MYTHS OF THE NEAR FUTURE
MYTHS OF THE NEAR FUTURE
When the last Space Shuttle took off from Kennedy Space Center in 2011 a population and generation defined by the dreams of the Space Age lost the most potent symbol of its identity. This project looks at the landscape of the “Space Coast” of Florida in wake of the closing of the shuttle program and on the many contradictions the program and its demise engendered.
In his collection of short stories, Memories of the Space Age, novelist JG Ballard describes a near future in which the infrastructure of the US Space Program has been abandoned, its gantries left to decay into the Florida swamp while inanimate astronauts circle the earth in an endless orbit. While the reality is not quite as dystopic as he suggests, the slow decline of the space program and its effects on the local economy and landscape have made many of Ballard’s descriptions eerily prescient.
Ballard’s recurring motifs – derelict motels, overgrown jungles and dead satellites tumbling through the darkness of space, occupy that ambiguous realm between dream and reality, between past and future, and between nature and technology. These photographs explore those in between states, depicting a nostalgia for the future as the promise of the Space Age slowly fades away.
Myths of the Near Future includes a text from Margaret Lazarus Dean author of The Time It Takes to Fall and leaving Orbit: Noted from the Last Days of American Spaceflight
Date: October 2019
Size: 7″ x 9″,
Pages: 96
Binding: Perfect Bound
Edition Size 300
ISBN : 978-1-944005-32-0
Design by: Perrin Studio