, 1915 The rise of
fantasy and
science fiction "pulp" magazines demanded artwork to illustrate stories and (via cover art) to promote sales. This led to a movement of
science fiction and
fantasy artists prior to and during the Great Depression, as anthologised by
Vincent Di Fate, himself a prolific SF and
space artist. In the United States in the 1930s, a group of Wisconsin artists inspired by the Surrealist movement of Europe created their own brand of fantastic art. They included
Madison, Wisconsin-based artists Marshall Glasier, Dudley Huppler and
John Wilde; Karl Priebe of
Milwaukee and
Gertrude Abercrombie of
Chicago. Their art combined macabre humor, mystery and irony which was in direct and pointed contradiction to the
American Regionalism then in vogue. In postwar
Chicago, the art movement
Chicago Imagism produced many fantastic and grotesque paintings, which were little noted because they did not conform to New York
abstract art fashions of the time. Major imagists include
Roger Brown,
Gladys Nilsson,
Jim Nutt,
Ed Paschke, and
Karl Wirsum. After 1970, modern western fantasy is influenced by illustrations from
Conan the Barbarian and
The Lord of the Rings, as well as popular works of SF and fantasy like the
role-playing game Advanced Dungeons & Dragons or the French
Heavy Metal magazine. == See also ==