#50 Weather Control

Home »
Weather Control

A beam of light sweeps in from the upper left, aimed at a tiny disc-like device that seems to “project” its influence across the curved edge of Earth. The composition is part map, part space-scene: recognizable landmasses sit at the margin while the background dissolves into stars and broad, painted bands of atmosphere. At the center, a ringed globe-like instrument hovers in orbit, drawn like a scientific model and a carnival prop at the same time.

“Weather Control” reads like a joke, yet the artwork leans into a very real historical fascination with mastering nature through technology. The exaggerated rays, the orbital apparatus, and the clean arcs around the sphere suggest a world where climate could be tuned as easily as a radio dial—an idea that has surfaced repeatedly in popular science, advertising, and futurist illustrations. It’s the kind of visual optimism that makes big promises with simple shapes: point a device, adjust the sky, and fix the planet.

For a WordPress post, this image works beautifully as a conversation starter about early visions of geoengineering, space-age imagination, and the long-running dream of controlling the elements. The playful, slightly “pulpy” style keeps it funny while still hinting at deeper themes—human ambition, anxiety about weather, and the temptation to believe there’s a machine for every problem. Whether you read it as satire or sincere futurism, it’s a memorable piece of retro science art that invites a closer look.