Published by ACE G SERIES,, 1967
Seller: GRAHAM HOLROYD, BOOKS, Webster, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback. ORIGINAL first edition. G-611, reading copy ,poor (ANTHOLOGY OF 15 STORIES), paperback,
Published by ACE G SERIES,, 1967
Seller: GRAHAM HOLROYD, BOOKS, Webster, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback. ORIGINAL first edition. G-611, good, many creases (ANTHOLOGY OF 15 STORIES), paperback,
Language: English
Published by Greenwich House / distributed by Crown Publishers Inc, New York, 1984
ISBN 10: 051744500X ISBN 13: 9780517445006
Seller: biblioboy, North Providence, RI, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. First Edition. New York: Greenwich House / distributed by Crown Publishers Inc 1984 First edition [printing code line ends with an "a"]. 612 pages. Near fine with light edge wear, pages lightly toned in like dust jacket. See Photos clph.
Published by ACE G SERIES,, 1967
Seller: GRAHAM HOLROYD, BOOKS, Webster, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback. ORIGINAL first edition. G-611, very good , creases (ANTHOLOGY OF 15 STORIES), paperback,
Published by Ace Books, Inc, 1967
Seller: Redux Books, Grand Rapids, MI, U.S.A.
Paperback. Condition: Good. Paperback. Pages are clean and unmarked. Covers show light edge wear.; 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed! Ships same or next business day!
Published by ACE H SERIES,, 1967
Seller: GRAHAM HOLROYD, BOOKS, Webster, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback. first PB. H-26, very good (ANTHOLOGY OF 13 STORIES), paperback,
Published by ACE G SERIES,, 1967
Seller: GRAHAM HOLROYD, BOOKS, Webster, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback. ORIGINAL first edition. G-611, very good -fine, , reading crease (ANTHOLOGY OF 15 STORIES), paperback,
Published by ACE H SERIES,, 1967
Seller: GRAHAM HOLROYD, BOOKS, Webster, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback. first PB. H-26, very good - fine, reading crease (ANTHOLOGY OF 13 STORIES), paperback,
Published by Dell Publishing, New York, 1965
Seller: biblioboy, North Providence, RI, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback. Condition: Very Good. Dell NY 1965. 190 pages. First Mass Market Paperback edition, First Printing. Very good condition with light edge wear, hole punch to rear cover. See photos. SR 1/3 First Mass Market Paperback, First Printing.
Language: English
Published by Old Earth Books, Baltimore, MD, 2003
ISBN 10: 1882968263 ISBN 13: 9781882968268
Seller: Second Edition Books, Butte, MT, U.S.A.
First Edition Signed
Hardcover. Condition: Near Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Near Fine. Klauba, Douglas (illustrator). 1st Edition. Signed by editor on title page (Henry Wessells). Tight binding, clean interior. Green boards with bright gold lettering in great condition. DJ is preserved in mylar, has not been clipped. Interior is unmarked. "Collected here for the first time, Avram Davidson's six Jack Limekiller stories create a rich and colorful world where the magical and inexplicable coexist with the outboard motor and the escalation of the American war in Vietnam." 290 pages. Signed by Author(s).
Published by ACE H SERIES,, 1967
Seller: GRAHAM HOLROYD, BOOKS, Webster, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback. first PB. H-26, almost near fine, (ANTHOLOGY OF 13 STORIES), paperback,
Published by Doubleday & Company, Inc, 1963
Seller: Second Chance Books, Independence, OR, U.S.A.
First Edition
Hardcover. Condition: Good+. No Jacket. First Edition. Ex-library with typical library markings and stickers, some edge wear and rubbing, corners bumped. Book.
Published by ACE H SERIES,, 1967
Seller: GRAHAM HOLROYD, BOOKS, Webster, NY, U.S.A.
First Edition
Paperback. first PB. H-26, near fine, (ANTHOLOGY OF 13 STORIES), paperback,
Published by Davis, New York, 1970
Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
First Edition
Softcover. Condition: Very Good. First edition. Foxing, very good in wrappers.
Published by Davis, New York, 1970
Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
First Edition
Softcover. Condition: Very Good. First edition. Foxing, sticker on front cover, very good in wrappers.
