Skip to content
Answering Your Questions About Reactor: Right here.
Sign up for our weekly newsletter. Everything in one handy email.
When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

Reactor

I’d like to say that when I saw John Dickenson’s work I made some informed comment about his great sense of space and his ability to subtly insert human elements into epic environments without losing them altogether. Instead, what I did after seeing a sample in Spectrum and then turning to my laptop to look up his website, was to start singing to the friends that were with me, “My new b-oy friend, my new b-oy friend!” And then immediately asked him to join our gallery and answer a few questions.

First break in the business?
When I got a call from Scott Williams of the then Homage Studios to help him ink three of the comic books he was working on per month. This new job allowed me to ink over Jim Lee, Jeff Scott Campbell, Travis Charest, and other world class comic book artists. It was amazing to be a part of that studio with all those incredibly talented artists back in the early 90s. After that I got another big break in 1997, to go work with Justin Sweet & Vance Kovacs at Black Isle Studios, and learn how to paint and create art on the computer. I’ve never looked back.

Your biggest influences?
Early on it was artists like Rick Griffin, Roger Dean, J.C. Leyendecker, Drew Struzan, and many of the Disney old timers. As I matured as an artist I continued to add new artists to my list such as Sargent, N. C. & Andrew Wyeth, Dean Cornwell, Joseph Clement Coll, Fechin, Winslow Homer, Mucha, Dulac and Bob Kuhn. Of course there are many other artists both past and present that continue to inspire and influence me.

John DickensonDream assignment?
My dream assignment would to find a publisher who would contract me to create my uPuP children’s book idea which would contain fifteen or so full color paintings along with a dozen pen & ink drawings. And I’d have a year to complete it, along with making enough money to meet my financial needs for that year. Oh, and to still have time to take on other creative projects as well.

A career highlight?
When I got the call to work on the Narnia Films as a pre-production concept artist. Plus the opportunity of getting to work with director Michael Apted, Jan Roelfs, Andrew Adamson, Roger Ford and others. Also getting to meet with Richard Taylor of Weta Studios. But the icing on the cake was to work on these 2 movies with my 2 best friends Justin Sweet and Vance Kovacs. An unforgettable ride.

John DickensonAdvice to a young illustrator?
I’d say without hesitation to learn first how to draw. Become a competent draftsman before anything else. I didn’t have the proper training early on. I went right after my natural strengths of color, design, and composition and for the most part, only focused on the “surface” aspect of my artwork. I didn’t work enough at improving my basic drawing skills. If I could go back to my first day in class, I’d only work in black and white, and stay away from too much surface detail. To this day I’m still having to go back and re-learn so much of what should have been done at the beginning of my artistic journey.


You can check out more of JD’s work on his website and his Tor.com gallery.

John Dickenson

John Dickenson

About the Author

About Author Mobile

Irene Gallo

Author

Learn More About Irene
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
8 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments