Friday, September 1, 2017

Friday Fun BIG APPLE COMIX "Can You Spot the New York Air Breather?" & "Backward"

We've reached the final two pages from the legendary Big Apple Comix!
Written and illustrated by underground cartoonist Margery Peters (aka Petchesky), known for her work on Wet Satin and Wimmen's Comix!
To cap it all off, Fabulous Flo herself writes and draws the epilogue...
But her contributions to our shared culture will live on forever...
Be here next Friday as we introduce a new ongoing feature!
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Thursday, August 31, 2017

Reading Room WORLD OF FANTASY "One Night"

Spaceship crewmen on shore leave at a distant port...
...sounds like a recipe for trouble!
Like many Baby Boomers (who, ironically, were this story's target audience of 6-13 year old children in 1956), Pete Cooper didn't plan for his retirement!
As a result, he made a gaffe that assured his fate would be exactly what he feared!
Illustrated by penciler Bob Forgione and inker Jack Abel, this never-reprinted morality play appeared in Atlas' World of Fantasy #2 (1956)!
The writer is unknown.
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Sci-Fi Art: a Graphic History

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Reading Room WORLD OF MYSTERY "Night I Lost My Body!"

Some people lose their minds!
This guy will tell you about something even worse...
...in a never-reprinted tale from Atlas' World of Mystery #7 (1957)!
Illustrated by longtime Simon & Kirby Studio artist Marvin Stein, the story seems to have a very Jack Kirby "feel" to the panel structures and character poses.
Could Kirby have helped out by doing uncredited layouts?
We'll never know...
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Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Reading Room STRANGE WORLDS "Abduction of the Earth"

Behind this kool Wally Wood inside cover vignette...
...lurks a never-reprinted tale from Avon's Strange Worlds #5 (1951) by an unknown artist or artists!
A typical "hard" sci-fi tale from the 1950s, not a classic, but an entertaining way to spend a few minutes letting your mind wander.
It could have made a decent B-movie back then...or a $100 million 3-D flick today!
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Sci-Fi Art: a Graphic History

Monday, August 28, 2017

Happy 100th, Jack Kirby!

To celebrate his centennial, here's a Kirby piece that's never been reprinted in color!

Appearing in the September, 1966 issue of Esquire magazine...this art was later reused, in pieces, as clip art for various projects including MarvelMania publications.
The Spider-Man was retouched by John Romita to keep him "on-model".
The art (probably photostats) was hand-colored with Dr Martins dyes used for decades by comics colorists for their color guides.
Inking on this spread looks like Joe Sinnott. (The Thing is a dead-giveaway. Nobody inked him like Sinnott!)

These two pages were b/w in the original publication, though the art was probably provided in color.
(In b/w publishing, blues and greens print as light gray, reds and oranges print as dark gray.)
Note the unusual, never-seen-again leg-webbing above on Spider-Man!
The inking on these two pages looks, to my eye, like Frank Giacoia.

Wonder who has the originals?
Are they in the Esquire art archives, or were they returned to Marvel?
On a side note: the best way to appreciate Jack Kirby the creative person is to read/hear his own words.
For those who want to understand Kirby the man, a fairly-complete list of interviews with The King thanks to the Kirby Museum...HERE!
LONG LIVE THE KING!