
USAF Astronaut Plants Flag on Titan — If Magazine, February 1957
Rendered in vivid gouache with crisp, optimistic brushwork typical of 1950s pulp cover illustration, this striking image depicts a pressure-suited astronaut scaling a flagpole to plant a USAF star-and-bar insignia on Titan, Saturn's moon. Saturn looms massive in the golden sky behind jagged alien ice formations. The composition balances patriotic Cold War bravado with genuine astronomical ambition — Saturn's rings rendered with careful detail, the frozen terrain pale and alien beneath an infinite black void.
A clean, confident cover that earns its score through sheer patriotic audacity — planting an Air Force flag on Saturn's moon is peak Atomic Age ambition. The spectacle is more Norman Rockwell-in-space than fever dream, but the Saturn backdrop and icy alien terrain give it genuine wonder.
“if WORLDS OF SCIENCE FICTION FEBRUARY 35 CENTS IN THIS ISSUE! Frank Riley's provocative short novel ABBR.! Also Arthur C. Clarke, James McConnell, Bryce Walton and others USAF TITAN”





