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Spectrum 16: The Best in Contemporary Fantastic Art [Hardcover]

Cathy Fenner , Arnie Fenner
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)


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Book Description

November 17, 2009 Spectrum (Book 16)
Spectrum 16 features such diverse visionary artists as James Jean (Fables), Brom (The Plucker), Iain McCaig (Star Wars), Peter de Sève (Ice Age), Anita Kunz (Rolling Stone), and nearly 400 more. Drawing from books, graphic novels, video games, films, galleries, and advertisements, Spectrum 16 is both an exciting art book for fans and an invaluable resource for clients looking for new talent. A useful "Year in Review" section surveys the entire field of fantastic art, and a handy index provides contact information for each artist.


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Cathy Fenner and Arnie Fenner are recipients of the Locus Award and World Fantasy Award for Spectrum as Best Art Book. In addition to Spectrum, the Fenners have edited a number of books celebrating contemporary art. They live in Kansas.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 264 pages
  • Publisher: Underwood Books (November 17, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1599290359
  • ISBN-13: 978-1599290355
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 1 x 12.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,016,466 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Customer Reviews

It is completely worth every penny. Sara Hargis  |  4 reviewers made a similar statement
If you are an artist this book is a must. R. A. Osmundsen  |  2 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
32 of 32 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic, as usual November 2, 2009
Format:Paperback
Length: 0:28 Mins
If you have previous copies of Spectrum, you already know what to expect. Spectrum 16: The Best in Contemporary Fantastic Art is a thick 264-page art annual filled with amazing art, reproduced brilliantly on low glossy paper. There are both paperback and hardcover editions.

This year, the winner for the Grand Master Award is Richard Corben.

Other than him, there are a ton of other great artists included like Iain McCaig, Jon Foster, Melaine Delon (who drew the cover painting), Jason Chan, Adam Hughes, Brom, Paul Bonner, James Gurney, Andrew Jones and many new fresh artists. All their websites and contact information are included in the index and the back should you want to check out more of their work.

The illustrations are grouped into different categories, namely Advertising, Book, Comics, Concept Art, Dimensional, Editorial, Institutional and Unpublished. What you'll see are environment paintings, character designs, game art, sculptures, Fine Art, and just basically whatever you can think of.

Spectrum 16: The Best in Contemporary Fantastic Art continues to be one of the best valued and inspiration art annuals around. Highly recommended to artists, art directors and anyone into fantasy art, or into fantastic art.

(More pictures are available on my blog. Just visit my Amazon profile for the link.)
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Spectrum 16 continues the habit of offering a feast for those who enjoy speculative art--whether graphic novel style, SF book cover art, advertising, etc. Plenty of fantasy of the traditional sort (sorcerers, maidens, fairies, witchy women, enchantments, magical landscapes) and a good amount of sci-fi stuff (steampunkiness, robots, futuristic).

Here are 264 pages, from beginning to index: in-between, a banquet of gorgeous, fantastical visions.

I liked last year's cover better, but those into dangerous females will relish the glowingly pale, serpentined-haired Medusa type on this edition's front. It's by Melanie Delon, called "Doom", and is found fully repro'd on page 256. Sexy and creepy. The femme fatale, flaunting her assets and dangerous allure, never goes out of style.

The Grand Master Award this time round goes to Richard Corben (Hellboy, cover of Meatloaf's BAT OUT OF HELL, The Hulk, co-creator of BLOODSTAR.

Really enjoyed the detail art on the contents page (full repro found page 186) by Jenna Smith--a digital piece with a watercolor vibe and anime spirit, playful and fun and beautifully colored, of a girl blowing a pink gum bubble while her backpack issues forth a trail of assorted critters,large and small. It's worth taking a peek at the phallically-clogged sci-fi-ey AIDS awareness poster repro on page 12.

