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Ed Emshwiller

Edmund Alexander Emshwiller (February 16, 1925 – July 27, 1990) was an American visual artist notable for his science fiction illustrations and his pioneering experimental films. He usually signed his illustrations as Emsh but sometimes used Ed Emsh, Ed Emsler, Willer and others.[1][a]

Ed Emshwiller
Emshwiller circa 1984
Born
Edmund Alexander Emshwiller

(1925-02-16)February 16, 1925
DiedJuly 27, 1990(1990-07-27) (aged 65)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Michigan
SpouseCarol Emshwiller (née Fries)

Background and early career edit

Born February 16, 1925, in Lansing, Michigan,[3] He graduated from the University of Michigan in 1947, and then studied at École des Beaux Arts (1949–1950) in Paris with his wife, novelist Carol Emshwiller (née Fries), whom he married on August 30, 1949. He also studied at the Art Students League of New York (1950–1951).[4]

Illustrator edit

From 1951 to 1979, while living in Levittown, New York, Emshwiller created covers and interior illustrations for dozens of science fiction paperbacks and magazines, notably Galaxy Science Fiction and The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction.[5] He debuted in the pulp magazines with about 50 interior illustrations and four cover paintings for the May to December 1951 issues of Galaxy, a monthly edited by H. L. Gold.[1] In that year or 1952 he also did his first book cover for the U.S. paperback edition of Odd John (Galaxy Publishing Corp.)[1] Because he experimented with a diversity of techniques, there is no typical Emsh cover. His painterly treatment for the August 1951 cover of Galaxy Science Fiction prefigures later work by Leo and Diane Dillon.

Film and video edit

 
A frame from Ed Emshwiller's video Sunstone (1979) was used on the front cover of this 1982 book published by Addison-Wesley.

Thanatopsis (1962) was his first five-minute film. In 1964, a Ford Foundation grant allowed Emshwiller to pursue his interest in film. Active in the New American Cinema movement of the 1960s and early 1970s, he created multimedia performance pieces and did cine-dance and experimental films, such as the 38-minute Relativity (1966). He also was a cinematographer on documentaries, such as Emile de Antonio's Painters Painting (1972), and feature films, such as Time of the Heathen (1964) and Adolfas Mekas' Hallelujah the Hills (1963). Emshwiller's footage of Bob Dylan singing "Only a Pawn in Their Game" on July 6, 1963, at a Voters' Registration Rally in Greenwood, Mississippi, was shot for Jack Willis' 1963 documentary The Streets of Greenwood and appears in D. A. Pennebaker's Dylan documentary, Dont Look Back (1967). For the US Information Agency, he directed Faces of America (1965) and The 21st Century: The Shape of Films to Come (1968), a film that presents examples of films shown at Expo '67 that feature startling new visual effects and innovations. Filme with Three Dancers was made in 1970.

His films of the 1960s were mostly shot in 16mm color, and some of these included double exposures created simply by rewinding the cameras. He was one of the earliest video artists. With Scape-Mates (1972), he began his experiments in video, combining computer animation with live-action. In 1979, he produced Sunstone, a groundbreaking three-minute 3-D computer-generated video made at the New York Institute of Technology with Alvy Ray Smith.[6] Now in the Museum of Modern Art's video collection, Sunstone was exhibited at SIGGRAPH 79, the 1981 Mill Valley Film Festival and other festivals. In 1979, it was shown on WNET's Video/Film Review, and a Sunstone frame was used on the front cover of Fundamentals of Interactive Computer Graphics, published in 1982 by Addison-Wesley.[7]

CalArts edit

After a period as artist-in-residence at the Television Laboratory WNET/13 (New York), where he worked on the effects for The Lathe of Heaven among other projects, he moved to California, where he was the founder of the CalArts Computer Animation Lab and served as provost and dean of the School of Film/Video at the California Institute of Arts from 1979 to 1990. He also served as provost from 1981 through 1986.[8]In 1987, he created his electronic video opera Hunger for the 1987 Los Angeles Arts Festival, in partnership with composer Morton Subotnick. It was his last completed work, also presented in October 1989 at the Ars Electronica Festival in Linz, Austria.

