StarTalk Radio - A Universe of Inspiration (Repeat)

Episode Date: March 14, 2015

Explore how science has inspired art through the ages, from Leonardo da Vinci to computer games, when Neil deGrasse Tyson interviews artist Peter Max. With co-host Lynne Koplitz and guest Bill Nye. Su...bscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide. StarTalk begins right now. Today we're going to talk about the universe as it inspires the creativity of artists. Artists throughout time and artists of all kinds. Not only painters but sculptors and the like. That's very interesting. I've liked it because I've, you know, scientists, we hang out together and sometimes we're not appreciated as much as we would like to be for whatever reasons.
Starting point is 00:00:42 And occasionally we see some of our handiwork reflected in the creativity of artists themselves. And we say to ourselves, maybe we're becoming mainstream. Maybe we're creative and we're not nerds. No, well, no. Let's take credit for that. Okay, I'll take credit for it too.
Starting point is 00:01:00 So actually I saw enough of this happen. So a few years ago I wrote an essay for Natural History Magazine called The Universe as the Artist's Muse. Dude, do you have a family? Do you ever not? You're always writing. You're like, I wrote a book about that. Well, because I got to know what I do.
Starting point is 00:01:14 That inspired the symphony I wrote. You're great, Neil. I'm happy that I get off the couch, but that's great. So, no, it was an essay because I was impressed by how often I was being called by artists to get the latest image from the Hubble telescope, or they wanted to find out the latest understanding of the Big Bang or black holes or Mars so that they can paint a scene, something inspired by it. I mean, even as a comic, you know, artists tend to look at where people, all artists,
Starting point is 00:01:42 whether it's writer, comedian, or visual artist, we tend to look at the whole world. We look at everything, over, under, in, out. I just don't think science was in that portfolio until recently. Well, science is part of the world. It is definitely part of the world. In fact, it shapes the world. And so I think science has come a long way in terms of being felt by the general public.
Starting point is 00:02:05 And so let's see what Bill Nye has to say. Oh, Bill Nye. Bill, he's my boy, Bill. You know, Bill, he's got to set the tone. He's a shaky little manic man we love. Bill, give it to me. Hey, Bill Nye, the science guy here. When you think of a planet in your mind's eye, what do you see?
Starting point is 00:02:23 Many of us see Saturn, but no one could envision such a thing until astronomers, starting with Galileo, drew sketches of this and other worlds. I've seen Saturn rings, Saturn brooches, Saturn ladies' pumps, dress shoes with jeweled Saturns instead of bows. How sexy is that? With images of distant stellar clouds and our so-called nearby worlds, we can make planetary art from photographs. With images of distant stellar clouds and our so-called nearby worlds, we can make planetary art from photographs.
Starting point is 00:02:52 If you've never taken a bit of time with the Voyager spacecraft's pale blue dot, well, you must. And thanks to a spacecraft named after another astronomer, Cassini, you can see our world through the thin rings of another. You can see the Earth beyond the rings of Saturn, backlit by the sun. It's a photo. It's astronomy. But for me, it's inspirational. It's art. This is Bill Nye hoping that after we're done star talking, you do a bit of star looking
Starting point is 00:03:13 at the works inspired by distant worlds and heavenly wonders. Good. That was very deep, Bill Nye. Bill, it's deep in one minute. That's a Bill Nye minute for you. Inspirational. Yes, yes. And, you know, when you think of the first of the artists to be fully scientifically inspired. I was just going to say, who are we going to talk about first?
Starting point is 00:03:31 It's got to be Leonardo, Leonardo da Vinci. There's nobody like him before or since. I mean, here's a guy who was on top of science. He was all over engineering. He was in architecture. And, oh, by the the way he painted on the side you know this guy and he used to do experiments in physics physics experiments the word physics didn't quite have it was defined back then but he would do experiments in motion and weights and
Starting point is 00:03:57 and wait now he did this for his art well i i don't know if it's for his art but he did it in a way that then influenced his art i don't know if that's for his art, but he did it in a way that then influenced his art. I don't know if that was the point of why he did these experiments. He was a smart, curious guy. You're smart and curious. You play with stuff. So he was one of those guys that activated both sides of his brain? Yes, completely.
Starting point is 00:04:16 If you did like one of these scans on his brain, it would be firing in every cubic inch that was in there. Great guy to date. What's the matter? Nothing. I think he sounds great. Great guy to date. What's the matter? Nothing. I think he sounds great. I'm just saying, some of these guys in history, I go, oh, he'd be like Galileo, great boyfriend. Da Vinci, not so much. Well, he's okay.
Starting point is 00:04:33 Well, because he'd be too distracted by his own thoughts rather than by you. Completely. And I like someone who's, yeah, like who's manipulated easily, not someone like that. That would not happen with Leonardo, for sure. No, but tell me more about him. Yeah. So first, he's considered one of those brilliant people who ever lived. And you look at his writings, all the subjects that he touched, geology, physics, biology.
Starting point is 00:04:53 And on the side, he was a painter, right? And so one of my favorite parts. Oh, by the way, you know about his, he drew a model for a helicopter. It turns out it wouldn't work if you actually built it. But he's thinking about flying. He's thinking about flying and not just saying, gee, wouldn't it be great if I had wings and I flew like a bird? He's actually trying to draw a machine that could make that happen. Oh, so he was one of the first people who started with machinery.
Starting point is 00:05:19 Yes, yes. To bring machinery to the task of ideas rather than just imagining that you had wax wings like Icarus trying to fly to the sun. He says, look, dude, you need some machines to do this. And that's more like who I would date. So you've got this. And with Leonardo, he embraced all knowledge. And with all of that knowledge, it infused into his artistic expression.
Starting point is 00:05:42 How did it infuse in his art? What did it do? Well, okay. Did you know that he... Probably not, but go on. Okay. So he basically pioneered... Well, he didn't invent perspective.
Starting point is 00:05:57 That's something that's been around since ancient Greece, but it got lost. It got lost until the Renaissance. And Renaissance is French for rebirth. And so it's the rebirth... And Leonardo was in the Renaissance? Yes, he was. Yes, he was.
Starting point is 00:06:07 I'm going to show my ignorance. Okay, so until then, let's go back a minute. So let's go back to like the Greeks and Egyptians and all these kind of people. Like first, okay, Egyptians, when they did hieroglyphics, they were flat. Yeah, all those dudes were flat. Right, right. You look at them, they're like, they're all flat. And you never see like a three-quarter face of an Egyptian, right? They're always like side on. Yeah, you didn't see them walking into the distance. Right, right, right. You look at them, they're all flat. And you never see like a three-quarter face of an Egyptian, right?
