sci fi
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70sscifiart: Alan Daniels
writersnoonereads:Arkady and Boris Strugatsky are probably the most famous Soviet-era science-fiction writers, but only recently have any of their numerous books come back into print in the US: Chicago Review Press published a new translation of Roadside
70sscifiart: Escape from the Planet of the Apes
70sscifiart:Greg Irons, “Light Comitragies,” 1971
70sscifiart: David A. Hardy, 1978
70sscifiart: Jean-Pierre Normand
70sscifiart: Danny Flynn
thehauntedrocket:Tom Corbett Space Cadet (1952)Art by Al McWilliams
70sscifiart: Brandon McConnell
70sscifiart: David Schleinkofer
70sscifiart: Moebius
70sscifiart: Jack Gaughan, 1965
70sscifiart: Jim Burns
70sscifiart: Philippe Druillet
70sscifiart: Vincent Di Fate
70sscifiart: Peter Elson did his take on the space helmet reflection with this 1981 work, a cover to Arthur C. Clarke’s ‘Of Time and Stars.’This trope is so popular in part because of its visual economy: It elegantly gets both a face and the scene
70sscifiart: David A. Hardy
70sscifiart: Eddie Jones, “First Assault on the Death Star,” 1977
70sscifiart: Alien clubbing
70sscifiart: John Berkey
70sscifiart: Roger Dean
70sscifiart:Peter Elson
70sscifiart: Angus McKie
70sscifiart: Syd Mead
70sscifiart: John Berkey’s 1969 cover to Secret of the Sunless World, by Carroll M. Capps
70sscifiart: Jeffrey Catherine Jones, “Sargasso of Space”
70sscifiart: Bob Eggleton
70sscifiart: Peter Elson
70sscifiart: Jennell Jaquays
70sscifiart: Franco Storchi
70sscifiart: Eye-shaped Robert McCall concept art for Star Trek: The Motion Picture
70sscifiart: Jon Lomberg
70sscifiart: John Schoenherr, 1963 cover art for Man of Two Worlds, by Raymond F. Jones
70sscifiart: 1979 The Black Hole concept art, by Peter Ellenshaw
70sscifiart:Fantastic magazine covers
70sscifiart: Bob Larkin
70sscifiart: Robert McCall
70sscifiart: Alan Gutierrez
70sscifiart: ‘Megastructure,’ by Syd Mead
70sscifiart: Happy Space Helmet Reflection Saturday! Here’s David O'Connor’s 1980 cover to ‘Who Goes There?’ by Edward Edelson. Again, the reflection helps put a viewer in the space shoes of the astronaut — and this time the title says exactly
70sscifiart: Paul Alexander
70sscifiart: I love how Mel Hunter signed his name on this one.
civilization fiction
70sscifiart: Bob Layzell
70sscifiart:Chris Foss, “Star Guard,” 1973
70sscifiart: Giangi Daverio
70sscifiart: Another big reason why the space helmet reflection visual trope works: By showing the witness to a view, the art ‘forces’ a reader to put themself in that person’s head and picture their emotional response.Great example: Stanislaw
70sscifiart: Jack Gaughan
70sscifiart: Jack Gaughan’s 1965 cover art for City of a Thousand Suns by Samuel R. Delany
70sscifiart: Uncredited 1978 cover art for The High Crusade, by Poul Anderson
70sscifiart: A surrealist Space Helmet Reflection Saturday: Ron Walotsky’s ‘Spaceman,’ an undated interior illustration in his 2000 art collection ’Inner Visions’
70sscifiart: Alan Guttierez, 1983
relatablepicturesofscully:
sci-fi-gifs: THE THING (1982) dir. John Carpenter