Wednesday, November 30, 2011
A Father's Obsession
Here is a double page from an Argosy magazine of 1952 illustrating The Rocket Man, a short story excised from Ray Bradbury's book The Illustrated Man, published the previous year. Ostensibly this story inspired a song by the Spotniks that in turn inspired Bernie Taupin and Elton John to create their song Rocket Man.
Tuesday, November 29, 2011
Forward! They are Ours!
Frank Schoonover, great American illustrator, didn't quite reach the level of stardom that superstar illustrator N.C. Wyeth did. Schoonover's work looked a lot like Wyeth's, undoubtedly because they were both students of master illustrator Howard Pyle and were schooled with the same great illustrative principles, becoming part of the famous Brandywine School.
Prolific like Wyeth, when Schoonover died at the age of 94 he had over two thousand illustrations to his credit. Joan of Arc was one of his classic subjects for a book in 1918, shown here with some illustrations from that book — and just because I like it so much, I've placed my favorite on top.
Monday, November 28, 2011
Something About an Aviatrix
Flavorful
I really like Frank Thorne's later work. Besides the focus on battling babes, Thorne has a graphic design quality that is unique and flavorful. His comic book claim to fame really began with his Red Sonja treatment, moving on to Ghita and others. I'll come back to Thorne's work on a later post, but in the meantime some flavorful comic pinups:
Labels:
Barry Windsor-Smith,
comics,
Frank Thorne,
Robert E. Howard,
Roy Krenkel
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Dream or Nightmare
The content of this image could either be an architect's dream or an architect's nightmare, but either way it's a beautiful rendering.
Parte di Ampio Magnifico Porto
Page 2000
Prince Valiant was the only comic strip that I know of that kept track of how many pages it had published, week by week. This was page 2000 of Hal Foster's epic Sunday strip. Published well after Foster retired and laden with iconic Foster artwork from the past, it was quite a treat to see in the midst of John Cullen Murphy's run on the strip.
Saturday, November 26, 2011
Decadent Deco
Another view of women from 1915, by my favorite decadent Deco artist — Georges Barbier. The elegant woman on the right appears to have been spanked recently, or am I paying too much attention here?
Can someone, knowledgeable in French, translate the border heading? Google translator is not making sense of it.
Update: I appreciate hearing from all you folks with translations. Coming straight from Jacques in France, this seems to be the final word:
The sentence in Georges Barbier's illustration is, in french:
"il est mieux de deviner que de voir",
which could be translated as :
"Guessing is better than seeing"
or as
" It is better to guess than to see".
—Your choice.—
Friday, November 25, 2011
Grand Era
Here is another beautiful example from the grand era, when editors honored the beautiful cover art they published by not slapping text blurbs all around it. The blurb along the bottom, advertising editorial content, adds just enough weight and balance to justify itself.
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Wednesday, November 23, 2011
Now Showing
Great golden age illustration now showing at The Pictorial Arts Journal, from a version of Spenser's Faerie Queene.
Tuesday, November 22, 2011
Lyrical, Laughable, Lovable
Gulliver's Travels, the 1939 full-length feature cartoon, was Paramount's response to Disney's Snow White feature. It had some interesting animation techniques combining rotoscoping for Gulliver, and stretch and squash for the lilliputians (25,000 of 'em!).
It was just one of so many landmark movies to come out in 1939.
Labels:
animation,
cartoons,
movie graphics
Harmony
James Abbott McNeill Whistler is hugely famous for his Arrangement in Grey and Black (his mom), but I much prefer his Harmony in Pink and Grey (Lady Meux).
Monday, November 21, 2011
New, Improved, Rotten Circus
Yow, wow! A HUGE tip o' the hat to Glen Story for shipping over a scan of the complete spread by Wally Wood that I talked about last post! It's an extravaganza of art from an amazing artist. There's the Marx Bros and Jerry Lewis and Plastic Man and Melvin Cowznofski and the whole furshlinger crowd!
Thanks Glen! What a great community of bloggers we have. Check out Glen's beautiful images on his tumblr site here.
Labels:
A few of my favorite things,
Mad,
Wally Wood
Fabulous Panorama
While wandering through my pictorial morgue, I sometimes find that I filed an item years ago even though it wasn't complete.
Here's a fabulous incomplete panorama by Wally Wood from one of the early magazine format Mads. The missing section continues off to the left but that doesn't prevent me from marveling at the tremendous talent that Woody brought to bear on this scene.
Each figure is fully rendered and fits proportionally and naturally into this forced perspective birds-eye view. I recognize Richard Nixon and Joe E. Brown amongst the clowns. This is the sort of scene that people refer to when they say, "it looked like something out of Mad Magazine!"
I've posted this as a very large scan, and I hope it comes across that way. If you try downloading and then opening it, you should be able to zero in on detail. If any of you Mad fans have the whole scene, I hope you'll consider sending a large scan of it over here.
Labels:
A few of my favorite things,
cartoons,
Mad,
Wally Wood
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Camels and Coffee
Many many people love pin-up art, and there is much of it (pin-up art, that is) for people to love. The golden age of pin-ups (1930?-1950?) was the best (in my opinion), I think because of a form of innocent sexuality. The nudity is removed from reality and the spirit of more innocent times is swirled into the paint.
Compare the work below, all created by the same artist, Fritz Willis. The top image is one of his earlier paintings and is just this side of being a cartoon for Esquire or Playboy, with stylized features and a golden aura. Below that is Willis' later work, from the Walter Foster art instruction book by Willis. The models are sophisticated women with a 60s' Las Vegas showgirl look about them. They're nicely done, but to my old and weary eyes they are commercial works trying to be fine art, whereas the first one is happy to be just a beautiful pin-up on a barrack's wall.
Smooth Blend
This post is dedicated to Mudwerks at sloth unleashed, for his smooth blend of music and imagery.
Labels:
A few of my favorite things,
Roger Huyssen
Friday, November 18, 2011
Earthy Yet Ethereal
Klimt's work is earthy yet ethereal, decorative yet symbolic.
Labels:
Early XXth Century Graphics,
Gustav Klimt
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
Energetic
Intentionally or not (probably not), this energetic painting, by George Petty intended for the 1965 Ice Capades, utilizes techniques similar to the Leyendecker brothers — a bit of the modeling of J.C. in the hair and fabric, and the spicy carnival coloring and staging of F.X.
Labels:
FX Leyendecker,
George Petty,
JC Leyendecker
Tuesday, November 15, 2011
Rivals
Back when Life was more flamboyant, F.X. Leyendecker didn't rival the stylized brushstrokes of his brother J.C., but he was nearly his equal in stylized design.
Monday, November 14, 2011
Dolphin Danger
Did anybody get a chance to see Dolphin Tale in the last few months? We saw it with our daughter and it was an okay film, demonstrating the danger of dolphins being caught in fishermen's traps. Who knew there was an awareness of such dolphin danger way back in 1899, which is shown in this graphic from Jugend magazine . . . oh and I guess a similar danger for water nymphs, though they may indeed be extinct by now.
Fine Line
There's a fine line between vanity and good grooming. Without mirrors most of us would be total slobs, but I guess it's that lingering gaze of self-admiration that constitutes unabashed vanity.
Sunday, November 13, 2011
Victorian Era Ink
Finding this Victorian era ink drawing was the inspiration for new 'Loose Leaf' designs over at The Pictorial Arts Journal.
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Sweet
Carl Larsson's work was almost always sweet but almost never sugary.
Labels:
Carl Larsson,
Early XXth Century Graphics
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