Starting point is 00:06:25 They're always like side on. Yeah, you didn't see them walking into the distance. Right, right, right. None of that. They're flat. And there were arrows pointing like, then they went that way, then they went that way. So they were flat. Right.
Starting point is 00:06:35 And it's the absence of perspective that does that. Then who? The Greeks? Did they have perspective? Yeah. Well, so perspective comes in, but it doesn't really take off, right? It's there. It's discovered.
Starting point is 00:06:47 They know about it. And it's used in the architecture, right? It's there, but you don't see paintings that make full use of this until the Renaissance. And so my point is that the physical principles of light and optics and ray tracing and in the case of da Vinci, he studied the laws of physics. They were not known as laws of physics back then, but he wanted to know how things balanced and how things would look if they were imbalanced. Because if you draw something that your eye and brain told you doesn't quite look right, it's not as convincing to you. So he wanted to make sure he understood how things worked. I took art in college. My mother is an artist. And as a kid, I remember one of the things she always used to make me do, and they make
Starting point is 00:07:27 you do this in art class in school or in college, they make you look at what you thought you saw and what you really saw. And that's what it sounds like you're saying. Because sometimes what you think you see is not exactly what's there. Because your brain is messing with what it is you thought you saw. And he's trying to get the basic data there so he gets it right. My mom makes me squint. When you squint, you see what it really is.
Starting point is 00:07:49 You know who we have for this week's Star Talk? I spent some time with Peter Max. Oh, that's a big dude. Do you know Peter Max? Do you remember Peter Max? Of course. And he's still around. He's a big pop artist.
Starting point is 00:07:59 Pop artist. And did you know he's deeply inspired by cosmic themes? I wouldn't be surprised by that. Yeah. Yeah. Let's check out what Peter Max had to say. Peter, I understand the universe inspires you. Is that a recent phenomenon or does it go far back?
Starting point is 00:08:13 It started when I was about 10, 7 years old living in China. And I was near Tibet. And I met an older man who stopped talking to me, do you know about the stars and the planets? And I had no clue, and every day he would talk about it. And by the time I think five, six, or ten days went by, that's all I would think about and what I would go to sleep dreaming about it, thinking about it.
Starting point is 00:08:37 So it took only a week for it to just infiltrate your mind and body. Yeah, to jumpstart that. And believe it or not, it just grew and grew and grew. There's not a single day in my life where I'm not preoccupied with things about planets, stars, the universe. What is this whole thing?
Starting point is 00:08:53 There's not a day that goes by where I don't think about it. I wake up in the morning and it's amazing. Like some cosmic alarm clock opens my eyes and I think about the universe. I don't think the bed I'm sleeping in,
Starting point is 00:09:06 I don't care what day it is, I don't care what it is I have to do today. The first thing is the universe, the cosmos. Then I got to calm this down and then I look at my sheet what I got to do today. But the first thing is the universe. So you've got it bad. I got it bad. You got it so bad it's good. Yeah, it's unbelievable. That's why when I'm with you, see you got it so bad it's good yeah it's it's unbelievable that's why when i'm with you see you on tv talk to you even hear your name forgive me but i get so inspired by that he's so nice to me forgive me he says that's that's so beautiful you're his muse he didn't have to say that but that was so nice so peter max if you remember peter max he wrote all those love posters from the 60s and and yeah and and it's
Starting point is 00:09:45 like he was the artist of a generation oh my gosh you still see all the t-shirts that have the p sign and the hearts and the hearts the big hearts that he did and um i wanted to say what what he said i thought was so sweet about waking up and how the universe inspires him like he doesn't think about his bed that's what i'm saying like artists are so neat because they think in such a bigger a bigger. A bigger canvas. Yes. And the universe I think is inspirational because it's infinite.
Starting point is 00:10:09 I wonder. It's not. I wonder if any listeners, if anything about science or space inspires them, either artistically or otherwise. Because I know it inspires me and I'm a scientist. It inspires Peter Max. It inspires me. And then he's an artist.
Starting point is 00:10:21 And Lynn. And I'm, you know, something like an artist. And you know, with Da Vinci. So call us. Wait, call us. Oh, yeah, sure. I got to give you the number. At 877-5-STARTALK.
Starting point is 00:10:30 Tell us what inspires you from art. I mean, from science. Yeah, yeah. Let us know. Because there are many people who are inspired, who are creating art, who are making a difference in this world. And I'm charmed by that. Because, like I said, to see artists get mainstreamed in that way. If it becomes the subject of art, to see science get mainstreamed in that way, when science becomes the subject of artists, I think science has arrived in the culture in the ways that no one had ever imagined for it.
Starting point is 00:10:56 You're just excited about scientists being cool. Do you know what Leonardo did to try to become a better artist? What did he do, Neely? He's drawing people, and so he dug up cadavers. Really? Dug them up, peeled them open to see. Oh, gross. It's gross, but if you're committed to your art, you'll do whatever it takes.
Starting point is 00:11:17 What did he do? He peeled them open. See, this is, again, we give. They're dead. What do they care? They're dead. Who's going to know? Jeffrey Dahmer did the same thing, and he didn't get credit for being, he said the same thing.
Starting point is 00:11:27 He killed them first. That's different. He learned how to kill them first. They're already dead. Oh, he just dug them up. That's fine. Dug them up. Who's going to know?
Starting point is 00:11:33 He dug them up, peeled back the skin. That's weird. Looked at how the muscles came together, how they formed. He wanted to know what was going on beneath the skin of his subjects. Well, doesn't he have an exhibit now that bodies his body? Yes, which I haven't seen yet, but I've read about it. You got downright giddy. No, because I want to go.
Starting point is 00:11:47 I want to take my kids to see it so they can see. Ew. They're creeped out. My kids are eight and 12, and they don't want to go. You should not see that right now, Neil. They're completely creeped by it,
Starting point is 00:11:55 but I'm going to drag them kicking and screaming so they can see what bodies are. Are you really? It's human physiology. And if you create little serial killers, I know you'll be surprised. And so that's maybe the modern version.
