Difference between revisions of "MagiCon"

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The 1992 [[Worldcon]] held September 3-7 at the Orange County Convention and Civic Center, The Peabody Hotel and The Clarion Hotel, [[Orlando]], FL. [[GoHs]]: [[Jack Vance]] ([[pro]]), [[Vincent Di Fate]] (artist) and [[FGoH]]: [[Walter A. Willis]]. [[Spider Robinson]] was [[Toastmaster]], but [[Mike Resnick]] acted as [[Toastmaster]] for the [[Meet-the-Pros party]]. It was [[chaired]] by [[Joe Siclari]] and sponsored by [[Fanac]].
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''(Did you mean a [[MagiCon (LA)|New Orleans regional]]?)''
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'''MagiCon''', the 50th [[Worldcon]], and [[Florida Worldcons|second in Florida]], was held September 3–7, 1992, at the Orange County Convention and Civic Center, The Peabody Hotel and The Clarion Hotel, [[Orlando]], FL. [[GoHs]]: [[Jack Vance]] ([[pro]]), [[Vincent Di Fate]] ([[artist]]) and [[FGoH]]: [[Walter A. Willis]]. [[Spider Robinson]] was [[Toastmaster]], but [[Mike Resnick]] acted as [[MC]] for the [[Meet-the-Pros party]]. It was [[chaired]] by [[Joe Siclari]] and sponsored by [[FANAC]].
  
 
See [[1992 Hugos]], [[1995 Worldcon Site Selection]], [[1995 NASFiC Site Selection]].
 
See [[1992 Hugos]], [[1995 Worldcon Site Selection]], [[1995 NASFiC Site Selection]].
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[[Mike Glyer]] commented at the time that "The con's pleasing personality could only have come from organizers who had looked into their own hearts for what people value in a worldcon, then spared no effort to deliver it."
 
[[Mike Glyer]] commented at the time that "The con's pleasing personality could only have come from organizers who had looked into their own hearts for what people value in a worldcon, then spared no effort to deliver it."
  
[http://fanac.org/timebinders/magicon/ Virtual Memory Book]
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== MagiCon Art Retrospective==
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The MagiCon Art Retrospective was the first attempt to provide a historical exhibit of [[science fiction]] [[art]] at a [[Worldcon]]. It was conceived by Chairman Joe Siclari, a genre art [[collector]], to take advantage of the special knowledge of Artist GoH Vincent Di Fate.
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Di Fate had written and spoken widely about S-F art, its history and its influence in other media. He had also organized numerous special exhibits and had consulted at various auction houses and museums. Di Fate enlisted the help of Roger Reed, the director of Illustration House, a leading art gallery specializing in illustration art.
  
{{FancyFile | MagiCon/Joe Siclari and Edie Stern.mp3| Joe Siclari and Edie Stern recount some of their MagiCon stories}}
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The exhibit encompassed dozens of illustrations covering over a century of art, starting in 1913. Among the artists included: [[Wayne Barlowe]], [[Rudolph Belarski]], [[John Berkey]], [[Hannes Bok]], [[Edmund Dulac]], [[Dean Ellis]], [[Virgil Finlay]], [[Frank Frazetta]], [[Kelly Freas]], [[Fred Freeman]], [[Jack Gaughan]], [[Josh Kirby]], [[Paul Lehr]], [[Stanley Meltzoff]], [[Leo Morey]], [[Frank R. Paul]], [[Ludek Pesek]], [[Richard Powers]], [[J. Allen St. John]], [[John Schoenherr]], [[Andrei Sokolov]], [[Gene Szafran]] and more.  
  
'''Video:'''
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The popularity of the MagiCon Art Retrospective encouraged other Worldcons to provide the resources to develop additional special art exhibitions, most notably [[Chicon 6]] (2000) and [[Noreascon 4]] (2004).
*{{link | website=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8e0U9b5lw5A|text=Isaac Asimov memorial}}
 
*{{link | website=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fPVf1E30z3o|text=Walt Willis interview by Ted White}}
 
*{{link | website=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ebzRkm6HyQA|text=Memories of the First Worldcon}}
 
*{{link | website=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3tvgKRhxQM0|text=Joe Siclari interviewed by Warren Buff}}
 
*{{link | website=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uc38I-Pl5XY|text=Vincent di Fate talk}}
 
*{{link | website=http://file770.com/?tag=magicon|text=Mike Glyer reposts File770 reports on the convention, 25 years on}}
 
