Space is Weird, So Are We Online Exhibition

Space Is Weird, So Are We is the fifth in a series of online exhibitions sponsored by CaFÉ, a program of Creative West, to honor, highlight, and celebrate the artists who make up the CaFÉ community. Since 2019, these exhibitions have offered a way to showcase artists beyond the boundaries of a physical gallery, leveraging the CaFÉ platform’s reach to bring new visibility to selected works and introduce more artists to creative opportunities.

CaFÉ began in 2004 as a free resource for artists, created to make opportunities more accessible, equitable, and visible. More than two decades later, that purpose continues through the artists who use the platform to share their work, apply to calls, and connect with arts organizations across the country and beyond.

This online exhibition showcases 105 artworks from both national and international artists. From this group, nine artists were chosen to receive cash prizes by a unique internal jury panel from Creative West. This diverse panel selected the winners using a fresh, community-centered lens.

Jury panel: Thank you to our internal Creative West team members who contributed their diverse perspectives, time, and commitment to scoring this exhibition. Ashley Arias, Ken Cho, Owyn Cooper, Josh Ellis, Kelsey Foster, Amelia Leinbach, Paul Nguyen, and Tyler Speller.

Special Thanks: We also want to express our gratitude to the MUD Foundation for their generous support, which made this virtual showcase possible. Special thanks also go to Natalie Villa, our Project Manager extraordinaire, and Raquel Vasquez, CaFÉ’s senior manager, whose organization, vision, and leadership helped turn this project from concept to reality.

Top Awarded Artists

1st Place: Tetiana Dmitrichuk, Earth on the Move
2nd Place: Jen Blalock, Waterbear Parade
3rd Place: Jessica Yu, Everything, Everywhere, All at Once

Honorable Mentions

Nikol Manes, Interstellar Telecaster
Patrick Nevins, Stardust
Cliff Powell, The Paradox of Embrace
Iuliia Susloparova, Cosmic craving
Nicoleu Valadez, CASE 07
Elisabeth Walker, Space Selfie

The selected works immediately appear strange, futuristic, or otherworldly; each one embodies a cosmic spirit. Together, they explore the concept of space through various dimensions, including distance, silence, humor, horizon, atmosphere, memory, light, landscape, and possibility. Some pieces gaze up toward the stars, while others look inward, finding space within the body, the home, the natural world, popular culture, folk traditions, and contemporary expression.

What emerges is not a single idea of space, but rather many. These artists have shaped personal meanings from vastness, mystery, place, movement, and imagination. Their voices are distinct, expansive, and profoundly human.

In this wide and wonderfully strange collection, space becomes more than a theme. It becomes a way of asking where we belong, how we connect, and what we notice when we look beyond the familiar. These artists remind us that the universe is vast, but so is the imagination.

Discover the diverse and captivating artworks in the virtual gallery “Space Is Weird, So Are We.” We invite you to explore this unique collection at your own pace, reflect on each piece, and be inspired by the artists’ imaginative interpretations of space. Share your thoughts and discoveries on social media by tagging us with #callforentry and #spaceisweirdsoarewe and engage with the creative community.

Photo Courtesy of Tetiana Dmitrichuk

First Place Award

Tetiana Dmitrichuk | Artwork Title: Earth on the Move

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This painting shows our perceptions and understandings of the world starting at the micro moving to a cosmic level.

Photo Courtesy of Jen Blalock

Second Place Award

Jen Blalock | Artwork Title: Waterbear Parade | Visit Website

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My work is guided by my awe of the universe. It is home to billions of galaxies and yet we exist on an oasis with a diversity of animals and plants that thrive alongside humans. Water bears, or tardigrades, are one of those creatures. They are microscopic, yet have a central nervous system. They look like something from another planet, yet also resemble bears. They can survive in the vacuum of space, inside a volcano, and in the Mariana Trench. They are weird, wonderful, and mysterious: just like humans and outer space itself. When I saw the image of the water bear at such a large scale, I thought it was the perfect opportunity to create a surreal landscape with humans as the small creatures and the water bear as the gigantic one. The result is a surreal fantasy that blends outer space, the ocean, and the human world, creating a sense of wonder and curiosity about the reality in which we live.

Photo Courtesy of Jessica Yu

Third Place Award

Jessica Yu | Artwork Title: Everything, Everywhere, All at Once

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My work explores space not just as something physical, but something emotional and psychological that mirrors the complexity of being human. Through intricate, abstract realism and surreal imagery, I blur the boundaries between inner and outer worlds to something beyond what the eye can see. In these pieces, space is fluid, layered, and alive, reflecting how we navigate identity, memory, and feeling. The repetition of organic patterns and cosmic elements speaks to a shared structure underlying everything, suggesting that the strange vastness of the universe is not separate from us, but embedded within us. “Space Is Weird, So Are We” resonates deeply in my practice, as I aim to visualize the unseen connections between the tangible and the intangible, bringing emotion and abstraction to life.

Photo Courtesy of Nicole Valadez

Honorable Mention

Nicole Valadez | Artwork Title: CASE 07 | Visit Website

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I’m interested in the moment just before a conclusion is drawn—the brief pause between seeing and assigning meaning. That hesitation can reveal more about the viewer than the figure being observed. When someone points out a “difference” in my work, I often respond, What difference do you see? The question returns attention to the instant judgment formed, exposing how quickly assumptions take hold and how easily perception hardens into classification.

As children, we accept what we see before deciding whether it belongs. Over time, that openness is replaced by systems of division—familiar or unfamiliar, acceptable or questionable. Difference becomes something to justify or fear, even when nothing is being disrupted.

“Classification Pending” reflects this idea. The work places unfamiliar forms within calm, recognizable spaces, inviting viewers to sit with ambiguity. Meaning is not declared; it accumulates slowly—classification still pending.

Photo Courtesy of Keith Van Norman

Keith Van Norman | Artwork Title: What’s so amazing that keeps us stargazing? | Visit Website

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Large format woodcut nightscape drawn from Oregon coastal communities featuring animals from First Peoples’ starlore around the world including The Cherokee Nation (Spirit Dog and the Milky Way), The Wardman (Dungdung the Frog lady from the Creation Story), The Chinook Nation (Canoe Race), The Yakima Nation (Elkskin stars), The Crow Nation (Three Legged Rabbit), The Navajo Nation (Dahsani the Porcupine), and The Tinglit Nation (Raven from The Theft of Daylight).

More than 10,000 stars illuminate the night sky and region-specific flora.

Video Courtesy of Ruchika Nambiar

Ruchika Nambiar | Artwork Title: Home vs Home | Limited edition artist book | Visit Website

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Home vs Home is a limited edition artist book that plays with themes of scale and mediation. The piece is constructed to produce an “analog zoom” effect, zooming into satellite imagery of two locations on opposite ends of the globe representing my home in Bangalore, India and Providence, RI USA. It considers the underlying absurdity of how our digital mediation of the “world” (via tools like zoomable maps and satellite imagery) allow humans a conceptual grasp over the world that has never existed to this degree before. For a tiny smartphone to hold a 3D picture of the earth as seen from outer space, it gives us the sense that the world is something that can fit within the palm of our hand, letting us zoom in/out and traverse it at whim. It blurs the tangibility of geographical distance, creating an illusory familiarity with places & experiences we’ve never encountered first hand, making the world feel “known” even though we may have only experienced a mere sliver of its vastness.

Photo Courtesy of Robert Moore

Robert Moore | Artwork Title: At home in the Universe

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I call the painting At Home in the Universe. We humans are a product of the universe. Our atoms were manufactured in the stars. Our home is situated in perfect zone that allows the chemicals of the universe to create life of all types that can even questioned the existence of the universe. We travel through space on our planet and rotate at a perfect speed around a star the provides us with the perfect temperature. We are a miracule yet we are not.

Photo Courtesy of Ric Taylors

Ric Taylor | Artwork Title: Earth on Fire | Visit Website

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I enjoy working in recycled wood, preserving the beauty of nature that surrounds all of us, often using wood that has been rejected or disposed of by others. This gives new and different life to elements of nature that would otherwise be destroyed forever.

There is art all around us every day in our world, but it is often covered up or disguised so that it goes unnoticed by most people. It is up to the artist to discover what others have missed, and present it in a surprising manner that hopefully will open the eyes of others so that they may better appreciate everything around them.

In my work, the wood comes from trees that have been diseased or dead, blown down during storms or otherwise saved.

