Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Illustration Art · Look Here · Original art vs. printed page

Look Here: BLUE CAMELLIA (1966), with cover art by Charles Binger

Here’s another random paperback that I picked up at a local church sale just so I could scan it and post it here at RCN; the artist is Charles Binger, who also painted the blonde on the cover of the Perry Mason novel, The Case of the Rolling Bones (1960), which I scanned and posted back in February:

[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]

As luck would have it, I was easily able to locate a snapshot of the original art, which sold at La Luz de Jesus Gallery for $2,800 back in 2011:

(N.B. Since I don’t own the above artwork and am not offering it for sale, I have taken the liberty of futzing with the original JPEG to make it a bit brighter and clearer, so at this point, it may or may not accurately represent the painting.)

The file name on the exhibition site — Binger_LG_Sophia-Loren-study.jpg — identifies the subject as Sophia Loren. But please note: although the woman in the painting does sort of look like a young Sophia Loren, I have no way to verify whether it really was intended as a likeness of her or not. I’m certainly not enough of a Loren fan to know if Binger based his “study” on a particular publicity photograph of her, but if you are, feel free to post the info below.

Keywords: Blue Camellia.

Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Don Ivan Punchatz · Illustration Art · Look Here

Look Here: Three paperback covers plus with art by Don Ivan Punchatz


“Don Ivan Punchatz — Don Ivan’s ability to touch men with acrylic and melt them into beasts, or touch beasts with oil and ink, and voila, they are senators or brokers is endlessly stunning. Metaphor, after all, is the universal language and Don Ivan Punchatz could teach at Berlitz.”
— Ray Bradbury


BONUS IMAGES:

The covers displayed above were scanned by me from books in my own collection; the covers displayed below were not:

Keywords: The Day of the Burning, Death Tour, Heavy Metal vol. III, no. 9, Times Without Number, Foundation, Second Foundation, Foundation and Empire, the Foundation Trilogy.

Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Heads Up! · Illustration Art · Michael Wm. Kaluta

Heads Up: KALUTA: THE BIG BOOK

Coming this summer from IDW:

Here’s the publisher’s description:

Michael Kaluta’s career has been both diverse and extraordinary. From his origins as a fanzine artist in the 1960s, to his defining rendition of The Shadow in the 1970s, through his stint as part of the legendary art collective known simply as THE STUDIO and beyond, Kaluta has produced countless gorgeous images that never cease to enchant us. Now, for the first time, the work of Michael Wm. Kaluta is presented in an oversized, massive retrospective that showcases his beautiful art. Many of the pieces presented in this very special volume will be scanned from Kaluta’s original art to maximize the quality of printing. If you are a fan of Kaluta’s work, or a lover of fine art, then this is the book for you!

Details:

Format: Hardcover, 304 pages, 9 x 12 inches
Publisher: IDW Publishing (July 23 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1613776829
ISBN-13: 978-1613776827

Kaluta is a terrific artist. And IDW has a reputation for publishing high-quality art books. So pre-ordering Kaluta: The Big Book is, for me, a no-brainer. YMMV.

Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Frank Frazetta · Illustration Art · Look Here · Movies

Look Here: MRS. POLLIFAX — SPY, with cover art by Frank Frazetta

I bought the following battered paperback for a buck at a church sale on the weekend:

[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]

The image on the cover is an aggressively cropped section of Frank Frazetta’s unusually expansive poster art for the movie Mrs. Pollifax — Spy (1971), which was based on the novel by Dorothy Gilman.

Here, for ease of comparison, are what the poster and the original art look like, more or less:

Notice how, in the poster image, someone or other — the art director? — not only has intensified the colour and contrast but also has moved the hand with the gun, camouflaged in the canopy of the tree in the original, down and slightly to the left, and trimmed back the foliage a bit, in order to make the “threat from above” ridiculously blatant, and I would argue that both changes work rather nicely; that is, the brighter colours seem to me to be more sympathetic to the comedic intent/content of the image — not to mention, more eye-catching — and the change in the position of the arm, etc., integrates the hidden, would-be assassin in a more satisfying way into the overall comedic situation.

(Oddly enough, on the paperback cover, the hand with the gun appears to be positioned more or less where Frazetta has it in his painting, though its effect in that instance — if one notices it at all — seems to me to be more unsettling than it is humorous.)

Notice also the variations in colour among the three images. I don’t know if Frazetta’s original painting is truly as subdued as it looks in that JPEG. What I do know, however, is that my scan at the top of this post matches my copy of the book quite well.

Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Illustration Art · Robert McGinnis

Look Here: Three more uncredited, vignette-style covers with art by McGinnis

One of the covers displayed below had a spidery splash of red paint over the author’s name in real life so I decided to repair my scan with GIMP; turned out okay, I hope…

[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]


RELATED LINKS HERE AT RCN:


WORD OF THE DAY: PERSEVERANCE

per·se·ver·ance

Noun

  1. Steadfastness in doing something despite difficulty or delay in achieving success.
  2. Continuance in a state of grace leading finally to a state of glory.

