Source: Link at Wikipedia
Link at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
Protypical Roper? Check out my continuing series on the Origins of D&D... |
"Ten feet, twenty feet, thirty feet south. Passage turns east and west. Which way do you go?" "We go South." Stupefied look and momentary pause. "Okay. Bump, bump, bump." -E. Gary Gygax to adventurers in Greyhawk Castle, circa 1972 You have now entered the realm of the LORD OF THE GREEN DRAGONS -- a "Classic Gaming" blog.
Protypical Roper? Check out my continuing series on the Origins of D&D... |
Awesome. Thanks for sharing all those incredible covers. Some of them I'm very familiar with, but I can't say I have been a close follower of Jack Gaughan. Gives me some good ideas for some work of my own.
ReplyDeleteI own a bunch of those books. Not all are as interesting as their covers, sadly. ;)
ReplyDeleteAs always, thanks for this info. These are some great, classic sci-fi and fantasy illustrations.
ReplyDeleteI had never seen those covers for Lord of the Rings. I'm deeply impressed.
ReplyDeleteThree things strike me: the lurid color palette; the figurative, almost eerie drawing style; and, the lack of posing babes.
ReplyDeleteThey look as though Erol Otus's uncle did a lot of them. It's surprising how willing to be weird these covers are compared with today, which use realistic colors, hyper realism, and unrealistic woman. It's as though the cover shots of today are from a television show. Perhaps the Battlestar Galactica covers, with their greater emphasis on realism, were a harbinger.
I guess with the mass market, the belly for weird and creative covers became smaller, as the market got bigger.
I am happy that many of you are having happy reactions to these.
ReplyDelete@Brasspen: You noted the similarities with E. Otus. as well, eh? Van Gogh, too, especially with the first posted Elric cover (though there are hints of this in many). I agree with your point about the shift of fantastic illustration to a TV/Movie look and that this mode has all but sapped the enchantment and weird out of the matter and flattened it to a mass consumption model. Great commentary! :)
As I grow older my appreciation for Jack's work increases exponentially. I'm old enough to have seen many of these covers when they were first published, but at the time my favorite artists were Freas, Frazetta, Krenkel, Gray Morrow, Berkey and Richard Powers. Now I love Jack's amazing palette, his sense of design, and, as someone else commented, his willingness to be weird. Thanks for posting this amazing work, much of which I haven't seen for many years. I was slightly disappointed by the Outermost book; I would have liked to have seen a lot more work.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome, Steven. It took a while collecting these as there is surprisingly (at least to my knowledge) no comprehensive site that has grouped his art and illustration. I will update this post with additional finds as time permits.
ReplyDeleteI'm another who is old enough to have seen many of these covers at the time they were published. I sometimes liked and sometimes didn't like Gaughan's work at the time, but in retrospect, it looks very good indeed. I read virtually no contemporary science fiction, but I often do browse through the SF sections at the bookstores to see what's new, and today's covers are quite terrible. I miss the evocatively expressive art and design of the book covers of the 60s and (part of) the 70s, and I rank Richard Powers and Paul Lehr as the kings of the field, but Jack Gaughan was almost as prolific as they and worthy to be remembered in his own right. I do plan to get the OUTERMOST book. (Will someone please do a book on Lehr?)
ReplyDelete