In this case, recycled Buckeye Burl wood was shaped into a sphere and dyed with various reds and yellows. Three different people told me they thought it looks to them like the Earth is burning up. Given the turbulent times around the globe, this piece became named “Earth on Fire.”

Photo Courtesy of Megan Howard

Megan Howard | Artwork Title: Alien-Abducted, Hibachi Loving, T.Rexes | Visit Website

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I have lived most of my life with Behcet’s Disease and Autonomic Neuropathy. These conditions cause severe pain and fatigue, making everyday tasks very difficult. Making art allows me to visually express myself in a cathartic way, to distract myself from pain, and to have a sense of purpose. I always keep sketch books within reach and do most of my artwork from bed. Painting allows me to escape the world of pain I know as reality, and to create a new one based on imagination. In this painting, T.Rexes that were abducted by aliens prior to the asteroid hitting Earth have now returned to offer their help in exchange for luxuries on Earth. They are especially fond of hibachi. Replacing expensive construction equipment, humans are happy to work with these cooperative, intergalactic travelers.

Photo Courtesy of Ujjwal Datta

Ujjwal Datta | Artwork Title: LONE RANGER | Visit Website

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I am a landscape astrophotographer and a moonscape photographer who loves to capture the beauty of our galaxy from our vantage point, the Earth, and capture the beauty of our own satellite, the Moon, against some of the iconic manmade and natural features.

Photo Courtesy of Edward Reynolds

Edward Reynolds | Artwork Title: Forgotten Future

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In 2011 I started my career as an engineer, but found I needed an artistic outlet as a
break from the document-filled world of engineering. I can’t color within the lines so started collaging.
I enjoy creating surreal dreamscapes that tell a story with the details inherent to the images. I seek to bring new life to the image that I’ve uncovered in old, dusty magazines, books,or postcards. The image is a moment in time that I get to combine with other seemingly non-related moments to tell a story and add meaning to it all. That’s the beauty of collaging.

Forgotten Future combines 1950/60s imagery with 1980s colors in a retro-futuristic style. The artwork invokes the past’s vision of what the future may hold, carrying with it a hopeful glimpse of exploration and beauty. Ancient roman architecture ties the images to the past, creating contrast with the vibrant sky and planets.

Photo Courtesy of Leonardo Pertuzzatti

Leonardo Pertuzzatti | Artwork Title: Disclosure

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Digital artwork inspired by Consciousness, Ontology, Phenomenology & Semiotics.

Photo Courtesy of Robert Bean

Robert Bean | Artwork Title: The Path of Totality | Visit Website

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“The Path of Totality” was painted in response to a recent event where there were a total solar eclipse and a rare cicada emergence happing simultaneously. The level of superstitious thinking during this time made me want to create an image where mysterious forces are controlling global events.

Photo Courtesy of Samaneh Takzare

Samaneh Takzare | Artwork Title: The Violet Melody | Visit Website

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My artwork, a mixed-media piece, responds to the exhibition’s theme by exploring the “”weirdness”” of both the outer cosmic reaches and our inner human landscapes. By blending literal celestial elements—like the purple orb and the crystalline “”eye”” in the stars—with a central, ethereal figure, the piece suggests that we are not just observers of the universe, but an integral, strange part of its fabric.

The inclusion of a 3D musical instrument and an atomic-like structure underscores the harmony between the vast unknown and the minute building blocks of life. This juxtaposition highlights the “”offbeat”” and “”profound”” nature of existence, where a woman cradling a lute becomes as cosmic as the mountains and nebulae surrounding her. Through these surreal, bold textures and vibrant colors, the work invites viewers to find the “”quiet”” and the “”strange”” within themselves as they look toward the stars.

Photo Courtesy of Cliff Powell

Honorable Mention

Cliff Powell | Artwork Title: The Paradox of Embrace | Visit Website

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My paintings sit at the crossroads of contemporary surrealism and fantasy, drawing from nostalgia, retro-futurism, and philosophy to create imagery layered with meaning and symbolism.

In my Celestial Reveries series, the dark matter of space reflects the vastness of the mind, memory, and imagination. The cosmos becomes a field of ideas, each star like a spark, a light bulb, a eureka moment waiting for illumination.

The cosmos is a journey where possibilities are limitless, and my paintings explore it as a psychological and symbolic territory, not just a physical expanse. They invite viewers to embrace the idea that what feels most alien is often deeply human.

My art is for the daydreamers, the ones who find the absurd in the ordinary and use fantasy to understand something deeper.

Photo Courtesy of Image Works 2025

Eric Reou | Artwork Title: First Contact | Visit Website

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Eric Reou’s Star Child Series, an epic narrative set within a triple-star system in the southern constellation of Centaurus. Three distinct species exist within this system until one is forced to flee its dying planet. Seeking survival, they attempt to settle on the only remaining planet capable of sustaining life—one already inhabited by life—igniting profound conflict. Caught between desperation and conscience, the displaced species grapples with the harm they inflict while simultaneously fearing the violence directed toward them. As tensions escalate, the fundamental ethics of survival are tested, revealing the fragile balance between self-preservation and responsibility to others. All of this unfolds under the shadow of inevitable extinction, as their home planet dies, sealing the ultimate fate of all three species.

Photo Courtesy of Aaron Strebs

Honorable Mention

Nikol Manes | Artwork Title: Interstellar Telecaster | Visit Website

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I make mosaic guitars and ukuleles using hand-cut glass mirror and other materials. My work is rooted in repetition labor and intuition. I’m drawn to symbols that have endured across time stars hearts hamsa cacti desert scenes aliens and geometric shapes… not as decoration but as containers for meaning and memory.

The process is slow and physical. I cut place and build each piece fragment by fragment allowing irregularity and breakage to remain visible. I’m interested in transformation how broken or discarded materials can be reassembled into objects that feel intentional and alive. My instruments remain fully playable. They co-exist between sculpture and function sound and stillness.

I create work as a way to mark experience and make sense of change. The finished pieces are meant to be held used or displayed… strung spun or hung.

Photo Courtesy of Lauren Young

Lauren Young | Artwork Title: Disco ET | Visit Website

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Lauren Young is a self-trained multi-disciplinary artist operating under Abstruse Art. She creates large-scale, disco-inspired sculptures and installations that turn everyday objects and natural forms into sparkly, larger-than-life moments. From flamingos to cacti, her work lives at the intersection of play, pop culture, and the wild landscapes inspired by the American West.

Based in Denver, Colorado, she pulls inspiration from natural landscapes of the west with a dash of retro nostalgia. This particular piece `Disco ET` was created as both an homage to childhood and the space we need to be ourselves. At the heart of her practice is a belief that art should be for everyone – spark joy, curiosity, connection, and play. This piece, while made entirely out of glass, is smooth to the touch and transforms into a light show for anyone to enjoy.

Photo Courtesy of Patrick Nevins

Honorable Mention

Patrick Nevins | Artwork Title: Stardust | Visit Website

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As someone how has always been fascinated by space and the cosmos, while also being an artist, it only made sense that at some point the two would collide.

Video Courtesy of Alana Mango

Alana Mango | Artwork Title: Black Box | Visit Website

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Black Box is a story of victory over fear, survival against all odds, and the courage of love.

The film centers a queer character as the hero of his own story, inviting LGBTQ viewers to step out from the sidelines and into the lead. My goal was to present an authentic queer experience not just in the visible, explicit sense, but in the non-literal sense. Our hero Jo’s terrifying isolation in deep space was not an arbitrary decision, but a deliberate choice meant to reflect the internal struggles many LGBTQ individuals face over the course of a lifetime. In the end however, it is his queerness that is his very salvation, as the image of the person he loves sparks in him the determination he needs to survive. Far from being another victim of queer tragedy, Jo’s story is one of survival of hardship, victory over fear, and hope for tomorrow.

Photo Courtesy of Alec MacLeod

Alec MacLeod | Artwork Title: Choosing the Simulacra | Visit Website

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Appearances can be deceiving. Seeing is believing. Pictures don’t lie. Things are not always what they seem. The paradoxes of our dominant sense—sight—and visual representations are at the heart of my work. As an interdisciplinary artist, I explore the relationships between appearance and reality, between the seer and the seen in multiple forms. The work may exploit or emphasize deception with the intention of challenging our ready acceptance of the “truth” of what we see. It may challenge or expand on our experience of the commonplace or everyday objects. While the questions are serious, much of my work is playful and humorous. The thread that runs through my work is a fascination with the ways that humans see.