Influences edit

Enshwiller's neighbors in Levittown was Bill Griffith, later acclaimed for his Zippy syndicated comic strip. Griffith's parents sometimes posed as models for Emshwiller's illustrations. Griffith, who credited Emshwiller as an influence on his becoming an artist, was painted by Emshwiller into the front cover of Original Science Fiction (September 1957). Griffith commented, "He didn't point me to cartooning, but he pointed me into art in general and showed me a way of understanding how within one artist, there could exist this pop culture impulse and a fine art impulse."[9]

Archives and awards edit

 
Cover of World Without Men by Charles Eric Maine – illustration by Ed Emshwiller – Ace Books, 1958

Emshwiller won one of the inaugural Hugo Awards in 1953, as the previous year's best "Cover Artist" (a tie with Hannes Bok). Cover artists and interior illustrators were not thereafter distinguished by the Hugo Award for Best Artist under various names; he won four more during the 1960s under the current "Professional Artist" distinction.[10] On June 16, 2007, he became the third artist inducted by the Science Fiction Hall of Fame.[11][b] His paintings of aliens were displayed in the Alien Encounters exhibition of the Science Fiction Museum, which houses the hall of fame, at that time (September 10, 2006, to October 30, 2007).

His papers are archived at the California Institute of Arts.

Personal life edit

Carol and Ed Emshwiller had three children—Eve Emshwiller, screenwriter Susan Emshwiller (Pollock) and actor-novelist Stoney Peter Emshwiller (The Host, Short Blade).[13] Family members, including his brother Maclellan Emshwiller, often served as models in his illustrations. Carol and Eve Emshwiller can be seen on a Galaxy Science Fiction cover (January 1957).

Emshwiller died of cancer on July 27, 1990, in Santa Clarita, California, where he was cremated.

Books edit

  • Ortiz, Luis, Ed Emshwiller, Carol Emshwiller, and Alex Eisenstein. Emshwiller: Infinity x Two: The Art & Life of Ed & Carol Emshwiller. New York: Nonstop Press, 2007. ISBN 978-1-933065-09-0.

See also edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ From 1951 at least to the mid-1960s, he was generally "Emsh" or "Ed Emsh" for pulp magazine covers and Ed Emshwiller for book covers. He used those names routinely for interior illustrations only after a couple years when he was more often "Willer" or "Ed Emsler" or "Ed Alexander". Evidently he debuted in May 1951 as Willer for the serial novel Mars Child (Outpost Mars) and Emsh for two other stories in the same issue.[2][1] For June and July (when the novel concluded) he did the covers as Emsh and Willer respectively. He was Willer as illustrator of the novel; Emsh and Ed Alexander for two other July stories.[2][1]
  2. ^ After inducting 36 fantasy and science fiction writers and editors from 1996 to 2004, the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame dropped "fantasy" and made non-literary contributors eligible. Chesley Bonestell inaugurated the "Art" category in 2005 and Frank Kelly Freas followed in 2006.[12]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Ed Emshwiller at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database (ISFDB). Retrieved April 10, 2013.
  2. ^ a b "Publication: Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1951". Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Retrieved June 14, 2023.
  3. ^ Ortiz, Luis (February 2007). "Ed Emshwiller: The Art of Things to Come". Illustration Magazine. p. 85.
  4. ^ "Ed Emshwiller, 65; Made Experimental Movies and Videos". Eleanor Blau. The New York Times. August 2, 1990.
  5. ^ . Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame.. Archived July 22, 2012.
  6. ^ Video Data Bank
  7. ^ Alvy Ray Smith: Art.
  8. ^ CalArts June 19, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  9. ^ The Comics Journal: Bill Griffith interview.
  10. ^ "Emshwiller, Ed" October 16, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. The Locus Index to SF Awards: Index of Art Nominees. Locus Publications. Retrieved April 10, 2013.
  11. ^ (Press release). Experience Music Project and Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame. March–May 2007. Archived from the original on October 14, 2007. Retrieved March 19, 2013.
  12. ^ "Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame" May 21, 2013, at the Wayback Machine. Mid American Science Fiction and Fantasy Conventions, Inc. Retrieved April 10, 2013. This was the official website of the hall of fame to 2004.
  13. ^ "Ed Emshwiller, 65; Made Experimental Movies and Videos". The New York Times. Retrieved April 22, 2024.