Language: English
Published by Rapp & Whiting, 1969
Seller: Dandy Lion Editions, Beare Green, Dorking, United Kingdom
First Edition
US$ 13.15
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Fair. Dust Jacket Condition: Good. First Edition (UK). 1st edition UK 1969. Firmly bound and has been carefully read but there is heavy spotting to the page edges & some lighter scattered foxing elsewhere. No inscription or ownership markings but what seems to be the number '20' in the corner of the endpaper. A good reading copy. Unclipped jacket is in VG clean condition without tears or loss. 9 short stories by various authors. A good reading copy.
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Fine. 1st Edition. As new hardcover in similar, unclipped dust jacket, with price intact. Six Jack Limekiller stories collected here for the first time. Clean text and interior. Tight, square binding. Stated first edition.
Published by Ace Books, Inc, New York, 1967
Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
First Edition
Softcover. Condition: Near Fine. First edition, paperback original. Mass market paperback. Very near fine with just a bit of edgewear. Includes stories by J.G. Ballard, Joanna Russ, Ron Goulart, Kate Wilhelm, and others. Ace # G-611.
Published by Mercury Press, 1963
Seller: HALCYON BOOKS, LONDON, United Kingdom
US$ 13.15
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketPaperback. Condition: Very Good. Pages clean and bright, no markings, light wear to edges. ALL ITEMS ARE DISPATCHED FROM THE UK WITHIN 48 HOURS ( BOOKS ORDERED OVER THE WEEKEND DISPATCHED ON MONDAY) ALL OVERSEAS ORDERS SENT BY TRACKABLE AIR MAIL. IF YOU ARE LOCATED OUTSIDE THE UK PLEASE ASK US FOR A POSTAGE QUOTE FOR MULTI VOLUME SETS BEFORE ORDERING.
Published by Doubleday and Company, 1964
Seller: Vintage Books & Finds, Newtown, CT, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Fair. Nice copy with dust cover that has slight wear( see photos ). The book itself is in very good condition .
Language: English
Published by Mercury Press, New York, 1963
Seller: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Art / Print / Poster First Edition
No Binding. Condition: Near Fine. Original Proof Illustration. Proof, Color Print. Fine. Edmund Alexander Emshwiller (1925 - 1990), Better Known As Ed Emshwiller, 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. 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 And The Magazine Of Fantasy & Science Fiction. 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. In That Year Or 1952 He Also Did His First Book Cover For The U.S. Paperback Edition Of Odd John (Galaxy Publishing Corp.) 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. 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.[8] On June 16, 2007, He Became The Third Artist Inducted By The Science Fiction Hall Of Fame. 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). 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). 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.[4] 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 Single Sunstone Frame Was Used On The Front Cover Of Fundamentals Of Interactive Computer Graphics, Published In 1982 By Addison-Wesley. 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 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. 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. (Wikipedia).
Language: English
Published by Mercury Press, New York, 1964
Seller: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Art / Print / Poster First Edition
No Binding. Condition: Near Fine. Original Proof Illustration. Proof, Color Print. Fine. Edmund Alexander Emshwiller (1925 - 1990), Better Known As Ed Emshwiller, 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. 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 And The Magazine Of Fantasy & Science Fiction. 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. In That Year Or 1952 He Also Did His First Book Cover For The U.S. Paperback Edition Of Odd John (Galaxy Publishing Corp.) 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. 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.[8] On June 16, 2007, He Became The Third Artist Inducted By The Science Fiction Hall Of Fame. 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). 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). 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.[4] 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 Single Sunstone Frame Was Used On The Front Cover Of Fundamentals Of Interactive Computer Graphics, Published In 1982 By Addison-Wesley. 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 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. 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. (Wikipedia).
Language: English
Published by Mercury Press, New York, 1964
Seller: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Art / Print / Poster First Edition
No Binding. Condition: Near Fine. Original Proof Illustration. Color Cover Print. Near Fine.
Language: English
Published by Mercury Press, New York, 1962
Seller: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Art / Print / Poster First Edition
No Binding. Condition: Near Fine. Original Proof Illustration. Proof, Color Print. Fine But Dampstaining In White Margin At Left. Edmund Alexander Emshwiller (1925 - 1990), Better Known As Ed Emshwiller, 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. 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 And The Magazine Of Fantasy & Science Fiction. 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. In That Year Or 1952 He Also Did His First Book Cover For The U.S. Paperback Edition Of Odd John (Galaxy Publishing Corp.) 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. 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.[8] On June 16, 2007, He Became The Third Artist Inducted By The Science Fiction Hall Of Fame. 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). 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). 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.[4] 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 Single Sunstone Frame Was Used On The Front Cover Of Fundamentals Of Interactive Computer Graphics, Published In 1982 By Addison-Wesley. 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 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. 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. (Wikipedia).
