More accolades for The Tyrannosaur's Feathers, which has been shortlisted in the Animals & Nature category of The Week Junior Book Awards.
Written by @JonathanEmmett and me, illustrated by @stievenvdp, it takes a light-hearted look at how our understanding of T. rex has changed again and again in the face of new evidence.
So my entry in the @neilhimself Folio Society contest didn't make the cut as a finalist 😢 It's disappointing, but I gave it my best shot and am very happy with what I created ☠️ 🖤
I might still turn it into an art print for my Etsy shop with a portion of funds raised going to charity, like I did with the bookmark art I also did for 'The Truth is a Cave in the Black Mountains'. If I do I will post about it here later on
Virgil Finlay art for the April-May 1965 Things To Come for the Science Fiction Book Club, advertising The 9th Annual of the Year’s Best SF edited by Judith Merril. #FinlayFriday
A little preview for the #illustration I commissioned for my upcoming #Aphrodite / #Demeter story in which the Goddess of Love comforts the Corn Mother with casual, comfy sex.
Virgil Finlay illustrating ‘The Bird of Time’ by Wallace West from Thrilling Wonder Stories, October 1952. It was incorporated with three other stories into a fix-up novel by the same name and published by Gnome Press in 1959. #FinlayFriday
🧵 Recently, I set out to create new digital artwork that can't be replicated/imitated by #AI. AI's Achilles heel seems to be its failure to deliver true details, or rather that its complex imagery is actually specious - the illusion of detail that often doesn't stand up to scrutiny.
With this in mind, I came up with this artwork called 'A Drawing of the Shelf Unit Beside My Desk on February 27th 2024 at 2:35pm'....
I love this book I found brand new at the used bookstore. Emily Dickinson is a favorite of mine. I don't draw, but I am going to take this up north and write down my nature observations over the summer. I was so fascinated with the wildlife from bugs to wolves last summer that I thought this sounded like a fun way to keep track of things.
As the 14th of February approaches, it seems a good time for Virgil Finlay’s illustrations for ‘The Lovers’ by Philip José Farmer, a novella published in the 8/1952 issue of 𝑺𝒕𝒂𝒓𝒕𝒍𝒊𝒏𝒈 𝑺𝒕𝒐𝒓𝒊𝒆𝒔 after rejections from 𝑨𝒔𝒕𝒐𝒖𝒏𝒅𝒊𝒏𝒈 and 𝑮𝒂𝒍𝒂𝒙𝒚. Later expanded, it received an honorable mention at the 1962 Hugo Awards for Best Novel. #FinlayFriday
Odd name for a superhero. Virgil Finlay cover painting of 'Minimum Man or Time to Be Gone' by Andrew Marvell from Famous Fantastic Mysteries, August 1947. #FinlayFriday
Virgil Finlay illustrating “The Shadow of Wings” by Robert Silverberg from Worlds of IF Science Fiction, July 1963. #FinlayFriday
“He saw a body about the size of a man, covered with darkish thick fur and terminating in two short, thick, powerful-looking legs. As he watched the Kethlan shivered and stretched forth its vast leathery wings.”
For the final Finlay Friday for the foreseeable future (okay, this year), there's nothing left to do but strap on your Corinthian helmet, hop on a robot, pop open some bubbly, and watch the world burn. #FinlayFriday
Today is the feast of St John the Apostle, seen here with eagle and palm in the silver seal matrix of #ClareCollege (the half-figure is 8mm high), & in the sumptuous Breviary of Marie de St Pol, best friend of the #LadyOfClare. 🧵 1/3
Until this year, the only published photo was so fuzzy that there were debates as to whether there was a bird, and interpretation of the palm. Even with the RTI image, discussion continues. Falconer friends think this most resembles a #GoldenEagle, scaled to speak comfortably to St John, while… standing on his fist? as raptors usually do… or on his open palm? as a trusted messenger of God? 🧵 2/3 #StJohn#theology#interpretation#StoneCarving#illustration
The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut (1922–2007). Cover Art for the 1959 Dell first paperback printing, and the frontispiece for the 1990 Masterpieces of Science Fiction series from The Easton Press by Richard M. Powers (1921-1996). Plus an amusing note from Vonnegut about Powers.