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PETER
ELSON BIOGRAPHY
FROM
WIKYPEDIA
Peter
Elson (1947-1998) was an English science fiction illustrator whose
work appeared on the covers of numerous science fiction paperback
novels, as well as in the Terran Trade Authority series of illustrated
books. Elson, whose illustrations often placed detailed, brightly-liveried
spacecraft against vividly colored backgrounds, influenced an entire
generation of science fiction illustrators and concept artists.
The look of the PC game Homeworld was heavily influenced by Elson's
illustrations of the '70s and '80s, according to artists who worked
on the title (he is listed in the Special Thanks section of the
game's manual and has a character, Captain Elson, named after him).
Elson was originally slated to create the game's box art, but at
the last moment was pre-empted by the publisher's decision to use
a 3D rendered scene.
Born
in Ealing, West London and died of a heart attack in Skegness while
working on mural paintings for Butlins. Most of his original work
is now owned by his sister.
A
LITTLE FAN BIOGRAPHY
by YVerloc from Conceptart.org
Time
warp!
Was
doing a web search for Peter's stuff, and this thread popped up.
I know it's years late, but I thought I'd add what I know anyhow.
Disclaimer - this turned out to be more of a biography than I intended.
Elson was a big influence on me, and I've felt for a long time that
a) he deserved to be better known and b) the man deserves some kind
of biography. Nobody else seems to be about the job, so I've decided
to do my best. All of you hotshot concept guys (and gals) might
find in it a sort of cautionary tale, maybe. This is as good a repository
for said biography as any other, i guess, so here goes:
Peter
Elson was a British sci fi artist who did book covers from ~1975
up until his death in 1998. His output peaked in the late 70's.
After the recession hit England in the early 80's, the sci-fi publishing
industry suffered and work dried up. He did backdrop paintings for
theater productions and amusement park rides in between occasional
cover stints - he only got one or two covers a year in the late
nineties. Despite being insanely talented, he never shopped his
skills around. He never seems to have done any production design
for film and TV, and he never adapted to computer graphics.
In
the 1970's, UK artist Chriss Foss pioneered a distinctive style
of cover illustration - a large, colorful spaceship against a vividly
colored airbrushed background. His style was massively successful,
and it seems that demand for this style of work outstripped supply.
Many prominent UK sci-fi illustrators of the time got their start
banging out Foss knock-offs. Peter Elson was among them. But he
soon surpassed Foss in almost every way. His handling of so called
'gadget' covers is second to none. He also developed a distinctive
detailing style that remains fresh even now, thirty years later.
Why
isn't Elson better known? I think I know a few reasons. I met him
in 1997, and spent the day with him in his 'studio', asking him
about his technique. His studio was his bedroom in a Colchester
flat he shared with his brother, in what American's would call "the
Projects".
Firstly,
Elson was not very versatile. He admitted himself that he sucked
at doing people. Not only did the publishing industry in England
suffer a sort of collapse in the 80's, but when it revived, tastes
had changed. Gadget covers were out, and people were in. Elson simply
didn't adapt.
Secondly,
he was strictly an illustrator and not a designer. He did 'design'
all the vehicles he put in his illustrations, but he only designed
them for the sake of the illustration, and only in the POV of the
illo itself. I asked him to show me how he designed his ships. He
just shrugged, and said he did whatever worked fo the sake of the
cover. He did no development sketches. He didn't explore shapes
and lines. He had no design process whatsoever. A couple of roughs
then bang, out with the final cover. In short, he wasn't a concept
designer at heart. A genius of a sort, but not a concept designer.
So he never did much (any?) work for film, TV or games that I know
of. just book covers and theater backdrops.
Thirdly,
he seemed painfully shy. I only met him once, and I talked to him
by phone from time to time. I can't claim to have known him. But
I did observe that he seemed to be shy and reclusive. I certainly
wouldn't have described him as 'ambitious' or 'outgoing'. I find
it heartbreaking that he could have languished as he did. He could
have brushed up on his figure drawing skills. He could have developed
his design process. He could have got aboard with the digital tools.
In 1983 Dragon's Dream Press published a book called "Parallel Lines"
featuring the work of Peter Elson and Chris Moore. Their lines didn't
remain parallel for long though - Moore learned digital stuff and
his work shows up in current issues of "Spectrum".
I
met Elson in the spring of '97. Rob Cunningham and I were about
to start designing the spaceships for a game called "Homeworld",
so I tracked Elson down to ask for some insights from the master.
I arranged to go to Colchester and spend a day with him. I spent
the day in his bedroom looking over his giant archive of all the
covers he'd ever done.
There were hundreds. He showed me a couple of sketches, and some
works in progress, and told me a bit about his process. There wasn't
much to tell though - he was a sort of idiot savant when it came
to designing ships. He just did it, he didn't know how.
I got to look at the original artwork for his cover to "Welcome
to Mars", known in Great Space Battles as "A mobile monitoring station
orbiting mars...". It was small - He said he did his originals at
double the size of the published final. "Welcome to Mars" was about
8 1/2 * 11 - for a small paperback edition. He used gouache, small
brushes and an airbrush. He sometimes put panel lines in with a
ballpoint pen.
I
talked to him again in early '98. We were trying to arrange for
himn to paint the box cover to our game. The publisher eventually
balked - they wanted a render, not a painting. Ironically, we got
a-hold of a bootlegged Russian copy of Homeworld that had a John
Berkey painting for the cover, and it looked awesome. An Elson would
have been better though.
When
I saw Elson, he seemed...uh, unwell. Seing as I'm I'm attempting
to biograph the man, I might as well be open about this. His nose
was a swollen red bulb. He had bags under his eyes you could have
carried groceries home in. The ashtray next to his bed was so full
of butts it looked like a sculpture of Jabba the Hutt. The sea of
beer cans beside the ashtray complete the picture. I know this is
more information that anyone here really cares about. But Elson
influenced me a lot. I know he was no Van Gogh, but I think he deserves
some kind of biography, and an honest one too. I don't know much
about him, but I feel I have to give a full account of what I do
know, for posterity's sake.
According
to his agent, sometime in '98, Elson went to a pub with some friends
for an evening of drinking. At last call, the friends got up to
leave, but Elson didn't. I think he was born in '46, so he died
at the ripe old age of 52.
For
questions write to Luca Oleastri at
innovariart@gmail.com
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