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What was your first introduction to Science Fiction
literature ?
It very likely was a striking cover on a book or
magazine. At the Worldcon, we celebrate SF in all its aspects, and that
most definitely includes the art of SF illustration.
Noreascon 4 plans to present an exhibit of the greatest
and most memorable art from the Golden Age of SF illustration, but
we'll need your help to do it. We'd like to create an exhibit of 100 or
so of the best pieces of SF art from 1950 to 1975. Can you help us
select and locate them?
SF art came of age in the early 50s when a new crop of
talented artists entered the field at the same time as the SF market
exploded. Add to this the introduction of better production techniques
which allowed a leap in the reproduction quality of SF cover art, and
(arguably) you have a Golden Age of SF illustration. It began in the
50s, and it's still going on today.
Look at the covers of Astounding. During
the 40s, there were some striking covers, but starting around 1951 or
52 the covers suddenly become classics. For many of us the art of this
period defined SF art. Through the 50s, SF art got better and better
and by the mid-60s there were artists at work who are every bit the
equals of the best of today's masters.
Think of the artists:
- John Schoenherr
- Frank Kelly Freas
- Jack Gaughan
- Paul Lehr
- Ed Emshwiller
- Richard Powers
- Gray Morrow
- Alex Schomberg
- H.R. Van Dongen
- Frank Frazetta
- Tim Kirk
- Jeff Jones
Masters all these are the artists that attracted
generations of readers and inspired the next generation of writers and
artists.
Part of our inspiration for this exhibit is the two
brilliant retrospectives we've seen in the past ten years. At Magicon
in 1992, Vincent Di Fate assembled a remarkable art retrospective of
fifty pieces covering the entire history of SF art, and at Chicon 2000,
Phyllis and Alex Eisenstein presented art from their collection and a
number of others to show an extraordinary group of pieces (this was the
highlight of the entire convention for me).
We'd like to show 100 or so of the most memorable pieces
from 1950 to 1975: the classic covers and interiors that you and every
fan will remember when you see them. The problem? To find them and to
arrange to borrow them! Do you own a piece which might be appropriate
for the show which you'd be willing to loan? Send us a picture
it doesn't have to be high resolution or anything, just enough so we
can know what piece it is. You don't even have to send a picture
just tell us on what book or magazine cover it was used and we'll find
it. Tell us who the artist was, how big it is, and where it was
published. You can mail the information to our address or email it
(digital photos are fine) to: ArtRetro@Noreascon.org.
Help us make this one of the highlights of the
convention the kind of exhibit where you can be lost in wonder
for hours.
All of the pieces of art on this page have been offered
to us for inclusion in the exhibit, but we want more! This page shows just a few of the pieces
we'd like to be able to show.
Mark Olson
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