The Artistic Superiority of Tits Out

Recently Julie Dillon, the first female artist to be nominated for a Best Professional Artist Hugo in close to 30 years, posted on Tumblr a gigantic compilation of pictures by women artists, stating:
This year, I was incredibly honored to be nominated for a Hugo award in the Best Professional Artist category, but I was a little shocked to find out there hadn’t been another woman nominated in that category since Rowena Morrill in 1986. That’s more than a little ridiculous, considering there are so many women artists out there, they are all amazing, and they all need more visibility and recognition.

And the question of course is, how is the disparity in nominations possible?  There are clearly a ton of female artists out there.  Quite a lot of them are working in the SFF field, producing covers that would come to the attention of the SFF community.  Why then are so many male artists being acknowledged, and female artists somehow failing to exist when award season rolls around?

A couple of years ago I joined the Tumblr crowd, mostly as a lurker, and one of the accounts I followed was an art reblogger.  Every day without fail gorgeous art would appear in my Tumblr feed - a selection of representative works duly accredited, with a link to the artist's site.  And it was awesome!  Lovely art, very impressive.  I've discovered tons of awesome artists through Tumblr. (Euclase, I am in awe).

But as a side-effect of this particular Tumblr feed my dashboard was suddenly full of half-naked ladies.  Tiny, cutesy women defying the laws of gravity.  Curvy women with their asses in the air.  "Strong" women in that weird pose where you can somehow see their front and their back at the same time.

Now, there are plenty of women out there who like a fine pair of breasts.  And professional artists are generally working to some sort of order - a request from an art director, a specified scene from a book, a strong imperative from marketing to match other covers that work.  Artists don't all get to decide what they depict, and how they depict it.  So a percentage of "tits out" poses are to order.  But I started looking at the names of the artists behind all those sexy sexy ladies and noticed a distinct correlation between (my guess at) author gender and amount of nakedness, and type of pose.

When the statistics regarding the Hugo artist nominations were raised these last few months, a  connection formed for me between that Tumblr feed featuring so many naked ladies, and also with this rather awesome cartoon of Batman drawn for the female gaze.  And when I saw Julie's incredible compilation, I could not help but notice a rather outstandingly small percentage of asses raised in the air.  There was certainly the occasional breast, but vastly more complete coverage or restrained cleavage, and far fewer women in invitingly submissive poses.

Now it would be ridiculous for me to say that the sole reason for the disparity in Hugo nominations is the presence or lack of tits in a particular artist's work.  There's clearly a lot more going on here than (het cis-)gender preferences impacting on voting (just as I cannot overlook the from-the-beginning presence of individuals attracted to men in the science fiction community, with their own preferences where art is concerned).

All I can really do is point, ask the question, and hope in future we see more female artists on the Hugo ballot.
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Published on November 26, 2013 15:30
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message 1: by Estara (last edited Nov 28, 2013 07:11AM) (new)

Estara I've been asking myself that for years, especially since Jody Lee covers brought me to DAW (and Ace and Roc, I think) and their amazing stable of female writers in the 80s in the first place. Lee and Kinuko Craft covers are as recognisable as Whelan or Thomas Canty if you see a book on the shelves.

Aside: I actually imported that amazing Julie Dillon astrological calendar for next year, because I so loved the depictions (have them on my desktop in the resolutions she posted to her gallery) - even though I will still make photo calendars for my family like every year.

ETA: Awww, no Jody Lee on her list.... but Kinuko Craft is there.


message 2: by Andrea (last edited Nov 27, 2013 02:24PM) (new)

Andrea Jody Lee's work is lovely, isn't it? Since I'm attending the next WorldCon, I'll actually get to have a say in nominations next year, and will definitely be making my own shortlist of artists available for the interested. I'll have to look up the rules on what exactly makes a person eligible on a yearly basis. [Ideally we should have several years of women-only ballots to make up for the ridiculous disparity, and the only way we can hope to do that is to raise awareness of the artists.]

I have the astrological calendar Julie illustrated as well. I loved the variety and the way she worked so many of the symbols into the pictures in new ways. Plus she's currently working on my next cover commissions! I love the thumbnail stage. :)

Edit: Here's the rule regarding artists, btw. "2.People, for example Best Professional Artist, in which case the Award is given for the work that person has done in the year of eligibility. Please note that “year of eligibility” qualification. If X happens to be the most famous SF artist in the world, but he has produced no work in the year of eligibility, then he should not be nominated."

The year of eligibility is interesting, but it looks to me like publication date of the work which is being illustrated is the relevant date (not, for instance, the date that the cover is first revealed, which might be long before that).


message 3: by Estara (last edited Dec 13, 2013 08:49AM) (new)

Estara I've always loved her work - she has a small Etsy shop for her lampwork and has offered custom portraits (I can't afford those) and also some postcard sized oils she did - I am now the proud owner of this one ^^. She's lovely in e-mail convo, too. Here's her blog about crafting AND her current artwork.

And DAW keeps getting her for MSW books and the Valdemar ones by Mercedes Lackey, so she ususally has something happening there.

The two times I had the supporting membership for the Hugos I always nominated Jody Lee. There's usually at least one new cover out by her per year.


message 4: by Denise (new)

Denise I've bought books just cause Jody Lee was the artist!


message 5: by Estara (new)

Estara Ditto. That's how I started finding more female written sf&f in the late 80s. Looking for her covers.


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