Details
GEORGE GIBBS (1870-1942)
STRANDED
signed Gibbs (lower left)
charcoal on paper
2434 x 37 in. (62.9 x 94 cm.) (sight)
Executed circa 1916.
Provenance
Norman Brosterman (b. 1952), New York.
Acquired by the late owner from the above, 2001.
Literature
Arthur Train and Robert Williams Wood, "The Moon Maker", Cosmopolitan, January 17, pp. 54-55, illustrated.
Norman Brosterman, Out of Time: Designs for the Twentieth-Century Future (New York, 2000), p. 84-85, illustrated.
Exhibited
Tacoma, Washington, Washington State Historical Society, Out of Time: Designs for the 20th Century Future, 11 November 2000-7 January 2001; also, Lansing, Michigan, Michigan Historical Museum, 27 January-25 March 2001; New York, New York Historical Society, 14 April-10 June 2001; Laramie, Wyoming, University of Wyoming Art Museum, 30 June-26 August 2001; Fargo, North Dakota, Plains Art Museum, 1 December 2001-27 January 2002; Springfield, Massachusetts, 5 October-1 December 2002.
Seattle, The Museum of Pop Culture (formerly EMP), June 2004-March 2011. London, UK, Barbican Centre, Into the Unknown: A Journey through Science Fiction, 3 June-1 September 2017; also, Athens, Greece, Onassis Cultural Center, 9 October 2017-14 January 2018; Odense, Denmark, Kunstmuseum Brandts, 28 September 2018-17 February 2019; Rotterdam, Netherlands, Kunsthal Rotterdam, 16 March-30 June 2019.
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Lot Essay

The Moon Maker by Arthur Train and Robert Williams Wood was serialized in Cosmopolitan magazine and tells the story of the Flying Ring spaceship and its expedition to save Earth. Its female protagonist is Rhoda Gibbs, a mathematical genius who discovers a massive asteroid named Medusa that is barreling through space towards Earth. With a group, Gibbs travels into space to intercept Medusa by throwing it off its trajectory with a nuclear explosion, which ultimately results in the asteroid becoming a second moon to Earth.

The present lot shows Gibbs on the moon’s surface. She has lost track of time while exploring and is almost out of air. Here, she is trying to retrace her steps and find the way back to the Flying Ring. The picture is captioned Rhoda staggered toward where the Ring would land. Would she arrive in time? The image shows the Flying Ring shooting up as the astronauts navigate the spaceship to save Gibbs before her air supply runs out.

Gibbs is the third known female character depicted as an astronaut in a science fiction story. The probable first women to fly into space are those described in Andrew Laurie’s The Conquest of the Moon, published in 1889. The second likely female astronaut is the character Lilla Zaidie Rennick in George Griffith’s 1900 Honeymoon in Space, making Rhoda Gibbs the likely third woman in space in a science fiction publication.

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