Recently, I became fascinated by medical illustrations and charts. Those with heads that showed the brains exposed seemed to invite me to replace those brains with “thoughts”.

Photo Courtesy of Danielle Henneborn

Danielle Henneborn | Artwork Title: Dog Pile | Visit Website

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I’m fascinated by the wildlife that inhabits the environments around us. Animals that are often misunderstood and overlooked raise further questions concerning purpose and self. Empathy becomes self-discovery as I journey through this life as a human being who’s trying to find belonging in the grand scheme of things. Wolves are often paired with the moon, often during transformation in fictional media. The moon also changes as it cycles through its phases. Here, in my artwork titled “Dog Pile”, the not-so-full moon rises and the wolves wait patiently. The moon changes like we all do. Some of those changes come with time. That full moon isn’t too far away from happening.

Photo Courtesy of Magnolia Eickhoff

Magnolia Eickhoff | Artwork Title: Watch Me Grow | Visit Website

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Magnolia Eickhoff’s artwork observes the collective human adoration for space, noticing that each of us carries a bit of a scientific heart. The concept of space can be petrifying. It’s big, dark, and cold. Yet, astronomy is a subject that most people find fascinating. Again and again we find ourselves curious about that vast, empty desert. We wonder “What if Mars hosted an ancient civilization?” or “What if we could go inside the sun?” and “What do the gas clouds of Jupiter look like up close?” It seems as if every time NASA unveils new photos of celestial objects, humanity collectively gasps. There’s something about space exploration that leaves us astonished at our own existence.

Photo Courtesy of Felicitas Sokec

Felicitas Sokec | Artwork Title: BooBoo and Guido go to Venus | Visit Website

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As a life-long artist, I create art because I can’t help myself to do otherwise. Creating art is an inner obsessive drive. Whether creating on canvas, on the computer, for my home or my garden, I am innately driven to transform the mundane into a thing of beauty, inspiration, introspection and/or a “teachable moment”. I draw inspiration for my work from nature, the human condition, philosophy, Jungian psychology, Gustav Klimt, Italian art & architecture, my cat family, the Feminine Divine. As a multi-disciplinary artist, I utilize many varied techniques, drawing from across disciplines to accomplish my ideas and visions. My life is strikingly rich because of art. As a teaching artist, I strive to impart this same passion to my students.

Photo Courtesy of Glenn Taylor

Glenn Taylor | Artwork Title: Marble Moon

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This space is weird. These may look like photos taken by space probes as they approach distant planets. They do start as photos, but they are photos of edible ingredients composed in kitchen pans. The pans are my canvases. Oils, spices, and other edible things give texture and color. I abide by two simple rules: made with edible things, and made in pans. Within these rules, I play with ingredients, temperature, lighting. Sometimes I start with the pan-bound remnants of breakfast, add more elements, and let the mix evolve over time. Along the way I photograph, then crop, edit, and compose into space scenes.

Ultimately this is about joy. The joy of connecting to the space-nerd kid in me who spent hours looking up at the boundless night sky, who was (and still is) in awe of outer space. The joy of play and discovery: how these ingredients together can create new worlds in the confines of a pan. And the joy of re-discovering in me and my audience those childhood feelings of awe and wonder.

Photo Courtesy of Lesley Rucker

Lesley Rucker | Artwork Title: many moons | Visit Website

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I have always felt a connection between nature, the elements, and human emotion. Each express a feeling that can be volatile, serene, tumultuous, ever changing, and constantly moving. My work explores those connections with both real and imagined subjects using symbolism. Often there may be a subtle underlying meaning that the viewer may notice with a second glance or by interpreting the narrative in the work for themselves. My current work explores time and place in imagined spaces.

Photo Courtesy of Dale Odell

Dale Odell | Artwork Title: The Observable Universe | Visit Website

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These pretty well fit the theme of ‘Space is Weird.’ They’re created in the studio by photographing a miniature set (100 year-old practical effects) of my own construction in forced-perspective, populated by rockets, portals and astronauts. Not intended to fool the eye to look ‘real’ but to have a vaguely-vintage look and simply be surrealistically fun.

Photo Courtesy of Makenzy Miles

Makenzy Miles | Artwork Title: On Top of the World or Down In It?

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I like to create paintings that have abstract, almost portal like backgrounds with mysterious and surreal collages. In some of my works I also “destroy” the piece where I will burn holes in the canvas, almost like a black hole. Space, vastly unexplored and mysterious, is surreal to me in a way that anything could be out there. There are many colors in the galaxies and in the Milky Way that are reminiscent of the colorful abstract backgrounds that I use. The collages that I put together over top of the painting speak on mental health issues and the melancholies of life. Space to me can invoke anxiety and a sense of existential dread when thinking of how vast and empty it really is.

Photo Courtesy of Jessie Leasure

Jessie Leasure | Artwork Title: Connected | Visit Website

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Stargazing is a passion of mine. I love how stargazing slows the fast pace of life. Observing the stars makes me feel connected to the universe because of the vast and profound sensation it creates. That is the sensation that I have recreated here. The varied tones of blue reflect both the darkness and peacefulness of the night environment required for stargazing—dark and clear nights are ideal. The celestial body in the sky glows bright while the figure has a similar glow emanating from her chest, above her heart. This mutual glow represents the feeling of connection and intimacy with the broad universe that the act of stargazing fosters.

Most people are not so fascinated with outer space to consider stargazing as a hobby. Although this piece is not particularly quirky in its imagery, it represents the experience of a relatively small community of people who many would consider strange. Those of us who stargaze, however, take pride in the sentiment “space is weird, and so are we.”

Photo Courtesy of Eduardo Del Rio

Eduardo Del Rio | Artwork Title: Transcendental Gazing | Visit Website

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Eduardo del Rio aka ‘PencilProne’ is a Spain-born graphic artist who has shown in galleries in San Francisco and Oakland, published illustrations, and was featured in the SF De Young Museum. Eduardo’s work explores the interconnections of our reality and transcendence of our human experience through playful representations of everything around us. He seeks to understand the frailty of the human existence and how we are all amalgamations of everything we experience.

Photo Courtesy of Barbara Barber

Barbara Barber | Artwork Title: A Cracker in Space | Visit Website

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Throughout my time as a painter I have made aconscious choice to paint such scenes which I find to be spiritually inspiring and uplift the soul.

Feeling isolated, an artist dreams she is a cracker floating in deep space.

Photo Courtesy of Therese Burton

Therese Burton | Artwork Title: Cherry Blossom Dream

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I wish to be dancing with the stars and planets to become one with the universe through color, light and sound. I try to show the contentment, peace and joy of transcending time and place.

Photo Courtesy of Jeff Glode Wise

Jeff Glode Wise | Artwork Title: Turtle Mountain Starship | Visit Website

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I often think of Star Trek, the 2nd series with Jean-Luc Picard where they meet an entity, depicted as an immense floating head. “Turtle Mountain Starship” was a collaboration between myself and welding students from Ignacio CO., a rural town that includes the Southern Ute Reservation. The sculpture hangs in the Durango/La Plata County Airport. The interior of the sculpture has individual planets, aliens, satellites and astronauts made by the students. My favorite is a comet in the shape of a teepee with comet tail streaming out. The idea came when we were talking about how a space capsule looks like a teepee and this was the result.

Photo Courtesy of Christopher Imhof

Christopher Imhof | Artwork Title: Requiem 1 | Visit Website

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Requiem is a visual meditation on the boundary where the internal landscape meets the extraterrestrial. In this piece, I explore the concept of “space” not just as a physical vacuum of stars and silence, but as a digital and psychological frontier.The title suggests a mourning or a final rest, yet the work functions as a gateway. It questions whether the vastness of the cosmos is a mirror of the human mind, or if our internal worlds are merely simulations—virtual realities we inhabit to escape or understand our own existence. By blending organic forms with architectural, alien geometries, I aim to create a sense of “cosmic loneliness” that is both haunting and comforting.Whether viewed as a journey through a foreign world or a deep dive into the architecture of thought, Requiem invites the viewer to lose their sense of scale and direction. It is an acknowledgment of what we leave behind as we transition from the physical world into the infinite expanses of imagination and the unknown.

Photo Courtesy of Nathaniel Hicks-Voll

Nathaniel Hicks-Voll | Artwork Title: we’re just folds in her dress | Visit Website

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The pieces in this submission use space as a way to zoom out of our individual experience and consider a collective whole. To question the limits of our perspective, the consequences of individual actions, and the potential worlds apart from our own. Using the medium of collage as a grand recycling project, my pieces compile disparate elements into surreal landscapes and unfamiliar worlds, drawing attention to what seems out of place and asking: why?

