Who is your favourite cover artist?

I also love Kinuko Y. Craft's ccovers. She even managed to induce my dad to buy "The cry of the icemark". Something he would never have done due to reading the blurb.

Cornelia Funke's covers are also good, especially as she does the illustration of the German originals herself.
 
Kelly Freas for all of those great, funny Astounding Stories covers.

John Jude Palencar from the early 80's with covers for Teot's War and the Postman through the current covers for the Kushiel series.

Michael Whelan, I own two originals and they still impart that sense of wonder after 20 years in my library.
 
Hmmm...impossible to choose a favorite. Here are some good ones, though:


John Jude Palencar (Again. Guy's popular.)--The Onion Girl, The bright and the Dark, about 15 others...
His website is stunning, too. I love the disparity in tone between the picture you click to enter the site and the picture on the homepage.

Scott M. Fischer--Southern Fire

David Wyatt--The Innocent Mage

Leo and Diane Dillon--Lirael, Sabriel, and Abhorson

Thomas Canty--Convergence
 
Definitely Edward Miller. He's done the Locke Lamora books, several of China Mieville's books, and many many more.
I'll second that. He can actualy make book covers that are way better than the books they cover, especially The Red Wolf Conspiracy. Which is not only a good thing, as it left me rather disappointed after reading The Scar.

The guy understands something about cities that no-one else does. He should do a cover for Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities!
 
The late Josh Kirby, who did many of the Discworld covers would have to be one of mine. I was thinking Brian Froud too but I don't know if he has done many covers.
 
I'll second that. He can actualy make book covers that are way better than the books they cover, especially The Red Wolf Conspiracy. Which is not only a good thing, as it left me rather disappointed after reading The Scar.

The guy understands something about cities that no-one else does. He should do a cover for Italo Calvino's Invisible Cities!

If you like Edward Miller check out Les Edwards it is the same guy using a different name
 
Stephan Martiniere and the guy who does the David Gemmell books

I'll second for Stephan Martiniere! Love his stuff: www dot martiniere dot com/newworks.htm

Love his covers for Mainspring by Jay Lake and Brasyl by Ian McDonald among others.
 
Jack Gaughan, Kelly Freas, John Schoenherr, from my early collecting days.
Michael Whelan, Don Maitz, Paul Alexander from the 70s. Picked my avatar because I was fairly sure it was a Whelan painting.
And of course, Chris Foss. :)
 
Michael Whelan and Edward Miller are great. So's the artist who did Abercrombie's The Blade Itself covers, which evoke an old pirate treasure map or ancient parchment kind of feel.

Though not a cover artist by profession, my favourite would have to be Janny Wurts, as she does her own covers, and as a result, the covers match the books perfectly (unless you are looking at some of the translated covers. There are a bunch of translated edition covers that are obviously inferior to Wurts' own, and some are downright horrible). She is an excellent artist. There are three different sets of covers for her big series, The Wars of Light and Shadow. The old US covers are character oriented, the old UK covers are landscapes, and the new UK covers are very slick, with a landscape behind a portal showing another picture, all on a white background. This link shows the older US and UK covers, and the new UK covers, which apparently will be gracing the US editions to be released this spring and summer:

List of Books

However, she doesn't do other author's book covers.

Too bad more authors couldn't do this, or collaborate with a good cover artist prior to the release of their books. Given the importance that ad campaigns take with image, you'd think that publishers would be a little more careful and try something that would maximize sales. I have passed over a lot of books with crummy covers, at least until I came here and got some good intel on good reads.

The cover is important, plain and simple, especially to the uneducated reader.
 
as they say in the publishing industry: "If you can get someone to pick the book up, you're halfway home." Only three things will cause you to pick up a book: the author's name, the title, and especially the cover artwork.

My personal favorite (contemporary) is Bob Eggleton. With Todd Lockwood running a close second. But I've always had a love for Richard Powers. His strange, organic, symbolic imagery pretty much defined science fiction in the 1960's.
 
Jack Gaughan, Kelly Freas, John Schoenherr, from my early collecting days.

Ditto. Not as familiar with current artists, but Freas has always been a favorite.
 

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