Gene Szafran

Gene Szafran (11 April 1941 – 8 January 2011)[1] was an American artist, illustrator, and sculptor. He was known for illustrations in magazines including Playboy and Fortune and cover art for science fiction books published by Bantam and Ballantine during the 1960s to 1980s, including a series of Signet paperbacks of Robert A. Heinlein's work.

Gene Szafran
Born (1941-04-11) April 11, 1941
Died8 January 2011(2011-01-08) (aged 69)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materCollege for Creative Studies
Society of Arts
Style
  • Sculpting
  • Illustrating
Spouse(s)Marilyn Despre

Born in Hamtramck, Michigan, Szafran studied at the College for Creative Studies and Society of Arts and Crafts in Detroit, where he later taught, and was also an art instructor at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. He and his wife Marilyn Despres moved from New York to Redding, Connecticut in the 1970s. They had a daughter named Alyssa. During this time he contracted multiple sclerosis which devastated him, severely affecting his mobility and cutting short his career as an illustrator. Szafran then returned to the Detroit area.

Sources

gollark: (people vaguely know that some areas of it do some things, and they work using something something interacting synapses)
gollark: You can get a rough high-level overview of it, but we've done that with brains.
gollark: They have billions of transistors in them, imaging them is hard itself, nobody actually knows how all the parts work, and they're designed with computerized design tools such that nobody knows what's going on with all the individual transistors either.
gollark: You can't really dissect a modern CPU and work out how it works, though.
gollark: https://github.com/minimaxir/aitextgen



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