Rick Sternbach, FIAAA
Rick Sternbach, FIAAA has been a space and science fiction artist
since the
early 1970s, often combining both interests in a project. His clients
include NASA,
Sky and Telescope, Data Products, Random House,
Smithsonian, Analog,
Astronomy,
The Planetary Society, and Time-Life
Books. He was Assistant Art Director, Illustrator, and Special Visual
Effects Designer, for COSMOS, Carl Sagan Productions.
He is a founding member and Fellow of the International Association of Astronomical Artists (IAAA), which was
formed in
1981.
Rick has written and illustrated articles on orbital transfer vehicles
and
interstellar flight for Science
Digest. Beginning in the late 1970s, he
added film and television illustration and special effects to his
background, with productions like Star Trek: The Motion Picture, The Last
Starfighter, Future Flight, and Cosmos, for which he and other members of
the art team received an Emmy Award, the first for visual effects. He
also twice received the coveted Hugo Award
for best professional science
fiction artist, in 1977 and 1978.
With the rebirth of Star Trek, beginning with The Next Generation, he
was one of the first employees hired to update the Trek universe. He
created new spacecraft, tricorders, phasers, and hundreds of other props
and set pieces. Using pencil, pen, and computer, he added Deep Space
Nine and Voyager to his spacecraft inventory, and kept his hand in real
space design with
Voyager’s Ares IV Mars orbiter (blessed by planetary
scientist Dr. Bruce Murray).
Rick contributed graphic designs for the recent Star Trek Nemesis feature
film, including the new Romulan bird of prey and Senate chamber floor. He
also provided computer playback graphics and animation elements for
Steven Soderbergh’s Solaris, and is now at work on a variety of freelance
projects related to spaceflight and space hardware
modeling.
His spacecraft designed include U.S.S. Voyager,
Future Klingon
dreadnought
(Negh’Var),
Deep
Space Nine station, Delta
Flyer,
Danube class runabout, Voyager
Shuttlecraft (“Speedboat”),
Ares IV Earth-Mars
ship,
Jupiter Station,
Klingon Attack Cruiser,
U.S.S.
Prometheus, U.S.S. Dauntless, and the Cardassian Galor-class cruiser. His props designed include
Starfleet Hand Phaser,
PADD Data device, Starfleet Communicator
Badge,
Starfleet Tricorder, Disruptors, tricorders, PADDs, and communicators for
Klingon, Romulan,
Cardassian, Bajoran, Kazon, Ferengi and other races.
Rick received the Emmy Award for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a
Creative
Technical Craft, visual effects for
COSMOS: On the Shores of the Cosmic
Ocean; 1980–1981 and the
Hugo Award, Best Professional Science Fiction Artist 1977 and 1978, World
Science Fiction Society.
He authored
U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-1701-D Blueprints: Star Trek : The Next
Generation, and coauthored
Star Trek: The Next Generation Technical Manual and
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Technical Manual.
Read his
1997 chat,
1998 chat, and
2000 chat on STARTREK.COM!
Read his interview
on
Ex Astris Scientia. Read his interview
on
TrekWeb.com.