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Art Created BEFORE The Moon Landing Missions Happened!

You will receive one 8 1/2 inch by 11 inch limited edition numbered fine art print. Your print will have a white border around the image for framing purposes so you will receive a 11 inch by 14 inch size paper. It will fit in a standard 11 x 14 frame or you can cut off the white border to use a standard 8 1/2 x 11 frame.

You will also receive an 8 1/2 x 11 red stamped certified copy of the notarized Affidavit of Authenticity signed by the artist James Burns. 

Your fine art print is printed on Domtar Lynx® Digital Smooth which is an uncoated 100 pound matt archival acid free paper guaranteed to last and with a true white 96 brightness to faithfully render the original artwork colors. These fine art prints are reproduced using RICOH C7110 X Digital Press which is a high end digital press that reproduces colors with incredible accuracy at near-offset printing quality.

SPECIAL NOTE: Listing photograph is ultra low resolution quality to prevent unauthorized duplication. All art is super crisp and stunning imagery!

PROVENANCE: James Burns work appears on a dedicated page in the Apollo Lunar Surface Journal, which is hosted by the NASA History Office. Google search "James Burns NASA"

About This Concept Art

Lunar Communication Relay Unit Cart Carry

1970 concept art drawing that illustrates the Modular Equipment Transporter (MET), an innovation that allowed an increase in the range of lunar surface exploration and in the amount of material that could be collected. The MET was a collapsible two-wheeled cart for carrying tools, cameras, a portable magnetometer and lunar samples. The MET was developed as an option if development of the Lunar Rover was not completed in time for the Apollo 15 mission and NASA had to fly a second MET. Although the terrestrial weight of the TV/TCU (Television Communications Unit), LCRU (Lunar Communications Relay Unit), batteries, and antennas was 106 pounds and wouldn't have overloaded the MET, the equipment took up so much room on the cart that the crew needed a second cart to carry geology tools and samples. 


Moon Man Publishing "Inventing Apollo" The Artwork of James Burns

This exclusive collection of James Burns artwork reveals the lunar landing and lunar exploration in a way never before seen by the public.   

Moon Man Publishing's Founder Alan Scalone's father, Sam Scalone, worked with James Burns at RCA on the Apollo Moon Mission Projects. Sam as one of the mechanical engineers and James as the concept artist worked hand in hand with the engineering team to invent and design the equipment that would ultimately be built and used on the Apollo Moon landing missions and other NASA space programs.   

These drawings were used in the top secret meetings where NASA decided to approve or not approve funding to build the equipment seen in the artwork. The outcome of these meetings and James's drawings determined how man would go to the Moon, the equipment they would use, and the very creation of the communications equipment that allowed the world to witness man’s first steps on the Moon.   

Concept art created of the actual equipment used on the Moon, drawn BEFORE the equipment was ever even made yet! Extremely rare and unique artwork!