Life on Earth is complex and contradictory. Artist Trevor Paglen's project The Last Pictures sends into orbit a time capsule of photographs capturing just that
Also see our gallery: "Photo time capsule aiming for orbit"
IT WAS September 1940. Four teenagers were walking a dog when they stumbled into a cave holding Palaeolithic paintings, a depiction of a time long forgotten. To this day these images, the famous Lascaux cave paintings remain enigmatic, with some historians suggesting that they were created deep underground as a kind of message for the future.
If we were to leave a similar gift for future civilisations, what would it be, and where would we hide it? After years of deliberation, artist Trevor Paglen has arrived at his own answer.
Paglen, who is also a keen amateur astronomer, is fascinated by the idea that about 36,000 kilometres above Earth is a ring of communication satellites that experience no atmospheric drag. In other words, these satellites can keep going in orbit for eternity. "If we take that seriously," says Paglen, "it means these are the longest lasting things we've ever made."
These satellites also speak volumes about the beings that created them, us. "To me they have come to represent a culture that can do extraordinary things - put things in space, explore questions about the beginning of time." But we also use this knowledge to destroy ourselves and the planet, he says.
In The Last Pictures, Paglen combines these ideas, creating his own Lascaux paintings - a series of 100 images that capture the contradictions and paradoxes of human nature, engraved on a communications satellite, in a format that could survive for billions of years.
It took Paglen several years to complete this challenge, seeking input from academics and other thinkers. A discussion with biologist Ignacio Chapela led the pair to overturn the over-simplistic DNA double helix as the image for life. Their counter-image of wild foliage draws on Darwin's anecdote at the end of On the Origin of Species, in which he describes how a tangled bank prompted him to reflect on the complexities of life. Other images are less literal, but together they portray the conflicts inherent to humanity.
Collectively, the mood of the pictures is melancholy; the work is a warning. "Particularly with the Mars landings right now, the mood of outer space has been very celebratory, but I think in some ways you could read this as the warning of celebration," says Nato Thompson, project curator from Creative Time, the organisation in New York that commissioned the work. There is a scepticism here that reflects our relationship with exploration and science, he says.
Because, of course, this project isn't just designed for alien populations of the deep future, but also for people who view the collection on Earth today. "We are making cave paintings for the future," says Paglen, "and I hope that sending this series of cave paintings into the vastness of time will allow us to see ourselves with a bit of distance, and to see where we are going."
The Echostar XVI satellite carrying The Last Pictures is due to be launched later this year
- The Last Pictures
- by Trevor Paglen
- Published by: University of California Press and Creative Time Books
- ?19.95/$27.95
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