Difference between revisions of "Mae Strelkov"

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(9 July 1917 -- ????)
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(July 9, 1917 – January 27, 2000)
  
Mae Strelkov "was born in China. Her parents were English missionaries. She married Vadim Strelkov who was Russian-born and they moved to Chile, then Buenos Aires, and then on to a ranch in Jujuy. She was so well loved in fandom that [[Joan Bowers]] and [[Susan Wood]] started a fan fund [the [[Mae Strelkov's Friends Fund]] for her, and in 1974 she attended the [[worldcon]] [[Discon II]], [[DeepSouthCon]] and traveled the U.S. for two months."
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[[File:StrelkovMae1974.jpeg|thumb|upright=2|'''Mae Strelkov, 1974.'''<br>''Photo by [[Ned Brooks]].'' ]]
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[[Fanzine]] [[fan]] '''Mae Strelkov''' was so well loved in fandom that [[Joan Bowers]] and [[Susan Wood]] started a [[fan fund]], the [[Mae Strelkov's Friends Fund]], for her, and in 1974 she attended the [[Worldcon]] [[Discon II]] and [[DeepSouthCon]] and traveled the U.S. for two months.
  
She "was an Argentinian grandmother and lived on a ranch in the middle of nowhere, wrote loving letters and [[locs]], and printed highly colorful [[hecto]] paintings."
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She was an Argentinian grandmother and lived on a ranch in the middle of nowhere, wrote loving letters and [[locs]], and printed highly colorful [[hecto]] paintings. Mae was known for her hecto paintings — long after hecto was a common [[fannish]] [[repro]] medium — and once boiled bones to make the gelatin. (She soon went back to commercially made hectographs, which she said were much better.)
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References to Mae Strelkov appear now and again in the late [[Ned Brooks]]'s zines, such as ''[[It Goes on the Shelf]]''. She illustrated his publication of ''The Spagyric Quest of Beroaldus Cosmopolita'' by [[Arthur Machen]] (Purple Mouth Press, 1976).
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She was born in China, the daughter of English missionaries. She married Vadim Strelkov who was Russian-born and they moved to Chile, then Buenos Aires, and then on to a ranch in Jujuy, Argentina.
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* [https://web.archive.org/web/19991011134811/https://www.fortunecity.com/roswell/quatermass/87/mae/ Hecto Gallery.]
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* [https://blinovitchlimitationeffect.wordpress.com/2016/01/30/hectograph-album-art-by-mae-strelkov-scenes-of/ More Mae art.]
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* {{link | website=https://eFanzines.com/Reluctant/ReluctantFamulus-114.pdf | text=Article about Mae.}}
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* [https://blog.lib.uiowa.edu/speccoll/2021/02/24/discovering-the-hectographic-world-of-mae-strelkov/ “Discovering the hectographic world of Mae Strelkov”] by Rich Dana, University of Iowa Special Collections, February 24, 2021.
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* [https://sclfind.galib.uga.edu/sclfind/view?docId=ead/ms4319.xml;query=;brand=default Mae Strelkov papers] at the University of Georgia.
  
 
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* ''[[The Mae Strelkov Trip Report]]''
 
* ''[[The Mae Strelkov Trip Report]]''
 
* ''[[Tink]]''
 
* ''[[Tink]]''
* ''[[Tong]]''
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* ''[[The Tinkunaku Event]]'' [1973]
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* ''[[Tong]]'' [1974]
 
* ''[[Tongzine]]''
 
* ''[[Tongzine]]''
  
References to Mae Strelkov appear now and again in the late [[Ned Brooks]]'s zines such as ''[[It Goes on the Shelf]]''.
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[[File:StrelkovArt.jpeg|frame|center|[[Hecto]] art by Mae Strelkov. ]]
 
 
{{link | website=https://eFanzines.com/Reluctant/ReluctantFamulus-114.pdf | text=eFanzines pages}}
 
  
{{person | born=1917}}
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{{person | born=1917| died=2000}}
 
[[Category:fan]]
 
[[Category:fan]]
[[Category:US]]
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[[Category:ROW]]
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[[Category:artist]]

Latest revision as of 18:46, 28 November 2022

(July 9, 1917 – January 27, 2000)

Mae Strelkov, 1974.
Photo by Ned Brooks.

Fanzine fan Mae Strelkov was so well loved in fandom that Joan Bowers and Susan Wood started a fan fund, the Mae Strelkov's Friends Fund, for her, and in 1974 she attended the Worldcon Discon II and DeepSouthCon and traveled the U.S. for two months.

She was an Argentinian grandmother and lived on a ranch in the middle of nowhere, wrote loving letters and locs, and printed highly colorful hecto paintings. Mae was known for her hecto paintings — long after hecto was a common fannish repro medium — and once boiled bones to make the gelatin. (She soon went back to commercially made hectographs, which she said were much better.)

References to Mae Strelkov appear now and again in the late Ned Brooks's zines, such as It Goes on the Shelf. She illustrated his publication of The Spagyric Quest of Beroaldus Cosmopolita by Arthur Machen (Purple Mouth Press, 1976).

She was born in China, the daughter of English missionaries. She married Vadim Strelkov who was Russian-born and they moved to Chile, then Buenos Aires, and then on to a ranch in Jujuy, Argentina.

Fanzines and Apazines:

Hecto art by Mae Strelkov.

Person 19172000
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