Friday, April 12, 2013

Good news! SPECTRUM 20 Selections!

Happy to hear that two of my 2012 works have been selected for inclusion in the forthcoming SPECTRUM 20: THE BEST IN CONTEMPORARY FANTASTIC ART, edited by Arnie & Cathy Fenner!

My cover artwork for Brenda Cooper's THE CREATIVE FIRE: BOOK ONE OF RUBY'S SONG (Pyr), art directed by Lou Anders:


And TARS TARKAS: THE GHOST THAT HAUNTS THE SUPERSTITION MOUNTAINS, my interior illustration for Chris Claremont's story in UNDER THE MOONS OF MARS: NEW ADVENTURES OF BARSOOM, edited by John Joseph Adams, and art directed by Tom Daly (Simon & Schuster):


Both of these were selected in the Book division by Spectrum 20 jurors, Tim Bruckner, Irene Gallo, Tim Kirk, Mark A. Nelson and Michael Whelan. The book will be published by Underwood Books in November.

Both of these works will be included in my display at Spectrum Fantastic Art 2 in Kansas City next month. :)

Monday, April 08, 2013

How To Change A Worldcon


I saw something inspiring this past weekend.

I saw working people helping each other, toward a common cause. They were, in some cases, working toward this despite deep political and philosophical differences. They were working people, creating a World Science Fiction Convention.

This weekend, they met in San Antonio to plan logistics, scout locations, diagnose problems, create solutions, cement relationships, and make a convention. Their goal -- to create the best World Science Fiction Convention possible this August in San Antonio, and when this convention arrives, it will bring some of the world’s best talent in science fiction/fantasy literature and art, as it inevitably does every year.

I watch this happen, and know that I have no interest in running one of these or volunteering on a committee. Ever.

It takes a special kind of human to do these things – to create a convention from the ground up. I have my hands full making art clients happy, building a company, making opportunities, making art. I can’t help but take my hat off to those that do have the fortitude to do this kind of work. I suspect making a Worldcon is a labor of love for them, in the same way that making art is mine.


This past Saturday, I took a few minutes to swing by the San Antonio Convention Center and Marriott Rivercenter hotel to see just what these World Science Fiction Society folks do, in preparation for a Worldcon. This is what I saw.

1) They’re not a mafia.

Far from it.

They’re working people, just like you and me. There were roughly 100 to 125 of them that I could see. This was an ‘all-staff’ meeting for convention committee members. These people, in most cases, have day jobs. They have families and lives back home that have nothing to do with fandom or sf/f. They paid hundreds of dollars of their own money to travel, lodge and feed themselves, taking time off from work and family. All of this, so that they could do the invisible hard work of planning and problem-solving -- negotiating, haggling, analyzing, questioning, and solution-making. They weren’t there for glory or thank-yous, but simply To Do The Job, and do it well.

2) Worldcon wants change.

True. I’m not going to say that all Worldcons have, but from what I see and hear, this one in San Antonio wants to be different. Change wears a million faces. The shape of that face often depends on who’s looking, and from what vantage point. In this case, I see a chairperson named Randy Shepard who is what once made me proud to be a Texan. He belongs to a Texas before George Bush, before Rick Perry, where mavericks and democracy were celebrated, where the weird and the strange were welcomed, where being different was cool, where common sense was King. These days, it’s hard to remember that this Texas even existed. Randy hasn’t forgotten, and he wants the biggest, boldest programming ideas that sf/f literature and art can bring. More importantly, he wants them to happen. I’m rooting for him.

3) Worldcon is a team game, not a glory trip.

What makes this con special? Put the traditions aside. Put the guests aside. Put the Hugos aside. The ugly truth that many Worldcon critics won’t face is this – the World Science Fiction Society belongs to the critics, if they know how to claim it. The power of a Worldcon IS there for the critics to claim for their very own, and swing like a mighty hammer, if they just reach out and grab it. It’s right there. Why? Because the World Science Fiction Society is one of the best examples of democracy in action that we still have. Anyone can join the process, and anyone can change it, if they use the tools of democracy properly. It’s that simple.

What’s beautiful is that the ones that wield the power are the ones that are doing the work, and until someone works harder, works smarter, and works better than them – then the workers wield the power. As an American, I feel pretty good when accessible working people wield the power, rather than a faceless elite hiding behind pretense. Don’t you?

