David A. Cherry


David Cherry is an American artist, author, and illustrator of science fiction and fantasy and has also done substantial work as a marketing artist, concept artist, and 3D modeler in the game production industry. David served as Lecturer and Head of the Art Department as well as Head of the master's degree Program for artists at The Guildhall at SMU, a graduate college dedicated to studies for people who want to work in the game production industry. David was also an attorney, as well as a past president of the Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists. He has been nominated eleven times for Hugo Awards, and 18 times for Chesley Awards.
Although at ease with oil painting and most other traditional media, David usually works in acrylic paint. As an illustrator of literary works, David has illustrated or done cover art for the works of such authors as Stephen R. Donaldson, Marion Zimmer Bradley, Lois McMaster Bujold, Terry Brooks, William Shatner, David Brin, L. Sprague de Camp, Poul Anderson, Piers Anthony, John Brunner, and his sister, C. J. Cherryh, among others. Publishers for whom David has worked include DAW Books; New American Library; Ballantine Books; Del Rey Books; Ace Books; TOR Books; Friedlander Publishing Group; Pocket Books; Phantasia Press; Donald M. Grant Publishing; The Hamilton Collection; Skybox Press; The Science Fiction Book Club; Bits and Pieces; Precedence Publishing; Pegasus Publishing; Iron Crown Enterprises; The Bradford Exchange; The Donning Company Publishers; and many others.

Biography: 1949–1982

David Alan Cherry was born in Lawton, Oklahoma to Basil Lafayette Cherry and Lois Ruth Cherry. David's paternal grandfather, Robert Edward Cherry, was a cowboy punching cattle in the new state of Oklahoma when Basil was born. David's parents are from Anadarko, Oklahoma. David's only sibling is Carolyn Janice Cherry, better known as C. J. Cherryh, one of the top authors of fantasy and science fiction. C.J. was seven when David was born.
Cherry'’s mother home-schooled him for kindergarten with the result that when he entered first grade at B.C. Sweeney Elementary in Lawton, he could write and was reading at a fourth-grade level. When he was nine, David’s family moved to Oklahoma City where he attended first Andrew Johnson Elementary then Ridgeview Elementary, Herbert Hoover Junior High School, and John Marshall High School. He learned art mostly from his sister, C.J. Cherryh, whom he credits with teaching him the basics of color theory and proportion. David’s sister also graduated from John Marshall High School seven years ahead of him. In college, she majored in Classics at the University of Oklahoma. After graduation with Honors, C.J. received a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship pursuant to which she obtained a Master’s degree in Classics from Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, MD. All of this led C.J. back to Oklahoma City and John Marshall High School where she became a teacher and had David as a student during his senior year for Latin and Ancient History.
When it was David’s turn to go to college, he too attended the University of Oklahoma. He wanted to study art, but decided against it when he saw that the art schools available to him only taught modern art, which he described as "throwing paint at a board and then melting toy tanks over it in protest to the Vietnam War".

