Background
Ludek Pesek was born in 1919 at Kladno, Czechoslovakia, and grew up in the mining town of Ostrava close to the Beskidy Mountains.
Ludek Pesek was born in 1919 at Kladno, Czechoslovakia, and grew up in the mining town of Ostrava close to the Beskidy Mountains.
Later, he attended the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague.
Born in Kladno in what is now the Czechoslovakian Republic, he died in Stäfa, Switzerland. The asteroid 6584 Ludekpesek is named for him. He was influenced by Lucien Rudaux.
His boyhood was marked by the longing for mountains, and distant lands, laying the ground for his later interest in geology and astronomy.
His potential artistic and literary talents were recognized early, and encouraged by his art teacher at grammar school. lieutenant was also on that occasion, that he first had the opportunity to use an astronomical telescope.
At the age of fifteen, Ludek acquired a painter"s easel, and began to practice his hobby earnestly. He produced his first art works around the age of 19.
His first publications were The Moon and Planets (1963), and Our Planet Earth (1967).
His work first reached United States readers through the National Geographic Magazine, which commissioned him to do a series of works about Mars. Previous to the Mars article, he had painted 15 scenes for an article called, "Journey to the Planets", in August 1970. In 1967, Ludek wrote his first science-fiction novel, "Log of a Moon Expedition", which he illustrated in black and white.
lieutenant was published in the United Kingdom and United States of America in 1974.
He illustrated Space Shuttles in 1976. He worked with writer Peter Ryan on several slim books for children: Journey to the Planets (1972), Planet Earth (1972), The Ocean World (1973), and UFOs and Other Worlds, (1975).
He later worked with the same author on the large-format Solar System (1978). He also illustrated the excellent "Bildatlas des Sonnensystems" (1974), with German text by Bruno Stanek.
In 1976, he published a fairy tale called, Schön friedliche Welt (English version as "A Beautiful, Peaceful World"), which is part of the children"s book Update on Rumpelstiltskin and other Fairy Tales by 43 Authors, which is compiled by Hans-Joachim Gelberg, illustrated by Willi Glasauer, and published by Beltz & Gelberg.
His other publications include a photographic record of Lebanon"s historical monuments and natural beauties, and several other novels. One, "Prey der Beute" (Price of a Prey), is about the lives of whalers from old times to the present. From 1981 to 1985, he produced a series of 35 paintings on "The Planet Mars", and a series of 50 paintings, "Virgin Forests in the United States of America", one of which can be seen on the Earth page.
He has produced several 360-degree panoramas for projection in the domes of the planetariums at Stuttgart, Winnipeg, and Lucerne, and has exhibited in Washington, District of Columbia, Boston, Nashville, Stuttgart, Berne, Lucerne, Zurich, and other venues.
His work is in the collection of the Smithsonian Institution.