Starting point is 00:12:06 Take them to Madame Tussauds Wax Museum where all the normal kids belong right now. So here's what's interesting. If we had the bodies exhibit, which is in a lot of the big cities across the country right now, where they have people formally alive shown without their skin, and you can see how the muscles and all the rest of the body parts come together in different poses and shapes and forms. Really? So it's really like a serial killer Disneyland? I guess so.
Starting point is 00:12:32 Well, no, a creepy, demented serial killer Disneyland. Yes, because serial killers just kill people. You've got to be demented enough to peel their skin back and see what the muscles are doing. But I do understand why Leonardo would have done that. If Bodies exhibit existed back then, he wouldn't have to dig up cadavers. That's my point. And I just saw a thing on National Geographic, because you know all my knowledge of everything is from you or television.
Starting point is 00:12:52 Okay. I just saw a thing on National Geographic where they had found these pterodactyls. Okay. And they did that very thing. And they had found just the fossil, just the skeleton. And they took it and they put the skeleton through a CAT scan. All right, all right, to see what was inside.
Starting point is 00:13:08 Which I thought was really weird, but there was nothing inside, of course, because it was a skeleton. Right. But they drew artistic pictures, and then they could figure out what would have gone in there by what was missing. There you go. Isn't that kind of cool? You don't have a pterodactyl cadaver, a literal cadaver, so you do the next best thing you
Starting point is 00:13:24 can. What's missing, that's how you figure it out. And you know these bodies that are in the exhibit, they're preserved. There are different ways you can preserve human flesh. And one of them is you sort of dip it in acetone that gets rid of sort of the moisture and the water. So you know!
Starting point is 00:13:37 And then they have to sort of keep it shape. So they infuse it with silicone, which then hardens the tissue so that then it can stay on display. Like Pamela Anderson. She's a liar. I don't know what fraction of her body weight is silicone. I don't know
Starting point is 00:13:54 about that. Lisa Rina, Pamela Anderson. So they would not need to be prepped if they were donated their body to this exhibit. Is that what you're saying? Because they, you know, they're pre-made for the exhibit. Oh, yeah. I'm saying they're going to last for a long time.
Starting point is 00:14:08 They'll be around with roaches and cheese woes. And Twinkies, don't forget. You're listening to StarTalk Radio. I'm your host, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson. My day job is as director of the Hayden Planetarium in New York City. We are live in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., and I'm here with Lynn, Lynn Koplitz. Give us a call if you have something about space that inspires you. Science, or
Starting point is 00:14:29 space or science in general. If you're an artist in particular, or if you're just somebody on the street. Or a writer, or a poet. Right, exactly. Tell us how creatively it is. I want to hear what it is that might influence you, because we'll hear more from Peter Max, learning about how science infused his creativity.
Starting point is 00:14:48 Our toll-free number is 1-877-5-STARTALK. And we're live-streamed on the web on startalkradio.net. Let's take a break. We'll be right back. And you've been gone for a couple of weeks. I'm so happy to have you back. I'm happy to be back. Neil, now, before we move on,
Starting point is 00:15:02 I want to go back to Leonardo da Vinci for a minute. Yeah. We were talking about bodies and the bodies exhibit. Because he dug up bodies to get the artistic form of what he drew. And then on the break, we were talking about the bodies exhibit now. Yeah, during the break, yeah. And then you told me a little something that I didn't know, which was that those were prisoners, Like Chinese prisoners? We're told that the bodies on display in the bodies exhibition, which is shown in many cities now, were not necessarily people who donated their bodies to this cause.
Starting point is 00:15:31 That they were the bodies of prisoners. Oh, that's much better then. I like that better. So it became a little controversial because the prisoner might not have had a choice in the matter. Who cares? He was a prisoner. I'm just saying. I'm just not voting for sides here. I'm just saying that it may be as controversial as it was in Leonardo's day when he's digging up cadavers. Now, was it controversial when he was digging them up? Yes, he was. You dig up a body and the body is a sacred burial grounds in a church yard or wherever people were.
Starting point is 00:15:57 Of course. But people didn't, people didn't, did they know he was doing that? I don't think he did it in the dark of night. He did it late at night, right, with an assistant who made nothing, probably. And, you know, one of the most famous illustrations from Leonardo's era is the Vitruvian Man. Have you ever seen this? Is that the one with the man in the circle and the square? Exactly, exactly.
Starting point is 00:16:16 He's hot. What? I mean, seriously. I never thought of it that way. It's just like a little homunculus inside of a circle. I just like from back then, everything's got a Jesus, Vitruvian Man. That's true, seriously. I never thought of it that way. It's just like a little homunculus inside of a circle. I just like from back then, everything's got abs. Jesus, Vitruvian Man. That's true, yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:28 Well, because he's drawn by people who like muscles. And I've never been to Pittsburgh. Have you ever seen that? There's no abs in Pittsburgh. No abs in Pittsburgh. You just performed there a few weeks ago. Yeah, the great sports teams, but no abs. The sports players have the abs, not the viewers.
Starting point is 00:16:41 Yes, exactly. So that's going to be on their next like the tourist motto visit pickford no abs don't worry about your abs come to pittsburgh so talk to me about so here's here's where you get into trouble because if you if you have an aesthetic no okay but if you want to believe that somehow the human form is some epitome of aesthetics this is what went into the vitruvian man. And so you all remember this image. It's this man with his arms outstretched and his legs slightly parted, and it's a perfect circle drawn around him, and the arms are just touching the edge of the circle, and
Starting point is 00:17:15 his feet are at the bottom of the circle. So you're saying this isn't just art. This was to prove something. It's to prove that the human form had some aesthetic beauty to it, because the circle was a thing of beauty. And in the center of that circle, you know what was there? His wavy? No, his belly button.
Starting point is 00:17:29 Okay. So what we learned was that some people don't have those proportions. It was assumed that your distance from fingertip to fingertip equaled your height. And then that was considered the ideal form. And then you actually measure people. And some people's hands are shorter, some are longer. Mine are actually especially long. Some people have a high ape index.
Starting point is 00:17:53 It's what's been joked about. If your arms are really long compared to your body height, my arms are a foot longer than my height. So I can touch your nose sitting right where I am right now. How do you know that? Well, because you know. So the point is in that circle. No, no, you don't know.
Starting point is 00:18:06 Did you measure them? Measure my arm, the distance from fingertip to fingertip? Yeah. You're hilarious. Yeah. It's 84 inches. And so that's, so I'm just telling you that that's, it's not, not everybody. I'm not alone in those who don't fit the circle.
