SpaceX revealed the first passenger its signed up to fly to the moon on Asian Dramas ArchivesMonday for one very expensive art project.
The Elon Musk-founded company will send 42-year-old Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa into deep space, but he doesn't want to take the trip all on his own. The entrepreneur hopes to bring along "six to eight artists" who will capture the experience on a four to five day mission in 2023.
SEE ALSO: Take a look at the first space suit that let Americans walk in spaceIf all goes according to plan, Maezawa will be the first non-American to orbit the moon.
Here's what we know about him and his larger-than-life lunar ambitions:
A skateboarder and former drummer in a hardcore band called Switch Style, Maezawa is now the 18th richest person in Japan with a net worth of $2.9 billion according to Forbes.
He is the founder of Start Today, a mail-order CD and record business he founded in 1998, which expanded into the online fashion business with Zozotown in 2004. Last year, the site boasted 7.2 million customers.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Maezawa is not shy when it comes to spending his riches, as evidenced when he made headlines for shelling out a record $110.5 million for Jean-Michel Basquiat's 1982 painting of a skull last year. At another auction in 2016, he spent $81 million in one night.
His love for Basquiat was something he echoed in the press conference, when he wore a t-shirt featuring a painting by the artist, and also spoke of his work. Basquiat died in 1988.
"One day, when I was staring at his painting, I thought, what if Basquiat had gone to space, and had seen the moon up close, or saw Earth in full view. What wonderful masterpiece could he have created?" he said.
Maezawa said his interest in the moon started as a child.
"Ever since I was a kid, I have loved the moon," he said. "Just staring at the moon filled my imagination. It's always there and has always continued to inspire humanity."
But he doesn't want to go alone either. He's taking along artists representing Earth who will contribute to a project called #DearMoon.
He will first reach out to artists that he loves to see if they'd like to go, but it'll be open to painters, sculptors, film directors, architects, fashion designers, and others.
"I love art. And I'm very much looking forward to seeing what different artists getting together could bring to life," he said.
According to the project schedule on DearMoon's website, selection of the artists will begin this year, with training and preparation to take place before planned liftoff in 2023.
"He is the bravest person and the most willing to do so, and he was the best adventurer I think," Musk said of Maezawa.
"He stepped forward to do it. To be clear, we are honored that he would choose us. This is not us choosing him... He is a very brave person to do this."
Maezawa has made a down payment on the trip, but declined to reveal how much he spent in total.
Musk said the money spent on the trip will help to fund the BFR's development, with the goal of one day opening up space travel to the average person.
The artists would be travelling for free, and an exhibition will take place on Earth sometime after the trip finishes.
As for Musk, he's not sure when he'll go to space, even though Maezawa extended the invitation to him.
Tweaking Windows 10 Privacy SettingsTesting Windows 10 Performance Before and After the Meltdown Flaw Emergency PatchHow to Remotely Sign Out of Gmail on Multiple DevicesProductivity on a $200 Chromebook, Coming From an Enthusiast Desktop8 Years Later: Does the GeForce GTX 580 Still Have Game in 2018?The Best Video Game HandgunsPlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds (PUBG) CPU TestHere's everything AI coming to Google Gmail10 Free Steam Games Worth PlayingHow to Merge and Remove Duplicate Contacts in AndroidThe ‘Melrose Place’ explosion turns 30 this month. Why it's still pop culture goldTweaking Windows 10 Privacy SettingsWashable rug deals for Memorial Day: Save on Ruggable, TumbleEthereum Mining GPU BenchmarkGoogle AI Mode is launching us into a new era of AI searchPatched Desktop PC: Meltdown & Spectre BenchmarkedQ&A with tendercare founder and CEO Shauna SweeneyPlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds (PUBG) CPU TestTweaking Windows 10 Privacy SettingsHow to Run Android Apps in Google Chrome At the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations Ten of Our Top Stories from 2017 Redux: James Baldwin, Raymond Carver, Dorothea Lasky by The Paris Review Puerto Rico Sketchbook: The Houses Still Standing Wants to Forget by László Krasznahorkai Degas’s Model Tells All Narcissism and Pleasure: An Interview with Yvonne Rainer by Robert Storr A Very Particular Bird A Visit to the Musée d’Edith Piaf Eureka Moment: Ernest Hemingway, Sam Lipsyte, James Wright by The Paris Review Eight Public Cases The Literary Prize for the Refusal of Literary Prizes What Do We Do with the Art of Monstrous Men? Matthew Zapruder: Advice on How to Read a Poem States of Desire: An Interview with Anne Garréta Staff Picks: Sohyang, Sacred Deer, and Steamers by The Paris Review A Message from ‘The Paris Review’ Staff Drawing Dogs in George Booth's Living Room The Uncertain Future of the American Mall Why an Unemployed Actor Flew Across the Country to Stalk Salinger
1.5467s , 10133.4765625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Asian Dramas Archives】,Charm Information Network