Everything we touch is made of stardust. On a granular level, and even on intangible levels, we are all connected. We are connected to community, to the lands, waters and skies above us, to the planet we inhabit, to honeybees and pelicans, and to each other. We are all made of stardust. We are all interconnected.

Photo Courtesy of Rosanna Lynne Welter

Rosanna Lynne Welter | Artwork Title: Spudnut | Visit Website

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My whimsical take on a barely but apparently theoretically possible toroid or donut-shaped planet quietly glowing near the local Rabbit Nebula. Spudnut’s fierce gravity has kept its sprinkles, bits of icing, golden deliciousness, and donut hole close even as centrifugal force has flung them away from the yeasty dworf.

Photo Courtesy of Gail Morrison

Gail Morrison | Artwork Title: VLA Pleiades | Visit Website

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VLA Pleaides: Photopolymer gravure of an enormous telescope of the Very Large Array near Socorro, NM. They constantly scan the sky searching for voices from afar. The image of the telescope is printed over another of the Pleiades star cluster from the Hubble space telescope

Photo Courtesy of Adam Sumner

Adam Sumner | Artwork Title: Realize | Visit Website

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Swayve is a multidisciplinary artist working mostly across collage, assemblage, and digital media. His practice involves assembling inconspicuous everyday items, paper prints, organic matter, and recycled materials into works of irreplicable art. His pieces contain purposeful arrangements of balanced and intriguing designs that tie the otherwise completely unconnected elements into a cohesive artwork. Swayve takes an approach to assembling his art that creates a contemplative interpretation by often using mirrors as canvases. His eclectic discography encompasses the tension between the color theory of Impressionism, fluid abstraction of Surrealism, and symmetry of artists like MC Escher. Creating art is not just a means of expression for Swayve, but allows him to transcend the mental framework of regular life while helping serve his passion for environmentalism through his sustainable waste reclamation process.

Photo Courtesy of Phillip Bernal

Phillip Bernal | Artwork Title: ENOS | Visit Website

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The notion that we exist within a biological spaceship that floats through the void of space is fascinating. Humans are a paradoxical species that seeks to discover new frontiers driven out natural curiosity, while at the same time collectively destroying their home planet simply out of greed and a lack of responsible stewardship. My work is a synthesis of history, fiction, and popular culture that arrives at the crossroads of chaos and existentialism. Whether one believes that we evolved from primates, or divine creation- humans sent animals to space space first. It is for this reason, a space chimpanzee witnessed a dimension of reality first and an image that I find profound.

Photo Courtesy of Jean Cormier

Jean Cormier | Artwork Title: Your Imagination WIll Take You Everywhere

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Space has always been a mirror—vast, silent, and just unfamiliar enough to feel like a reflection of ourselves at our most curious and unguarded. In this work, I explore that strange parallel: the absurdity of the cosmos alongside the equally peculiar nature of being human.

An astronaut floats against the enormity of the moon while a Buck Rogers tin rocket cuts through the scene—a nostalgic relic of imagined futures. The juxtaposition of the human figure with a toy from our collective past blurs the line between exploration and imagination, reminding us that our understanding of space has always been shaped as much by wonder as by science.

This painting embraces contradiction: playfulness and isolation, scale and intimacy, the known and the unknowable. Space is strange not only because of its distance from us, but because it amplifies what is already strange within us—our need to make meaning, to imagine, and to find connection in the most unlikely places.

Photo Courtesy of Patrick Stoll

Patrick Stoll | Artwork Title: Mysterious Hot Pool below Milky Way | Visit Website

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“Space is weird, so are we.” According to some, this could apply to me and some of my work as a photographer. I have been making photographs for more than four decades. I am always looking for something a little quirky in my subjects. In 2005 I was awarded first place in the Mountain Environment category of the Banff International Photography Competition sponsored by National Geographic. The title of the winning photo was “The Red Queen’s Forest” – a rigidly defined “forest” of poplar trees. I recently came out with a new book – “An Abridged Natural History of the Bethine Church River Trail.” I have been told that many of the featured photos are a little on the weird side. That encouraged me to enter one of the photos from the book in this competition. I also spend a lot of time in the deserts. There is some pretty weird stuff there too.

Photo Courtesy of Aaron Strebs

Nikol Manes | Artwork Title: Space Bass Mosaic Thunderbird Bass Guitar | Visit Website

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I make mosaic guitars and ukuleles using hand-cut glass mirror and other materials. My work is rooted in repetition labor and intuition. I’m drawn to symbols that have endured across time stars hearts hamsa cacti desert scenes aliens and geometric shapes… not as decoration but as containers for meaning and memory.

The process is slow and physical. I cut place and build each piece fragment by fragment allowing irregularity and breakage to remain visible. I’m interested in transformation how broken or discarded materials can be reassembled into objects that feel intentional and alive. My instruments remain fully playable. They co-exist between sculpture and function sound and stillness.

I create work as a way to mark experience and make sense of change. The finished pieces are meant to be held used or displayed… strung spun or hung.

Photo Courtesy of Lynn Nguyen

Lynn Nguyen | Artwork Title: Gợn Đầm | Visit Website

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The installation exteriorizes my most intimate interior landscape—the quiet mental space where my thoughts translate into speech. At the center of the room, the “leaf” sculpture, crafted from warm-toned bamboo sticks and cradling my mother’s saved floral pistachio shells, represents maternal love and cultural roots. Around it, a synthetic pond constructed from industrial acrylic and featuring applied vinyl pedestals harmonizes with the leaf. While viewers often perceive this surreal environment as a sci-fi galaxy, these synthetic materials physically manifest the complex, constructed space inside my mind where I pause to converse with my inner child before interacting with the outside world.
Driven by motors, the kinetic acrylic elements create continuous ripples around the leaf. This motion visualizes the internal delay of my bicultural translation. Because this cognitive processing takes time, I often embrace silence rather than rushing to speak.

Photo Courtesy of Brooke Steytler

Brooke Steytler | Artwork Title: Cosmic Amazement | Visit Website

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I worked in my professional career as an animator for film and TV. As the medium became more impacted by computers I felt inspired to paint using traditional materials: watercolor and acrylic paint on paper and canvas.
As in animation I like to tell stories and have always been inspired by science fiction. I was fortunate to study at CalArts where one of my teachers, Ed Emschwiller, started out his career doing illustrations for science fiction books and magazines, then moved into making films and video.

Both of the submitted works were inspired by workshops I attended at the Monroe Insitute where deep, meditative starts of consciousness are explored using binaural beat technology.

Photo Courtesy of Julia Kohane

Julia Kohane | Artwork Title: Interval

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Since 2024, my practice has explored the collapse of linear time and a space between memory and imagination, where past, present, and future coexist rather than progress sequentially. In this context, “space” becomes both psychological and environmental, shaped by instability, fragmentation, and the unknown. I create surreal collages in which figures inhabit fractured landscapes and shifting terrains that resist fixed location, suggesting realities that feel both familiar and disorienting.

Works such as The Drowning and Interval reflect this condition, placing figures within environments that are at once cosmic and internal. These spaces feel unstable and unfamiliar, where gravity, scale, and logic begin to dissolve, and perception itself becomes uncertain. Through ambiguity and dislocation, the work approaches space not as a fixed place, but as an unstable field shaped by memory, perception, and imagination.

Photo Courtesy of Nicole Valadez

Nicole Valadez | Artwork Title: CASE 004 classification pending | Visit Website

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I’m interested in the moment just before a conclusion is drawn—the brief pause between seeing and assigning meaning. That hesitation can reveal more about the viewer than the figure being observed. When someone points out a “difference” in my work, I often respond, What difference do you see? The question returns attention to the instant judgment formed, exposing how quickly assumptions take hold and how easily perception hardens into classification.

As children, we accept what we see before deciding whether it belongs. Over time, that openness is replaced by systems of division—familiar or unfamiliar, acceptable or questionable. Difference becomes something to justify or fear, even when nothing is being disrupted.

“Classification Pending” reflects this idea. The work places unfamiliar forms within calm, recognizable spaces, inviting viewers to sit with ambiguity. Meaning is not declared; it accumulates slowly—classification still pending.