Starting point is 00:18:19 But people are bigger now, right? They were smaller then. Yeah, but if it's in proportion, it's just a bigger circle. Everything would be in proportion. So that didn't really turn out the way then. Yeah, but if it's in proportion, it's just a bigger circle. Everything would be in proportion. So that didn't really turn out the way anyone had hoped. But it remains an iconic vision. It remains an iconic vision of what humans would have looked like.
Starting point is 00:18:35 And then there's this thing with the golden ratio. You remember that? Many people have heard of it but don't quite remember it. It has a mathematical form. I'll tell you what it is mathematically, but it's more interesting artistically. Oh, really? Oh, really? Mathematics is not more interesting than art. That's a new idea.
Starting point is 00:18:49 All right. So if you take a line segment, and you could split it exactly in half if you wanted, right? And then it'd be half and half. But if you don't split it in half and make one segment a little longer than the other, okay, you want to cut it into two pieces where A plus B divided by B. I fell asleep for a minute. Tell me more. A plus B divided by B is in the same ratio as A to B, as B is to A.
Starting point is 00:19:15 Now, that's what it is arithmetically. Okay? So now you can write that out as an equation. It's 1 plus the square root of 5 divided by 2 to 1. Neil, I'm so sorry. I don't want to be disrespectful, but I'm going to shoot myself in the face if you keep talking. What does this mean? I'm just saying, so if you do the math, you get a ratio of one to about 1.6. In other words, back then, if you designed form, you would design it so that the base was 1.6 units long and the height was one unit high.
Starting point is 00:19:47 And that would feel aesthetically pleasing to you. And that was called the golden ratio. Oh, now that's very interesting. You know what they've done lately? Can they do that with your face too? Exactly. They're measuring people's faces, the width of the face and the height of the face and the nose to the eyes to the mouth.
Starting point is 00:19:59 And the claim is those people where those measurements capture the golden ratio are considered more beautiful than other people. I was going to say that's very creepy because that's like that movie Gattaca that's saying that those people are more perfect. Wow, so this is the one where they genetically choose your offspring. So you choose one that has more golden ratios and then more people will think you're attractive. But that's not fair either because in different cultures, in different places, the ratios are going to be different, right? in different cultures, in different places, the ratios are going to be different, right?
Starting point is 00:20:26 Like, if you go to Africa, facial features are going to be different than facial features maybe in certain parts of America or Eastern. They claim they've done it for people all around the world and everyone focuses back on this golden ratio. I have my, I'm suspicious of it, but I'm just reporting what they've said. And it's fascinating that there might be some genetic.
Starting point is 00:20:44 It sounds a little Aryan to me. I don't like it. that there might be some genetic... It sounds a little Aryan to me. I don't like it. That there might be some genetic propensity for that. I don't like it. And do you know about the... Not only that, in Da Vinci's most famous painting is what? Do you know what his most famous painting is? Oh, don't do this to me.
Starting point is 00:20:59 You make me feel stupid, Mona Lisa. The Mona Lisa, of course. I have it in my room. She looks like a dude. You have a copy of the Mona Lisa. Let's get that straight. Yeah, well, not the real one. I mean, I live in a three-floor wall cup that smells like trash and says, wash me on the Sharpie
Starting point is 00:21:12 marker on the wall. I don't think the real Mona Lisa's in my apartment. So, what, she looks masculine to you? Yeah, she looks like a dude. Well, you know what they found? They were able to study the painting. You can expose it to a certain wavelength of light that penetrates the top surface of paint, and you can see a whole other illustration below it. And it's rumored that that was a self-portrait of Leonardo himself
Starting point is 00:21:32 that was the first attempt at whatever he was doing on that canvas. Oh, and then he painted his inner Mona Lisa? Oh, well, I don't know. Is that why you think she looks like a dude? I didn't know that until you just said it. But, yeah, she does look like it. I look at her every morning. She's right in front of my bed, and she looks like a dude? I didn't know that until you just said it. But yeah, she does look like it. I look at her every morning. She's right in front of my bed, and she looks like a dude.
Starting point is 00:21:49 Yeah, well, okay. A sweet dude. So this is Leonardo in drag is what you're saying. Yeah, I'm just saying it looks a little bit like there was a review back then. But yeah, because she's got kind of a thick forehead, and she's kind of crossed out a little bit. I've got to look again. I've got to look again. I've got to look again to check that out. She's a little Eliza Minnelli-ish.
Starting point is 00:22:09 Put her in a review? Is that in Vegas? That's interesting. You're listening to StarTalk Radio, and for this episode, I spent some quality time with Peter Max, pop artist from the 1960s, and he's still at it right on through to today. And let's see what more he has to say about how the universe has inspired him. He's interesting. We are part of something that is so enormously big. You know, when you talked about
Starting point is 00:22:32 the molecules in one glass of water, there are more molecules in one glass of water than there are glasses of water on planet Earth. Well, that line that you gave me about this feeds me for the next six months. I want to think about this at least once a day. I love it so much. Well, I'm happy to be your fuel supply. So let me ask you, are you more influenced by science directly or is there a bit of philosophy
Starting point is 00:22:58 that folds in? There's science. There's the mystery of the science because there's so much more we don't know than we do know, and we do know a lot, and so that we must probably not know a billion times as much, but it's wonderful what we do know. But I was also lucky in 1966, just about the same time, I met a Swami, a holy man from India. So, you would use pure science as your source of objects and imagery, but the philosophy is a means of how you would interpose them. Yes, yes. So it was nice.
Starting point is 00:23:29 Through meditation, I was able to get very, very peaceful and quiet, but through looking at the universe, I would get excited. And so in between the peacefulness and the universe is where the art world lived. That's Peter Max. He's just so in tune with his own sense of art and self and science. He sounds so like a cool hippie guy,
Starting point is 00:23:50 like very like down to earth and calm. He calms me just listening to him. Yeah, isn't it? He's got one of these calming voices. It's so beautiful. And you two, the two of you are like a glass of warm milk and a cookie. You're listening to StarTalk Radio.
Starting point is 00:24:04 Our phone number is 1-877-5-STARTALK. If there's some aspect of science The two of you are like a glass of warm milk and a cookie. You're listening to StarTalk Radio. Our phone number is 1-877-5-STARTALK. If there's some aspect of science that has influenced you inspirationally as a creative person or just in your thoughts, give us a call. We have Nancy from Santa Monica. Nancy, you're live on StarTalk. Hi, Nancy. Hi. Hi. Hi.
