Vel Jaeger
Fan | |
---|---|
Name: | Vel Jaeger |
Alias(es): | Deborah Goby (fiction), Ellen Hulley (poetry), Artemis (art), Vera Cacciatore (dirty limericks) |
Type: | fanartist, fanwriter, zine editor |
Fandoms: | Star Trek: TOS |
Communities: | |
Other: | |
URL: | online bio in 2009 |
Click here for related articles on Fanlore. | |
Vel Jaeger was a well-known and prolific Star Trek: TOS fanartist and fanwriter.
Vel’s first SciFi con was 1975 in West Palm Beach, Florida, where she made her first Trek encounter: George Takei. She also entered her first costume contest, with her designs placing first and third. Vel was also asked to be a staff photographer on the very first Star Trek cruise, and then by Joe Motes of Vulkon fame.
Jean Lorrah was the first to publish Vel's art as the back cover of NTM Collected. Vel was published in a section in the early issues of Starlog Magazine called Fan Fare, which introduced fan talent in many forms - her submission consisted of two small pen and ink vignettes of Kirk and McCoy. They were printed in 1980, her first and only appearance in a national publication.
Vel's first fiction was "A Diplomatic Relationship" in R & R #13. In 1987, she wrote that Joanna Cantor "took my very first story and treated it with tender loving care. [Her] skill seemed to be the ability to improve without interfering with either the author's intent or style. A rare commodity indeed." [3]
Vel was proudest of founding TREKisM, the Star Trek Special Interest Group (SIG) for Mensa, the high IQ society. In addition to 68 issues of varying lengths from 1977 to 1991 were a number of lengthy anthologies and novels known as “TREKisM at Length.” Issue #X has been in limbo, along with a fourth volume of “Trek Encore," a retrospective of the author, Ginna LaCroix. The “Trek Encores’ were a publication of In Case of Emergency Press, the brain child of sometime co-coordinator and co-editor Kim Knapp. “Between the Sheets” (BTS) was published under the aegis of “Encore Enterprises.”
Vel was very adamant about preserving fan history, especially fan art. In 2014, she wrote:
Concerning art in fanzines: in essence, art created for zines is meant to be seen by as many as possible; it's already been published, so it's not like art from a private collections. For that matter, museum art is frequently reproduced in programs, catalogues, etc. And including art in educational settings such as Fanlore.org is as essential as including quotations in reviewing an author's writings. So, my short answer is "yes," reproducing the art from fanzines is not only legitimate usage, but essential that these wonderful (and the not so wonderful) images be preserved. I'd just as soon some of my early attempts at illustration disappear, but then no one would know how much I improved over the years. [4]
In the years before her passing, Vel expressed her "hope for the not too distant future is to reestablish the Star Trek SIG in Mensa, now that the web has made communication so much easier than in the days of snail mail. In the meantime, she has given Fanlore permission to reproduce any and all of her artwork, writing, or photos for the purposes of documenting both her involvement in fandom and fandom history in general."
She passed away on July 2, 2018.[5]
Interviews
- Scribbling Women: Artists Talk Back (2007)
- Media Fandom Oral History Project Interview with Vel Jaeger (2017)
Open Letters
Her K/S Inspiration
In 2007, Vel was interviewed for an article about the history of K/S art. When asked what inspired her to illustrate Kirk/Spock, she replied:
"What inspired me? This is an easy one: the obvious magnetism between them, as complex as an artist/writer wants to delve into and elaborate. On the surface these are damn good lookin’ men in the prime of their lives. Their sexuality positively drips off their bodies.” For someone who talks about bodies here, Vel did a lot of portraits of Kirk, so I asked her about this preference. She explains, “Favouring Kirk is unusual because his (Shatner’s) features are the most difficult to depict; they’re very subtle with no hard lines or unusual characteristics. I always work with copies of photos as guidelines, sometimes exaggerating the contrast to remove the mid-tones and reduce the image to only light and dark." [6]
Another excerpt:
