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70s Sci-Fi Art

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Art. Sci-fi art. From the 70s.

stories primary
Wow, I hadn’t heard of these!
wacky packagestopps trading cardsart spiegelmanToppsphoto set

atomic-chronoscaph:

Wacky Packages stickers - Topps (1979 reissue)

Wow, I hadn’t heard of these!

“Known affectionately among collectors as Wacky Packs, the Topps stickers that parodied well-known consumer brands were a phenomenon in the 1970s―even outselling the Topps Company’s baseball cards for a while. But few know that the genius behind it all was none other than Art Spiegelman―the Pulitzer Prize–winning graphic novelist who created Maus.” -this book

https://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/816998661411291136
TYSM!
sign up it's fun!

cosmicretreat:

70sscifiart:

A Twilight Zone cover featuring a big abstracted swirl of colors chasing after a man in a suit. ALT
The Twilight Zone comic cover art. A man struggles with a melting clock face that is wrapped around his neck. Text reads: "Time was the tyrant that had to be stopped!"ALT
A Twilight Zone cover featuring a shadow with claws for hands decending on a guy who's lying at the bottom of an elevator.ALT
A Twilight Zone cover featuring a bellhop who is falling off of a building, plunging to his apparent demise.ALT

Hi, new followers! Want to sign up for my art blog newsletter? It’s free and you get a fun weekly art roundup!

If you see this post in the next few days, you can sign up in time to get my next issue, all about George Wilson’s ‘60s and '70s “Twilight Zone” comic book covers. My latest two issues covered the history behind black light posters and the different ways artists illustrate dreams.

I’ve been subscribing to this newsletter since it was first offered, and it’s one of my favorite things. It’s a weekly bright spot.

TYSM!

https://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/816982673328390145
Hi, new followers! Want to sign up for my art blog newsletter? It’s free and you get a fun weekly…
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70sscifiart:

A Twilight Zone cover featuring a big abstracted swirl of colors chasing after a man in a suit. ALT
The Twilight Zone comic cover art. A man struggles with a melting clock face that is wrapped around his neck. Text reads: "Time was the tyrant that had to be stopped!"ALT
A Twilight Zone cover featuring a shadow with claws for hands decending on a guy who's lying at the bottom of an elevator.ALT
A Twilight Zone cover featuring a bellhop who is falling off of a building, plunging to his apparent demise.ALT

Hi, new followers! Want to sign up for my art blog newsletter? It’s free and you get a fun weekly art roundup!

If you see this post in the next few days, you can sign up in time to get my next issue, all about George Wilson’s ‘60s and '70s “Twilight Zone” comic book covers. My latest two issues covered the history behind black light posters and the different ways artists illustrate dreams.

https://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/816903714549989376
Hi, new followers! Want to sign up for my art blog newsletter? It’s free and you get a fun weekly…
art blognewsletterphoto setgeorge wilsontwilight zoneretro science fiction art
A Twilight Zone cover featuring a big abstracted swirl of colors chasing after a man in a suit. ALT
The Twilight Zone comic cover art. A man struggles with a melting clock face that is wrapped around his neck. Text reads: "Time was the tyrant that had to be stopped!"ALT
A Twilight Zone cover featuring a shadow with claws for hands decending on a guy who's lying at the bottom of an elevator.ALT
A Twilight Zone cover featuring a bellhop who is falling off of a building, plunging to his apparent demise.ALT

Hi, new followers! Want to sign up for my art blog newsletter? It’s free and you get a fun weekly art roundup!

If you see this post in the next few days, you can sign up in time to get my next issue, all about George Wilson’s ‘60s and '70s “Twilight Zone” comic book covers. My latest two issues covered the history behind black light posters and the different ways artists illustrate dreams.

https://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/816807546802372608
«Bob Dara “Death-Rider” Black Light Poster
bob daradeath-riderblack light posterskeleton

gotankgo:

«Bob DaraDeath-Rider” Black Light Poster

Bob Dara was an artist from New York who was active through the 1960s and 70s. He made political art and he made biker art, sometimes both at the same time. This piece, called “Death-Rider,” depicts a skeleton smoking a hookah that is installed on its bike.»

https://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/816750774496477184
vintage black light posters
black light postersblack light posterblack light

gotankgo:

vintage black light posters

https://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/816750716359213056
M. C. Escher (1898-1972) Dream (1935)
m.c. escherdreamblack light poster

tomoleary:

M. C. Escher (1898-1972) Dream (1935)

Black Light poster after M. C. Escher’s Dream (1935)

“Escher wasn’t too disturbed about the reprints as he could have been. When an American friend advised him to call in a lawyer, he wrote: ‘Why should I be displeased if youngsters are happy with awfully coloured red things on their walls? I feel more or less flattered and I am glad that they can afford them.’”

https://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/816750678471065600
I grew up fairly obsessed with Usborne’s World of the Unknown series: UFOs, Ghosts and Monsters….
The Usborne Guide to the Supernatural World1990photo set

vintagerpg:

I grew up fairly obsessed with Usborne’s World of the Unknown series: UFOs, Ghosts and Monsters. Image the frenzy that awoke inside me a few years ago when I learned that there was a second series of three books, from the same period, with the same style and art direction called Supernatural Guides. Worse, imagine my frustration when I found that they command frankly ridiculous prices second hand. Three kid books at 50 bucks a pop? Nah. Even this, the all-in-one digest remained well over a hundred bucks for longer than I liked. Eventually I got it off Etsy for like 60, which, fine, OK, more than I wanted, but still a good buy.

Anyway, three constituent books: Vampires, Werewolves and Demons, then Haunted Houses, Ghosts and Spectres and finally Mysterious Powers & Strange Forces, all originally published in 1979. Nice of Usborne to arrange them in order of my interest. This collected edition, The Usborne Guide to the Supernatural World, came out in 1990. Really love the world continents etched into the skull (someone used the skull for some knock-off toy packaging and the map aspect is a dead giveaway).

Vampires is my fave, naturally, though mostly for the demon section. Ghosts is solid and surprisingly doesn’t have much overlap with the World of the Unknown book. Powers is a potpourri of paranormal topics, including ESP, UFOs, Uri Gellar and so on. It’s fine, but I don’t have more than a passing interest in most of it.

As with World of the Unknown, there is an attempt to make these books “educational.” They are designed to maximize the delivery of trivia in an easy-to-read package, but I think between the selection of stories and the bloody artwork, these books are more intentionally lurid than the other series. Not a complaint, really! I love it. If my Usborne science books, produced in the same style, had even half the buckets of blood, I’d maybe be a scientist.

https://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/816712857637060608
Moebius
Moebiusretro comics


Moebius

https://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/816706102848864256
Michael Kaluta
michael kalutafantasy artflying creature

ananta108:

Michael Kaluta

https://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/816631374088929280
Richard Hescox
richard hescoxcatdeskvirtual reality

ananta108:

Richard Hescox

https://70sscifiart.tumblr.com/post/816631283941801984