
THE
FOUNDATION FOR ART IN ZERO-G year
zero
installation / poetry, central college st.
martins, london (06.99)
companion text >>
EUSTON, WE HAVE A PROBLEM
By Angela Buttolph
From The Independent, 22 August 1998 C.E.
"Compared to us, NASA are dinosaurs"
says John Eden of the Association of Autonomous
Astronauts. "We're sexier in a number
of ways." According to the AAA, it
can't be much fun being part of a state-controlled
space programme - "just dock in and
follow orders." So in 1995 a group
of 20-somethings with a severe case of wanderlust
established the AAA - "the world's
first independent and community-based space
programme," dedicated to putting the
fun back into intergalactic travel. "We're
promising sex and parties in space,"
says John. "That's what people want."
Space is no longer the final frontier, but
unless you are a whizz at astrophysics or
have £98,000 for a ticket on the first
commercial space flights (ETA 2001), you
have little hope of getting there. The AAA's
Andi Freeman claims it offers the only solution:
space travel by the people for the people.
The AAA is more interested in rock'n'roll
than rock samples. Asie from planning lunar-raves
and conducting "research into the sexual
possibilities of zero gravity" much
time is spent daydreaming ... or, as the
AAA has it, practising "astral projection"
(visualising space flights) and "psycho-geographical
exercises" (navigating around your
earthly neighbourhood using a map of the
moon).
Three-sided football matches form a vital
part of the AAA's space training. Playing
three teams (one ball) simultaneously, literally
adds a new dimension to the game's more
traditional back and forth formula; perfect
for getting to grips with both the anti-gravity
conditions on the moon and the AAA's inherent
silliness. To add to the chaos, players
swap teams randomly and / or refuse to divulge
which team they are playing for. This anarchic
pursuit has spawned its motto, "Moving
in Several Directions at Once".
The AAA's Five Year Plan to establish "a
worldwide network of local, community-based
AAA groups dedicated to building their own
spaceships", has seen membership, er,
rocket. There are currently 30 AAA groups
- from Euston to Copenhagen and New Zealand.
Surprisingly, there aren't any US-based
groups yet. Perhaps they are too baffled
by hints of irony (or they're all too busy
watching the X-Files). The AAA is determined
to "leave this society behind",
Stuart explains. "We don't want to
end up on the moon with branches of McDonalds
everywhere."
If 1997's Intergalactic Conference in Vienna
is anything to go by, the AAA isn't alone
in its beliefs. Hundreds of wannabe Gagarins,
many of them over seven years old, assisted
in an ambitious rocket-building programme
that AAA members heralded as a triumph,
but which one onlooker described as "more
Blue Peter than Cape Canaveral".
And we're talking about space travelling
in style. The AAA advocates the use of fun
fur and sequins to decorate both space suits
and ships "to counter the masculinist
bias of space exploration ... undermining
the rocket + phallus fantasy".
"We're serious about the business of
going into space," says John, seriously,
at an AAA presentation (during the Festival
of Underground Literature) which "for
technical reasons", had to be held
on Earth. Ask the AAA for details of its
intergalactic tactics, though, and the answers
become a little sketchy ("Euston, we
have a problem").
"People do sometimes say, 'Where's
your spaceship?' but we're not worried,"
says Julie. "There are plenty of DIY
rocet enthusiasts out there, and with their
technical skills and our imagination, we'll
go far." This is where NASA has the
edge but when it comes to technical know-how,
the AAA plays a mean game of three-sided
football.
Surprisingly, it is in contact with its
rivals - "We hope people in the European
Space Agency and NASA will come and work
for us instead." No wonder government-controlled
space agencies are worried. "Unsurprisingly,
the most concerted efforts to undermine
the AAA have come from those most threatened
- the state space agencies, NASA in particular,"
tuts Neil. Like, how? "In March, NASA
announced the discovery of water on the
moon ... to show that they alone have a
practical programme for space exploration.
NASA are attempting to hijack the dreams
and visions of autonomous spaceflight and
channel them into support for its own discredited
space programme."
Junior Autonomous Astronauts are exactly
the kind of conscientious kids you would
want to populate the moon with. Billy, six,
is particularly concerned about missing
his homework while he's away. He is equally
worried that zero-gravity conditions "might
make the TV go upside down."
Fiercly anti-capitalist ("No to Blairism
and Economic Rationalism! Yes to Weightlessness
and Exploration!), the AAA's collective
global funds currently total £157.26.
It is relying on appealing for donations
from David Bowie (composer of "Space
Oddity" and, therefore, doubtless a
kindred spirit), sales from T-Shirts and
the optimistic belief that the price of
propulsion-engine technology will drop over
time, "like the price of the pocket
calculator did".
"No-one can now write a history of
space travel without mentioning the contributions
of the Association of Autonomous Astronauts",
says Skeet proudly, disregarding the significance
of the word 'travel'.
"In a sense, we're already in outer
space," says the AAA's Stuart. "It's
very earth-centric to think we're not."
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