Formally trained in Physics and Astronomy, José Francisco Salgado uses his skills in astronomy, education, and visual arts to create multimedia works that communicate science in engaging ways. In 2010 he co-founded KV 265, a non-profit organization whose mission is the communication of science through art and for which he serves as Executive Director. Prior to this positions he worked from 2000 to 2015 as an astronomer and science visualizer at the Adler Planetarium in Chicago.
Television
Host of Nuestra Galaxia
In February 2006, José Francisco Salgado started hosting Nuestra Galaxia, a news segment in the Noticias Univision Chicago 5 p.m. newscast. In the weekly segment Salgado featured astronomy news, skywatching information, and answers to questions submitted by viewers. That same year he was nominated for an Emmy Award for his work in the segment. Nuestra Galaxia concluded in 2008 with 110 segments aired. Salgado is interviewed regularly in newscasts and radio shows across the U.S. He has appeared twice on Chicago Tonight.
Contributions to Television Productions
José Francisco Salgado has contributed his photography and videos of astronomical observatories and the night sky to many science documentaries including:
In 2006, José Francisco Salgado produced and directed Gustav Holst's The Planets, a critically acclaimed, award-winning astronomy film to accompany live performances of the popular orchestral suite. The film features awe-inspiring images, historical illustrations, NASA and European Space Agency animations, as well as science visualizations produced by Salgado. The film, which follows the tone and tempo set by the music, was premiered by the Chicago Sinfonietta. The reception by audience members and critics prompted a second Science & Symphony film entitled Astronomical Pictures at an Exhibition and a repeat concert of Gustav Holst's The Planets in Chicago's Millennium Park. Salgado’s films were featured in the opening ceremony of the International Year of Astronomy at the UNESCO Headquarters in Paris and were shown around the world as part of IYA2009 festivities. In 2014, his collaboration with composer Chris Theofanidis, The Legend of the Northern Lights was premiered with Grant Park Orchestra to critical acclaim on two nights in front of 32,000 people. By mid 2015, the films have been presented in more than 100 concerts and have reached a combined audience of more than 250,000 people in concert halls, museums, and lecture halls spanning 45 cities in 15 countries. Some of the orchestras that have presented these works include the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the Boston Pops Orchestra, the San Francisco Symphony, the National Symphony Orchestra, the Czech National Symphony Orchestra, the Victoria Symphony, the California Symphony, the Pacific Symphony, the Orchestra Teatro Regio Torino, the National Taiwan University Symphony Orchestra, and the Santa Fe Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, in addition to a 10-city tour in Spain. In Toledo, Spain the Astronomical Pictures at an Exhibition concert was honored with the Teatro de Rojas Best Concert of Season award. Salgado's Science & Symphony films include:
Moontides
Nocturnes
Aurora Triptych
The Legend of the Northern Lights
Moonrise
3D Universe
The Universe at an Exhibition
Gustav Holst's The Planets
His short films include :
Solaris - Part I of Aurora Triptych
Borealis / Wondrous Light - Parts II & III of Aurora Triptych
In 2010 Salgado joined with musician and composer Tom Bailey to form the audiovisual ensemble Bailey-Salgado Project. BSP combines music with photography, video, and motion graphics to create multimedia works that have as their subject the physical world. Their first work together, the short film entitled Sidereal Motion, was premiered in Bath, England on 27 October 2010. Subsequently, they have presented their works in San Juan, Chicago, and Valencia. Their works include:
Moonrise
Sketches for Moonrise
The Carina Nebula
Staring at the Sun
Sidereal Motion
Photography and illustrations
José Francisco Salgado is a contributing writer for Digital Photography Review. He writes photo techniques and equipment, especially those used in astrophotography. His photographs, composites, and illustrations have been published in magazines and science books, and shown in cities such as San Juan, Belgrade, Chicago, and Paris. Salgado, a two-time Photoshop Guru Award finalist, has photographed 17 astronomical observatories around the world. In 2010 he was named ESO Photo Ambassador by the European Southern Observatory for his photographic work done at the European observatories in Chile. Salgado experiments with high dynamic range imaging, time-lapse, infrared, fisheye, and stereoscopic photography to enhance his multimedia works.
Selected contributions to books
100 New Scientific Discoveries, 2011, Time Inc.,,
Einstein’s Telescope: The Hunt for Dark Matter and Dark Energy in the Universe, E. Gates, 2009. W. W. Norton,
Astrolies, N. Stanic & M. Tadic, Belgrade, 2005. Zavod,
Zvezdani Gradovi. Galaksije–Putovanje Kroz Vreme, N. Stanic, Belgrade, 2004. Zavod,