FUTURES:
Winner of Sir Arthur Clarke Award for 'Best Written
Presentation', 2005
Recent/Unusual
SF & Fantasy
Here are some
recent non-astronomical commissions,
both private and for book/cover use, from 2001–2005.
‘Technology is
Magic’
In
2001,
SFX magazine asked several prominent SF
artists
to illustrate a
'fake' story, to compare the different
styles and
approaches. This is David Hardy's
version.
‘Test Flight’
Orignally painted (digitally) as a cover
for The Human Front by Ken
MacLeod (PS Books, 2001),
this was later used as a cover for
Analog magazine
in May 2003.
‘Dancer in the
Dark’
Cover for
book by David
Gerrold, The Magazine of
Fantasy & Science Fiction
(F&SF),
April 2004.
'The Space
Eater' (revised)
Hardy produced a new cover for The
Space Eater by David Langford,
published by Cosmos Books in 2005.
The version used has no astronaut,
though the artist (and the author)
prefer this version!
‘Dragons of Taban’
A digital composite, produced as a cover for 42 magazine
in 2001. It uses the background from 'Towers of Taban' from Galactic
Tours (1981), which was painted in gouache, combined with a
dragon scanned from an acrylic painting done as a private commission.
'The Balance of Nature'
This is the cover illustration for 'The Balance of Nature' by Lee
Goodloe, to be used on a forthcoming 2006 issue of Analog.
Based on the 'Spiral' trilogy
A recent private commission (August 2005): an oil painting on canvas,
based on Mike Scott Rohan’s ‘Spiral’ trilogy –
Chase the Morning, Gates of Noon and Cloud Castles.
These are favourites of SF fan and collector Susan Peak.
'The Cathedral of Universal
Biodivesity'
by Gary W. Shockley is the subject of this latest cover artwork
for F&SF, for February 2006. "It is a story about
the power of the mind, and imagination, so appealed to me,"
says Hardy. (Unfortunately this cover has printed very pale and
looks washed-out and insipid – click to see how it should
appear!)
From recent work to very early work from the 50s
– click on 'next' below