Difference between revisions of "Jon Gustafson"
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− | (June 28, 1945 | + | (June 28, 1945 – April 13, 2002) |
− | Jon Martin Gustafson | + | '''Jon Martin Gustafson''' was an [[Idaho]] [[fan]], writer, illustrator, editor, publisher, and appraiser of [[SF]] and [[fantasy]] art and book [[collections]]. |
− | From the 1970s on, he was active in SF. He was one of the founders of [[ | + | From the 1970s on, he was active in SF. He was one of the founders of [[Moscon]], the annual [[convention]] in Moscow, Idaho, which began in 1978 and was the first SF convention in the Northwest outside the major cities. He chaired [[MosCon XXII]]. Over the years, Jon introduced other innovations, making Moscon the first SF convention to feature both an author and an artist [[GoH]], the first to have a scientist GoH, and the first to pay writers and artists for their contributions to its souvenir [[program book]]. |
− | + | He was a founding member of many [[organizations]], including the [[Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists]] ([[ASFA]]). He was a member of [[Writers' Bloc]]. | |
− | + | As an [[author]], his publications include the [[book]] ''CHROMA: The Art of Alex Schomberg'', numerous encyclopedia articles in ''The Visual Encyclopedia of Science Fiction'', ''The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction'', ''Starlog Science Fiction Yearbook 1979'', and the ''New Encyclopedia of Science Fiction'', and columns and book reviews for various genre magazines. | |
− | + | He was married to author [[V. E. Mitchell]]. He died of stroke and complications of diabetes in Lewiston, Idaho. | |
+ | |||
+ | *{{SFE|name=gustafson_jon}}. | ||
+ | *[https://sfnorthwest.org/jon.html Obituary] at sfnorthwest.org | ||
{{recognition}} | {{recognition}} | ||
* 1981 -- [[V-Con 9]] | * 1981 -- [[V-Con 9]] | ||
* 1982 -- [[Noncon (Canada) 5]] | * 1982 -- [[Noncon (Canada) 5]] | ||
− | * 1983 -- [[ | + | * 1983 -- [[SpoCon '83]] |
* 1988 -- [[Norwescon X]] | * 1988 -- [[Norwescon X]] | ||
− | * 1993 -- [[ | + | * 1990 -- [[Vikingcon 11]] |
+ | * 1993 -- [[RadCon 1A]] | ||
* 2000 -- [[Rustycon 17]] | * 2000 -- [[Rustycon 17]] | ||
− | {{person}} | + | {{person | born=1945 | died=2002}} |
− | |||
[[Category:fan]] | [[Category:fan]] | ||
[[Category:US]] | [[Category:US]] | ||
+ | [[Category:pro]] | ||
+ | [[Category:artist]] |
Latest revision as of 14:03, 31 January 2024
(June 28, 1945 – April 13, 2002)
Jon Martin Gustafson was an Idaho fan, writer, illustrator, editor, publisher, and appraiser of SF and fantasy art and book collections.
From the 1970s on, he was active in SF. He was one of the founders of Moscon, the annual convention in Moscow, Idaho, which began in 1978 and was the first SF convention in the Northwest outside the major cities. He chaired MosCon XXII. Over the years, Jon introduced other innovations, making Moscon the first SF convention to feature both an author and an artist GoH, the first to have a scientist GoH, and the first to pay writers and artists for their contributions to its souvenir program book.
He was a founding member of many organizations, including the Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists (ASFA). He was a member of Writers' Bloc.
As an author, his publications include the book CHROMA: The Art of Alex Schomberg, numerous encyclopedia articles in The Visual Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, Starlog Science Fiction Yearbook 1979, and the New Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, and columns and book reviews for various genre magazines.
He was married to author V. E. Mitchell. He died of stroke and complications of diabetes in Lewiston, Idaho.
- Entry in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction.
- Obituary at sfnorthwest.org
Awards, Honors and GoHships:
- 1981 -- V-Con 9
- 1982 -- Noncon 5
- 1983 -- SpoCon '83
- 1988 -- Norwescon X
- 1990 -- Vikingcon 11
- 1993 -- RadCon 1A
- 2000 -- Rustycon 17
Person | 1945—2002 |
This is a biography page. Please extend it by adding more information about the person, such as fanzines and apazines published, awards, clubs, conventions worked on, GoHships, impact on fandom, external links, anecdotes, etc. See Standards for People and The Naming of Names. |