Starting point is 00:24:21 on StarTalk. Hi, Nancy. Hi. Hi. Hi. So, I'm not dabbling in art. I'm actually an environmental scientist, but I like art a lot and I've observed a lot of artists who've been inspired by environmental science, and I thought I'd just share something with you. We have a bunch of
Starting point is 00:24:37 art galleries here in Santa Monica called Bergamot Station, and there is this really cool exhibit on hyperbolic crochet. And what this is, you guys were talking about Leonardo da Vinci and perspective, right? Well, that's about flat planes as a geometry. Well, apparently there's another kind of geometry that was, I guess, driving mathematicians crazy, hyperbolic space, which is the geometric opposite of a sphere.
Starting point is 00:25:04 And I guess I was so taken by it that I actually photographed the caption here. So in 1997, there was this little Cornell mathematician who was trying to figure out how to model this geometry, and so he wound up crocheting it. And you wound up finding that corals, kelp, sponges, all these different kind of anatomical features, actually hyperbolic geometry. So these artists have gotten together and crocheted these different kind of anatomical features, actually hyperbolic geometry. So these artists have gotten together and crocheted these incredible kind of landscapes of these objects with hyperbolic crochet. And that was an exhibit at Bergamot Station. So there are a lot of children now going around without mittens because the crochet effort is going to art.
Starting point is 00:25:39 I love crochet, and it's very difficult, but it does have a lot of that spiral, and it's very difficult but it does have a lot of that spiral and it is very interesting so are you saying that crochet is the natural artistic way to express these forms of nature well no crochet was a technique that humans could use to model this geometry which is very hard to do um mathematically um otherwise or i guess even on the computer well that's very cool and so anyone near santa monica go check it out. Definitely. That sounds so interesting. I'm going to look it up online. Thank you, Nancy.
Starting point is 00:26:09 Thank you, Nancy. You know what I like about that, too, is because if you're using yarn or whatever, which you use a rope to crochet, that's great for studying the body, too, because it is like tendons and muscles. Oh, how it holds together and how it doesn't. Yeah, you can pull it and make it twisted and make it do things that you can't do with just charcoal.
Starting point is 00:26:27 It brings in perspective. You'd use yarn as a substitute for muscle. It brings in perspective. Shut up, Neil. I have lots of crocheted things in my mind. I just told Neil to shut up. One other thing about perspective, another very famous painting is The Last Supper. The Last Supper, it's one of the most famous.
Starting point is 00:26:42 Oh, Jesus' Dinner Party. Jesus' Last Supper. They call it supper rather than dinner. I famous. Oh, Jesus' Dinner Party. Jesus' Last Supper. And they call it supper rather than dinner. I was intrigued by that. I like to call it Jesus' Dinner Party. I just love a man that throws a dinner party at the end. And if you look at that, there are lines of perspective that reach what they call a vanishing point. And the vanishing point is where all the lines that are horizontal in a room or in a painting end up focusing down in the backdrop of the painting.
Starting point is 00:27:04 And it focuses right on Jesus' eye. Really? That's very interesting. So wherever you are in the painting, the lines take you right to the center of his face. For those who don't know, when you're drawing or painting perspective, a vanishing point is one of the first things you draw so that you can— Because everything else works into that. Everything comes off of that, works into that. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:27:24 So that's very interesting that the vanishing point, so that was no accident that the vanishing point was Jesus' eye. No accident at all. And plus his 12 dinner guests. And he was the center of the whole thing. We have a tweet. You can tweet us at StarTalkRadio. We have a tweet.
Starting point is 00:27:39 Someone asks, do you think Georgia O'Keeffe's paintings are a combination of science and art? And anatomy. Their vagina, aren't they? No, their flowers. Their vagina flowers. Oh, come on, their vagina flowers, tweeter. Their flowers.
Starting point is 00:27:55 They are not flowers. Look at them. Oh, please. Look into those flowers. They're not just flowers. You know what, Neil? This is what annoys me about men. Sometimes a flower is just a flower. Well, sometimes it needs you to look for the G-spot on it. So what we're saying is Georgia O'Keeffe took the flowers of the Southwest
Starting point is 00:28:18 and folded them with her knowledge of human anatomy to create a whole new expression of... a whole other way to communicate with her knowledge of human anatomy to create a whole new expression of a whole other way to communicate with the viewer. Yeah, I think it's what George O'Keefe and many artists do, great artists do, is that they make you look at something a different way. They make you see the other possibilities in it. Then that, okay, all right, I'll give other possibilities. Yeah, and I think Leonardo did that.
Starting point is 00:28:44 I think all the great artists and painters, and they've all done that, and right, I'll give other possibilities. Yeah, and I think Leonardo did that. I think all the great artists and painters, and they've all done that, and writers, they've taken things that everybody looks at every day, and they've twisted it and showed you other sides to it. We've got another tweet. They're asking, is the golden ratio, which we talked about a moment ago, only about aesthetics,
Starting point is 00:29:00 or is it indicative of the health of an organism? And that's a fascinating point. What a great question. What kind of geniuses do we have listening to this show? My family's clearly not tuning in. So, no, what's good about that is if the aesthetic is sort of hardwired into our brain and we identify beauty that way and then you turn ill or something happens to your bodily form. Don't put the horns on me.
Starting point is 00:29:24 You pointed at me. And if you turn ill, then your body starts taking a shape that does not fulfill that golden ratio and you look less attractive to others. It's a fascinating concept there. So maybe it is hard. I'm angry. So my question is I don't know the answer to that,
Starting point is 00:29:39 but it's an intriguing possibility. Like osteoporosis. Yeah, exactly. Your bones start becoming misshapen and you no longer fulfill the golden ratio. Well, I think there should be a golden ratio for different ages. Okay. So there should be like a silver ratio, a platinum ratio.
Starting point is 00:29:53 Yeah, just like what your average weight should be or whatever. It should just be like, here's the silver ratio. That's an excellent, excellent thought. The platinum. Excellent thought. We've got some more of my interview with Peter Max. I was in his studio in New York City, and he's got this huge studio where he's still painting.