The Advertising Gold Award was rather disturbing--a forward-frantic melee of human appendages and rabbits by Ryohei Hase (digital). Note that scary rabbitty things are scattered throughout this edition of SPECTRUM. Urg. For instance, p 77. And the clay/acrylic sculptural hare on p 133. Eek. The Silver ad award wen to Yuko Shimizu for a retro-look piece with men in old-style striped bathing suits and red/white lifesavers against a pea-soupy colored background. What are they doing? Riding a saddled multi-celled organism that looks like a close-up of amoebae cluster? Made me think of old hardcovers with faded artwork. (ink drawing with digital) Weird. Both winners have a sense of movement and energy, though the styles are quite different. Shimizu has another retro-deep-sea fantasy diver on page 150, and I actually like this piece better, personally.

Andrew Jones' "Artumnal Dancer" deserved its sole position on page 31. A gorgeous swirl of orange garment made of fall foliage, another galactic-like swirl of pure white, a zombie-pale dancer, a watchful, haloed moon. Really cool (Painter X medium). His "Heaven's Bones" on page 62, with its gorgeous use of a red accent amidst the dark and the wondrous gear-machinery wings is worth an extended visit (digital). Two more pieces on 172-173 are must-sees, and Mr. Jones ends up being a stand-out for me in this issue.

A thought-provoking, surrealistic, social-commentary piece by Jose Emroca Flores (Starbucks employees may wanna avoid) is oil on wood with some serious "Cashcow" udder-sucking.

Stephan Martiniere's epic moodiness in his digital piece for Orion's ACE OF SKULLS is a delight to behold, partly for the perspective: You're high above a misty SF city with winding roads about hills and a great big metal hulker of a ship floating above, while we're anchored by a male figure on a parapet watching what is going on below. Lots of grays, misty pale colors, bits of blue , shadows, scaffolding, banners. Make me think of many older SF titles, and I mean that in a good way. This is page 39, but behold 38 where smaller repros of two other Martiniere works show he's no slouch.

One of my faves, J J Palencar, has a gorgeous piece on page 46 done in acrylic that momentarily took me back to THE SLEEPING GYPSY, only this boasts a white tiger staring down the viewer and keeping guard over a lovely tawny-skinned sleeping female in JJP's trademark subdued tones. VEry much a horizontal composition and me likey. More Jude on p. 63 with "The Mystery of Grace." Also acrylic. And page 82, "Nor Flesh, Nor Feathers." (I own that book, hah.)

Another non-digital piece (for those of you who whine about the preponderance of digital) is a stunner by Donato Giancola (who had one of my fave artwork in last year's SPECTRUM): the cover for Tor's ARCHER OF THE ROSE. Wow, look at that wonderful diagonal composition of ornate shields (golds, greens, roses, silvers) , the gleam of armor, the brightness. Contrasting to all that metal is the heroine with her bow and arrow and blonde, unarmored presence, who is anchoring at the center. Really, really love this. Page 57. Oil on panel. (Check the lovely pencil piece on the opposite page by Eric Orchard called "The Guardian of Autumn."' Nice.)

If you like pirates, visit Johnny Duddle's "Treasure Hunting!" on p.66 (digital), which will make you smile at it's teeny ship of fools and it's large octopi on the grab. Digital. Note: I noticed a lot of sea dangers recurring, including a cool Jonah and the Whale piece on p. 86 and a giant squid on 107.Also about sea periils, see the really marvelous piece on page 224 (watercolor, acrylic) by Jeremy Enecio. One of my faves--a blue, green, white, composition with sea serpents. The curling snakey bits around humans made me think of the classic Lacoon.

A nice architectural focus spreads across 118-119-, with mysterious and threatening to playful structures. .

Ron Wilson's fun retro-futuristic landscape with robot piece--the "lighting" effect is tres cool--is on page 175, "The Electrician" (digital).

A delightful, and not wholly fluffy knight/damsel/forest/fairies piece by Justin Gerard effectively uses rose tones and lighting and swirling fabric. Pretty. (watercolor/digital).

One of my fave two-page spreads is on 182-183, with an acrylic/ink/watercolor by Scott Bakal having majorly "pink" fun with a spaceship in Central Park; a terrific digital, low-to-the-ground/zombies-in-the-playground piece by Jason Chan (normal kids fighting zombie kids, and how cool is this); and a mixed and ink media piece by Dan Santat that does something totally delightful with Godzilla.