Vel’s style was always very original but she too was influenced by other art she saw. She writes, “when I first began communicating with editors I was very impressed by Gayle F., one of the rare “triple threats”—editor, writer and artist. And very kind and encouraging in responding to a neophyte. She complimented my art as “Bizzarro” in style—referring to my heavy use of darks and contrast, and told me that her intriguing work was heavily influenced by the Art Nouveau and Art Deco periods. After researching these eras I could see where those movements were reflected in her work, especially the bold sensuality.” [7]
More:
“My strongest skill in art is design, which helps liven up a plain portrait with intricate detail as a background. I’ve always loved the challenge of catching the essence of a person’s face; even if the result is garbage, I’m content when someone says, ‘Oh, that’s ______!’ I try to capture the eyes first—if that isn’t accomplished it’s a waste of time and paper to continue. But I mostly stuck to portraits because you know with three young children in the house I had to be careful. Kids already have too many questions without fueling young curiosity. [8]
Source Material
The earliest and most easily available reference sources were Starlog and the Trek calendars. Then came trading cards and collectors’ photos, and eventually lots of clear photos for sale by dealers. But sometimes there was the last resort of taking photos off the TV screen: crude, but workable. Having prints made from the 35 mm film clips that were available in the early days was another option. Remember, this was before everyone had a VCR and computers. Dark ages indeed! [9]
A Favorite Medium
Without a doubt pencil is the easiest medium for drawing: mistakes can be erased and it’s fun to make subtle shadings. But from the editor’s viewpoint it was the most expensive to print. Pencil (and ink with a wash—think black and white photos) have to be screened before they can be printed, a costly process 30 years ago in pre-computer days. Even the best screens lost some of the quality of the original. The best medium for offset printing or photocopy is pen and ink, and over the years I came to appreciate the precision that could be attained with it. I used various drawing ink pens (every possible size of Rapidographs) and brushes with India ink for the large areas (okay—I confess I got lazy and used markers sometimes). A toothbrush for spraying with white ink can produce some interesting effects— stellar fields, for instance. [10]
Vel's Fannish Memories
Vel has given permission for some of her fannish memories to be posted on Fanlore. See Vel Jaeger/Memories.
Vel and LaVena Kay Kidd dream a little..., illo from The Shatner File May 1983
Some Private Record Keeping
"I guess you could call this stuff from my 'Primitive Period.' I got tired of looking for this list, I suppose, as I changed to writing the zine & story/poem name on the back of the drawings." [11]
Vel's Pseudonyms
Deborah Goby (fiction), Ellen Hulley (poetry), Artemis (art), Vera Cacciatore (dirty limericks), and others.
In December 1986, Vel wrote:
I've written far more than anyone would expect, as I keep changing pseudonyms, a different name for each genre: some are probably obvious, such as my art pen name — my style is pretty hard to disguise, but I have fun trying (and no, I'm not going to mention it). Those I don't keep secret are Vera Cacciatore for filthy limericks, though it's been years since I've indulged in them, and Ellen Hulley for poetry/vignettes that I publish in one of my own zines. It's not that I'm ashamed of what I've written, but rather that I think it looks tacky to have an editor's name dominate the contents page — and mostly stuff written to fit an orphan illo, or sometimes I need something at the last minute to fit X number of inches of dead space. It's been one of my biggest thrills in writing that one of those "poems by the inch" inspired a whole new fan universe (TALES FROM THE VULCAN HEARTH), and at least one other story I know of (so far). [12]
Zines in Which Vel's Work Has Appeared
- occasional short stories, essays, LoCs, con reports and lots of poetry