Starting point is 00:30:10 He's still doing it. The guy is still doing it. Why did I get to go to this? I take you to my thing. I love Peter Max. You didn't ask. Let's see what more Peter Max has to tell me. While I was a realist and I started painting realism like Michelangelo, I couldn't get any work. No galleries were interested in it, no museums, nothing. And I
Starting point is 00:30:31 used to sit in a little cafe, which back then was almost like what is a Starbucks today, and I would make my astronomical drawings every day because I loved it. And I had maybe a hundred little drawings with me. And one day an art director said to me, Peter, what's this on the bottom of your portfolio? And I go, oh, it's nothing because I was shy. I was a realist. I was a classical guy. Because at the top of your portfolio was all your realistic illustrations. Yeah, I wanted to be like Michelangelo.
Starting point is 00:30:55 I wanted to be revered because I was so good in realism. Anyhow, and one day he said to me, what's this on the bottom of your portfolio? I said, no, it's nothing. It's nothing. And he insisted I take it out. And when he looked at it, he went, oh my God, this stuff looks unbelievable. Hey guys, fellas, girls, come over here, see what this guy does. And I walked out of there for the first time in my life with 14 projects that paid like, you know, a few hundred dollars each, which was today like a few thousand each. And when I delivered them about 10 days later, I walked out of there with 22 projects.
Starting point is 00:31:27 And in the next 18, 20 months, I won 66 gold medals in art and design for my creativity and for my inventiveness. And I suddenly realized that the stuff I was doing, which was these cosmic characters and cosmic stars and cosmic runners and all these characters with wings that I invented only because of my interest in the space area, that I invented characters that lived there that really weren't anything I could see
Starting point is 00:31:57 in the regular world. So it's fair to say that the universe birthed your career as an artist? Completely. So you want to be a great artist study the universe that's the i think that's very cool that that's his inspiration yeah and so rather i wouldn't have to be the universe in particular but i think it's fair to say that you can be a new kind of an artist or as an artist you can reach another dimension of reality if you come to it with some kind of science literacy. Is that fair? Well, I think it is fair, but I think the other thing that our show keeps bringing up is that science makes you ask questions. It keeps you asking questions. Probing the nature of reality.
Starting point is 00:32:34 And I think when a creative person keeps asking questions, it keeps broadening their view of things. And that's what happened to him. He kept asking questions, and he kept creating these characters and people built on that. And it's not happened to him. He kept asking questions and he kept creating these characters and people built on that. And it's not just science ideas. There's math even beyond the golden ratio that we talked about earlier. There's algebra. Look at the matrix.
Starting point is 00:32:58 Movies and things are being built around this whole thing now. Exactly. And there's a branch of algebra called linear algebra, which is – you don't normally greet that in high school, but you can take classes in it in college where there's 3D computer games that are enabled because of a huge mathematical engine that's driving them. Oh, yeah. I guess so. Yeah. No. So that's how – Like Grand Theft Auto.
Starting point is 00:33:19 I don't know the extent of math. Because of science and math, you can kill a hoe and steal a car. I haven't checked the math engine on that particular game. But you know what scares me? But it allows them. What it does is they're trying to create a virtual world for you that you move through. And if you're stealing cars in it, fine, that's your virtual world. But the perspective that changes as you run down the street and as doorways open and as
Starting point is 00:33:42 corridors show up, they have to calculate i know at every split second what the new scene looks like as you travel through that and what it will look like if you do this move or that move exactly they don't know what you're gonna do they don't know what you're gonna do next so it has to be ready for that and that's the computing power because i play laura croft tomb raider when you dive in the water all of a sudden you're in the ocean and the music stops you want to be laura cro? No, she's way too active. I got to admit, I liked the movie when I saw it. I did. She was good.
Starting point is 00:34:09 The video game is very active and annoying. At one point, I just started jumping off the slide. But here is what concerns me as an actress, aspiring actress and comic. CGI now, computer graphic imaging, is really taking over. I went to see Bolt, the 3D, when it was 3D, with my friends. Bolt is with the dog? Yeah, with my friend's sons. And I have to grab little kids from out of nowhere so I can go to these movies and not look scary.
Starting point is 00:34:36 And I went to see it. It was great. But when I was a kid, 3D movies were not as intense as they are now. I mean, they're so realistic. And as an actress, it started bothering me, Neil, because I started thinking, wow, when are we going to fade out? Like the way talkies took over silent films.
Starting point is 00:34:52 Right, right. Like I'm finally getting acting roles and I'm done. They're going to start just drawing people. Yeah, you draw people and animate them in 3D and then they won't need you anymore. So isn't there a chance
Starting point is 00:35:03 that regular actors and actresses are going to become obsolete? You know what they can do? They can fully scan your body in various motions and then fully get you to read like a whole encyclopedia of words. And then they have all your vocabulary, they have all your body motions, and they can just cast you in a 3D animated movie. So they might not need us anymore. No.
Starting point is 00:35:19 Yeah. You just sort of sell your body that one time and then you get used later on. Wow. I know there are people in LA listening to this show right now. If this scares you because you're waiting tables and you're thinking, what now? Call us at 877-5-STARTALK. If you're worried about being out of a job, is that what you're doing? Yeah, I mean, some of the science stuff, when it comes into the creative form, it scares me.
Starting point is 00:35:39 Because, like, for example, I don't like nude digital film. I hate it. Nude digital film? No, the digital film versus like 16 millimeter things. Oh, okay. Let's shoot everything on digital. Now all of a sudden, I don't want to see people with lines in their face.
Starting point is 00:35:51 I can see that in a mirror myself. I want pretty people. I want the old grainy imaging. I want the Barbara Walters lens that looks like it's got Vaseline over it. That's what I want. The soft focus lens. Yes, thank you.
Starting point is 00:36:03 Well, you know, photography is a, you know, it's... Did I make you nervous? All of a sudden, Neil's like, I'm never going to be on The View. What has Lynn done? We're going to go to break, and we're going to come back. Give us a call at 1-877-5-STARTALK, and
Starting point is 00:36:19 we're tweetable at Startalk Radio. And we'll be right back, and we're going to talk about photography in the universe and how that's inspired whole generations of artists and movements, social movements, simply because of images we've obtained from the night sky. See you in a minute. StarTalk Radio, Neil Tyson on the line here. We've got Lynn Koplitz, my co-host, Lynn.
Starting point is 00:36:53 Hello. Hello. We've got a caller who called into 1-877-5-STARTALK. They have a question about the relationship between science and art and inspiration. Who is the muse for whom? We have Rick from L.A. Rick, you're live on StarTalk. Hi, Rick.
