Tim Kirk
Tim Kirk is both a professional artist and an American fan artist. He worked as a senior designer at Tokyo DisneySea, as a Imagineer for the Walt Disney company. He began his profssional art career during the mid-1970s as an illustrator at Kansas City's Hallmark Cards company. He earned his Bachelor’s Degree in Fine Arts, with an emphasis in commercial art, and his Master’s Degree in Illustration from California State University, Long Beach. His Master's thesis project consisted of a series of paintings from The Lord of the Rings trilogy by J.R.R. Tolkien; 13 of these were published by Ballantine Books as the 1975 Tolkien Calendar. Today, Kirk is retired from his design firm, Kirk Design, Inc., located in the Los Angeles, California area. He also sits on the advisory board of Seattle's Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame.[1]
Tim Kirk | |
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Born | Long Beach, California, United States | October 30, 1947
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | California State University |
Known for | Painting, drawing |
Movement | Fantasy art |
Website | www |
Hugo Awards
Kirk won the Hugo Award for Best Fan Artist in 1970, 1972, 1973, 1974, and in 1976. With Ken Keller, he co-designed the first cold-cast resin base used for a Hugo, given in 1976 by the World Science Fiction Society at Kansas City's 34th World Science Fiction Convention; he has been additionally nominated other times for the award.
References
- Science Fiction Museum and Hall of Fame -- Advisory Board Archived 2004-07-05 at Archive.today, accessed February 28, 2007
External links
- Official website (as of 2017-03-18: "Kirk Design is closed" with telephone reference)
- Hugo Award Winners from the 1970s
- Tim Kirk at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Tim Kirk at Library of Congress Authorities, with 22 catalog records