Photo Courtesy of Brooke Steytler

Brooke Steytler | Artwork Title: Cosmic Bees | Visit Website

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I worked in my professional career as an animator for film and TV. As the medium became more impacted by computers I felt inspired to paint using traditional materials: watercolor and acrylic paint on paper and canvas.
As in animation I like to tell stories and have always been inspired by science fiction. I was fortunate to study at CalArts where one of my teachers, Ed Emschwiller, started out his career doing illustrations for science fiction books and magazines, then moved into making films and video.

Both of the submitted works were inspired by workshops I attended at the Monroe Insitute where deep, meditative starts of consciousness are explored using binaural beat technology.

Photo Courtesy of Jeremy Jarvis

Jeremy Jarvis | Artwork Title: HOPE REMAINS | Visit Website

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Hope Remains explores space as both a vast physical expanse and a fragile emotional distance between humanity and the natural world. A lone astronaut cradles a sapling against the infinite cosmos, suggesting a future where life-sustaining elements like trees have become rare, precious, and displaced. This juxtaposition of the organic and the cosmic reflects the strange tension between technological advancement and ecological loss. Inspired by speculative worlds where nature is sacred and scarce, the mural frames space as both warning and possibility, an unfamiliar territory shaped by our choices. In this quiet, surreal moment, the act of holding a tree becomes an act of preservation, responsibility, and hope. Even in the unknown, life endures, if we choose to protect it.

Photo Courtesy of Counsel Langley

Counsel Langley | Artwork Title: Hold Fast | Visit Website

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“I have come home at last! This is my real country! I belong here. This is the land I have been looking for all my life, though I never knew it till now…Come further up, come further in!” ― C.S. Lewis, The Last Battle. Space–vast, beautiful, and strange–calls out of us that longing for connection with that which is bigger than ourselves. We come to a place where we stand alone in the face of such, and once there the choice is ours–to linger in our ‘no,’ or to take the step of ‘yes,’ moving “further up…further in.

Photo Courtesy of Nancy Viebrock

Nancy Viebrock | Artwork Title: Space Cats

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In my world, cats are just the Best!! I love their humor, their sass, their independence and also their devotion. Kitties make everyplace better. While viewing the vastness of the night sky and the constellations of bears, fish, horses, crabs etc., I feel that something is missing….No cats! This piece is my imagination putting cats up in space to add their own special brand of craziness to an already weird universe!!!

Photo Courtesy of Elizabeth Mills

Elizabeth Mills | Artwork Title: City Above the Clouds

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I created a series of celestial paintings to showcase our desire for connections beyond our understanding of our universe.

Photo Courtesy of Patrick Nevins

Patrick Nevins | Artwork Title: Luna | Visit Website

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As someone how has always been fascinated by space and the cosmos, while also being an artist, it only made sense that at some point the two would collide.

Photo Courtesy of CJ Hungerman

CJ Hungerman | Artwork Title: Astrojagoffronaut #1 | Visit Website

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These painting depict humans traversing through space on a psychedelic trip.

Photo Courtesy of Dale Odell

Dale Odell | Artwork Title: Wormhole Generator | Visit Website

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These pretty well fit the theme of ‘Space is Weird.’ They’re created in the studio by photographing a miniature set (100 year-old practical effects) of my own construction in forced-perspective, populated by rockets, portals and astronauts. Not intended to fool the eye to look ‘real’ but to have a vaguely-vintage look and simply be surrealistically fun.

Photo Courtesy of James Knauf

James Knauf | Artwork Title: Our Place | Visit Website

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As a photographer and digital artist, my work ordinarily ranges from night skies and landscapes to city streets and architecture, to moments of flight in aviation and space launch. I like to explore themes of our relationship with nature, the cosmos, and ourselves, seeking beauty in both natural scenes and human creations in compositions and perspectives that evoke contemplation, curiosity, wonder, and emotion. One might call it eclectic visual expression driven by creative and worldly curiosity. Lately I’ve been creating more abstract art assembled from elements of my astrophotography and nightscapes—not accurate depictions of celestial objects, but created images featuring bits and pieces of layered texture, vibrant color, and movement. Otherworldly. Timeless. Sometimes even a bit weird. Selections of my work have appeared in various Southern California and online venues, including a 1st Place win, Space Category, in Aviation Week & Space Technology Magazine’s Photo Contest 2025.

Photo Courtesy of Elisabeth Walker

Honorable Mention

Elisabeth Walker | Artwork Title: Space Selfie

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My artwork is about the concept of how everyone takes selfies. If an astronaut was able to take a phone out into space with them, they might take a selfie. I think one of the craziest things in space that, despite being famous, really isn’t paid a ton of attention, is Black holes. They swallow up everything including light, and I think it’d be funny for someone to be in front of a black hole and just not care. So I wanted to depict how when humans become used to things, even if they are a little crazy, that they fade into the background of life. Thats why I drew an astronaut taking a selfie in front of Earth, ignoring the blackhole right in front of them.

Photo Courtesy of Gabriela Vladimirova

Gabriela Vladimirova | Artwork Title: Continuum

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We are stardust. In one way or another, we are all connected. Across universes and galaxies, each and every one of us is a part of the greater whole. As space softly wraps it’s undying arms around you, you are cradled in comfort. The next minute you could be falling into a never ending pit of of solemn silence, ever etched to the world below. Then there’s the in-between. Drifting quietly, untouched by the world, as a shiver runs through you to the ends of every limb. As space and time dance around each other, we are thrown into their vast expanse for not even a second of their lifetimes. Yet somehow…you can still leave a mark.

Photo Courtesy of Therese Burton

Therese Burton | Artwork Title: Dancing with Stars

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I wish to be dancing with the stars and planets to become one with the universe through color, light and sound. I try to show the contentment, peace and joy of transcending time and place.

Photo Courtesy of Jessica Yu

Jessica Yu | Artwork Title: The DNA of Everything

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My work explores space not just as something physical, but something emotional and psychological that mirrors the complexity of being human. Through intricate, abstract realism and surreal imagery, I blur the boundaries between inner and outer worlds to something beyond what the eye can see.

In these pieces, space is fluid, layered, and alive, reflecting how we navigate identity, memory, and feeling. The repetition of organic patterns and cosmic elements speaks to a shared structure underlying everything, suggesting that the strange vastness of the universe is not separate from us, but embedded within us.

“Space Is Weird, So Are We” resonates deeply in my practice, as I aim to visualize the unseen connections between the tangible and the intangible, bringing emotion and abstraction to life.

Photo Courtesy of Visionarymemories, 2025

Anya Marshay | Artwork Title: Alien Gyal

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My artwork responds to the exhibit’s theme because I am the physical embodiment of what it means to be weird in space. As the subject I am this pink alien girl who stands as the subject. It’s something both beautiful and odd as I stand. It’s something endearing, odd, and sensual about these pictures. Other worldly, odd, and yet familiar to the viewer. Both conceptually and visually I am bringing together the other worldly, the odd, and the familiar.

Photo Courtesy of David Mueller

David Mueller | Artwork Title: In Space, No One Can Hear You RAWWRR! | Visit Website

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Wisconsin-born, cheese-eating and beer-drinking, I’m a working-class artist. Medium of choice, Acrylic on wood.

I use found and/or recycled wood as painting surfaces. These discaeded remnants supply the setting to my stories and live on to inspire a few more of their own… And to be honest, it’s an affordable way for me to keep making artwork that happens to prevent a few things from being tossed in a landfill.

As an artist, my work focuses on narrative. My goal is to advance and legitimize concepts of visual storytelling by making it accessible to my audience, using imagery and themes inspired by the cartoons and popular culture that raised me.

I did not take the path of an astronaut, but I travel to space from time to time through my work. I have fun with the themes of science and science fiction. There’s a lot of nerd in me. I paint the cosmos as I paint the earth beneath our feet, with surfaces hosting unlikely narratives spattered with accessible and vulnerable characters.

Photo Courtesy of Nathaniel Hicks-Voll

Nathaniel Hicks-Voll | Artwork Title: Adopt a Planet (inconvenience) | Visit Website

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The pieces in this submission use space as a way to zoom out of our individual experience and consider a collective whole. To question the limits of our perspective, the consequences of individual actions, and the potential worlds apart from our own. Using the medium of collage as a grand recycling project, my pieces compile disparate elements into surreal landscapes and unfamiliar worlds, drawing attention to what seems out of place and asking: why?

Everything we touch is made of stardust. On a granular level, and even on intangible levels, we are all connected. We are connected to community, to the lands, waters and skies above us, to the planet we inhabit, to honeybees and pelicans, and to each other. We are all made of stardust. We are all interconnected.

