© Yayoi Kusama. Courtesy David Zwirner, New York
This installation by renowned Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama uses mirrors and LED lights to give viewers the sense of being in deep space.
NASA
An image of earth captured by American astronaut William Anders during Apollo 8, the first manned space mission to leave Earth's orbit.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Produced for a church in Siena, Italy, Giovanni di Paolo's Renaissance painting portrays the universe as a series of concentric circles. The earth sits in the center, with the sun above and the known planets in orbit.
© Wolfgang Tillmans, courtesy Maureen Paley, London
A photograph showing Venus as it passes between the Earth and the sun. This transit of Venus against the sun will not be visible again until 2117.
Smithsonian American Art Museum/Art Resource/Scala, Florence
African-American artist Alma Thomas depicted the setting sun in this painting from the latter stages of her career. The name is believed to refer to Apollo 10's lunar module, Snoopy. But, as the new book "Universe: Exploring the Astronomical World" suggests, it may refer to the cartoon strip character: "(Snoopy's) habitual position lying on top of his doghouse might also explain why the horizon runs vertically rather than horizontally."
Sotheby's, Inc. © 2011
One of two cosmological woodcuts created by German Renaissance painter and theorist Albrecht Dürer. Based on the work of Austrian mathematician Johannes Stabius and German astronomer Conrad Heinfogel, the two images show the northern and southern constellations.
© The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation/Art Resource, NY, Dist. RMN-Grand Palais
Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky alludes to the cosmos through a series of colored circles set against a black backdrop.
NASA
American astronaut Bruce McCandless floats above Earth as he becomes the first person to embark on an untethered spacewalk in 1984.
Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford, UK/Bridgeman Images
A 16th-century illustration based on the work of influential 13th-century astronomer, Abu Yahya Zakariya' ibn Muhammad al-Qazwini. In a theory popular throughout the Islamic world at the time, Qazvini envisaged the world surrounded by a series of spheres.
DEA Picture Library/DeAgostini/Getty Images
An ancient Mayan depiction of the cosmos, with the fire god Xiuhtecuhlti at its center. T-shaped trees can be seen in each of the four cardinal directions.
Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Firenze
Galileo produced these detailed drawings after observing the moon through a small telescope. Thanks to his artistic training, Galileo realized that he could use the visible shadows to ascertain the moon's topography.
The Cartin Collection
Flaming comets are imagined flying over -- and towards -- Earth. The image appeared in "The Augsburg Book of Miracles" a recently discovered 16th-century manuscript envisaging disasters sent by God.
Phaidon
"Universe: Exploring the Astronomical World," published by Phaidon, is available now.
CNN  — 

On the walls of the Lascaux cave in France, prehistoric artists produced one of the oldest known star maps – six dots painted above images of Paleolithic beasts. Some 17,000 years later, in 2017, NASA produced a series high-definition photographs showing Jupiter’s stormy south pole.

Humankind’s attempts to picture the cosmos have come a long way. But according to a new book on how we depict the universe, this isn’t just a matter of science. It’s also about art.

The Metropolitan Museum of Art
"The Creation of the World and the Expulsion From Paradise" (1445) by Giovanni Di Paolo

Bringing together a collection of 300 images – from ancient stone carvings to abstract modernist paintings – “Universe: Exploring the Astronomical World” charts our history of mapping, illustrating and finding meaning in the skies above.

The book features work by artists and thinkers of the past, including Galileo’s sketches of the moon, Andy Warhol’s pop art print of Buzz Aldrin and religious manuscripts envisaging galactic disasters sent by God.

Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale di Firenze
"The Moon" (1609) by Galileo Galilei

Through them, we can see changes in how humans understand the universe and our place within it, according to Paul Murdin of University of Cambridge’s Institute of Astronomy. As he writes in the book’s introduction: “As we have learned more about (the universe) physically, we have also come to interpret it in different ways. For that reason, space has long fascinated scientists, astronomers and visual artists and it remains a recurring subject in our society and culture.

“Many of the images (in the book) prove that, as astronomical research continues, the close relationship between the scientific and the artistic will remain as close as it has been for the last 17,000 years.”

Universe: Exploring the Astronomical World,” published by Phaidon, is available now.