Satelites

0→223

pencil on paper
30 x 21 cm

The metal stars

The night sky has changed. It seems not only have we reached the stars but have also created them. The pieces of man-made objects surround the core of our planet.  

I try to picture the metal forms that fly over my head, to put the abstract information into a representative form. The visual information I find on the debris is minor. With satellite trackers, only larger objects, such as old satellites and mostly rocket bodies, are being tracked. As a first step in this project, I try to track what I can. 

In each of the drawings, I show a piece of a star chart and the objects that are to be found in the sky. Both active satellites and the debris are shown, some above, some on a very small portion of the sky I see through my windows. I use satellite trackers to record the positions and codes of debris and satellites. Afterwards, I fill in the information by looking at photographs and plans of old satellites or, on some occasions, I speculate on the shape of the rocket bodies based on the amount of information I find on the stages of rocket flight of each rocket.

→ Publication :  

Le temps s’enfuit sans disparaître’’ La Filature, Scène nationale de Mulhouse, 2023