American Futurism in the Atomic EraMain MenuIntroductionUnderstanding the Development and Context of Futurism in the Cold WarBusinesses Embrace FuturismNASABoosted by FuturismMarketed AudiencesSuburban American; Youth; Specialized: Scientists, Technologists, IndustrialFuturism by ThemeConclusionBibliographyGina Plumeye78b6aad26fa4301c0f15031f1ee2970fee53980
Figure 60: Concept art illustration depicting space age architecture
12019-12-04T23:19:49+00:00Gina Plumeye78b6aad26fa4301c0f15031f1ee2970fee539806611963 concept art showing for a coffee shop in Oakland, CA. The design takes root from popular imagery of spaceship design.plain2019-12-04T23:19:49+00:00Gina Plumeye78b6aad26fa4301c0f15031f1ee2970fee53980
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12019-12-04T23:19:31+00:00Futurism by Theme: "The Atomic Age" and Rocket Design1plain2019-12-04T23:19:31+00:00 While there are examples of the other themes of futurism in other eras, none is more unique to the Cold War than the marketed emphasis on Atomic Culture. Nuclear energy was promoted in magazines to maintain support and deflect from the negative affects emerging through scientific research. Automotive design and architecture adopted the imagery that was presented in space concept imagery (see figures 60 and 62). Gas stations, restaurants, shopping malls, and other entertainment venues all embraced the concept of nuclear power and rocketry in design (see figure 61). Astro pops and other consumable goods normalized the idea of living in the nuclear age, particularly to the younger generation. Fashion utilized the bomb craze for a time which saw atomic themed beauty pageants, mushroom cloud apparel, and the introduction of the bikini.[1] Most significant in the normalization of atomic culture was the promotion of nuclear research as an energy source (see figures 58 and 63). While nuclear energy was promoted as the potential environmental solution it was also given positive weight through that technology being a necessary component to rockets.