- Paperback: 256 pages
- Publisher: Paper Tiger (UK) (Jan 2001)
- ISBN-10: 185585905X
- ISBN-13: 978-1855859050
- Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (1 customer review)
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This book is a great value. You'd have to collect dozens of out-of-print books to come close to the images collected in this one volume. In addition to the art reproductions, the story of Bonestell's life is well written and illustrated. He is a fascinating character in his own right, apart from his art. This book has the clear signs of a work done by authors who love their subject and know it well. If you have a soft spot for the romance of space, this book will go to the top of your list.
Who was this incredible artist, Chelsey Bonestell? Although I collected books illustrated by Bonestell throughout the 1950s and 1960s, I knew little about him personally until I found a trade paperback about him in the late 1970s or early 1980s, which gave a broad overview of his life and work.
The present book is a greatly expanded version of that earlier work, 256 pages versus 133 in the trade paperback. Since that paperback came out, both Chelsey and his wife have died, but I think it is safe to say Chelsey's work is more appreciated than ever. Here you'll learn of his childhood, his work as an architectural renderer and movie matte painter, and his entry into space art at an age when most men are thinking of retirement. Chesley lived to be nearly a hundred, and was able to compare many of his painted visions of other worlds to actual photos taken by astronauts and robots. But none of these photos have the incredible artistic validity of Chelsey's own vision. As many have commented, where Chesley's vision disagrees with reality, it is generally Chesley's vision which is the better.
For several generations, whenever anyone thought of space travel, or explorations of other worlds, it was Chesley Bonestell's vision they recreated in their mind's eye. Few artists have ever had or could ever hope to have such an impact.
Whether you are an old fan or are discovering Bonestell for the first time, this is a rich feast of his art, which ranges from architectural renderings to recreations of long-vanished Spanish missions of California.
It was thus actually rather nerve-racking when I opened this new book for the first time. Could the reality of his art possibly match my childhood memories? Could all of that vividness and excitement have been magnified in my mind's eye over the succeeding decades? Was I in for a disappointment?
I most certainly was not. If anything, the fabulous art inspired and excited me even more than it had way back then.
And there's a lot of that art here -- a real feast of it, superbly reproduced. And I discovered as I kept turning the pages, hands quite literally trembling as I discovered treasure after treasure. Even more excitingly, I found that Bonestell had worked in areas of art I'd never suspected before: fabulous landscapes, stunning sketches ... I have perused many, many art books, but I've never before reacted quite as strongly as to this one.
And it gets better. There's a long, beautifully written and utterly fascinating illustrated biography of Bonestell written by Ron Miller. It's almost as if one's getting two books in one.
An earlier reviewer (who cannot spell "Chesley") talked of this as if it were an expanded version of <I>The Conquest of Space</I>. He was talking through his hat. This is a completely new book covering the entirety of Bonestell's career both visually and textually; it contains a big selection of illustrations from <I>The Conquest of Space</I> (all the best ones), but they form only a small part of the huge and sumptuous collection on display here.
This is a gorgeous book, and an extremely valuable piece of work -- the authors/compilers deserve the highest praise for having brought this treasure to us.
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