Fred Gambino's art
I'm not a big fan of SF art - not in the sense of actually going out and buying it, though there is much that I enjoy looking at.
However, I saw this particular picture at Interaction and again at Contemplation and it fascinates me.

It must have been the original that I saw at Interaction as I know the price meant I was safe from the temptation of buying it. At Contemplation, the print was priced at £50 and I was sorely tempted. It was titled "Scorpion Jatz" but looking at it online, I discover it is the cover art for the book "Scorpion Jar".
I'm now wondering whether to read the book. I have my own mental image of the woman in the art, what she's like, what's going through her mind. To me, she is coming back from a fight, she has won, and it's a significant victory. Everyone's cheering, but she doesn't see them. Her mind is still there in the battle - she hasn't yet returned mentally. She's too hyped up and too exhausted to be able to relate yet to anything except the battle.
Would the book tell me more about her, or would it totally destroy my mental image?
Will any relatives club together and get me the print for my next birthday? These, and other questions, remain to be answered!
However, I saw this particular picture at Interaction and again at Contemplation and it fascinates me.

It must have been the original that I saw at Interaction as I know the price meant I was safe from the temptation of buying it. At Contemplation, the print was priced at £50 and I was sorely tempted. It was titled "Scorpion Jatz" but looking at it online, I discover it is the cover art for the book "Scorpion Jar".
I'm now wondering whether to read the book. I have my own mental image of the woman in the art, what she's like, what's going through her mind. To me, she is coming back from a fight, she has won, and it's a significant victory. Everyone's cheering, but she doesn't see them. Her mind is still there in the battle - she hasn't yet returned mentally. She's too hyped up and too exhausted to be able to relate yet to anything except the battle.
Would the book tell me more about her, or would it totally destroy my mental image?
Will any relatives club together and get me the print for my next birthday? These, and other questions, remain to be answered!

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Cool picture though! Hope you are sending non subtle clicky links to said relatives.
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I suppose you could print it to canvas, but it's still not quite the same as having something that can't be reproduced exactly, even by the artist.
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There is no solution to this (it's a bit like "original manuscript" for a book, when it's a laser printed printout, the best you can do is have a letter from the author saying that this was indeed the original and only printout of that version of the book)
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I'd add that perhaps one reason why her mind is still there in the battle is that for her, there was a significant loss of some sort.
But I suspect the book wouldn't live up to it, simply because it's #13 in a series...
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I wonder whether those two chaps on her left, with jackets over their shoulders, are the supposed "aces" who couldn't win the fight she was just in. The right-hand one looks rather more envious than happy - perhaps they were originally sent out to take care of things, but she had to be called in when they failed?
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Now I just need to keep telling myself that I do *not* need any more sf art, no matter how gorgeous it is.
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I do like the image too. :)
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Some of the others are real beauties though.
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Plus a few of the poses look weird. Maybe that part's just me. :)
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I like his spaceships, but dislike the mechs. I'm very mixed re people. I greatly like a few and care nothing for most of them
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