Hannes Bok, pseudonym for
Wayne
Woodard (July 2, 1914–April 11, 1964), was an American
artist and illustrator, as well as an amateur astrologer and writer
of fantasy fiction and poetry. He painted nearly 150 covers for
various science fiction, fantasy, and detective fiction magazines,
as well as contributing hundreds of black and white interior
illustrations. Bok's work graced the pages of calendars and early
fanzines, as well as dust jackets from specialty book publishers
like
Arkham House, Llewellyn, Shasta,
and
Fantasy Press. His paintings
achieved a luminous quality through the use of an arduous glazing
process, which was learned from his mentor,
Maxfield Parrish. Bok was the first artist
to win a Hugo Award.
Today, Bok is best known for his cover art which appeared on
various
pulp and
science fiction magazines, such as
Weird Tales,
Famous
Fantastic Mysteries,
Other Worlds,
Super Science
Stories,
Imagination,
Fantasy
Fiction,
Planet
Stories, If,
Castle of
Frankenstein and
The Magazine of
Fantasy and Science Fiction.
Life and career
Wayne
Woodard (the name is sometimes mistakenly rendered as "Woodward")
was born in Kansas City,
Missouri
, the first stop in a peripatetic youth. His
parents divorced when he was five; and his father and stepmother,
strict disciplinarians, discouraged his artistic efforts.
Once he
graduated high school, in Duluth, Minnesota
, Bok cut off contact with his father and moved to
Seattle
to live with his mother. There he became
active in SF fandom, including the publication and illustration of
fanzines. It was in connection with these activities that he
originated his pseudonym, first "Hans", then "Hannes", Bok. The
pseudonym derives from
Johann
Sebastian Bach (whose name can be rendered both as "Johann S.
Bach" and "Johannes Bach").
In 1937,
Bok moved to Los
Angeles
, where he met Ray
Bradbury. In 1938, he relocated to Seattle - where he
worked for the W.P.A. and became acquainted with artists like
Mark Tobey and
Morris Graves. In 1939, Bok moved to New York
City in order to be closer to the editors and magazines which
published his work. Bok had corresponded with and had met
Maxfield Parrish (ca. 1939?), and the
influence of Parrish's art on Bok's is evident in his choice of
subject matter, use of color, and application of glazes. Bok was
also gay, according to friends
Forrest J Ackerman and
Emil Petaja; the erotic fantasy elements of his
artwork, especially his male nude subjects, display homoerotic
overtones unusual for the time.
Like his contemporary
Virgil Finlay,
Hannes Bok broke into commercial art and achieved initial career
success as a
Weird Tales artist - though he did so through
one of the stranger events in the history of science fiction and
fantasy. In the summer of 1939,
Ray
Bradbury carried samples of Bok's art eastward to introduce his
friend's work to magazine editors at the
1st World Science Fiction
Convention. This was a bold move, since Bradbury was a neophyte
with no connections to commercial art or the magazine industry; but
it reflects the close ties within the
fan and professional community.
Bradbury was, at the time, a 19-year-old newspaper seller, and he
borrowed funds for the trip from fellow science fiction fan
Forrest J Ackerman. Bradbury
succeeded;
Farnsworth Wright,
editor of
Weird Tales, accepted
Bok's art, which debuted in the December 1939 issue of
Weird
Tales. More than 50 issues of the magazine featured Bok's
pen-and-ink work until March 1954. Bok also executed six color
covers for
Weird Tales between March 1940 and March 1942.
Weird Tales also published five of Bok's stories and two
of his poems between 1942 and 1951. Once he broke through into
professional publications, Bok moved to New York City and lived
there the rest of his life.
Throughout his life, Bok was deeply interested in astrology, as
well as in the music of the Finnish composer
Jean Sibelius, with whom Bok had a
correspondence. (Bok's copy of Karl Ekman's
Jean Sibelius: His
Life and Personality [Knopf, 1938], for example, is annotated
with Bok's comments and astrological charts.) As the years passed,
Bok became prone to disagreements with editors over money and
artistic issues; he grew reclusive and mystical, and preoccupied
with the occult. He eked out a living, often in near poverty -
until his death in 1964. He died, apparently of a heart attack (he
"starved to death" according to Forrest J Ackerman), at the age of
49.
Bok as an author
As an author, Bok is best known for his novels
The Sorcerer's Ship, originally
published in the December 1942 issue of John W. Campell's legendary
fantasy magazine
Unknown; and
The Blue
Flamingo/Beyond the Golden Stair. The Blue Flamingo
first appeared in the January 1948 issue of
Startling Stories. Bok later
performed an extensive revision and expansion of this work,
published posthumously as
Beyond the Golden Stair (1970).
Both novels have been repeatedly re-issued, as in the
Ballantine Adult Fantasy
series. Bok also was allowed to complete two novellas left
unfinished by
A. Merritt at the time of his death in 1943. These
were published as
The Blue
Pagoda (1946) and
The Black
Wheel (1947). (Bok's commitment to fantasy and science
fiction had occurred in 1927 in connection with Merritt's
The Moon Pool in
Amazing Stories - one of those
conversion experiences common among young SF fans.) Also published
posthumously was a collection of Bok's poetry,
Spinner of Silver and
Thistle (1972).
