The duo created an elaborate, Andy Warhol-like design that has been etched into a satellite's panel, transforming the spacecraft into a replica of an over sized electrical charging device.
"If someone is going to invade our planet, presumably they're going to come in some sort of electronic, electricity-powered ship," Gibson notes whimsically. "Maybe this will make them stop for a moment and say, 'These guys are nice. We're not going to destroy their planet.'"
At the very least, it will give them the opportunity to pause briefly and check out what may be the world's first orbiting work of art.
"No one else is crazy enough," the CEO of Clyde Space Ltd. Said during a recent phone interview from his office in Glasgow.
In building the small satellite that will monitor atmospheric conditions and send back photos and other information from 373 miles (600 kilometers) above Earth, he turned to Gibson and White and their popular iam8bit gallery in Los Angeles.
"Hopefully, by doing some kind of quirky things like this we'll get some kids interested in space. Rather than going on to doing war, they can do something that helps change the world and makes it a better place," said Clark, who received a Member of the British Empire honor for his work this year from Queen Elizabeth II.