  
There also seems to have been a [[regional]] named MagiCon held January 23-24, 1982 at the Rault Center Hotel in [[New Orleans, LA]]. Nothing else is known about it.
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==More Information ==
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* {{conpubs|series=Worldcon|con=MagiCon}}.
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* [https://fanac.org/timebinders/magicon/ Virtual Memory Book.]
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* [https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8D69oYQFIO9sOYQLD2tjpf6pldTLOXBc&si=u_WLhAjSZdaXQUCC MagiCon videos.]
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** {{link | website=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8e0U9b5lw5A|text=Isaac Asimov memorial.}}
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** {{link | website=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fPVf1E30z3o|text=Walt Willis interview by Ted White.}}
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** {{link | website=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ebzRkm6HyQA|text=Memories of the First Worldcon.}}
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** {{link | website=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3tvgKRhxQM0|text=Joe Siclari interviewed by Warren Buff.}}
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** {{link | website=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uc38I-Pl5XY|text=Vincent di Fate talk.}}
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* {{link | website=https://file770.com/?tag=magicon|text=Mike Glyer reposts File770 reports}} on the convention, 25 years on.
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* {{FancyFile | MagiCon/Joe Siclari and Edie Stern.mp3| Joe Siclari and Edie Stern recount some of their MagiCon stories. }}
  
{{convention | series=Worldcon |year=1992 | before=Chicon V | after=ConFrancisco | files={{fancy}}}}
 
  
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{{convention | series=Worldcon |year=1992 | before=Chicon V | after=ConFrancisco |locale=Orlando, FL|series1=Florida Worldcons|before1=SunCon}}
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:worldcon]]
 
[[Category:worldcon]]

Latest revision as of 17:30, 27 September 2023

(Did you mean a New Orleans regional?)


MagiCon, the 50th Worldcon, and second in Florida, was held September 3–7, 1992, at the Orange County Convention and Civic Center, The Peabody Hotel and The Clarion Hotel, Orlando, FL. GoHs: Jack Vance (pro), Vincent Di Fate (artist) and FGoH: Walter A. Willis. Spider Robinson was Toastmaster, but Mike Resnick acted as MC for the Meet-the-Pros party. It was chaired by Joe Siclari and sponsored by FANAC.

See 1992 Hugos, 1995 Worldcon Site Selection, 1995 NASFiC Site Selection.

Orlando in 1992 was the bid for MagiCon and won against competition from DC in '92 which was forced to withdraw a couple of months before the vote. See 1992 Worldcon Site Selection

MagiCon's exhibit hall featured a miniature golf course themed around The Enchanted Duplicator in honor of Fan GoH Walt Willis.

Mike Glyer commented at the time that "The con's pleasing personality could only have come from organizers who had looked into their own hearts for what people value in a worldcon, then spared no effort to deliver it."

MagiCon Art Retrospective[edit]

The MagiCon Art Retrospective was the first attempt to provide a historical exhibit of science fiction art at a Worldcon. It was conceived by Chairman Joe Siclari, a genre art collector, to take advantage of the special knowledge of Artist GoH Vincent Di Fate.

Di Fate had written and spoken widely about S-F art, its history and its influence in other media. He had also organized numerous special exhibits and had consulted at various auction houses and museums. Di Fate enlisted the help of Roger Reed, the director of Illustration House, a leading art gallery specializing in illustration art.

The exhibit encompassed dozens of illustrations covering over a century of art, starting in 1913. Among the artists included: Wayne Barlowe, Rudolph Belarski, John Berkey, Hannes Bok, Edmund Dulac, Dean Ellis, Virgil Finlay, Frank Frazetta, Kelly Freas, Fred Freeman, Jack Gaughan, Josh Kirby, Paul Lehr, Stanley Meltzoff, Leo Morey, Frank R. Paul, Ludek Pesek, Richard Powers, J. Allen St. John, John Schoenherr, Andrei Sokolov, Gene Szafran and more.

The popularity of the MagiCon Art Retrospective encouraged other Worldcons to provide the resources to develop additional special art exhibitions, most notably Chicon 6 (2000) and Noreascon 4 (2004).

More Information[edit]



Chicon V Worldcon - Bidding - Hugos ConFrancisco
SunCon Florida Worldcons last
1992
This is a convention page. Please extend it by adding information about the convention, including dates, GoHs, convention chairman, locale, sponsoring organization, external links to convention pages, awards given, the program, notable events, anecdotes, pictures, scans of publications, pictures of T-shirts, con reports, etc.