Biography: 1982–2000

In 1987 David took home two Chesley Awards, one for Best Cover Illustration and one for Best Color Work. The Chesley Awards are presented annually by ASFA, The Association of Science Fiction and Fantasy Artists to honor excellence in the field. In the years to come, David would be nominated for sixteen more Chesley Awards, six of which he would win. David would win virtually every other award available for his art except the Hugo Award for Best Artist. He would be nominated for that award 10 times.
Another important landmark in David's career occurred in 1987. The Donning Company Publishers brought out a book of 40 of David's paintings along with a treatise written by David providing step by step instruction on his painting technique at that time. The book was entitled Imagination: The Art and Technique of David A. Cherry. In 1988, that book was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Non-fiction Book of 1987.
In 1991, a science fiction short story by David, The Odd Man Out, appeared in the anthology, The War Years: The Jupiter War, edited by William Fawcett and David Drake, published by ROC Books.
In 1993, Ballantine Books was preparing to publish a coffee table book entitled The Art of Michael Whelan in tribute to the art he had created for Ballantine Books over the years. He asked David to interview him as his fellow artist, and the included interview is entitled "Materials and Methods".
In 1995, Friedlander Publishing Group published a fifty card set of trading cards entitled David Cherry Fantasy Art Trading Cards. That same year Artist's Market published a lead article by David entitled Research Turns Fantasy Into Reality in which David provided an insider's view into the day to day effort involved in operating a successful business as a freelance illustrator. 1995 was also the year David received the honor of being invited by The Fellows of the Smithsonian to appear at the Smithsonian Institution and give a presentation about his art and career. Also in 1995, David was selected as one of the jury for Spectrum 2, an annual publication of Spectrum Fantastic Art.
Since 1980, David had lived on Pineoak Drive in Edmond, Oklahoma and worked out of his studio there, but in December 1999 he and his family moved to McKinney, Texas, a suburb of Dallas. Once settled in, David accepted an offer from William Fawcett to do the cover and all of the interior illustrations – color and monochrome – for an oversized, coffee table book for Ballantine Books which would be entitled The World of Shannara, a companion guide to the fantasy world created by Terry Brooks.

Biography: 2000–2008

David was not done on The World of Shannara project when he received an offer from Tony Goodman, the owner and CEO of Ensemble Studios, a Dallas-based game company which was poised to begin production on a computer game called Age of Mythology. The position would be Senior Concept Artist, and David would be responsible for the concept art for all of the minor and major gods and goddesses of the Greeks, Romans, Norse, and Egyptians. Shortly after David signed with Ensemble Studios, it was acquired by Microsoft.
The World of Shannara, by Terry Brooks and illustrated by David Cherry was published by Ballantine Books in 2001. That would be the last freelance illustration project of David's for a long time.
The game, Age of Mythology, by Ensemble Studios, Inc. was published in 2002 by Microsoft. During the development of the game, David's job description at Ensemble Studios had begun to morph to suit the changing artistic needs of the project, which resulted in him "preparing marketing materials: ads, brochures, magazine covers, etc." In addition to numerous magazine covers, David created the box cover for the game. At the annual Electronic Entertainment Expo in 2001, his box cover art was displayed seven stories tall directly over the entrance to E3.
Eventually, David taught himself how to work in 3D Studio Max and joined the Ensemble Modeling Team. After Age of Mythology, David stayed with Ensemble through the production and release of its expansion pack, '; Age of Empires III and its expansion pack, '; as well as the Xbox title: Halo Wars. He often had to switch between preparing marketing art and building game content in 3D.
In 2008 Microsoft decided to close Ensemble Studios, at which time David approached The Guildhall at SMU. The Guildhall is a graduate school which offers a master's degree in Interactive Technology, designed "from the ground up to provide the same kind of support for the game production industry that law schools provide for the practice of law and medical schools provide for the practice of the healing arts". He began in 2009 and left on December 31, 2012. During his time there, David became head of the Art department as well as the master's degree program for the Art Track. David then chaired a committee responsible for a total rewrite of the Art Track's curriculum.

Biography: 2013–present

In 2013 David moved from Dallas to Norman, OK where his daughter, Kassandra Leigh Cherry, was finishing college at The University of Oklahoma. His stated goal from this point "is to do art to please myself, and possibly to show the work from time to time if I am happy with it".

Honors and awards

—the Charles B. Goddard Center in Ardmore, Oklahoma.
—at Repartee Gallery in Park City, Utah.
—Traveling exhibit of astronomical art touring the United States and Canada. Sponsored by the International Association for the Astronomical Arts
—at the Park Avenue Atrium in New York, sponsored by Olympia and York.
—at the Park Avenue Atrium in New York. Sponsored by Olympia and York.
—at the Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, Delaware.
—Studio 125, Atlanta, GA
—at the Orlando Science Center, Orlando, FL
—at the Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, DE
—sponsored by the Cultural Arts Council of Plano, TX

Professional associations