Title | The Space Shuttle Challenger |
Artist/Maker | Charles Schmidt ( 1939 - Present ) |
Date | 1987 |
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Dimensions | h. 50 x w. 36 in. (h. 127 x w. 91.4 cm) |
Credit Line | U.S. Senate Collection |
Accession Number | 35.00002.000 |
To honor the seven crew members of the space shuttle Challenger, Republican Leader Robert Dole of Kansas and Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia proposed that a commemorative mural be placed in the Senate wing of the U.S. Capitol. The Senate Commission on Art, with the recommendation of a five-member advisory panel composed of museum professionals from the Smithsonian Institution, NASA, and the U.S. Capitol, selected Philadelphia artist Charles Schmidt for the commission. Schmidt's completed mural was placed in an empty oval in the Brumidi Corridors on the first floor of the Capitol's Senate wing, and unveiled on March 3, 1987.
The Brumidi Corridors, a series of ornate muralled hallways, were designed by Italian artist Constantino Brumidi. Inspired by Raphael's loggia in the Vatican, the walls and ceilings depict American themes and subjects and include historical scenes, important personages, images of American culture, and native flora and fauna. The decorative painting of the corridors began in late 1857, but the project was never completed; a number of ovals and diamonds throughout the hallways were left blank. Some of these empty spaces have been filled by 20th-century artists, most notably Allyn Cox, who completed America's First Moon Landing in 1974. The Space Shuttle Challenger mural, which was placed directly across from Cox's work, depicts the seven astronauts in space suits, grouped in front of the space shuttle, poised on its launch pad. Christa McAuliffe, the New Hampshire school teacher, carries a globe in her arms.
A professor of painting and drawing at the Tyler School of Art at Temple University in Philadelphia, Schmidt has received numerous painting commissions and awards. His work has been included in national and international exhibitions, and he is represented in the collections of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, NASA, and the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.