Language: English
Published by Mercury Press, New York, 1970
Seller: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Art / Print / Poster First Edition
No Binding. Condition: Near Fine. Original Proof Illustration. Color Cover, Print. Fine. Ronald Walotsky (1943-2002) Was A Us Illustrator Who Began His Career In Sf Art With The Cover For The May 1967 Edition Of The Magazine Of Fantasy And Science Fiction, Illustrating Phyllis Gotlieb's Novelette "Planetoid Idiot". Walotsky Would Continue To Be Associated With F&Sf For The Rest Of His Life, Painting Some Sixty Covers For The Magazine. He Also Produced Many Book Covers And Brochure Paintings For The Science Fiction Book Club In Addition To Covers For Trade Publishers - The First Being Commissioned By Avon For Wyman Guin's Collection Living Way Out (1967) - Record Sleeves, Posters, Erotica And Much Else, Including Four Cards For The Magic: The Gathering Collectible Card Game. Walotsky Received His Formal Art Training At The School Of Visual Arts In New York City, And He Never Lost His Interest In Fine Art. He Often Expressed Frustration At The Way Some Gallery Owners Would Instantly Switch Off Their Interest In His Work On Hearing That He Also Created Sf Illustration. His Non-Commercial Paintings Tended To Be Curiously Surreal, Mixing Realistic And Abstract Elements In A Way That Could Be Quite Unsettling. Many Were Part Of His Long Children Series, In Which Fairly Realistic Depictions Of Children Were Given A Surrealistic Backdrop, Which Had The Effect Of Both Enhancing The Surreality And Creating An Odd Sense Of Unidentifiable Menace. Towards The End Of His Life He Began To Produce A Series Of 3D Pieces In Which He Painted Onto The Shells Of Horseshoe Crabs Found On The Beach Near His Florida Home. He Called This Series Of Pieces "Ancient Warriors Of Lost Civilizations" Because Of The Pieces' Resemblance To Face Armour. He Usually Worked In Acrylics, With Or Without Airbrush. Much Of His Work Retained The Hippy Sensibility, The Psychedelia, Of His Earliest Commercial Projects, Produced In The 1960S - It's No Coincidence That The Book Collecting His Work Was Called Inner Visions (2000) - But He Was Very Versatile And, When The Subject Matter Called For It, He Could Paint Hard Sf As Well As Anyone. He Was Nominated For A Dozen Chesley Awards, Including For Artistic Achievement In 2000, But Surprisingly Never Won One. He Did, However, Receive The Frank R Paul Award In 1987. [.
Language: English
Published by Mercury Press, New York, 1963
Seller: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Art / Print / Poster First Edition
No Binding. Condition: Near Fine. Original Proof Illustration. Proof, Color Print. Fine. Edmund Alexander Emshwiller (1925 - 1990), Better Known As Ed Emshwiller, 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. 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 And The Magazine Of Fantasy & Science Fiction. 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. In That Year Or 1952 He Also Did His First Book Cover For The U.S. Paperback Edition Of Odd John (Galaxy Publishing Corp.) 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. 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.[8] On June 16, 2007, He Became The Third Artist Inducted By The Science Fiction Hall Of Fame. 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). 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). 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.[4] 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 Single Sunstone Frame Was Used On The Front Cover Of Fundamentals Of Interactive Computer Graphics, Published In 1982 By Addison-Wesley. 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 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. 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. (Wikipedia).
Language: English
Published by Mercury Press, New York, 1963
Seller: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Art / Print / Poster First Edition
No Binding. Condition: Fine. Original Proof Illustration. Proof, Color. Fine. Edmund Alexander Emshwiller (1925 - 1990), Better Known As Ed Emshwiller, 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. 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 And The Magazine Of Fantasy & Science Fiction. 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. In That Year Or 1952 He Also Did His First Book Cover For The U.S. Paperback Edition Of Odd John (Galaxy Publishing Corp.) 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. 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.[8] On June 16, 2007, He Became The Third Artist Inducted By The Science Fiction Hall Of Fame. 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). 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). 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.[4] 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 Single Sunstone Frame Was Used On The Front Cover Of Fundamentals Of Interactive Computer Graphics, Published In 1982 By Addison-Wesley. 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 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. 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. (Wikipedia).
