Alan
Bean—Apollo
XII
astronaut,
commander of
Skylab II
and
artist—was
born in 1932
in Wheeler,
Texas. In
1950 he was
selected for
an NROTC
scholarship
at the
University
of Texas at
Austin. In
1955, he was
commissioned
an ensign in
the United
States Navy.
Holder of
eleven world
records in
space and
astronautics,
as well as
numerous
national and
international
honors, Alan
Bean has had
a most
distinguished
peacetime
career. His
awards
include two
NASA
Distinguished
Service
Medals, the
Yuri Gagarin
Gold Medal
and the
Robert J.
Collier
Trophy. As
part of the
Apollo XII
crew, he
became the
fourth of
only twelve
men ever to
walk on the
Moon. As the
spacecraft
commander of
Skylab
Mission II,
he set a
world
record:
24,400,000
miles
traveled
during the
59-day
flight. He
has also
launched
himself
successfullyinto
a new career
as an
artist.
When he
wasn’t
flying, Bean
always
enjoyed
painting as
a hobby.
Attending
night
classes at
St. Mary’s
College in
Maryland in
1962, Alan
experimented
with
landscapes.
During
training and
between
missions as
a test pilot
and
astronaut,
he continued
private art
lessons. On
space
voyages, his
artist’s eye
and talent
enabled him
to document
impressions
of the Moon
and space to
be preserved
later on
canvas. His
art reflects
the
attention to
detail of
the
aeronautical
engineer,
the respect
for the
unknown of
the
astronaut
and the
unabashed
appreciation
of a skilled
painter.
The space
program has
seen
unprecedented
achievements
and Bean
realized
that most of
those who
participated
actively in
this
adventure
would be
gone in
forty years.
He knew that
if any
credible
artistic
impressions
were to
remain for
future
generations,
he must
paint them
now. “My
decision to
resign from
NASA in 1981
was based on
the fact
that I am
fortunate
enough to
have seen
sights no
other artist
ever has,”
Bean said,
“and I hope
to
communicate
these
experiences
through
art.”
Bean’s
book Apollo:
An
Eyewitness
Account
which
chronicles
his
first-person
experience
as an Apollo
astronaut in
words and
paintings
was received
with
critical and
popular
acclaim upon
its
publication
in 1998.