Excerpt:
...Since ancient times, when Icarus and Daedalus strapped
on their wings of wax, man has attempted to overcome
his physical limitations and defy gravity. In the 1850s,
a half-century before the Wright Brothers made history
at Kittyhawk, Charles Dellschau believed he held the
secret of flight.
Dellschau (1830-1923) was an enigmatic self-taught
artist -- a Texas butcher who spent his retirement cloistered
in an attic painting large-scale books of flying machines.
Forgotten for nearly fifty years after his death, his
books were unearthed in the late 1960s.
A visually compelling body of work created by America's
earliest known visionary, the books have since attracted
the attention of collectors curators, and journalists.
As early and as-yet unexplained aviation plans, they
have also become a key piece of evidence in attempts
to prove the existence of extraterrestrial life, and
they are a highly inventive articulation of an age-old
human impulse. The source of Dellschau's inspiration
and the meaning of his work remain elusive. It is unclear
whether he worked from memory, transcribing the activities
of an aeronautical research society, or from his imagination,
depicting with unerring conviction a story of engineering
feats and clandestine activity.