Star Wars Art: Because we haven’t heard enough about Star Wars Lately!
No. You haven’t seen enough Star Wars yet
No. You haven’t seen enough Star Wars yet
George Lawlor has publicly posed the question. Maybe we should ask DeviantArt?
Satellite dishes aren’t usually considered to have great visual appeal, but the collection of images I found is surprisingly poetic.
Ken Kelly: NOT a Frazetta wannabe, as Mr. Jackson is quick to point out
Look at the aliens from This Island Earth. If they are so smart, why are the denizens of Metaluna all such big headed pricks?
Who can resist a laser gun wielding blonde with a tattoo on her ass, riding a dinosaur? Not me.
Oddly enough, cave women and cave men are frequently featured in SF and fantasy art.
All the magazine covers from 1940.
Images have power. Nothing has shown that more clearly than the sudden turn of the tide in the current refugee crisis.
Early science fiction and fantasy magazines of the twentieth century, of which Amazing Stories was chief, employed artists for their interior illustrations who could produce images of great variety using only ink applied to paper.
Take a gander at THE legendary fanzine – Hyphen
The Hugos are not the only awards given out at Worldcon. Celebrate the winners of the Chesley Awards.
Stairway to Heaven, Highway to Hell – escalators symbolise glitzy promises of glamour, or the grunge of broken down technology.
Lehr “dominated science fiction covers in the mid-1960s into the 1970s”
So what’s the difference between a robot, an android (or droid), and a cyborg?
21 Draw takes the art world by storm with this 254 page full-color masterpiece by 100 working artists!
Suyperhero films: Marvel succeeds, DC fails. Could the difference be one of character?
Artists used to get great exposure, back in the day. Now they’re fighting for more.
Liu Cixin’s International Best Seller has created a franchise
For more than a century the name Buck Rogers has been synonymous with science fiction.
Allowing the unconscious to express itself, surrealism resolves the contradictory realms of dream and reality
Space stations are a technological reality, but also a quintessential locus for projecting dreams about a bright technological future which might take humans to the stars.
Surrealism strays into all other areas of art from modern culture to food to sex to death.

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