Synonyms
persistence – tenacity – pertinacity – assiduity

Keywords: The Empty Trap, Dead Low Tide, Deadly Welcome.

Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Illustration Art · Look Here · Richard Amsel

Look Here: Two paperbacks with cover art by Richard Amsel

More scans of paperbacks in my increasingly eclectic collection:

[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]

American illustrator and graphic designer Richard Amsel (December 1947 – November 17, 1985) was perhaps best known for the poster art he produced for Hollywood movies such as The Champ, Chinatown, Julia, The Last Picture Show, The Last Tycoon, The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean, McCabe & Mrs. Miller, The Muppet Movie, Murder on the Orient Express, Nashville, Papillon, The Shootist, The Sting, Flash Gordon, The Dark Crystal, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome. He also produced over forty covers in 13 years for TV Guide and worked for many other high-profile clients. He was the envy of his peers. He died at the age of 37.

Amsel fans might be interested to know that the cover of Dangerous Summer was published in 1969, the same year that Amsel’s submission to a nationwide talent search for an illustrator to produce the poster art for the Barbra Streisand musical Hello, Dolly! was selected by 20th Century Fox for the film’s campaign. At the time he won the talent search, the 22-year-old Amsel was still a student at the Philadelphia College of Art.

Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Comics · Here, Read · Illustration Art · Look Here · Rebecca Dart

Look Here, Read: “Depression” by Rebecca Dart

From the mini-comic The Other 88% #1, published way back in November 1993, here’s “Depression,” a heartfelt two-page story by Rebecca “Battle Kittens” Dart, who had just turned twenty in April of that year:

[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]


BONUS SCANS: COVER and ABOUT THE ARTIST


REBECCA DART ON THE WEB:


INTERVIEWS:

Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Illustration Art · Look Here

Look Here: Three sexy, fun, odd, nsfw photo covers

As I’ve mentioned once or twice on this blog in the past, I don’t often buy paperbacks with photo covers, but when I came across a copy of The Secret Sex Curse of Bertha T. — dig that groovy lettering, dig that papier-mâché demon mask, dig the sleek Ms. Bertha Turtle, her upper body bathed in a golden glow, her lower body not merely exposed but over-exposed! — after I came across that book, I say, at a local Salvation Army Thrift Store, I started to watch for a couple of others that I could scan with it to produce a post here at RCN. And, well, it’s not much, but here’s what I’ve got:

[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]

Does it make any sense to you that the woman on the front of Blondes Don’t Have All the Fun is wearing sheer pantyhose? Because it makes no sense to me… though I am certainly familiar with the theory that being not quite naked is sexier than being totally naked… I just don’t see that it makes much difference here, except that waistband is an unattractive distraction…

Keywords: Juliet of the Spirits, Blondes Don’t Have All the Fun, The Secret Sex Curse of Bertha T.

Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Illustration Art · Look Here · The Brothers Hildebrandt

Look Here: The “Fall of the Towers” trilogy times two

More paperback covers, scanned by yours truly…

First up, here are the covers that the folks at Ace Books designed for their 1970s reprint of Samuel R. Delany’s “Fall of the Towers” trilogy, which was first published in the early 1960s; the pretty, staid cover art is by the Brothers Hildebrandt, who at the time were generally fairly adept at colour mixing for various lighting conditions but not especially good at designing futuristic or alien cities that didn’t look like conglomerations chess pieces (or monsters that didn’t look like slightly modified versions of plastic toys; see, for instance, the cover of Epic Illustrated #5):

[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]

In contrast, in the UK in the late 1960s, the “Fall of the Towers” trilogy was published by Sphere with relatively adventurous cover art by Russell FitzGerald, although I must say, the artist’s ambition here seems to me to have been tightly hobbled by his weak draftsmanship and indifferent painting technique:

FitzGerald’s work was later featured in and on the cover of the inaugural issue of the SF paperback quarterly Quark (1970), which was edited by Delany and Marilyn Hacker. I know I have a copy of Quark #1 somewhere around here, but damned if I know where it is at the moment… not that it matters, because the cover of Quark #1 is terrible…

Keywords: The Fall of the Towers, Out of the Dead City, The Towers of Toron, City of a Thousand Suns.

Barye Phillips · Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Illustration Art · Look Here

Look Here: Three pulp covers with art by Barye

I might have even more paperbacks with cover art by Barye Phillips on a shelf somewhere… or I might not… I’m not sure…

[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]

To view all of the paperback covers with Barye art that I’ve posted so far (along with a cover by an artist I’ve been unable to identify), click here.

Keywords: Always Leave ‘Em Dying, Arrowsmith, Brides in Bedlam.