On 15 January 2025, the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket launched from NASA’s Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida bound for the Mare Crisium basin of the moon—carrying with it 47 artistic creations, including MAX IV colleague Filip Persson’s artwork, ‘MAX IV Control System’. The art will be part of humanity’s galactic impression to live for millions of years.
According to Persson, his artwork represents a new genre of art with requirements yet to be defined. “The idea with the genre ‘Technical Art’ is that a sufficiently complex machine can create art by being run in normal operation. So, no deliberate special run in order to create the art. It can, for example, be instabilities or other things creating a beautiful pattern.”

The work, curated for the MoonMars Museum project, was created with Python and Gephi software. All devices of the full control system of MAX IV along with all interconnections were extracted as a huge table. The table was then imported into Gephi as a node network and evolved using gravitational parameters, creating beautiful patterns resembling galaxies—a bit like a Big Bang but with the very different behaviour that all information about the control system and the connections remain intact.
“I have over the years seen a lot of beautiful graphs at MAX IV and I thought quite early, due to having a somewhat artistic mind, that it would be fun to do something with these images,” explained Filip Persson, who is MAX IV’s Assistant Head of Accelerator Operations.
The artworks are packaged both digitally, on a very resilient memory card, and analogue as laser etched into a nickel plate using state-of-the-art Nanofiche technology with 300 000 DPI resolution. The art is part of the company LifeShip’s payload called ‘Pyramid on the Moon’.
How does one define technical art? The parameters are something that Persson aims to classify so that more people from around the world can contribute to the genre.

Persson has delved into digital art, NFT (Non Fungible Token), and AI art for many years as a member of the VAVortex AI Art Community. In December 2024 his art won the Artcrush Australia competition and was featured on 500 billboards across Australia.
The special payload carried on Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost lunar lander was safely delivered Sunday, March 2nd 09:34 near a volcanic feature Mons Latreill at Mare Crisium on the lunar surface.