1. Final Space Shuttle Discovery Delivers A Fitting Tribute To The Late Bob McCall




    artwork: The crew of mission STS-133, Discovery's final flight. From Left to right: Alvin Drew, Nicole Stott, Eric Boe (pilot), Steve Lindsey (commander), Michael Barratt and Tim Kopra. The mission patch (top centre) was designed by the talented artist Robert McCall who also designed the poster for the film “2001: a Space Odyssey".


    Florida (Space.com).- Space shuttle Discovery's final crew left its mark on the International Space Station on Sunday 6th March 2011 prior to departing the orbiting laboratory. Participating in a long-standing tradition established by previous visiting crews, the six Discovery astronauts added their mission's insignia to the station's wall and then signed their names around the decal. The simple act signified the successful conclusion of their goals while onboard the space station. "We delivered the last pressurized module, we delivered the ELC4 [cargo pallet], we did a whole bunch of transfer and we outfitted the [Permanent Multipurpose Module] as best we could," Discovery's STS-133 mission commander Steven Lindsey said during a farewell ceremony. Space shuttle Discovery undocked from the space station at 7 a.m. EST (1200 GMT), beginning its journey back to the Earth for its last time. Landing was targeted for Wednesday at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida to end what is the last flight of space shuttle Discovery.


    Astronaut Alvin Drew volunteered to head up choosing the design for Discovery's final mission emblem soon after he was named to the crew in 2009. At the time, the flight was not only the last for Discovery, but was also scheduled as the final mission of the space shuttle program.

    "I saw it as something that might be fun to do," Drew said during a preflight interview with collectSPACE.com. It was not too long after, that he received a suggestion to call on artist Robert McCall. "I had gotten a suggestion from one of the workers at the Johnson Space Center. Bob McCall had done the [patch] for the last Apollo mission and the first shuttle mission. Wouldn't it be a nice bookend if he also got to do the last shuttle mission patch?" Drew recounted.

    In addition to designing the Apollo 17 and STS-1 patches, McCall was a highly-regarded space artist whose murals filled full walls at NASA's centers and the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

    "It was a great idea," recalled Drew. "If anyone was going to have any better design ideas than I have, it was going to be Bob McCall. He has all the experience at this." As much as he liked the idea, Drew didn't know if McCall was still designing patches or who to contact to ask if he was. Then a chance meeting introduced an opportunity.

    "I was in Star City (Russia) and one of the back-up space flight participants named Barbara Barrett, she was one of Bob McCall's neighbors and she was proudly showing us the personal patch that he designed for her." Drew asked Barrett to ask McCall if he'd like to design the patch for Discovery's last mission. The famed artist's reply was simply "Yes."

    Drew provided McCall with information about the flight and brief crew biographies. He also described what he wanted as well as what he didn't want, in the design.

    "I told McCall I am not interested in any deep symbology or harking back to the ships or the shuttle program," Drew shared. "I understand it is the last one, but I just want a patch that is beautiful. A patch that really is just pleasing to the eye so even if we are not the last shuttle mission, because even at that point we knew we might not be, it would still be just a gorgeous patch to look at."

    "Got it," said McCall. Weeks went by and Drew hadn't heard from the artist, so he started to look elsewhere for ideas. "Lots of folks out there were submitting their designs and ideas for patches. A lot of them were really good." "Finally, I get this voicemail at work from Bob McCall. 'Oh yeah, I have been working on these patches,'" McCall told Drew.

    "'I was up all weekend,'" Drew recalled McCall saying. "He had found his muse and was just completely tickled with these patch concepts he had come up with." "I can't wait for you to see them!" McCall told Drew. The astronaut was excited by the artist's enthusiasm. "This is Bob McCall. He's been working on patch designs for as long as I have been alive and if he is kind of beside himself with these patch designs, I can't wait to see them either," remarked Drew.

    McCall told Drew that he'd FedEx him the patch designs "as soon as I figure out how to get these things digitized." "Look for them by Thursday or Friday," McCall said. Thursday and Friday came and went without a package. "Saturday, I see a newsgram that Bob McCall had passed away that Friday," recalled Drew. "So I'm like, well, I'm not going to see those patches. I am not going to bother his family."

    McCall, 90, died of a heart attack on Feb. 26, 2010. "I asked Barbara Barrett to pass along our condolences to his family," said Drew.


    artwork: Robert McCall - "Handshake in Space", 1974. This McCall painting depicts the historic docking of American and Soviet spacecraft during the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project. Credit: Robert McCall.


    Having given up on seeing McCall's designs, he resumed searching for patch ideas. Then, the following Tuesday, a FedEx envelope showed up in his inbox. "It had been held up by Johnson Space Center's security system," explained Drew. "So I'm sitting there, my hands just shaking because I just know what's in this thing. This is the final works of art by Bob McCall."

    In addition to mission patches, Robert McCall created hundreds of vivid paintings, from representations of his wartime experiences in the USAAF, through gleaming spaceships to futuristic dream cities where shopping centers float in space. His most famous image may be the gargantuan mural, showing events from the creation of the universe to men walking on the Moon, on the south lobby wall of the National Air and Space Museum on the National Mall in Washington. More than 10 million people a year pass it. Alternatively, it might be his painting showing a space vehicle darting from the bay of a wheel-shaped space station, which was used in a poster for Stanley Kubrick’s landmark 1968 film, “2001: A Space Odyssey”.

    Source - Space.com plus various other sources -


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