216-217 has an amazing double offering by David Bowers, both oil works, one on panel and one on linen. Wow.Really rich,detailed work infused with subdued, but living sort of light. I'm impressed. Beautiful execution meets creepy story elements.

If you're a bee-lover, visit the two-pager on 232-233 for four bee-yootiful works.

Herman Smorenburg's haunting oil on wood, The Vision of a Mortal Life, is a haunting, sensual, creepy memento mori type painting, complete with darkened landscape, Celtic cross, death figure, skull-caressing maiden, and lantern-holding seeker.

If like me, you've got a thing for albinoes (I blame Elric of Melnibone), visit two really worth-seeing pieces: Tran Nguyen's "Fine Line", p 242, photoshop--with a lovely use of turqouise against the neutrals; and Jeremy Enecio (again, he's standing out for me this year) "Milk", a digital work, of an albino madonna holding a totally red child.

Spectrum 16 closes with Michael Whelan's soaring architectural piece in acrylic on canvas, "Lumen 5". It's a piece that has a rickety-looking, spiraling structure that looks medieval, but it rises and rises and curves in one of those huge spaces we've seen Whelan do before (and do well, of course). A serpent of wood and cloth seeking a way out from this hulking structure (is it an alien ship or a temple of sorts, with those boxed details like the Pantheon?) It's looking toward what's out there, and it's moving up and out. I suppose it's good to end with this piece, which is one that is looking onward...to Spectrum 17.

Enjoy.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Magnificent art April 28, 2010
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
The best spectrum so far. Tons of amazing art. I think this is even better than the $50 Ballistic Books because it has tons of different medias, not just digital. Very inspiring. If you are an artist you should own this book.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars excellent
This is as good as all of the other spectrum books in the series. I purchased all 19 of them and am not disappointed in any of them. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Greg H.
5.0 out of 5 stars The best one to date
I bought this and was instantly pleased..... however I did get to preview a few pages when a certain bookstore was still open.
Published 4 months ago by tazda L
4.0 out of 5 stars Amazing Arts
I have no regret buying this Art Book, they really motivated me and inspired me. I wish I could kept buying all the series, but I am kind of short in money or I would kept getting... Read more
Published 14 months ago by Andrew Susanto
5.0 out of 5 stars pretty
Pretty pictures all around. Always impressed with the artists' talents in these books. Doubt I will buy another book anytime soon since everything is digital nowadays. Read more
Published 16 months ago by B. Truong
3.0 out of 5 stars Not as good as previous editions
I love the spectrum series, but it seems that since the Thirteenth edition each book has become progressivly more commercialized. Read more
Published on December 19, 2010 by Juliet
2.0 out of 5 stars great book but takes too long to ship
im buying this book for my girlfriend on december 5th on amazon. but it says its not gonna ship till january or march. this was gonna be a christmas gift. Read more
Published on December 5, 2010 by zed
5.0 out of 5 stars Best ever!!!
Once again, Spectrum 16 has outdone itself with the amount of amazing artwork/illustration featured in this book. Read more
Published on November 7, 2010 by Ben Kwok
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome.
I'd gush, but the art speaks for itself. Beautiful work. Plan on buying all of the volumes.
Published on September 10, 2010 by Zack Sterling
5.0 out of 5 stars Love
The book is gorgeous, well put together, and full of a wide variety of fantasy art.
Published on June 25, 2010 by eiie
5.0 out of 5 stars Escape
Oh my god, this line of books is AMAZING.

If you have any imagination, check this out. You won't regret it. Read more
Published on May 28, 2010 by Sara Hargis
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Topic From this Discussion
Spectrum 16 hardcovers?
There was a news posting on the official Spectrum website last year around December. They mentioned that Spectrum 16 was under-printed and folks would probably have to wait for a future re-print. I know that there are still a lot of softbound copies still available, but the hardback edition was... Read more
Jul 10, 2010 by M. Sebring |  See all 2 posts
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