Starting point is 00:37:09 Hey, how are you guys doing today? Well, thank you. We're doing good. How are you doing, Rick? Big fan, big fan. Oh, thank you. So what you got for us? Well, you're talking about how science has inspired art over the years, and I was just wondering if you could think of any examples
Starting point is 00:37:26 where art has inspired science. Oh, that's a good question, Rick. Ooh. Well... Scientific discovery. Yeah, here's the best I could do for you there. For example, before the era of photography, when people nonetheless had telescopes
Starting point is 00:37:42 and they wanted to be able to tell others about what they saw, they had to draw what they saw. So they needed an artistic talent just to communicate their science to other people. And if they were not good at their art, they'd be showing something that was not really what they saw to other people. And that would confound any attempt to have sort of a level-headed assessment of what was going on. Well, also, the constellations, at first they came up with what the stars, they came up with pictures, correct? Yeah, but there's no science anywhere in that. No, there's just mythological.
Starting point is 00:38:17 Well, no, they're connected dots points. I mean, they are scientific subjects themselves, but things we would only learn much later, long after anyone was drawing pictures with them. Okay, so Rick, the answer is we don't really know. No, no. No, let me offer a little insight. I can say that artists, not to speak for artists, because I don't claim myself among them, although my brother's an artist. I can say that all artists I know are driven
Starting point is 00:38:45 often, if not all the time, by some aesthetic. And it's the aesthetic that drives, that fuels their attempt to create a form. And I can tell you without hesitation that as a scientist, we approach the universe, we approach the natural world with a similar expectation that what we're going to discover is something aesthetically pleasing, something beautiful, something that will make you say that is nature at its finest. And so I can tell you that we share a common driver. But whether or not there's some art that inspired a scientific discovery, it may be that it doesn't if you're talking about what Also, if you're talking about
Starting point is 00:39:25 what kind of art you're talking about, because we've already discussed on this show that there are films that have probably, in television programs like Star Trek, that have inspired scientists. Exactly. So what happens there is the art triggers someone to be interested in a subject
Starting point is 00:39:38 because it affects them in an emotional way, and then they become charged, and then they want to learn about the science. I think what we're saying is we all need each other. Okay. Kumbaya. Hold that. So, Rick, thanks for calling in. Thanks, Rick. And we still have some more from Peter
Starting point is 00:39:54 Max. Peter Max, you gotta love him. And like you said, Lynn, he's such a soothing voice. I could listen to him all day. He's like Venus Flytrap. Remember him on WKRP in Cincinnati? They've got that really smooth Let's see what more he's got to tell us.
Starting point is 00:40:09 I was in Cleveland. I had an art show and I wake up in the morning and I go back to sleep and I wake up again at about 10.30 and I'm flip-flopping around the TV set and suddenly I see Neil Tyson with his khaki pants rolled up past his knees, squatting down, lifting up a handful of sand,
Starting point is 00:40:26 and saying, you see all the sand? There are 10,000 beaches in the world. They're like 10 or 20 miles long. And then he lifts up another big pile full of sand, and he said, as it's running through his fingers, he says, for every grain of sand that we have on these 10,000 beaches, there are more planets in the universe.
Starting point is 00:40:45 And I meant, oh, my God. I can't. This is so big. It's so gigantic that all the grains of sands in 10,000 beaches that are like probably 10 feet deep and 10 to 20 miles long, that there are more planets than this. The first thing I looked is for my phone. I found Neil Tyson's phone number, and I called him up and said,
Starting point is 00:41:08 is this real? He said to me, it's probably bigger than that. Well, I'm honored to have blown your mind without drugs. What do you think of that? It is like there's nothing that's nicer to be blown away by than the cosmos, the universe, these complete unbelievable facts that exist.
Starting point is 00:41:34 And the more you think about it, the more you dream about it, the more it starts making sense. And you still know that you're just this little microscopic little thing in the universe thinking about all the bigness, the largest thing. I mean, isn't it true now that because of this thing they call the string theory, they think that it could be other universes? There are a couple of ideas that lead to the idea that there could be a multiverse and we're just one bubble within an uncountable number of other cosmos. Just like when Hubble discovered the first few galaxies. Exactly. And now they're discovering maybe more universes.
Starting point is 00:42:01 It's philosophically the same thing, because back then we imagined it was only one galaxy, and then he discovered a universe of galaxies. Yeah, there must be a place you can hide. It is too big. It's too big to imagine. You know, sometimes you've got to take a tranquilizer to calm it down. It's just so amazing. Okay, now, I didn't think this could happen, but Peter Max made me like you more.
Starting point is 00:42:23 Really? So I got dibs from Peter Max, and now it's... He actually makes you sound even cooler. Okay. I didn't know he'd go off on that that way. I was just trying to get some... It was so sweet that you touched him so much. ...good content for our show, but I didn't know that.
Starting point is 00:42:37 And he's an amazing artist and an amazing influence in person, and that's really neat. Yeah, you know. I have a homeless person in my neighborhood who says I really inspire them. Was that that guy that was on the sidewalk when I visited you the other day? It was the lady
Starting point is 00:42:50 who wears these big crazy Erykah Badu wraps in her hair. So photography can inspire people. Do you remember, I don't know how old you are, Lynn,
Starting point is 00:42:58 but in 1968, Apollo 8 went to the moon. It didn't land, but it actually circled the moon and came back and took a picture Of Earth rise Above the lunar landscape
Starting point is 00:43:07 That was very little When that happened Okay But you've certainly Seen that photo It's called Earth rise By the way Earth does not rise
Starting point is 00:43:13 On the moon Because the moon Doesn't rotate Compared to the Earth So Earth is just Always in the sky So the picture Misrepresents what
Starting point is 00:43:22 Actually happens on the moon It rose because They were in orbit Around the moon When they took the picture. Okay, that's great. Yeah, thanks. Okay, I'm just saying. No, no, I'm saying that's great things.
Starting point is 00:43:32 Is a moon camera different than a regular camera? Bigger and more expensive and take better pictures than most cameras you'll ever see in your life. Do you have one? No, I don't. You do, don't you? No. So what I'm saying is that picture that showed Earth without any lines of continents or states or cities, it was just this blue orb juxtaposed as part of the scenery of another world transformed our understanding of our place in the universe.
Starting point is 00:43:55 And the modern green movement is traceable to that photograph. And so there's scientific photograph that became iconic art that influenced a generation of people to take action. I just had to share that with you. Now, the Hubble images and things, is that the same kind of camera? Hubble, no, it's a digital camera. That was a regular sort of film camera back in the days of Apollo 8. And now Hubble pictures is digital. It's a very expensive version of the detector that's in the camera that all of us have, the digital cameras that we all use.
