Friday, April 24, 2009

Near the Top of the List


Above, one of my drawings of Michael Wm Kaluta, as he looked in 1985

For the next few days, I'd like to celebrate Michael W. Kaluta's artwork (don't worry Steven, I'll still do Uncle Walt on Sunday). Mike is a legend of our time, crossing back and forth tween
illustration and comic books, without spilling a drop of ink. His style has always been his own.

Mr. Door Tree, over at goldenagecomicbookstories has recently posted Mike's terrific art from The Swords of Sharazar, and in the past has displayed all the illustrations from Metropolis, a personal favorite of mine. I'm posting two of the Metropolis pieces here from my own scans because I admire them so much. In fact they are near the top of the list of my favorite images of ALL time.

I met Mike back in 1985, at a small convention, and we talked a bit and I got him to sit for some portrait photos. I then drew a couple of portraits and the one above is the first one. I suppose it's not very flattering, but I liked his profile and the lines of his hair and beard.

Mike's artwork, over the years, has been consistently superior and has continually inspired me. I commissioned Mike to create a special drawing for me, which I'll post in a few days. But in the meantime, I'll be posting work you've undoubtedly seen and maybe own, but it's worth seeing again, close-up.

Such gorgeous design and execution. Color treatment is magnificent. The uplight and rendering of face displays a perfect balance of techno-human pathos. 

The piece above belongs in a museum. Mike, this is the best.

Mike obviously has mastered his own brand of art deco. I don't draw like him, but he has inspired me none the less.

This, above, from his famous Studio days.

Variations on a Theme

W. Herbert Dunton did more than a few paintings of a Gibson Girl in cowboy hat. Some were rodeo images, some were just girls on horseback, variations on a theme. When an artist takes on a theme, all angles are fair game for examination.




Sunday, April 19, 2009

All That Zazz

Forty-five years ago today:

Kelly took old doggerel and made it into new doggerel:



1955

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Shot Out of the Sky

When I was a boy (man I say that a lot these days), when I was a boy you could get a big handful of comics for less than a buck. And getting a big handful of DC war mags was worth its weight in .50 caliber bullets. Joe Kubert and Russ Heath were so great in packing each page with pulse-pounding blood and thunder (though come to think of it, we rarely saw any blood--if ever). Each panel was straight up jammed with seemingly authentic detail. These two comics below were my favorite covers of hundreds of other DC war favorites.

Joe Kubert

Russ Heath

Shot Out of the Sky

Do you know how hard it is to shoot down an enemy fighter? In DC war mags they did it every day, sometimes several times a day. Every other issue they showed it on a cover. There are so many images of that sort of stuff scattered throughout the DC war mag years that I was tempted to devote an entirely separate  blog just to show those.  My better sense took over, but I'm adding a category here of 'Shot Out of the Sky', that I'm going to add to every once in a while.

Russ Heath

Joe Kubert

Joe Kubert

Joe Kubert

And this is the cover for the story below. Joe Kubert

Ghost Ace