External links edit

emshwiller, edmund, alexander, emshwiller, february, 1925, july, 1990, american, visual, artist, notable, science, fiction, illustrations, pioneering, experimental, films, usually, signed, illustrations, emsh, sometimes, used, emsh, emsler, willer, others, ems. Edmund Alexander Emshwiller February 16 1925 July 27 1990 was an American visual artist notable for his science fiction illustrations and his pioneering experimental films He usually signed his illustrations as Emsh but sometimes used Ed Emsh Ed Emsler Willer and others 1 a Ed EmshwillerEmshwiller circa 1984BornEdmund Alexander Emshwiller 1925 02 16 February 16 1925Lansing Michigan U S DiedJuly 27 1990 1990 07 27 aged 65 Santa Clarita California U S NationalityAmericanAlma materUniversity of MichiganSpouseCarol Emshwiller nee Fries Contents 1 Background and early career 2 Illustrator 3 Film and video 4 CalArts 5 Influences 6 Archives and awards 7 Personal life 8 Books 9 See also 10 Explanatory notes 11 References 12 External linksBackground and early career editBorn February 16 1925 in Lansing Michigan 3 He graduated from the University of Michigan in 1947 and then studied at Ecole des Beaux Arts 1949 1950 in Paris with his wife novelist Carol Emshwiller nee Fries whom he married on August 30 1949 He also studied at the Art Students League of New York 1950 1951 4 Illustrator editFrom 1951 to 1979 while living in Levittown New York Emshwiller created covers and interior illustrations for dozens of science fiction paperbacks and magazines notably Galaxy Science Fiction and The Magazine of Fantasy amp Science Fiction 5 He debuted in the pulp magazines with about 50 interior illustrations and four cover paintings for the May to December 1951 issues of Galaxy a monthly edited by H L Gold 1 In that year or 1952 he also did his first book cover for the U S paperback edition of Odd John Galaxy Publishing Corp 1 Because he experimented with a diversity of techniques there is no typical Emsh cover His painterly treatment for the August 1951 cover of Galaxy Science Fiction prefigures later work by Leo and Diane Dillon Film and video edit nbsp A frame from Ed Emshwiller s video Sunstone 1979 was used on the front cover of this 1982 book published by Addison Wesley Thanatopsis 1962 was his first five minute film In 1964 a Ford Foundation grant allowed Emshwiller to pursue his interest in film Active in the New American Cinema movement of the 1960s and early 1970s he created multimedia performance pieces and did cine dance and experimental films such as the 38 minute Relativity 1966 He also was a cinematographer on documentaries such as Emile de Antonio s Painters Painting 1972 and feature films such as Time of the Heathen 1964 and Adolfas Mekas Hallelujah the Hills 1963 Emshwiller s footage of Bob Dylan singing Only a Pawn in Their Game on July 6 1963 at a Voters Registration Rally in Greenwood Mississippi was shot for Jack Willis 1963 documentary The Streets of Greenwood and appears in D A Pennebaker s Dylan documentary Dont Look Back 1967 For the US Information Agency he directed Faces of America 1965 and The 21st Century The Shape of Films to Come 1968 a film that presents examples of films shown at Expo 67 that feature startling new visual effects and innovations Filme with Three Dancers was made in 1970 His films of the 1960s were mostly shot in 16mm color and some of these included double exposures created simply by rewinding the cameras He was one of the earliest video artists With Scape Mates 1972 he began his experiments in video combining computer animation with live action In 1979 he produced Sunstone a groundbreaking three minute 3 D computer generated video made at the New York Institute of Technology with Alvy Ray Smith 6 Now in the Museum of Modern Art s video collection Sunstone was exhibited at SIGGRAPH 79 the 1981 Mill Valley Film Festival and other festivals In 1979 it was shown on WNET s Video Film Review and a Sunstone frame was used on the front cover of Fundamentals of Interactive Computer Graphics published in 1982 by Addison Wesley 7 CalArts editAfter a period as artist in residence at the Television Laboratory WNET 13 New York where he worked on the effects for The Lathe of Heaven among other projects he moved to California where he was the founder of the CalArts Computer Animation Lab and served as provost and dean of the School of Film Video at the California Institute of Arts from 1979 to 1990 He also served as provost from 1981 through 1986 8 In 1987 he created his electronic video opera Hunger for the 1987 Los Angeles Arts Festival in partnership with composer Morton Subotnick It was his last completed work also presented in October 1989 at the Ars Electronica Festival in Linz Austria Influences editEnshwiller s neighbors in Levittown was Bill Griffith later acclaimed for his Zippy syndicated comic strip Griffith s parents sometimes