From Rochester, New York, Virgil Finlay has been described as "the most popular interior illustrator ever to work in science fiction and fantasy magazines." (170). This reputation grew from the late... Read full biography
From Rochester, New York, Virgil Finlay has been described as "the most popular interior illustrator ever to work in science fiction and fantasy magazines." (170). This reputation grew from the late 1930s. Finlay's method, influenced by the art of Gustave Dore, was to use a lithographic pen and ink... Read full biography
From Rochester, New York, Virgil Finlay has been described as "the most popular interior illustrator ever to work in science fiction and fantasy magazines." (170). This reputation grew from the late 1930s. Finlay's method, influenced by the art of Gustave Dore, was to use a lithographic pen and ink to produce stipple art to create precise groupings of black dots that created a photographic effect. For each one of these interior illustrations, he earned about ten dollars and about one-hundred... Read full biography
From Rochester, New York, Virgil Finlay has been described as "the most popular interior illustrator ever to work in science fiction and fantasy magazines." (170). This reputation grew from the late 1930s. Finlay's method, influenced by the art of Gustave Dore, was to use a lithographic pen and ink to produce stipple art to create precise groupings of black dots that created a photographic effect. For each one of these interior illustrations, he earned about ten dollars and about one-hundred dollars for cover art. During the Depression years of the early 1930s, he attended art school at night, studying portraiture and figurative painting. To earn money, he worked as a house painter, radio assembly-line laborer and clerk in a stockroom. He... Read full biography
From Rochester, New York, Virgil Finlay has been described as "the most popular interior illustrator ever to work in science fiction and fantasy magazines." (170). This reputation grew from the late 1930s. Finlay's method, influenced by the art of Gustave Dore, was to use a lithographic pen and ink to produce stipple art to create precise groupings of black dots that created a photographic effect. For each one of these interior illustrations, he earned about ten dollars and about one-hundred dollars for cover art. During the Depression years of the early 1930s, he attended art school at night, studying portraiture and figurative painting. To earn money, he worked as a house painter, radio assembly-line laborer and clerk in a stockroom. He was an avid reader of Weird Tales, a pulp-fiction publication, and in 1935 submit... Read full biography
Virgil Finlay - Artist Info
About Virgil Finlay: Books
Books & Publications (5)
Publications based on askART research. List may not be comprehensive.
The Artists Bluebook 34,000 North American Artists to March 2005
2005
AskART.com Inc. - Dunbier, Lonnie Pierson (Editor)
479 pages
Davenport's Art Reference: The Gold Edition
2005
Davenport, Ray
2,421 pages
The Classic Era of American Pulp Magazines
2000
Haining, Peter
224 pages (color)
Pulp Culture The Art of Fiction Magazines
1998
Robinson, Frank/L Davidson
204 pages (color)
Pulp Art: Original Cover Paintings for the Great Pulp Magazines