Hardware is not a perfect book. The binding, while sturdy, struggles slightly with the two-page spreads of his most famous panoramic paintings (a common curse of the format). Additionally, a few of the earliest commercial pieces feel like filler compared to the majesty of the space art.
9/10 Essential for fans; a masterclass in retro-futurist design. The only thing missing is a pull-out poster of the "Crimson Dawn" ship schematic.
For anyone who grew up in the 1970s or 80s with a stack of dog-eared science fiction paperbacks, the name Chris Foss isn't just a footnote—it's a primal trigger. Before CGI, before concept art for Star Wars became ubiquitous, there was Foss’s airbrushed vision of the future: mile-long starships crusted with primary-colored hull plates, enigmatic alien city-ships drifting through nebulae, and impossible geometries rendered in glossy, fetishistic detail.
Art books often suffer from overly academic or painfully sparse text. Hardware strikes a smart middle ground. The foreword by Foss himself is surprisingly humble and technical, detailing his move from graphic design to airbrush art. The chapter introductions are written by sci-fi author and critic Jonathan McCalmont, who provides historical context without getting bogged down in theory.
Hardware is not a perfect book. The binding, while sturdy, struggles slightly with the two-page spreads of his most famous panoramic paintings (a common curse of the format). Additionally, a few of the earliest commercial pieces feel like filler compared to the majesty of the space art.
9/10 Essential for fans; a masterclass in retro-futurist design. The only thing missing is a pull-out poster of the "Crimson Dawn" ship schematic.
For anyone who grew up in the 1970s or 80s with a stack of dog-eared science fiction paperbacks, the name Chris Foss isn't just a footnote—it's a primal trigger. Before CGI, before concept art for Star Wars became ubiquitous, there was Foss’s airbrushed vision of the future: mile-long starships crusted with primary-colored hull plates, enigmatic alien city-ships drifting through nebulae, and impossible geometries rendered in glossy, fetishistic detail.
Art books often suffer from overly academic or painfully sparse text. Hardware strikes a smart middle ground. The foreword by Foss himself is surprisingly humble and technical, detailing his move from graphic design to airbrush art. The chapter introductions are written by sci-fi author and critic Jonathan McCalmont, who provides historical context without getting bogged down in theory.