Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Trashy Movie Posters

Something a little different...some exploitation movie posters.



Murder by Television, 1935.



Prison Without Bars, 1938.



Under Age, 1941.



Youth Runs Wild, 1944.



I Was A Shoplifter, 1950.



One Girl's Confession, 1953.



Rock All Night, 1957.



Jesse James' Women, 1954.



Girls in Prison, 1957.



Hot Rod Rumble, 1957.

Monday, December 29, 2008

It's a Mob Scene!


No one draws mob scenes quite like Bernie Wrightson. A bunch of guys surrounding a monster, usually with an axe prominently in the foreground. Here's a few samples:



Hanover Fiste is Caught Stealing Chickens at the Gentlemen Farmer's Commune, 1897. From the Apparitions portfolio, 1978.



Swamp Thing #5, August 1973.



Cover to Back For More. Archival Press, 1978.



Cover to the 1977 Comic Art Convention program book.

Saturday, December 27, 2008

Zero Heroes

B.K. Taylor is probably best know for his strips "The Appletons" and "Timberland Tales" done for National Lampoon magazine in the late 1970's to early 1980's. Taylor has drawn and written for a wide range of humor publications and other trading cards, including the Odd Rods series. Below are some samples from his Zero Hero sticker set produced in 1983.


The Fantastic Fast Guy


Fancy Man


Muscle Man


Put-Down Man


Brand X Man


Rat Man


Power Baby


The Incredible Bulk


Milk Man


Lard Lady


Ape Man

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Christmas!

A few Christmas images for your holiday.




Some Christmas carolers, by Bernie Wrightson, n.d.




Christmas Tree Harvest, by Bernie Wrightson, n.d.




I couldn't do without this classic image by N.C. Wyeth, 1925.




A Christmas Carol, by Charles Dickens. Illustration by Arthur Rackham, 1915.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

James Montgomery Flagg


James Montgomery Flagg (1877-1960) is probably most famous for his depiction of Uncle Sam (left)for a WWI recruiting poster. Flagg created this poster 20 years into a productive career as an illustrator. At the age of 15 he was working for both Life and Judge magazines. Flagg had little formal art training, he studied for a short time at the Art Students League and later in Europe. In addition to his patriotic posters during WWI, during his career Flagg published in all the leading magazines of the day: McClures, Colliers, The Saturday Evening Post, Redbook, and Ladies Home Journal. Below are some illustrations Flagg did for John Fox Jr.'s story "Christmas for Big Ame." The illustrations were published in the December 1910 issue of Scribner's Magazine.




Christmas for Big Ame


He marched straight up to ole Jim's porch


He pulled from his coat pocket...





A lot more Flagg images here.

Monday, December 22, 2008

Michael Kaluta & My Name is Paris

Michael Kaluta has been drawing comics and science fiction and fantasy illustration since the late 1960's. He is probably best know for his work on DC's The Shadow
and his illustrations for the novel Metropolis.

In 1987 he illustrated and drew the covers for a set of young adult novels in the "My Name is Paris" series. The novels were issued in paperback, but three of them were issued in hardcover for libraries. Below are scans of the covers from the three library editions.



Mystery of the Metro, by Elizabeth Howard. Random House, 1987.




Mystery of the Deadly Diamond, by Elizabeth Howard. Random House, 1987.




Mystery of the Magician, by Elizabeth Howard. Random House, 1987.



Below is a picture I took of Michael Kaluta at the Alterna-Con in Charlotte, NC in 1985.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Careful With That Axe

A couple of guys with axes, art by Bernie Wrightson.




From the cover of Rocket's Blast Comic Collector #125 (Feb. 1976).




A page from Bernie's adaptation of Edgar Allan Poe's "The Black Cat." Originally published in Creepy #62 (May 1974).

Wednesday, December 17, 2008

William B. Van Ingen: Muralist

William B. Van Ingen (1858-1955) was a noted mural painter and stained glass artist. He did his preliminary art studies in Japan. Van Ingen later studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. He produced murals for the Library of Congress, the Pennsylvania and New Jersey State Capitols, and the University of Albany. He is probably most well known for his murals depicting the construction of the the Panama Canal. They hang in the Administration Building in the Panama Canal Zone. Below are images of these Murals taken from the March 1915 issue of Scribner's Magazine.



The Spillway in Gatun Dam under construction.




Culebra Cut before the water was turned in.




Miraflores Locks in process of construction.




Erecting lock-gates.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Dave Stevens: Brush With Passion

I first encountered Dave Stevens in 1982. I went over to my friend Scott's house and he said something like “Comics are good again. Kirby's doing something for a company called Pacific and check out this backup story in this Mike Grell comic.” I looked at that six page story in Starslayer #2 and saw an instant newness and familiarity in Stevens' renderings of Cliff Secord and the supporting cast. Like the best songs by Bob Dylan and Neil Young, Stevens' art was both new but at the same time it felt like something that always existed and was waiting to be plucked out of the air if the right artist came along to see it. That day began about ten years of waiting patiently between episodes of The Rocketeer, anticipating each new cover Dave did for Pacific and Eclipse comics. Usually when we bought a new Pacific Comic, the first thing we did was flip it over and see if there was a Stevens cover in the “Coming Attractions.”

Brush with Passion: The Art and Life of Dave Stevens collects all those covers, some wonderful examples of Rocketeer art, and much, much more. In addition to Stevens' published and familiar work this book has a generous sampling of Stevens' early samples, animation work, commercial art, and commissioned pinups and other drawings. Almost every page is a visual treat, offering something you haven't seen before or a familiar Rocketeer page reproduced from the original art as you never seen it before.

Stevens provided the often illuminating narrative for the book. We learn how Stevens kind of stumbled into doing the Rocketeer and what was supposed to be a quick fill-in job grew grew into something that defined Dave Stevens for many of readers, who always clamored for more. But the conditions of the comic market at the time, and Stevens' drive for doing the job right made his output seem sporadic and never enough for his eager fans. Brush With Passion details what Stevens was doing all that time: working with the Rocketeer movie, trying to do jobs that would earn him a living and challenging himself as an artist. And toward the end, taking oil painting classes and battling leukemia.

I got to meet Dave Stevens once in the early 1990's at one of John Hitchcock's comic shows in Greensboro. I probably asked him when the next Rocketeer was coming out and he patiently and graciously answered my questions. I bought a couple of prints from him and as he signed them I commented how his cover for the Sheena in 3-D comic was one of my favorites by him. He commented, “Apparently someone else liked it too, it's been stolen.” There's a happy ending to that story in this book.

One more Stevens story. The drawing on page 181, “Charity.” I was over at a friend of mines' house who sold original comic art. He had a Polaroid of that piece he passed around. At this time, Dave was “just teasing” with his Eclipse covers and just seeing a full on nude by Stevens was something. Even though I was an adult, seeing that drawing brought some of that some thrill one got when viewing their first Playboy magazine at the age of 12 or 13. That's what Stevens' art always did for me, whether it was a drawing of the Rocketeer, the Shadow, or one his pretty girls, it always felt like seeing something new, but something you always wanted to see but just didn't know it yet.