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Astrophotographer may become first out gay man in space – Washington Blade

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Jon Carmichael (Photo courtesy of Jon Carmichael)

Jon Carmichael could become the first openly gay man to travel to space, and he says it’s “about time.”

An astrophotographer and pilot, Carmichael is applying to the Inspiration 4 program — the first all-civilian space mission. The trip will be led by pilot Jared Isaacman, the founder and CEO of Shift4 Payments, a company that supports e-commerce platforms.

The spacecraft will take four people to travel in Earth’s orbit for three to five days. The launch date has not been determined, but it will be no earlier than October.  

Carmichael, 34, says he has had an interest in space since he was a kid.

“It’s my lifelong dream now to go to space, and it’s actually more realistic now,” he told the Washington Blade. “It actually could happen.”

He
loves to take photos of the Earth’s galaxy, the Milky Way, to connect people to
the “mesmerizing” experience often lost due to light pollution.

“We’ve really lost touch of that — that curiosity and that wonder,” he said “That’s why I like to go out of my way in the middle of nowhere away from light pollution and shoot these night sky images so that doesn’t get lost, so I can share that with others, so that people still can feel that inspiration.”

Carmichael’s application to the contest has been recognized by George Takei, the gay actor who played Hikaru Sulu in the original “Star Trek” series.

(Astronaut Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, was closeted most of her life. Details of her 27-year relationship with Tam O’Shaughnessy were only revealed after Ride’s death in 2012.)

Carmichael is based in Las Vegas and is helping his mother, who was recently diagnosed with Hodgkins and non-Hodgkins lymphoma after surviving Stage 4 Hodgkins lymphoma five years ago.  She encouraged him to apply to Inspiration 4, he said. 

The Inspiration 4 mission is also raising awareness and funds for St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. Carmichael gifted prints of his piece, “108,” of the 2017 total solar eclipse to those who donated $50 or more to the hospital.

Each
person on the Inspiration 4 mission represents a “pillar” of leadership, hope,
generosity or prosperity.

Carmichael is applying for the prosperity seat, which is for an entrepreneur who has used Shift4Payments’ Shift4Shop platform to launch a business. The leadership seat is taken by Isaacman and the generosity seat is for an individual who has supported the St. Jude mission. Hayley Arceneaux, a physician assistant at St. Jude and pediatric cancer survivor, will take the hope seat.

The rest of the winners will be announced in late March.

Inspiration
4 isn’t the only space mission for which Carmichael is vying.

He’s been working on his application to the dearMoon Project, where eight artists from around the world can apply to take a trip to the moon in 2023. The mission is created and led by Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa and Elon Musk.

“It
really will ignite a new era of the space race and excitement for space again,”
he said.

“Stardust”, a close-up of the center of the Milky Way Galaxy. (Photo
by Jon Carmichael)

Carmichael became fascinated with the total solar eclipse in his seventh grade geography class in Las Vegas.

“I
was so blown away by it,” he said. “Since that day, I was determined to see
this eclipse.”

Carmichael
in 2017 took career-changing images of the eclipse on a Southwest flight.

After losing an in-flight viewing party contest hosted by Alaska Airlines, he booked a flight from Portland, Ore., to St. Louis in order to be in the air while the eclipse was in its totality. When the flight crew found out about Carmichael’s story, the pilot cleaned a window for a clearer shot and even adjusted the plane’s flight pattern to help Carmichael capture as much of the eclipse as possible.

Carmichael stitched more than 1,000 photos together that he captured in the three minutes of totality to get the finished product. He said he worked more than 200 hours on the piece.

The
photo was unveiled privately at #OneTeam, a Twitter company event where
Carmichael was the substitute keynote speaker when Musk, the original
headliner, cancelled at the last minute. A self-proclaimed “Elon Musk fanboy,”
he was excited about the possibility of meeting him, but Carmichael said his
first speech in front of more than 1,000 people was a “beautiful
moment” that changed his life.

“Moral
of this story is things not happening for the better,” he said. “My entire
career is still around this eclipse image years later.” 

The photo was later publicly unveiled on the first anniversary of the eclipse at Twitter’s New York office.

The 2017 solar eclipse from a Southwest flight. (Photo courtesy of Jon Carmichael)

Carmichael began photography at 20 when he moved to Los Angeles after coming out. Two years later, he made the passion a career, he said.

“I was going through a bit of a depression in my life because I had just come out, and I wasn’t received very well in circles I was in my life,” he said. “So I ran away to L.A. to start a new life. And I suddenly fell in love with photography while I was there, and that sort of became my escape from my depression.”

Former President Obama and Lady Gaga are among the celebrities whose pictures he’s taken, but Carmichael has been fascinated with space and documenting the universe since he was a kid. The astrophotography specialization was a hobby and he rarely shared this work with anyone, but he decided to formally print his work in his father’s honor after he passed away in 2013.

Carmichael’s
first buyer and collector was Elton John.

He
met John’s assistant at the Million Dollar Piano show at Caesars Palace in Las
Vegas while he was meeting another buyer in 2015.

From left: Jon Carmichael with Elton John (Photo courtesy of Jon Carmichael)

“We turned his entire living room into like a pop-up gallery,” said Carmichael. “He became my first collector because of this, and he was the reason that inspired me to actually follow this path.”

To Carmichael, the curiosity and mystery of space are what drive him. The unknowns, rather than terrifying him, inspire a connection to childhood and allow hardships “to disappear.”

“When
you are thinking about the universe, and you’re thinking about the reality of
where and who we are in the universe, it’s such a humbling experience,” he
said. “And that humility is what actually unites us because it gives us
all an ego check.”