Language: English
Published by Mercury Press, New York, 1962
Seller: Arroyo Seco Books, Pasadena, Member IOBA, Pasadena, CA, U.S.A.
Association Member: IOBA
Art / Print / Poster First Edition
No Binding. Condition: Near Fine. Original Proof Illustration. Proof, Color Print. Fine.Image Is 7 3/4" X 5 5/16", With 1/2" White Margin At Left (Where Spine Printing Would Go). Edmund Alexander Emshwiller (1925 - 1990), Better Known As Ed Emshwiller, 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. 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 And The Magazine Of Fantasy & Science Fiction. 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. In That Year Or 1952 He Also Did His First Book Cover For The U.S. Paperback Edition Of Odd John (Galaxy Publishing Corp.) 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. 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.[8] On June 16, 2007, He Became The Third Artist Inducted By The Science Fiction Hall Of Fame. 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). 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). 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.[4] 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 Single Sunstone Frame Was Used On The Front Cover Of Fundamentals Of Interactive Computer Graphics, Published In 1982 By Addison-Wesley. 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 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. 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. (Wikipedia).
Published by Fantasy House, New York, 1963
Seller: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, U.S.A.
First Edition
Softcover. Condition: Very Good. Magazines. 10 issues. Pictorial wrappers. A few small chips and tears at the edges of two issues, light soiling on a couple volumes, inked numbers on the front cover of four issues, overall very good. Contributions by: L. Sprague de Camp, Fritz Leiber, Isaac Asimov, Frederik Pohl, Robert Silverberg, Miriam Allen deFord, Ray Bradbury, Shinichi Hoshi, Richard Matheson, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Robert A. Heinlein, Roger Zelazny, and more.
Published by Mercury Press, London, 1963
Seller: Orlando Booksellers, Lincoln, United Kingdom
First Edition
US$ 20.75
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketOriginal Wraps. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: No Jacket, as Issued. First Edition. Vol. 4, No. 2 January 1963 - British edition, printed and published in the UK, with a price of 2/6 on the front cover. This issue contains a featured story "When you care, when you love" by Theodore Sturgeon, and the first publication of a scientific article "The Shape of Things" by Isaac Asimov, plus stories and articles by James Blish, Robin Sturgeon, Kit Reed et al (please see scan of Contents page for a full list of the authors). ***Very good in colour illustrated paper covers. The covers have some light wear commensurate with age and handling, but are generally very clean. The edges of the covers are slightly rubbed and creased, mainly at the fore-edge of the page block, but the spine is still flat and untorn, with light reading creases. No fading. Internally also very good, with an ink note at the top of the title page, but no other inscriptions or annotations. No creases or tears. Cheap pulp paper stock tanned as usual. Pages clean. Spine tight. ***194mm x 130mm. 112 pages. ***'Theodore Sturgeon, born Edward Hamilton Waldo, Feb 26, 1918 - May 8, 1985) was an American fiction author of primarily fantasy, science fiction, and horror, as well as a critic. He wrote approximately 400 reviews and more than 120 short stories, 11 novels, and several scripts for Star Trek: The Original Series. Sturgeon's science fiction novel "More Than Human" (1953) won the 1954 International Fantasy Award (for SF and fantasy) as the year's best novel, and the Science Fiction Writers of America ranked "Baby Is Three" number five among the 'Greatest Science Fiction Novellas of All Time' to 1964. Ranked by votes for all of their pre-1965 novellas, Sturgeon was second among authors, behind Robert Heinlein.' (Wiki) ***A collection of Science Fiction stories, novellas and articles, including a scientific astronomical article "The Shape of Things" by Isaac Asimov about the spherical Earth. ***A classic original 1960s American issue of pulp magazine Fantasy and Science Fiction, published in January 1963, in very good condition for its age. ***For all our books, postage is charged at cost, allowing for packaging: any shipping rates indicated on ABE are an average only: we will reduce the P & P charge where appropriate - please contact us for postal rates for heavier books and sets etc.