Starting point is 00:44:24 It's called a CCD, charge coupled device camera. So I'm just, you asked, I'm just telling you. You asked. Did I volunteer that? You asked. LOL. You asked. And so the Hubble photos are today's generation of exposure to the rest of the world.
Starting point is 00:44:40 Which are better? Oh, definitely digital pictures are far superior. Because they're more accurate. They're far superior. But they're more accurate. They're far superior. But they're not as romantic. That's why I'm a Luddite. In terms of romance, do you know there's a scene in the Carl Sagan film Contact? I don't know if you saw the film.
Starting point is 00:44:54 Yes, of course. Do you remember when Jodie Foster was taken by the aliens into their distant land? Yeah. And she's looking and it's so beautiful. And you remember what she says? No. She says, because she's speechless by the beauty of it all, she says,
Starting point is 00:45:06 they should have sent a poet. Oh. Yeah. That's just. That's poetical in itself. Poetical or political? Whatever, poetical.
Starting point is 00:45:16 And other thing. Really, Neil? I'm a big fan. I'm not Peter Max. You better watch what you say. I'm a big fan of Van Gogh's Starry Night.
Starting point is 00:45:24 Oh, you think? It inspired a song. Just so everyone knows, who doesn't know Neil, Neil has Starry Night stuff all over his office everywhere, like pillows, books, which is great because
Starting point is 00:45:35 it's beautiful. And it was the cover of one of my books too. Because it's a Starry Night. It's an artist who, he could have named that painting Sleepy Village. Neil, you know what? We had this argument before. No, we couldn't. It's all stars in the sky it's about the sky not about i'm agreeing so the man came through i'm totally with you on that and then there's other art that gets inspired you know the ceiling of the of grand central terminal yeah yeah you took me there and showed the ceiling to me yeah well you didn't need me to take you there it's grand central terminal i know but i never
Starting point is 00:46:04 really looked up at it until you took me there. Oh, that's different. Okay, so that ceiling, did you know that all the stars are backwards? That pissed me off when I discovered that. And who did that? What was that artist's name? What's the guy's name? I forgot.
Starting point is 00:46:13 Paul Hale-Yue from 1912. Was he dyslexic? French artist. I think he was not sufficiently scientifically literate to know that the image of the sky he was looking at in a map was the reverse of what he had to put on the ceiling of the grid. Or he might have been dyslexic now. It can't be that dyslexic. Dyslexic is flip a few letters or a few words, not an entire sky.
Starting point is 00:46:34 So there's no excuse. I don't forgive him at all. I wonder if he still got paid. And you know, with those Hubble photos, some of the colors are vivid. They can represent colors that you would see if your eyes were huge and if your retina were sensitive to the filters that the Hubble telescope uses. You wouldn't necessarily see what Hubble sees. You would, however, if you can tune your eyeballs in the way we tune the Hubble telescope. I don't get that. What does that mean? So it means the colors that I think I see on there are not the colors that really, as if I'm up in space? That's great.
Starting point is 00:47:04 If you had special eyeballs, you would see it that way. You would see it just that way. We have feeble eyeballs. So in space, when I see, if I was in spacecraft looking at it,
Starting point is 00:47:11 it wouldn't look like that to me? No, it would look like something else that was commenced with your eyeballs. But in Hubble, we want to see... That's aggravating.
Starting point is 00:47:16 Well, I'm sorry, but it's just, you know, what happens when people put on makeup before they get photographed? It's not what you really look like. It's something else. I'm just letting you know.
Starting point is 00:47:24 But if you were there on the planet, would it look like that? It would look different. Like, is Mars really red? Yes. You're getting angry with me. Because I just find it aggravating. We got one more clip.
Starting point is 00:47:34 Let's get a fast clip of Peter Max. Our final clip with him. Let's see what more he has to tell us about how he's been inspired by science. How much he loves you. I want to make an animated film. I told you about it earlier. And this film has a lot to do with the universe.
Starting point is 00:47:47 And it's with us suddenly connecting with another species from far, far away who have some common interest with us. And it's a beautiful, it's a musical. It's a two-hour musical. And I'm about maybe halfway through designing it, conceiving it, and I'm going to go to some of my friends in Hollywood and see how I can get it made.
Starting point is 00:48:10 Well, we've got to get you back when that comes out. Yes. Listen, Peter Max, it's been great having you on Star Talk, and thanks for your hospitality, inviting me into your studio where I'm inundated by paintings ready to fall on me. This place is... You need like three more floors of this warehouse.
Starting point is 00:48:26 Thank you, thank you. We just have a couple floors here with about 100 people, but it's my playground. In the morning, I can't wait to get here. At night, I don't want to leave. That's how all jobs should be.
Starting point is 00:48:37 Peter Max, thanks for being on Star Talk. That was Peter Max. I love him. Oh my God. Why do you love all the guests that I have on the interview? Well, I don't love, I think he's my new favorite. Okay. Until our guest next week. She, my God. Why do you love all the guests that I have on the interview? Well, I think he's my new favorite. Okay.
Starting point is 00:48:47 Until our guest next week. She's my real favorite. But it's really awesome. So I don't know if you know that NASA is not unmindful of the fact that art matters in our culture and in society. So it's not just fighter pilots, flyboys, and scientists they send into space. They send artists? Well, no, they don't send artists into space. Not yet. But there's an arts in space program
Starting point is 00:49:07 where artists are invited to capture the discoveries of NASA, the voyages of NASA in whatever is their artistic means of expression. And it was started in 1962. And they've commissioned artists such as Norman Rockwell and others. And it chronicles the history of space exploration through the eyes of artists and others. And there's more than 2,000 works of art by 350 artists in their archive.
Starting point is 00:49:33 That's interesting. And listen, next week, this has been a great show, but next week, tonight, we need everyone to watch the Joan Rivers Rose. Joan Rivers is being rose. She's a buddy of yours. She's my dear friend, and she's on our show next week. Yes, indeed. Thanks to your connections.
Starting point is 00:49:47 I could have never had access to this woman. We had so much fun with her. She's an icon of comedic. She's going to be riffing on all the science that we're trying to take seriously here and tell us where that fits and where it sits. You've been listening to StarTalk Radio. Good show, Neil. Funded by the National Science Foundation.
Starting point is 00:50:01 We'll see you next week. Keep looking up.

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