Photo Courtesy of Stuart McCall

Stuart McCall | Artwork Title: UFO’s over the Strait of Georgia | Visit Website

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These two images are both weird. Malahat Skywalk is a weird perspective on a group of tourists. UFO’s Over The Strait is a weird juxtaposition of ceiling lights reflected in the ferry window – making them appear to be UFO’s.
My work is characterized by observations on pattern, repetition and serendipitous alignments. I am an observer rather than an interventionalist.

All my images are unified by an overarching consideration of the unexpected alignment of elements, colours and patterns.
When in nature, I observe the play of line, curve, texture and the passing of time. In the world of man, I am intrigued by the manner in which we shape the places we inhabit. The things we construct, the things we leave behind. I see pattern and visual coincidence, and search for meaning.

Photo Courtesy of Maria Mijares

Maria Mijares | Artwork Title: DISCERNMENT | Visit Website

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DISCERNMENT, addresses the question of what we are to believe and our ability to distinguish truth from deception. We consider where reality and fiction begin, end, or continue off the page—from what appears black & white, through shadows, to enlightenment.

Orson Welles’ WAR OF THE WORLDS cited Grover Mills in Mercer County as the place of Martians landing. The radio broadcast on October 31, 1938, posed a double deception—that aliens had landed and that people had believed it. Failing newspapers played up the fictional terror to boost the credibility of print versus the dangers of the ‘new’ media, radio. We still reckon with the power of the media today. Do we believe what we hear and how do we discern manipulation?

Turning the page we find the concrete picture of the City of Trenton positing a beautiful and peaceful skyline at sundown.
All is well on earth.

Photo Courtesy of Thomas Twitmyer

Thomas Twitmyer | Artwork Title: Space Station Wave | Visit Website

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My work explores space as both environment and perception. In this piece, a familiar mountain structure is transformed through layered digital processes, heightened color, and altered atmosphere into a place that feels both recognizable and strange. The exaggerated sky, intense palette, and shifting sense of scale create an in-between world—part landscape, part psychological space, part imagined territory. I am interested in how visual distortion can open ordinary places into something more expansive, uncanny, and emotionally charged, where space becomes less about location and more about experience.

Photo Courtesy of Ian Greenwood

Ian Greenwood | Artwork Title: Space Crab-Man of the Future | Visit Website

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My piece is entitled “Space Crab-Man of the Future” and it explores the idea of humanity and how inevitably we will evolve or change to fit the changing world and universe. I think it is natural to identify very strongly with what the idea of being human is, and often the greatest expression and art is an exploration of this, but if humanity survives into the distant future, what humanity is will change.

Photo Courtesy of Mitch Miller

Mitch Miller | Artwork Title: The Traveler | Visit Website

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I seek to expand our consciousness by focusing on space across time, connecting day to night, near to far, and reality to imagination.

In “The Traveler”, I see the ancient creature “Rock O’Saurus”, rooted to this time and place, wistfully gazing into the heavens in search of a portal through which to transport back to its place in time, because Rock O’Saurus was a time traveler, now stuck in our present, much to its displeasure. May the journey renew in earnest.

Photo Courtesy of Alec MacLeod

Alec MacLeod | Artwork Title: Blinded by the Lights | Visit Website

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Appearances can be deceiving. Seeing is believing. Pictures don’t lie. Things are not always what they seem. The paradoxes of our dominant sense—sight—and visual representations are at the heart of my work. As an interdisciplinary artist, I explore the relationships between appearance and reality, between the seer and the seen in multiple forms. The work may exploit or emphasize deception with the intention of challenging our ready acceptance of the “truth” of what we see. It may challenge or expand on our experience of the commonplace or everyday objects. While the questions are serious, much of my work is playful and humorous. The thread that runs through my work is a fascination with the ways that humans see.
Recently, I became fascinated by medical illustrations and charts. Those with heads that showed the brains exposed seemed to invite me to replace those brains with “thoughts”.

Photo Courtesy of Pamela Vasquez Rodriguez

Pamela Vasquez Rodriguez | Artwork Title: Sunset Adoch from The Invisible Borders-Lines collection | Visit Website

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I am a chilean visual artist creating multimedia installations where still photography is the primary component. Themes of immigration, popular iconography, and other social issues run through my work. Through double exposure, superimposed imagery, and visual overlay, I explore how these contemporary concepts impact the human condition.
My process moves from research, to selecting iconography linked to a theme, to layering images over a human model. I use one predominant color juxtaposed with its opposite across an installation, along with unusually long exposures of 1:30–3:00 minutes — allowing me to “”paint with light”” and help viewers deconstruct each work into its component parts.
Multimedia elements complete each piece: collage photography, paper-fabric dolls, historical file imagery with audio, or large-format video projection. My work Morose Delectation on Blue Roses was selected for the Third Biennale of Video and Electronic Art (Santiago, Chile, 1997).

Photo Courtesy of Lara Kempke

Lara Kempke | Artwork Title: Galaxies Unfurled

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I have always been drawn (no pun intended) to the creatures of the natural world, and recently my muses have been pushing me to make my subjects…otherworldly. Portals of light from other dimensions piercing the cosmos, constellations coming to life, creatures transformed from terrestrial to celestial–all are finding their way into my art. The more chaotic strife that occurs here on our planet, the more I want to reach beyond, and invite transformation, enlightenment, and love.

Photo Courtesy of Lisa Bayer

Lisa Bayer | Artwork Title: Emergence from the Inner Sea | Visit Website

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My work explores space not only as a physical dimension, but as an emotional and internal landscape. Through layered mixed media compositions, I create environments where the boundaries between the self and the cosmos begin to dissolve. Water, light, and celestial elements become symbolic languages—representing intuition, memory, and the unseen forces that shape perception.

Rather than depicting outer space alone, my work focuses on the inner vastness that mirrors it—the quiet, infinite terrain of the mind and soul. Figures often exist in transitional states, suspended between worlds, reflecting the tension between reality and imagination, control and surrender.

In response to this exhibition, my work engages with space as both distance and intimacy—something expansive yet deeply personal. It invites viewers to consider that the unknown is not only something we look toward, but something we carry within.

Photo Courtesy of Angela Nguyen-Dinh

Angela Nguyen-Dinh | Artwork Title: Singer of the Deep | Visit Website

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After Decades of Waiting, Animals Launch the Aerospace Interspecies Alliance (AIA) to Save Earthly Life

After decades of waiting, the animals lost all hope that humankind would cease destroying the planet. An all-animal task force was formed, Aerospace Interspecies Alliance or AIA. Their only mission was to find a suitable new home for all earthly life forms. Through cooperation and instinct, the animals repaired aged space equipment and assembled enough pieces to launch into the unknown. In a stunning evolutionary leap, some species adapted so quickly that breathing equipment was no longer required to survive in a vacuum. Meanwhile, most Earth’s animals remain behind, clinging to the slim chance of AIA’s success.

The Aerospace Interspecies Alliance is a cooperative, cross-species initiative formed in response to planetary collapse. AIA does not promise salvation. It promises the refusal to quietly disappear.

Photo Courtesy of Joan Coff

Joan Coff | Artwork Title: Star Dancer

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Every culture has myths of how the stars appeared in the sky. When we look into space, we can’t help but wonder. Was it a big bang? Was it a god? Was it coyote? Who put them there? I offer an alternative myth.

Photo Courtesy of Victoria Lundy

Victoria Lundy | Artwork Title: Good Heavens | Visit Website

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I’ve spent my career as a graphic artist, designer, and musician. I’ve recently come full circle back to where I began, drawing. I am moving forward by drawing the creatures that fascinate me, putting them in puzzling circumstances, even scary ones.
I’m a life long astronomy and science fiction enthusiast. This delighted guinea pig is literally in space (Good Heavens), possibly floating near the Butterfly Nebula — but only she knows for sure.

Photo Courtesy of Steven Vigil

Patrycja Pardee | Artwork Title: Fungiverse | Visit Website

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Fungiverse is an alternative universe where the more you look the weirder it gets

Photo Courtesy of Corey Hayes

Corey Hayes | Artwork Title: Lux Ex Tenebris | Visit Website

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My artwork bridges the cosmic and the personal, using the profound, inexplicable nature of the universe as a metaphor for our own complex inner landscapes. These paintings explore the threshold of reality, a place I call the “liminal cosmos,” where paths lead not just into space, but through it.

