In 1987 Cherry took home two
Chesley Awards, one for Best Cover Illustration and one for Best Color Work. The Chesley Awards are presented annually by ASFA, The Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists to honor excellence in the field. In the years to come, Cherry would be nominated for sixteen more Chesley Awards, six of which he would win. Cherry would win virtually every other award available for his art except the Hugo Award for Best Artist. He would be nominated for that award 10 times. Another important landmark in Cherry's career occurred in 1987. The Donning Company Publishers brought out a book of 40 of Cherry's paintings along with a treatise written by Cherry providing step by step instruction on his painting technique at that time. The book was entitled
Imagination: The Art and Technique of David A. Cherry. In 1991, a science fiction short story by Cherry,
The Odd Man Out, appeared in the anthology,
The War Years: The Jupiter War, edited by
William Fawcett and
David Drake, published by ROC Books. In 1993, Ballantine Books was preparing to publish a coffee table book entitled
The Art of Michael Whelan in tribute to the art he had created for Ballantine Books over the years. He asked Cherry to interview him as his fellow artist, and the included interview is entitled "Materials and Methods". In 1995, Friedlander Publishing Group published a fifty card set of trading cards entitled
David Cherry Fantasy Art Trading Cards. That same year Artist's Market published a lead article by Cherry entitled
Research Turns Fantasy Into Reality in which Cherry provided an insider's view into the day to day effort involved in operating a successful business as a freelance illustrator. 1995 was also the year Cherry received the honor of being invited by The Fellows of the Smithsonian to appear at the
Smithsonian Institution and give a presentation about his art and career. Also in 1995, Cherry was selected as one of the jury for Spectrum 2, an annual publication of Spectrum Fantastic Art. Since 1980, Cherry had lived on Pineoak Drive in
Edmond, Oklahoma and worked out of his studio there, but in December 1999 he and his family moved to
McKinney, Texas, a suburb of
Dallas. Once settled in, Cherry accepted an offer from William Fawcett to do the cover and all of the interior illustrations – color and monochrome – for an oversized, coffee table book for Ballantine Books which would be entitled
The World of Shannara, a companion guide to the fantasy world created by
Terry Brooks. == Biography: 2000–2008 ==