From what I see out here, those that demand change and spew venom at the Hugos and at Worldcon – they’ve demanded a place at the table with angry blogposts and derisive comments. They want their voices heard. They want the Hugos to reflect their tastes. They want to believe that there’s an ‘establishment’ blocking the world from seeing their way.

What makes Worldcon great is it's a convention by the people, for the people. At its best, it welcomes the outlier. It welcomes the outcast. It welcomes everyone to take part and better yet, to criticize it, and shape it into something better. And it’s always ripe for a revolution, for a new regime, for a group of critics, trolls, and nerd ragers to democratically bring their new ideas into the fold. It’s there for the taking every single year, with no exception. How?

Simply show up.

And do the work.

I just saw some of that hard work in action, this weekend. I saw hard-working people leaving behind their dayjobs and families for four days. They paid their own money to get on a plane and fly to a distant location. They checked their egos at the door. They thought about what they wanted. They took the time to understand the wants and needs of those around them. They took the time to understand others’ fears and hopes. They took the time to show up at the World Science Fiction Society meetings. They proposed amendments and changes. They built coalitions. They built relationships. They made the future happen.

Easy.

Simple as that.

Once you put yourself in the shoes of these men and women – the ones who do the work – any agent of change would have to ask themselves first, “Why would someone do all of this work and then turn around and submit to those that aren’t doing any work?” Social media is a weapon. But to my friends who criticize Worldcon and the Hugos – let me offer some advice -- the truth is you need a bigger weapon. You’re bringing a knife to a gunfight.

If you want to change Worldcon, you’ve gotta bring yourself.

You’ve gotta bring your best desire to build a common good. And you’ve gotta bring what makes you extraordinary to Worldcon, in some way, shape or form -- every year if need be -- in person, until you've changed this world, as you see fit.

In short – you’ve gotta bring your best. And you simply can’t do that by solely hiding behind an avatar and a keyboard. Apathy has never rung more hollow than when someone slams the Hugos or Worldcon, and has never attended either.

I’m stoked about the experience and leadership I saw in action this weekend in San Antonio. I saw people methodically solving problems. I saw people with big visions. I saw people with the will to make those visions happen. I saw people who want to achieve the very best.

It bodes well for a landmark Worldcon this summer in San Antonio. I’ll be there. You should be there too, if you care about science fiction and fantasy, and especially if you don’t like the current state of the Hugos or Worldcon. Bring a revolution. Bring your best -- because this Worldcon, and this world, needs you.

If you do, it’s quite possible you might find a world bigger than yourself.

(Upper right photo credit: http://www.kylecassidy.com/ / Lower photo credit: William Lexner and The Brotherhood Without Banners)

Saturday, March 30, 2013

It's Been A Good Day

Found out this morning that I was selected for the 20th edition of SPECTRUM: THE BEST IN CONTEMPORARY FANTASTIC ART. Congrats to all of the artists who made the list! :)

Fast forward a few hours, and the 2013 Hugo Award nominee announcement went public announcing that I'm a 2013 finalist for Best Professional Artist!

Grateful and honored to be in the company of Dan Dos Santos, Julie Dillon, Chris McGrath, and Vincent Chong. Congrats, folks -- and to all of the nominees! :) This is the first Hugo nomination for Julie, Chris and Vincent. It's the fifth for Dan.

The complete list of 2013 Hugo Awards nominees is here, and it's a list full of surprises and new blood, which is great to see.

The final voting for the Hugos will open soon. Details here.

I'll be in San Antonio for this year's LoneStarCon 3, where the Hugo ceremony will take place over Labor Day weekend. Should be a blast!

And in the coming weeks, I'll find out which piece of my 2012 work was selected for this year's Spectrum annual, which releases in November.

Been a good day. These kind don't happen often.

Might be a good time for a Macallan 25. ;)


Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Andrew Wyeth on Art, Work, Life, and America

If anyone can find more conversations with Andrew Wyeth, please holler. This conversation is gold. I love this guy's work, and don't need words to enhance that. However, hearing him talk about work is especially inspiring. My favorite line -- "....when you know something, and feel it and have a love for it...my god....do it. Don't let it go by."

