Stargazing And Remembering Robert McCall
Robert McCall is seen here painting a mural. Many of his murals can be found throughout NASA centers and the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. His artwork can be seen on posters for Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey and U.S. postage stamps.
Robert McCall is seen here painting a mural. Many of his murals can be found throughout NASA centers and the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. His artwork can be seen on posters for Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey and U.S. postage stamps.
Andrew Chaikin is the author of A Passion for Mars.
Just inside the National Air and Space Museum is a six-story-high mural by Robert McCall celebrating the Apollo moon landings. Look beyond his larger-than-life astronaut and you can see other worlds, yet unvisited, beckoning amid the stars. McCall always had his mind on tomorrow.
That was true even in the early 1960s when he envisioned the Apollo missions, still on the drawing board, for Life magazine. Those paintings gave millions of Americans their first glimpses of the fantastic adventure about to unfold.
As a NASA space artist, he had a ringside seat for the moon landings. He was in Mission Control, sketchpad in hand, when the Apollo 15 astronauts drove the first lunar rover. Later, his artwork became a U.S. postage stamp commemorating the event. He also created stamps for the Skylab space station and the Viking Mars landings.
McCall once told me he dreamed of going into space himself. He never made it, but his work did: He created the mission patches for the final Apollo landing in 1972 and the first space shuttle mission in 1981.
What I loved most about Bob McCall and his work was his joyful optimism, the sense of promise in every painting. It wasn't just about astronauts and spacecraft; it was about humanity's journey beyond our home world, into a bright future on an endless frontier.
With NASA's future so up in the air, I hope we can find a way to honor that promise — to have a space program that McCall's countless fans would recognize.
More Opinion

Commentary
India: No Country For Old People?
Amid its economic boom, India struggles to deal with its aging population.







Comments
Please note that all comments must adhere to the NPR.org discussion rules and terms of use. See also the Community FAQ.
NPR reserves the right to read on the air and/or publish on its Web site or in any medium now known or unknown the e-mails and letters that we receive. We may edit them for clarity or brevity and identify authors by name and location. For additional information, please consult our Terms of Use.