On Fanlore, users with accounts can edit pages including user pages, can create pages, and more. Any information you publish on a page or an edit summary will be accessible by the public and to Fanlore personnel. Because Fanlore is a wiki, information published on Fanlore will be publicly available forever, even if edited later. Be mindful when sharing personal information, including your religious or political views, health, racial background, country of origin, sexual identity and/or personal relationships. To learn more, check out our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Select "dismiss" to agree to these terms.
Vida Hull
Fan | |
---|---|
Name: | Vida Hull, Dr. Vida Hull |
Alias(es): | |
Type: | fanartist, fanwriter |
Fandoms: | mainly Star Trek: TOS with a smattering of Star Wars |
Communities: | |
Other: | |
URL: | |
Click here for related articles on Fanlore. | |
Vida Hull is a Star Trek: TOS fanartist and fanwriter.
Meta
- Renaissance Themes in Star Trek: The Pagan Mysteries of the Enterprise by Dr. Vida Hull, essay in Pastaklan Vesla #6 (1980)
Art and/or Fiction
- Comlink #5
- Enter-comm #2
- Grip #7
- Guardian #4
- Insatiable Curiosity
- Masiform D #10
- Pastaklan Vesla #6
- Plak Tow #3
- R & R #12, 13, 17, 18
- Spock's Childhood
- Starborne
- Time Warp #5
Sample Art
1980
from Enter-comm #2
from R & R #12
from R & R #12
Pastaklan Vesla #6, "Kirkules at the Crossroads" -- from "Renaissance Themes in Star Trek: The Pagan Mysteries of the Enterprise by Dr. Vida Hull"
Pastaklan Vesla #6, from "Renaissance Themes in Star Trek: The Pagan Mysteries of the Enterprise by Dr. Vida Hull"
from Masiform D #10
from Spock's Childhood #1
1981
This stoneware sculpture was created by Vida Hull in 1981. It features Spock and is titled "Your Answer Lies Elsewhere". It was originally created for the August Party Art Show. It is 9 inches tall and weighs over 4 lbs.
inside R & R #13
Time Warp #5, "Reflected in a Mirror" -- "Reflected in a Mirror" by -- "Apologies... to Vida Hull, who drew the excellent Spock portrait gracing the front cover of TIME WARP 5. Because I was looking for a 'mirror effect' to complement the "Mirror Worlds" theme of the last issue, I chose to print Vida's art through a heavy screen, thinking that this would give the impression of a mirrored reflection. Unfortunately, I think that the final result was too washed-out, and did not do full justice to Vida's original portrait. For this, I apologize." -- from the editorial in "Time Warp" #6/7</ref>
1982
1983
from Insatiable Curiosity