Photo Courtesy of Mike Cressy

Mike Cressy | Artwork Title: Destiny Space | Visit Website

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Space, for me, is the meeting point between perception and imagination—a place where distance becomes emotion and the familiar turns slightly strange. My work often begins in those in‑between zones, where a face can feel like a landscape and a landscape can feel like a memory.

I’m drawn to the quiet distortions that make an image hum: the subtle shifts that blur inner and outer worlds, or the moments when something ordinary becomes uncanny. Through structure, color, and character, I explore space as both a physical expanse and an emotional terrain—cosmic, intimate, and a little offbeat.

What excites me about Space is Weird, So Are We is the chance to join a global constellation of artists who are stretching the idea of what space can mean. My work aligns with that spirit of curiosity and creative strangeness, and I’m honored to contribute a perspective shaped by discovery, imagination, and the pull of the unknown.

Photo Courtesy of Fuzz Grant

Fuzz Grant | Artwork Title: Laika | Visit Website

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Laika is a work on paper about the dog that was sent into space as a test. She didn’t choose to go there and sadly died. This piece is about how humans want to conquer space but are not willing to looks after their own planet.

Photo Courtesy of Benjamin Hanvy

Benjamin Hanvy | Artwork Title: Robot girl in myco-Land | Visit Website

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Installed across multiple levels of a residential stairwell, this mural, titled “Robot girl in myco-Land”, explores ‘Space’ as an interdimensional frontier where organic life and synthetic intelligence converge. I utilize bold, high-contrast imagery to juxtapose an expanded, neon-spotted mushroom—a symbol of ancient earth systems and psychedelic experience—against a cybernetic entity. This entity’s intricate fiber-optic (yarn and under paint) ponytail, which activates under UV light to reveal a constellation of fluorescent fibers, acts as a bridge between the physical ground and a cosmic consciousness.

By bringing these elements into a mundane, functional space (the stairwell), the work aims to make the quiet unknown experienced daily. It is a surreal territory that is intentionally weird, bold, and subtle. The unexpected fluorescent reveal captures the feeling of discovering hidden dimensions and the bizarre distance between the familiar and the alien.

Photo Courtesy of Johnny Larson

Johnny Larson | Artwork Title: Temptation | Visit Website

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Space is weird because people are weird. A lot of my work deals with strange inner worlds, emotions, humor, isolation, and trying to make sense of things that probably can’t fully be understood. I tend to approach surrealism as a mix of psychological landscapes and visual experimentation, where figures, symbols, and environments feel familiar but slightly off. The theme made sense to me because outer space feels a lot like the human experience. Vast, confusing, beautiful, lonely, absurd, and occasionally inspiring.

Photo Courtesy of Miko Hoenscheidt

Miko Hoenscheidt | Artwork Title: Explore yourself

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I love painting consciousness astronauts and strange and wonderful cosmic characters and concepts i feel like my style fits the bill so well.

Photo Courtesy of Kathleen Donovan

Kathleen Donovan | Artwork Title: There, But Not | Visit Website

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“There, But Not”: Space is often defined by what fills it; here I explore it through what is missing. The shadow of a woman seated becomes an image of what might be lost and what remains. The half-lit chair stands as a silent keeper of memory, a juxtaposition between the physical and the ethereal. I want the viewer to look beyond the visible to the unseen. It is a study of space as a feeling—the quiet realization that what is gone still lingers, forming our ongoing memories.

Photo Courtesy of Iuliia Susloparova

Iuliia Susloparova | Artwork Title: Cosmic craving

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An astronaut holds a burger at the edge of the universe.
There is nothing strange about it — that is the point.
In a space where transformation is expected, the most ordinary desire persists. As we travel into space, we explore the unknown, yet remain the same.
And any vision can become hyperreal.
“Space Is Weird, So Are We” is not about the cosmos, but about a human carrying their habits into infinity.

Photo Courtesy of Elizabeth Bibza

Elizabeth Bibza | Artwork Title: Beware the Mighty Tardigrade

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In a world within our own, the weirdest of spaces exist within our reach yet just out of sight. The universe of microscopic beings is as bizarre as any galaxy far away. These life forms carry on in their own world oblivious to the giants around them. Superstars of this arena, The Mighty Tardigrades are the first known animals to survive in the vacuum of space and can survive extreme temperatures and radiation making them some of the toughest beings known to man. Despite their awesome capabilities, these guys are surprisingly chill.

Photo Courtesy of Reine Concepcion

Reine Concepcion | Artwork Title: Schmiggy to the Moon

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My collection of works comes from a space of dreaminess and nostalgia. Not only do these feelings indicate a longing for a place that is not reality, they also send a rush of gratitude into the place that IS reality. For this work, I showcase myself on the moon, miles away from my home on Earth. I am featured with a TV playing The Notebook movie, as well as an adaptation of a character who represents a lonely romantic. Being on the moon, I create a disconnect from others like myself and I long for a human connection. The alien-like creatures blend take on some of my facial features, acting as a reflection of how I see myself and relate to an alien-like being, as well as the lonely romantic aspect of it. I gaze longingly behind, as though I am searching for a connection. This piece is an interpretation on this exhibition’s theme, as well as a portrayal of my relationship with others around me, and the metaphorical space that I feel between others during lonely times of my life.

Photo Courtesy of Tylee Kareck

Tylee Kareck | Artwork Title: the setup to photograph this one was diabolical | Visit Website

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The selected works depict different possible unusual places across space and time. The darker seascape depicts the intrigue of unexpected architecture and technology, which simultaneously clash against the natural environment and bring life to it. The sunset scene illustrates the beauty of both geometric and organic patterns in reimagined landscapes. While seascapes are familiar Earth environments, the unnatural elements in both pieces remind the audience that Earth, too, is part of the weirdness of space.

Photo Courtesy of Angela Nguyen-Dinh

Angela Nguyen-Dinh | Artwork Title: Solar Flare | Visit Website

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After Decades of Waiting, Animals Launch the Aerospace Interspecies Alliance (AIA) to Save Earthly Life After decades of waiting, the animals lost all hope that humankind would cease destroying the planet. An all-animal task force was formed, Aerospace Interspecies Alliance or AIA. Their only mission was to find a suitable new home for all earthly life forms. Through cooperation and instinct, the animals repaired aged space equipment and assembled enough pieces to launch into the unknown. In a stunning evolutionary leap, some species adapted so quickly that breathing equipment was no longer required to survive in a vacuum. Meanwhile, most Earth’s animals remain behind, clinging to the slim chance of AIA’s success. The Aerospace Interspecies Alliance is a cooperative, cross-species initiative formed in response to planetary collapse. AIA does not promise salvation. It promises the refusal to quietly disappear.

Photo Courtesy of Kathleen Kralowec

Kathleen Kralowec | Artwork Title: Princess Moxie and the Scientist | Visit Website

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After Decades of Waiting, Animals Launch the Aerospace Interspecies Alliance (AIA) to Save Earthly Life

After decades of waiting, the animals lost all hope that humankind would cease destroying the planet. An all-animal task force was formed, Aerospace Interspecies Alliance or AIA. Their only mission was to find a suitable new home for all earthly life forms. Through cooperation and instinct, the animals repaired aged space equipment and assembled enough pieces to launch into the unknown. In a stunning evolutionary leap, some species adapted so quickly that breathing equipment was no longer required to survive in a vacuum. Meanwhile, most Earth’s animals remain behind, clinging to the slim chance of AIA’s success.

The Aerospace Interspecies Alliance is a cooperative, cross-species initiative formed in response to planetary collapse. AIA does not promise salvation. It promises the refusal to quietly disappear.

Photo Courtesy of Deyby Garcia

Deyby Garcia | Artwork Title: Space Is Strange

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This piece explores space as both vast and deeply personal. An astronaut flots beside a familiar object- a cup of coffee- suggesting that even in the unknown, we carry pieces of everyday life with us. The exaggerated scale of creates a quiet sense of disorientation, where the ordinary becomes monumental and the human figure feels small and reflective. The steam from the cup blends into the surrounding cosmos, blurring the line between intimate and infinite. The eye-like planet introduces a subtle tension hinting that space is not empty, but aware in ways we don’t fully understand. Through this work, I am to capture stillness, strangeness, and quiet wonder of space.