Bok as an artist
Bok is better known for his art than for his fiction. His style
could alternate between, or combine, lush romanticism and humorous
grotesquery. His use of time-consuming glazing techniques for his
paintings impeded his productivity and limited his output, and
therefore his commercial success. He also spent time carving
figures in wood and making masks in
papier mache. In the 1950s he was able to
do more book-jacket illustrations, which he found less irksome than
magazine work; though he could never have abandoned the latter. His
striking wraparound cover for the November 1963 issue of
F&SF,
illustrating Roger Zelazny's "A Rose for Ecclesiastes", was
published in the last months of his life.
A member of the
Futurians, Bok won the
first
Hugo Award for
Best Cover/Professional
Artist in 1953.
Bok and Emil Petaja
The science fiction and fantasy author
Emil
Petaja (1915 - 2000) was lifelong friend of Bok and collector
of his work. After Bok's death, Petaja did as much as anyone to
keep the artist's work before the public eye.
Bok and Petaja first met in the summer of 1936.
According to Petaja,
Bok and his friend Harold Taves were hitch-hiking from Seattle to
New York City when they stopped off in Montana
to see the
aspiring writer. At first correspondents, Bok and Petaja
soon became close friends. The two had much in common - including
an interest in fantasy fiction, the
Kalevala (the Finnish verse epic), and the music of
Sibelius.
Petaja's first book,
Brief Candle (1936), contained twelve
poems by Petaja and twelve illustrations by Bok.
Petaja printed this
now rare chapbook by running-off copies on the mimeograph machines
at Montana State University -
Bozeman
, where he was a student in creative writing.
According to Petaja, approximately 40 to 50 copies were printed
with many "given to friends and well wishers."
Bok and Petaja's friendship continued in Los Angeles, where each
had relocated in 1937. Throughout 1937 and 1938, Petaja and Bok
shared an apartment, and together they attended fan meetings,
haunted second-hand book and magazine shops, went to the movies,
and helped each other with their poems and stories. They also
immersed themselves in the primordial Los Angeles science fiction
scene. Bok and Petaja befriended Ray Bradbury - then still a
teenager - as well as Forrest J. Ackerman,
Henry Kuttner and others.
And Flights of Angels was the first book published about Hannes
Bok.
The artist is pictured on the cover.
In
And Flights of Angels, Petaja recounts: "Perhaps when
all is washed down over the dam, my major claim to fame will rest
in the fact that it was I who got Hannes down to Los Angeles and I
who dragged him, reluctantly, to the meetings of the Los Angeles
Science Fiction Society. Where we met Ray Bradbury. . . . It was at
Clifton's Cafeteria on Broadway. We couldn't afford to eat there,
usually, but we took advantage of the free lime sherbet. In that
fabled back room where so many of the s-f elite have sat around the
long table chewing the fat, fanwize, Hannes first met Forrie
Ackerman, Henry Kuttner, et al. But it was Ray Bradbury who took to
Hannes instanter and proved to be such a rare and wonderful friend
to him a little later on."
"Besides introducing Hannes to Ray Bradbury, I take pride in the
fact that this brief Los Angeles period of Bok's life was one of
the most productive of his life. He produced a dozen color
paintings based on
Peer Gynt, as samples
to show book publishers what he could do. He painted "The Mermaid"
and several Enchanted City themes. He wrote scads of poetry. All of
which does indicate that, for all his beefs, he was happy then. He
might lash out cruelly about this or that, but nobody I have known
had as great a capacity for enjoying and sensating all there was
around him."
In 1967, three years after Bok's death, Petaja founded the
Bokanalia Memorial Foundation. The foundation was set up "with the
help and encouragement of Harold Taves of Seattle and Ray Bradbury
of Los Angeles and the Golden Gate Futurians of San Francisco . . .
. The avowed intention of Bokanalia is simply to keep the great
imaginative art of Hannes Bok from slipping into oblivion, and to
make new (better than pulp) prints available to his many admirers
all over the world".
Between 1967 and 1970, Petaja published three portfolios of Bok's
art. Those portfolios include
Variations on Bok Theme,
(black & white portfolio, 1967);
The Famous Power
Series, (black & white portfolio, with text by Bok, 1969);
and
A Memorial Portfolio, (color portfolio, with booklet
with text by Petaja, 1970). Petaja also authored a commemorative
volume,
And Flights of Angels: The Life and Legend of Hannes
Bok (Bokanalia Memorial Foundation, 1968). Along with brief
contributions from
Roger Zelazny,
Jack Gaughan,
Donald Wollheim and others,
And Flights
of Angels contains Petaja's long biographical essay on the
artist, a checklist of Bok's published artwork and writings, and
reproductions of a substantial number of the artist's drawings,
prints and illustrations. Later, under the SISU imprint (and on
behalf of the Bokanalia Foundation), Petaja published an
illustrated volume of Bok's poetry,
Spinner of Silver and
Thistle (1972), as well as editing
The Hannes Bok Memorial
Showcase of Fantasy Art (1974).
Much of the Bok material included in the portfolios and books
published and authored by Petaja came from Petaja's personal
collection. Petaja owned at least a dozen paintings, as well as
dozens of sketches, drawings, prints and three-dimensional objects.
Among
Petaja's most beloved possessions was the first sketch Bok ever
drew for him, a piece from 1936 called "Gleef," which hung on the
wall of Petaja's San
Francisco
home.
Petaja also collected examples of Bok's published work - such as
magazine covers, interior illustrations, dust jackets, book covers,
and more. Additionally, Petaja amassed Bok manuscripts (both
published and unpublished fiction and poetry), as well as letters,
books, other printed matter and unique, one-of-a-kind
objects.
External links