CHARLES DANA VESS

Charles was born in 1951 in Lynchburg, Virginia and has been drawing since he could hold a crayon. He drew his first full-length comic when he was 10 and called it "Atomic Man." Minimalist in nature, it required no drawing of hands, feet or heads ("they just glowed"). Since then, he has painstakingly drawn thousands of hands, feet, and heads in great detail. Charles graduated with a BFA from Virginia Commonwealth University, and worked in commercial animation for Candy Apple Productions in Richmond, Va., before moving to New York City in 1976. It was there that he became a freelance illustrator, working for many publications including Heavy Metal, Klutz Press, and National Lampoon. His award-winning work has graced the pages of numerous comic book, publishers such as Marvel, DC, Darkhorse and Epic. He has been featured in several gallery and museum exhibitions across the nation, including the first major exhibition of Science Fiction and Fantasy Art (New Britain Museum of American Art, 1980) and "Dreamweavers" (William King Regional Arts Center, 1994-95). In 1991, Charles shared the prestigious World Fantasy Award for Best Short Story with Neil Gaiman for their collaboration on Sandman #19 (DC Comics) --- the first and only time a comic book has held this honor. In the summer of 1997, Charles won the Will Eisner Comic Industry Award for Best Penciler/Inker for his work on The Book of Ballads and Sagas (which he self-publishes through his own Green Man Press) as well as Sandman #75. Soon after Charles finished the last of 175 paintings for Stardust, a novel written by Neil Gaiman, for which he was given the 1999 World Fantasy Award as Best Artist.

In 2002 Charles won a second Will Eisner award, this time as Best Painter for his work on Rose, a 130-page epic fantasy saga written by Cartoon Books' Jeff Smith. The year continued to be busy for Charles with the publication of Seven Wild Sisters (Subterranean Press) and The Green Man, Tales from the Mythic Forest (Viking), both utilizing cover art and interior b/w illustrations by the artist, and both making the 2003 American Library Association's list for Best Books for Young Adults! By the end of the year he had completed 28 paintings for his first children's picture book, A Circle of Cats, done in collaboration with writer Charles de Lint (Viking). This cover art won the Gold Award for Best Book Art in the 10th annual "Spectrum: The Best in Contemporary Fantastic Art" even before it was officially published. A new edition of Peter Pan (Tor/Starscape) featuringa cover as well as over 30 b/w interior illustrations by Vess was released this past Fall. Another collaboration with de Lint, Medicine Road (Subterranean Press) and the YA anthology,The Faery Reel (Viking ) will be arriving this Spring and he is currently hard at work producing drawings for several new books, including, A Storm of Swords (MeishaMerlin), the 25th anniversary edition of Moonheart (Subterranean Press) and a graphic novel collection of his ballads material for Tor.

PERSONAL: Born June 10, 1951
Lives on a small farm in the southwest corner of Virginia

EDUCATION: B.F.A.,1974, Virginia Commonwealth University

EXPERIENCE:

Commercial Animation
1974-76, Candy Apple Productions, Richmond, Virginia

Freelance Illustrator
Since 1976, New York City and beyond: Tor Books, Abrams Books, "National Lampoon," "Heavy Metal," Marvel Comics, DC Comics, Berkley Books, etc.

Art Instructor
1980-82, Parsons School of Design, New York, NY

Artists-in-Residence
1992-96, William King Regional Arts Center, Abingdon, Virginia

 

EXHIBITS:

"The Art of Science Fiction and Fantasy" Winter 1980. The Museum of American Art, New Britain,Connecticut

"The Art of Fantasy and Science Fiction" Winter 1989. Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, Delaware

"Storyteller" Fall 1992. Frameworks Gallery, Bristol, Virginia

"The Mythic Garden" Summer 1993. Open Air Birch Garden, Devon, England

"The Magic" Fall 1993. Repartee Gallery, Park City, Utah

"The DreamWeavers" Fall 1994 - Summer 1995. (Co-curator and participating artist) A travelling museum exhibition of 15 contemporary fantasy artists and children's book illustrators.

"The Tempest" Spring 1996. Four Color Images Gallery, N.Y.C.

"Stardust" Spring - Summer 1998 San Francisco Comic Art Museum, San Francisco, Ca.

SOME PUBLICATIONS:

The Horns of Elfland, Spring 1977, (Archival Press) The Raven Banner, Spring 1984, (Marvel Comics) The Book of Night, #1-3, Summer/Fall 1987, (Dark Horse)

The Warriors Three Saga, Marvel Fanfare #34-37,1987-88, (Marvel Comics)

A Midsummer Night's Dream, Fall 1988, (Donning Co.)

Little Red Riding Hood, Fall 1988, (Gargoyle Press)

The Dream Makers, A collection of work by six artists, Winter 1988, (Paper Tiger Press)

Sandman, #19, Summer 1990, (DC Comics), World Fantasy Award Winner

Spirits of the Earth, A Spider-man Graphic Novel, August 1990, (Marvel Comics)

"Morrigan Tales" Taboo #4, Fall 1990, (Spiderbaby Graphics)

C. Vess Sketchbook, Fall 1991, (Tundra Publishing Co.)

Swamp Thing, #129-139, 1993, (DC Comics)

The Books of Magic, #1-14, 1994-95, (DC Comics)

Prince Valiant, #1-4, 1995, (Marvel Comics)

Stardust, written by with Neil Gaiman 1997-98, (DC Comics/Vertigo)

ONGOING:

The Book of Ballads and Sagas, Fall 1995 to present. A twice-yearly publication of Green Man Press presenting a comic book format adaptation of well-known Scottish, Irish, and English traditional ballads.

Rose, a 3-issue full color mini-series written by Jeff Smith.

AWARDS:

The Ink Pot Award: For excellence in comic art,1990.

World Fantasy Award: Best short story, 1991.

Comic Creators' Guild: 1993 Best Cover (Dark Horse Presents #75).

Silver Award (Comics Industry) 1995, Spectrum Annual of Imaginative Art.

The Will Eisner Comics Industry Award: Best Penciler/Inker 1996 for The Book of Ballads and Sagas and Sandman #75

The World Fantasy Award: Best Artist, 1999.

1999 World Fantasy Convention
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