Brian Stauffer. Although slightly younger than child portrayed, I distinctly remember following the Apollo 11 mission, from launch to splashdown. I played alone for hours with my very own Saturn 5 rocket and Lunar Landing module, pantomiming with slow motion movement, the first step we took on the surface of the moon.
Harry Campbell. My year is 2069. Essentially my thought process started with the idea that nobody can predict fifty years into the future, particularly now with climate change really beginning to get our attention. I felt any kind of utopian scene would be purely fiction. Everything else on earth is sort of up in the air, so I essentially went with the idea of the future being unpredictable. We are still in space, space is still there, will be there no matter what we do, and perhaps the answers to our problems here are somehow out there. Also influenced by the launching of the James Webb Space Telescope later this month, replacing the Hubble telescope. Scientists are promising to see well beyond our galaxy.
Slices of TIME is a two-part collection, inspired by TIME’s nearly 100 year history. The collection features four editions: single red border, single white border, double red border, and double white border. The rarity of this collection was determined completely by Slices of TIME collectors and was final and set as of 12pm ET Feb 23, 2022.
The collection includes work by TIME Creative Director DW Pine and 38 incredible artists. TIME selected 19 artists, who in turn picked 19 collaborators, to create two pieces of art—one inspired by a year from TIME’s past and one by what they see as a hundred years in the future. So, for example, 1969 and 2069.
Learn more about the collection: https://time.com/collection/slices-of-time/
View the Slices: https://opensea.io/collection/timepieces-sot-slices
License Agreement: https://time.com/privacy/timepieces_license_agreement.html
The Year That Took Us To The Moon, 1969 by Brian Stauffer & Porthole, 2069 by Harry Campbell
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
- Sales
- Transfers
The Year That Took Us To The Moon, 1969 by Brian Stauffer & Porthole, 2069 by Harry Campbell
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
Brian Stauffer. Although slightly younger than child portrayed, I distinctly remember following the Apollo 11 mission, from launch to splashdown. I played alone for hours with my very own Saturn 5 rocket and Lunar Landing module, pantomiming with slow motion movement, the first step we took on the surface of the moon.
Harry Campbell. My year is 2069. Essentially my thought process started with the idea that nobody can predict fifty years into the future, particularly now with climate change really beginning to get our attention. I felt any kind of utopian scene would be purely fiction. Everything else on earth is sort of up in the air, so I essentially went with the idea of the future being unpredictable. We are still in space, space is still there, will be there no matter what we do, and perhaps the answers to our problems here are somehow out there. Also influenced by the launching of the James Webb Space Telescope later this month, replacing the Hubble telescope. Scientists are promising to see well beyond our galaxy.
Slices of TIME is a two-part collection, inspired by TIME’s nearly 100 year history. The collection features four editions: single red border, single white border, double red border, and double white border. The rarity of this collection was determined completely by Slices of TIME collectors and was final and set as of 12pm ET Feb 23, 2022.
The collection includes work by TIME Creative Director DW Pine and 38 incredible artists. TIME selected 19 artists, who in turn picked 19 collaborators, to create two pieces of art—one inspired by a year from TIME’s past and one by what they see as a hundred years in the future. So, for example, 1969 and 2069.
Learn more about the collection: https://time.com/collection/slices-of-time/
View the Slices: https://opensea.io/collection/timepieces-sot-slices
License Agreement: https://time.com/privacy/timepieces_license_agreement.html
- Sales
- Transfers