Galaxies in Motion: Turning Space Images into Visual Stories
11 – 12
July 2025
STEM
21 Days
About Project
Have you ever looked at pictures of space and wondered what those bright colors and shapes really mean? In this creative project, you’ll work with real images of galaxies—huge collections of stars far beyond our own solar system—and learn how to turn what you see into your own visual art.
With guidance from Prof. Raja GuhaThakurta, an astrophysicist at UC Santa Cruz, you’ll explore how scientists study galaxies using powerful telescopes like Hubble and James Webb. You’ll look closely at the shapes, colors, and patterns in galaxy photos and learn what they tell us about space. Then, you’ll use those ideas to create your own artwork that shows what a galaxy looks like, how it moves, or what story it tells.
Here’s what you’ll create:
- Visual Art Piece: A drawing, digital design, painting, collage, or mixed media piece based on a galaxy or space concept.
- Story Behind the Art: A short explanation (300–500 words) of what the galaxy is, what inspired the design, and the science it’s connected to.
- Space Art Showcase: Share your artwork and story with your school peer group in a space art showcase event at school!
Here’s what you’ll learn:
- What galaxies are and how scientists study them using light and images.
- How to recognize shapes, colors, and patterns in space and what they mean.
- How to turn science ideas into creative visual stories.
- How to talk about your ideas with others in a fun and confident way.
You don’t need to be a science expert or an artist to join—just bring your curiosity and creativity. This is your chance to explore space and tell your own story through art!
Expert Profile
Professor Raja GuhaThakurta is a Distinguished Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of California, Santa Cruz and an Astronomer with the University of California Observatories. He studies galaxy formation and evolution by analyzing stellar populations, integrated light, and globular clusters in systems from the Milky Way and its Local Group neighbors to Virgo‐cluster galaxies.
At UCSC he leads key surveys using the Keck II DEIMOS spectrograph, Hubble and James Webb Space Telescopes, and collaborates with teams at Harvard and Tsinghua. He earned a BSc in Physics from St. Xavier’s College, Kolkata (1983) and a PhD in Astrophysical Sciences from Princeton University (1989). His honors include the 2025 AAS Education Prize, AAS Fellowship (2021), and an Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship (1997).
Prof. Raja GuhaThakurta was raised in a family of artists and taught himself cartooning, oil painting, and perspective drawing under mentors Cyril Hennessy, Ritu Singh, and Shanu Lahiri. Though he once considered formal art studies in Kolkata, he chose science as his career and art as his lifelong passion. Over the past 15 years he has shown work in Bay Area group exhibitions, held a solo show at the Triton Museum of Art in Santa Clara, and will present a retrospective at UCSC’s Mary Porter Sesnon Gallery later this year.
