Space Machine continues the space series with a simple shift in setting.
The image is built from a mid-century photograph of a female mechanic working on heavy machinery—hands steady, attention locked in—but placed under a star-filled sky. The engine becomes a spacecraft engine. The shop becomes orbit.
What I love is how normal it all feels. No spectacle, no drama. Just someone doing precise, physical work on something large and complicated, surrounded by hoses, bolts, and metal forms that already look like they belong in space.
The piece is about quiet competence. The stars aren’t the subject, and neither is the flying machine. The act of working is. And somehow adding space makes this a statement of hard work paired with belief in the infinite.
Space Machine presents a retro-future zone where optimism lived inside engineering, and progress looked like patience, focus, and getting your hands dirty—even if the job happened to be light-years from home.