Photo Courtesy of Derrick Burton

Derrick Burton | Artwork Title: Divine Negligence / Evening Diligence | Visit Website

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Divine Negligence/Evening Diligence imagines a dark future where 3 god-like beings inhabit the space between the Earth and the Moon. They diligently watch the moon while neglecting humanity and the Earth. The work literally has space as a representation of mans’ solitary existence, devoid from outside intervention or inclusion. No one is coming to save us. We must save ourselves.

Photo Courtesy of Jasper Perkins

Jasper Perkins | Artwork Title: Star Mother | Visit Website

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This gouache painting (“Star Mother”) is a personification of the universe as a loving force which wraps its galaxies around you to connect you and your grief to the rest of the Universe and remind you you’re not alone in these feelings.

Photo Courtesy of Kenneth Hochberg

Kenneth Hochberg | Artwork Title: Testing Gravity

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I look through my telescope almost every night, pondering the beauty and immensity of
Space. This inspired me to do a series of drawings of what I see and also some drawings illustrating the physics that make it all possible.

Photo Courtesy of Patrick Shields

Patrick Shields | Artwork Title: Entrance | Visit Website

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Patrick Shields is a California based artist that has been painting in the Entertainment Industry for the past 35 years. His personal art reflects a desire to be free of constraints and the notion of FREEDOM is a recurring theme in his work, which has been shown in numerous galleries and Public Art awards throughout California. He primarily paints in oils on canvas or boards and creates whatever he feels like without regard for protocol or style. His work reflects an admiration for artists that defy convention while still paying homage to the craft of fine art painting. The quest for FREEDOM allows for improvisation in his work even though it appears to be meticulously crafted. Most of his paintings are a calculated rendering of a deep and abiding inner vision, but some are a spin of the wheel, and the thrill of discovering these is a constant joy. And the future is truly wide open.

Photo Courtesy of Robert Bean

Robert Bean | Artwork Title: Stranger in a Strange Land | Visit Website

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“Stranger in a Strange Land” is a painting that evokes alienation and separation. The figure is in a spacesuit in what appears to be a swampy environment. Is the figure so alienated from his environment that it no longer sustains him or is this a strangely familiar alien land?

Photo Courtesy of Tania Torres

Tania Torres | Artwork Title: Childlike Wonder | Visit Website

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My work responds to the exhibition’s theme both conceptually and emotionally, rooted in transformation through adversity. I create from lived experience, turning criticism, pain, and pressure into something intentional and expressive. Influenced by classical techniques and surrealism, I build layers that reflect both control and chaos, reality and distortion.

This piece is not just a visual response, but a personal one. It explores the tension between who we are shaped to be and who we choose to become. Through composition, color, and form, I aim to capture a moment of becoming where struggle is no longer hidden, but instead integrated into something powerful and self defined.

My work does not separate beauty from discomfort. It brings them together, reflecting the idea that growth is not clean or linear, but layered, complex, and ultimately transformative.

Photo Courtesy of Yuqing Wu

Yuqing Wu | Artwork Title: New World, Old Habits | Visit Website

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My work responds to the exhibition’s theme by examining how human behavior persists across time and place. In New World, Old Habits, I imagine a speculative future where humanity encounters a new planet, only to repeat the same systems of colonization, control, and exploitation. Rather than presenting progress as transformation, the work suggests that expansion often reproduces existing hierarchies in new environments.

Through this conceptual framing, I explore the idea that the desire for power and ownership is not limited to history, but embedded within human systems. By displacing colonial narratives into an unfamiliar setting, the work invites viewers to reconsider the present, questioning whether new spaces can ever escape old patterns, or if “new worlds” inevitably carry the same habits forward.

Photo Courtesy of David Willson

David Willson | Artwork Title: Metamorphosis | Visit Website

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I am a career illustrator and my work has often ventured into space, from science fiction book covers to renderings of future technology for commercial clients. After all, our venturing into space has been a defining characteristic of the last 80 years. Also, what we’ve learned from physics tells us the Universe is interactive and we are made of star stuff. And the creative process often confounds me with a mystery of possible quantum interconnection. Where did that inspiration come from, in a random moment of thought? How did that strange new aspect manifest itself on my canvas, while I was busily preoccupied with technique –– only to provide entirely new meaning beyond my original intent? Weird indeed.

Photo Courtesy of Teresa Anne Volgenau

Teresa Anne Volgenau | Artwork Title: Boundless | Visit Website

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Astronaut of the Self. My work explores the surreal parallel between the vastness of the cosmos and the infinite depth of the human psyche. I respond to this theme conceptually, bridging the literal and the metaphorical: the “weirdness” of the external universe is mirrored in the mysterious landscape of our own consciousness.
Through “Clarity Within” and “Boundless,” I explore the “weirdness” of the infinite—where space exploration meets meditative stillness. These pieces map an Inner/Outer Space Journey, suggesting that the curiosity required to chart the stars is the same wonder needed to navigate our own hearts.
My art is a testament to curiosity and resilience, and is an invitation to personal ascension. It is a call to become an “Astronaut of the Self,” to seize joy, seek truth, and to leap into the limitless possibilities found within the beautiful “weirdness” of being alive.

Photo Courtesy of Veronica Winters

veronica winters | Artwork Title: A lifetime of goodbyes | Visit Website

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Through figurative oil paintings and colored pencil art, I invite viewers into a mystical realm. Using color, form, and symbolism, I explore the profound interconnectedness of all living things in the universe. My visionary art is an attempt to capture the ethereal beauty, radiant light, and magical power of the Divine, bringing it into our earthly reality as a counterforce to darkness. As a reflection of the Creator, I create the sincere beauty in our lives, envisioning a world reborn as a vibrant, light-filled, and heart-centered world.

Photo Courtesy of Paul Woggy

Paul Woggy | Artwork Title: The Explorers: Beyond the Dream | Visit Website

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I create art in narrative whimsical surrealism, blending realistic technique, imaginative characters and atmospheric, nature‑infused worlds. My work serves as modern visual fairytales that blend humor, serenity and nostalgia, and explores themes of honoring the natural world, nurturing the inner world, and recognizing the inner truth in everyone’s story. The characters, environments, and emotional narrative evolve together, allowing the final scene to feel dreamlike while still echoing lived experience. I work in acrylic, pastel, and photography; yet each piece belongs in this same universe. My work is grounded in the belief that we are more whole by embracing nature, imagination, and empathy. When combined, those elements transform into lighthearted whimsy; the message is accessible without being judgmental or negative. I invite viewers into a world shaped by imagination and memory, a space for each person to discover their own reality in a world where everyone belongs.

Photo Courtesy of Cliff Powell

Cliff Powell | Artwork Title: Voyage of the Infinite | Visit Website

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My paintings sit at the crossroads of contemporary surrealism and fantasy, drawing from nostalgia, retro-futurism, and philosophy to create imagery layered with meaning and symbolism.

In my Celestial Reveries series, the dark matter of space reflects the vastness of the mind, memory, and imagination. The cosmos becomes a field of ideas, each star like a spark, a light bulb, a eureka moment waiting for illumination.

The cosmos is a journey where possibilities are limitless, and my paintings explore it as a psychological and symbolic territory, not just a physical expanse. They invite viewers to embrace the idea that what feels most alien is often deeply human.

My art is for the daydreamers, the ones who find the absurd in the ordinary and use fantasy to understand something deeper.

Photo Courtesy of Michael Knapp

Michael Knapp | Artwork Title: Dont fence me in | Visit Website

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When we finally colonize the moon, will we do so as a united earth, or will we take all our fences with us? Cultural fences? Physical fence?, Racial fences? What a different world it would be without taking our current fences along.

Photo Courtesy of Eduardo Del Rio

Eduardo Del Rio | Artwork Title: The Celestial Archive | Visit Website

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Eduardo del Rio aka ‘PencilProne’ is a Spain-born graphic artist who has shown in galleries in San Francisco and Oakland, published illustrations, and was featured in the SF De Young Museum. Eduardo’s work explores the interconnections of our reality and transcendence of our human experience through playful representations of everything around us. He seeks to understand the frailty of the human existence and how we are all amalgamations of everything we experience.

Photo Courtesy of Carrie Hanna

Carrie Hanna | Artwork Title: Ancestor’s Dream | Visit Website

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Ancestor’s Dream reflects the strange, tender experience of carrying unseen histories. Space becomes an intimate, cosmic meeting place where memory, inheritance, and imagination converge. The universe remains largely unknown: full of wonder, discovery, and possibility. Though our bodies fade, our atoms endure, returning to the earth. We are, quite literally, made of stardust. This work invites reflection on how both our past and present shape the promises of what is still to come.