Man has gazed at stars since he raised his head. Initially, he worshipped them, then measured them, then flew to them. But there was art between these stages. The cosmos in painting, literature, music — it's not just a backdrop. It's an attempt to make sense of infinity, one's place in it, fear, and awe. From ancient myths to "Dune," from frescoes to installations — we speak of the cosmos when words fail. This article is a journey through the starry paths of creativity.
For the Greeks, the cosmos is not emptiness but harmony. Plato and Aristotle described the celestial spheres, but poets did not lag behind. Hesiod in "Theogony" told of the origin of the stars. Stars were living beings, gods. In the Middle Ages, the cosmos became a religious sky: frescoes depicting Christ in the mandorle, surrounded by angels and planets. Dante's "Divine Comedy" is a journey through three realms, where the cosmos is a map of morality. In the visual arts — Giotto's frescoes, where the sky is no longer conditional but blue with golden stars.
Copernicus, Galileo — science shattered the old picture of the world, but art did not lag behind. Raphael's fresco "The Disputation" connects the earthly and the celestial. Bosch's "Garden of Earthly Delights" mesmerizes with cosmic landscapes. Astronomy enters painting: in Vermeer's "The Astronomer," a man studies the sky. Literature: Milton's "Paradise Lost" — a cosmic battle of angels, cosmology in verse. The Renaissance showed that the cosmos can be known by man, and art — its ally.
In the eighteenth century, the cosmos became an object of scientific interest. But the romantics brought back its mystery. Caspar David Friedrich's paintings — man against the starry sky, small and lost. Turner's cosmic whirls, precursors of abstraction. Goethe (both a poet and a scientist) wrote about color and light. "Faust" is also the cosmos: a journey of the spirit. Edgar Allan Poe in "Eureka" tried to grasp the universe in a poem. The cosmos became a symbol of infinity that cannot be embraced by reason but can be felt.
Jules Verne sent heroes to the Moon ("From the Earth to the Moon"), albeit not entirely scientifically, but entertainingly. Wells in "The First Men in the Moon" described the Seleneites. These were the first literary journeys that influenced real constructors. Science fiction made the cosmos accessible to imagination. Martians, interplanetary ships, alien worlds appeared. This genre is a bridge between science and art.
The era of 1950-1970s. Isaac Asimov with robots and the Galactic Empire; Arthur C. Clarke — the author of "2001: A Space Odyssey" (with Kubrick). Ray Bradbury — "The Martian Chronicles," where the cosmos is a metaphor for human nostalgia. In the USSR — the Strugatsky brothers: "The Country of Blue Flowers," "Hard to Be a God," "Picnic on the Edge of the Universe." Their cosmos is not bright and heroic, but anxious, ethical. Literature about the cosmos stopped being only adventurous and became philosophical.
Mikalojus Chyurlenius wrote symphonic cycles: "Sonata of the Stars," "Sonata of the Sun." His cosmos is musical, rhythmic. In the 1960s, Soviet cosmonauts: Panfilov, Belloli. The cosmos as ideology, but also as aesthetics. In the West — surrealism: Dali painted "Galactic Soup," canvases where atoms and planets are mixed. In the 1970s — "View of the Earth from the Moon" (photographs), influencing landscapes. The "Cosmic Waste" installation is also art today.
Cinema has given us images of the cosmos that have become a cultural code. "2001: A Space Odyssey" — slow, meditative, with classical music by Strauss and Ligeti. "Star Wars" — already cosmic fantasy, but also art. "Interstellar" — black holes, time relativity, organs. In music — Holst's "The Planets," Shchedrin's "Cosmic Symphony," Pink Floyd with "The Dark Side of the Moon." The cosmos in sound is a separate universe.
Today's artists use cosmic images, craters, waste. The "Orbit" installation from satellite debris. NFT art with views of galaxies. Neural networks generate "cosmos in the style of Van Gogh." The cosmos has become ordinary but has not ceased to be a mystery. Art seeks answers to questions: what did we forget there? What will we leave behind?
The cosmos in art and literature is a mirror in which humanity sees its fears and hopes. From myth to meme, from poem to pixel. We will continue to gaze at stars and seek ourselves in them for a long time.
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