posed as models for Emshwiller s illustrations Griffith who credited Emshwiller as an influence on his becoming an artist was painted by Emshwiller into the front cover of Original Science Fiction September 1957 Griffith commented He didn t point me to cartooning but he pointed me into art in general and showed me a way of understanding how within one artist there could exist this pop culture impulse and a fine art impulse 9 Archives and awards edit nbsp Cover of World Without Men by Charles Eric Maine illustration by Ed Emshwiller Ace Books 1958 Emshwiller won one of the inaugural Hugo Awards in 1953 as the previous year s best Cover Artist a tie with Hannes Bok Cover artists and interior illustrators were not thereafter distinguished by the Hugo Award for Best Artist under various names he won four more during the 1960s under the current Professional Artist distinction 10 On June 16 2007 he became the third artist inducted by the Science Fiction Hall of Fame 11 b His paintings of aliens were displayed in the Alien Encounters exhibition of the Science Fiction Museum which houses the hall of fame at that time September 10 2006 to October 30 2007 His papers are archived at the California Institute of Arts Personal life editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2012 Learn how and when to remove this message Carol and Ed Emshwiller had three children Eve Emshwiller screenwriter Susan Emshwiller Pollock and actor novelist Stoney Peter Emshwiller The Host Short Blade 13 Family members including his brother Maclellan Emshwiller often served as models in his illustrations Carol and Eve Emshwiller can be seen on a Galaxy Science Fiction cover January 1957 Emshwiller died of cancer on July 27 1990 in Santa Clarita California where he was cremated Books editOrtiz Luis Ed Emshwiller Carol Emshwiller and Alex Eisenstein Emshwiller Infinity x Two The Art amp Life of Ed amp Carol Emshwiller New York Nonstop Press 2007 ISBN 978 1 933065 09 0 See also editPortals nbsp Film nbsp Speculative fiction nbsp Visual artsExplanatory notes edit From 1951 at least to the mid 1960s he was generally Emsh or Ed Emsh for pulp magazine covers and Ed Emshwiller for book covers He used those names routinely for interior illustrations only after a couple years when he was more often Willer or Ed Emsler or Ed Alexander Evidently he debuted in May 1951 as Willer for the serial novel Mars Child Outpost Mars and Emsh for two other stories in the same issue 2 1 For June and July when the novel concluded he did the covers as Emsh and Willer respectively He was Willer as illustrator of the novel Emsh and Ed Alexander for two other July stories 2 1 After inducting 36 fantasy and science fiction writers and editors from 1996 to 2004 the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame dropped fantasy and made non literary contributors eligible Chesley Bonestell inaugurated the Art category in 2005 and Frank Kelly Freas followed in 2006 12 References edit a b c d Ed Emshwiller at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database ISFDB Retrieved April 10 2013 a b Publication Galaxy Science Fiction July 1951 Internet Speculative Fiction Database Retrieved June 14 2023 Ortiz Luis February 2007 Ed Emshwiller The Art of Things to Come Illustration Magazine p 85 Ed Emshwiller 65 Made Experimental Movies and Videos Eleanor Blau The New York Times August 2 1990 Ed Emshwiller biography Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame Archived July 22 2012 Video Data Bank Alvy Ray Smith Art CalArts Archived June 19 2007 at the Wayback Machine The Comics Journal Bill Griffith interview Emshwiller Ed Archived October 16 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Locus Index to SF Awards Index of Art Nominees Locus Publications Retrieved April 10 2013 Science Fiction Hall of Fame to Induct Ed Emshwiller Gene Roddenberry Ridley Scott and Gene Wolfe Press release Experience Music Project and Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame March May 2007 Archived from the original on October 14 2007 Retrieved March 19 2013 Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame Archived May 21 2013 at the Wayback Machine Mid American Science Fiction and Fantasy Conventions Inc Retrieved April 10 2013 This was the official website of the hall of fame to 2004 Ed Emshwiller 65 Made Experimental Movies and Videos The New York Times Retrieved April 22 2024 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ed Emshwiller Emsh and Coye Works by Ed Emshwiller at Project Gutenberg Biography at The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction Ed Emshwiller at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Ed Emshwiller biography Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ed Emshwiller amp oldid 1220162386, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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