- art in: Alderaan | Alpha Continuum | Amazing Grace | Antithesis | As I Do Thee | A Collection of K/S Poetry | Between the Sheets | Cutters Goose | Daring Attempt | The Dianasian Gift | Dreams of the Sleepers | Dr. McCoy's Medical Log | Enter-comm | First Time | The Gallian | Galactic Discourse | Grip | Impact | In Triplicate | Intercom | Kaleidoscope | Kirk | Liberation from Hell | Maine(ly) Trek | Masiform D | Matter/Antimatter | The MacShannon Chronicles | Meridian | More Missions, More Myths | Naked Times | Nome | NTM Collected | Odyssey | Orion Archives: 2285-2293 The Third Mission | Orion Archives: 2275-2283 The Second Hiatus | Orion Archives: 2295 The Sixth Fleet | Orion Archives: 2283-2284 Interludes | Plak Tow | The Poet and I | A Question of Balance | R & R | Riders to the Stars | Saurian Brandy Digest | Simon Says – Avenge Bond! | Spin Dizzie | Standard Orbit | Star Canticle | Stardate | Stellar Gas | Sublight Reading | T'hy'la | Trek Continuum | Trek Encore | TREKisM | TREKisM at Length | TrexIndex | Two-Dimensional Thinking | Vault of Tomorrow | Warped Space | Within the Mirror | The Women's List
Gallery
1978
back cover of NTM Collected, her first zine art published (1978)
1979
back cover Naked Times #3 (1979)
1980
from Saurian Brandy Digest #23, portrays Kirk and Gary Mitchell
interior art from A Question of Balance (1980)
from Trek Continuum v.2 n.2 (1980)
from Trek Continuum v.2 n.2 (1980)
1981
from R & R #15 (1981)
from R & R #15 (1981)
from R & R #15 (1981)
from R & R #15 (1981)
front cover of T'hy'la #1 (1981)
Stardate #8 (1981)
Stardate #9 (1981)
from R & R #13 (inside front cover) From Vel: "It's a depiction of my friend from way back, Karen Spera Shaub. She and I went to our first con in West Palm Beach, and this is taken from a photo of her costume that won first place at the con. It was black with gold braid design and trim, based on a caftan design; we listed it as "Militant Alien Nun." (1981)
from R & R #14 - "In my active days the printers I used often went nuts over some of the drawings, as happened with the Yoda. They did a two-color print on a nice tan paper (about 11" x 17"); I think they did the lettering in green - spelling out, "Yoda Does It In The Swamp!" Who knows how many they ran off - something printers love to do. I imagine it helps to make up for the messy job that offset printing is. Anyway, I couldn't resist making the snake cute as well. I guess it must have been the spirit of the 70s." [13]
1982
inside art from Warped Space #47 (1982)
1983
inside art from Odyssey #7 (1983)
1984
1985
inside page from More Missions, More Myths #1 (1985)
inside page from More Missions, More Myths #1 (1985)
back cover of Two-Dimensional Thinking #1 (1985)
front cover of T'hy'la #5 (1985)
back cover As I Do Thee #3 (1985)
inside art in As I Do Thee #3 (1985)
inside art in As I Do Thee #3 (1985)
front cover of Dreams of the Sleepers (1985)
back cover of Dreams of the Sleepers (1985)
back cover of Time Out of Mind (1985)
back cover of A Collection of Dreams (1985)
cover First Time #2, 1st edition (1985)
cover of In Triplicate (1985)
back cover of In Triplicate (1985)
from Cutter's Goose #1 (1985)
interior art from Meridian #1 (1985)
cover of Naked Times #6 (1985)
cover of Naked Times #7 (1985)
Achilles/Patroclus, from Matter/Antimatter #5 (1985)
1986
back cover As I Do Thee #4 (1986)
inside art Within the Mirror #1 (1988)
cover of The Women's List #1 (1986)
1987
1988
the original art, in black and white, for the back cover of Between the Sheets
back cover of Between the Sheets: ""The scan in black is directly from the original artwork; the first & only printing is in red on a soft grey card stock, with red cloth tape binding. Front cover is a montage I put together with images from some of the interior art, which was reduced to 20% of the originals, then pieced with black tape." [14]
References
- ^ by Vel, from private correspondence with Mrs. Potato Head, 2012 quoted with permission
- ^ Vel pointed out that these are illos not caricatures.
- ^ Vel's comments in K/S & K.S. (Kindred Spirits) #28
- ^ from an email, quoted with permission by Fanlore User MPH, dated April 16, 2013
- ^ Velma E Jaeger Obituary - Largo, FL, Archived version
- ^ from Scribbling Women: Artists Talk Back
- ^ from Scribbling Women: Artists Talk Back
- ^ from Scribbling Women: Artists Talk Back
- ^ from Scribbling Women: Artists Talk Back
- ^ from Scribbling Women: Artists Talk Back
- ^ by Vel, from private correspondence with Mrs. Potato Head, 2012 quoted with permission
- ^ from K/S & K.S. (Kindred Spirits) #24
- ^ by Vel, from private correspondence with Mrs. Potato Head, 2012 quoted with permission
- ^ by Vel, from private correspondence with Mrs. Potato Head, 2012 quoted with permission