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

My 2012 Body of Work

It's been a crazy start to 2013 here, so I'm only just now posting an illustrated list of my 2012 body of professional work, including covers for Brenda Cooper's THE CREATIVE FIRE, Ian McDonald's BE MY ENEMY, and the limited edition of Dan Simmons' HYPERION, as well as the first glimpses of my Loteria card set.

As noted by Tor.com and most of your social media circles, the awards nomination season is upon us again (Hugos and otherwise). If you wish to reference this list for future consideration, please feel free to peruse and bookmark at your convenience. Enjoy!

Wednesday, January 09, 2013

The Shiny New Future of Publishing

Just read a must-read post by Dennis Johnson of Melville House, outlining the very-possible closing-down of Barnes & Noble's physical bookstores. For many of my more radical ebook-loving friends, this is cause for cheering and applause. I do not agree with them. For me and several of my long-time publishing friends, it's the realization of something we've been watching and noting since around 2008/2009, like watching a massive train derail in slow-motion.

While I do not forget big-box stores' ruthless and myopic elimination of independent bookstore competition over the years (good ol' American capitalism, right?), I don't applaud the demise of any bookstore, even the big-box versions. And if you're a fan of anything that's written or drawn in published form, then you should pay attention to what's happening right now, because it's going to affect you, even if you're really happy right now with your Shiny New Future. And in fact, it already is affecting you, even if you don't realize it.


New York Times' David Streitfeld, in a recent report on ebooks: “The triumph of e-books over their physical brethren is not happening quite as fast as forecast.” Streitfeld floated the idea that this may be due to the “counterintuitive possibility … that the 2011 demise of Borders, the second-biggest chain, dealt a surprising blow to the e-book industry. Readers could no longer see what they wanted to go home and order.”

Result, according to Melville House's Johnson? "The closing of bookstores selling PRINT books may also be hurting the sale of EBOOKS."


Ding-ding-ding. Hi, folks -- that's Reality ringing your cultural doorbell.


My take: Culture is an ecosystem. Think balance. Think beyond the length of your own arm. Our current Shiny New Future of Publishing is built for short-term gratification, and long-term 'scorched earth' (borrowing Johnson's phrase). I think we can do better than that. We NEED to do better than that.


I offer this to anyone reading this -- you're not in charge of 'saving Barnes and Noble' or 'saving publishing' or 'saving culture'. That's missing the point. It's the wrong way to frame these events. You ARE in charge of deciding what kind of culture you want, and leaving a world of better choices than the one you were given. In publishing and in reading culture, we're not doing such a hot job lately. Stop choosing convenience over culture, people. You can have both, but when you choose the former exclusively over the latter, you lose. Ebooks are NOT the devil, but ignorance sure is. 

Monday, December 31, 2012

Goodbye, 2012....Hello, 2013!

Hey, 2012 -- You were an amazing career year. Fortunate and grateful to have so many highlights packed into twelve months. Here's to continuing to put nose to grindstone in 2013, and hopefully becoming a better artist.

Today marks the last day of the 2012 George R. R. Martin / A SONG OF ICE AND FIRE Calendar that I illustrated. This gig was one of the joys of my career, and I'm grateful for not only the work but for George, Parris, Anne, Dave, the Brotherhood Without Banners, and all of the worldwide friends that made the experience one of the best of my life so far. The work is its own reward, but the cherry on top was receiving the Chesley Award for Best Product Illustration for the calendar's artwork.

This was the year I won the Hugo Award for Best Professional Artist, becoming the seventeenth artist in the history of sf/f to do so. Again -- incredibly grateful.

This was also the year that I launched a company for my creator-owned works -- Lone Boy -- and the year that I produced a 2013 calendar of some of my best cover artworks, as the first product offering from Lone Boy. The next Lone Boy endeavor will be Loteria. I can't wait to create all of that artwork, and bring a new set of visions to it in the coming months.

2013 is gonna be a big year, and I sincerely thank everyone who has shared in my work to this point. I'm grateful for being a part of the sf/f genre community, and I'm looking forward to continuing to make more big sf/f art, while expanding my outreach in the weeks ahead. All best wishes in 2013 to all of my friends and family near, far, and around the world -- may all of you experience the very best of times in this coming New Year. Let's keep trying everyday to make a better world together.