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

Look Here: Two “Lovecraft” collections with cover art by John Holmes

Picked up a stack of old paperbacks for cheap at a local book sale last week, including these two:

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BONUS SCAN (added later the same day):

Rescued from an ebay auction:

Keywords: The Shuttered Room and Other Tales of Horror by H. P. Lovecraft and August Derleth; Tales of the Cthulhu Mythos: Volume 1, H. P. Lovecraft and Others, edited by August Derleth; John Holmes.

Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Illustration Art · Leo and Diane Dillon · Look Here

Look Here: Four more Ace SF Specials with cover art by Leo and Diane Dillon

I’ve been a bit slow with new posts and scans here at RCN… been feeling a bit discouraged about a number of things… although TRANSISTORADIO seems to be doing okay, with 90 followers since 01 August 2013 and 1,732 notes on 368 (!) posts… but never mind all that… the show must go on…

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Keywords: Furthest by Suzette Haden Elgin, Rite of Passage by Alexei Panshin, Chronocules by D. G. Compton, The Eclipse of Dawn by Gordon Eklund, Leo and Diane Dillon.

For more scans of book covers, etc., with art by Leo and Diane Dillon, click here and scroll down.

Art Collection · Comics · Here, Read · Look Here · Steven Weissman

Look Here: A savage “Barack Hussein Obama” strip by Steven Weissman

This summer, my wife and I bought a page of original art from the online comic strip, “Barack Hussein Obama,” by Steven Weissman; the page, which is signed by the artist, is from an ongoing sequence that Steven began posting online in the spring of 2013 entitled “Looking for America’s Dog.” Here’s a scan:

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If I had to break it down, I would say that the first element that drew me to the above page was the opening panel with Barack Hussein Obama’s daughter Sasha in what has become an iconic pose/situation in the strip. Second was the beautiful use of blood-red design tone in the third panel. And third, the overall excellence of the timing of the words and pictures in the fight sequence.

A hardcover collection of Weissman’s “Barack Hussein Obama” was published by Fantagraphics in 2012, and I thought it was one of the best “graphic novels” of the year. If the “real” Barack Hussein Obama had lost the election in November of last year, the strip probably would have ended then and there. But Obama won, and Weissman has been posting new instalments ever since, with a view, I suppose, to a second collection — or perhaps simply a complete collection — at some point in the future.

Fans of first-rate cartooning — and screen/design tones! — can follow Barack Hussein Obama‘s surreal progress at What Things Do.

Original art by Steven Weissman is available for purchase via his bigcartel shop.


BONUS IMAGES:

From the collection, Barack Hussein Obama, page 33, via Flickr:

From the Stinckers blog, September 2012:

From the Stinckers Facebook photostream, October 2012:

Like I said… iconic…

P.S. You can shop for uncut production sheets and 3-packs of Stinckers on Etsy.

Album Covers · Illustration Art · John Berkey · Look Here

Look Here: Four more SF covers with monumental machines by John Berkey

More covers, freshly scanned and displayed in order of publication:

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Jupiter and Star Science Fiction 4 are wraparound covers, but I’m not in the mood right now to do the scanning and stitching necessary to display the back, spine, and front of each book as a single image. Sorry…

Keywords: Star Science Fiction 4, edited by Frederik Pohl; Jupiter, edited by Carol and Frederik Pohl; The Humanoid Touch by Jack Williamson; Rendezvous by D. Alexander Smith; John Berkey.

Connections · Fine Art · Francis Bacon · Look Here

Connections: Francis Bacon (1967) and Francis Bacon (1978)

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Keywords: Portrait of Isabel Rawsthorne Standing in a Street in Soho (1967), Landscape (1978), Francis Bacon

Fine Art · Look Here · Salvador Dali

Look Here: MEMORIES OF SURREALISM by Salvador Dali

Published in 1971 by Transworld Art, the print portfolio, Memories of Surrealism, is a fresh and lively distillation of the art of Salvador Dali. Working on an intimate scale, Dali here revisits the major themes and motifs of his art in a remarkably restrained, even analytical mood, and the happy result is a series of sketchbook-style studies that, even after the passage of forty-plus years, look like they could have been produced yesterday.

My understanding is that each of the twelve colour prints in the portfolio is an etching on a photo-lithograph of an original mixed-media work that Dali created with gouache and collage on paper. The prints were all signed by Dali in pencil and were issued unbound in a presentation case along with some descriptive text plates, and all etching plates and lithographic stones were destroyed before the portfolio was released to impose a hard limit on the edition. Enjoy!

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— VIA WBG & LSG

Fine Art · Frank Frazetta · Illustration Art · Look Here · Norman Lindsay

Connections: Norman Lindsay and Frank Frazetta

I’ve never thought much of Frazetta’s line-and-watercolour painting, Tarzan Meets La of Opar, which, rumour has it, originally featured Tarzan naked with an erect penis. (According to a Frazetta friend who claims to have witnessed the event, the artist edited the painting before he sold it to an insistent collector.) Although Frazetta’s “true fans” have a tendency to turn cartwheels of joy over every jot of ink and tittle of paint that flowed from their hero’s pens and brushes, the colour scheme, the physical types, the awkward body language of La (with one arm, one hand, and both feet completely hidden from view!), the composition, none of it here is prime Frazetta in my humble opinion.

I think the picture begins to make more sense, however, if one sees it as Frazetta’s attempt to absorb the influence of the amazingly prolific Australian cartoonist, illustrator, painter, sculptor, etc., etc., Norman Lindsay. The connection here, if there is one, would have been made possible by Frazetta’s friend, mentor, and educator in art history, Roy Krenkel, who was himself a true fan of Lindsay and so almost certainly would have brought the man’s art to Frazetta’s attention.

Anyway, so you might look and decide for yourself what’s what, here’s Frazetta’s modest effort sandwiched between two of Lindsay’s epic watercolours:

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I suppose some people will think I’ve gone pretty far out on a limb here. But I don’t think I have. Many commentators over the years have parroted that line that, of course, Norman Lindsay influenced Roy Krenkel and Frank Frazetta. Only trouble is, few if any have ever seen fit to get down to cases and count the ways. Why be so timid? Half the fun of looking at pictures involves learning from others, and attempting to suss out for oneself, the various pathways of influence, both obvious and devious, from one artist to another, from one art form to another.

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

Look Here: Two surreal SF covers with art by Carlos Ochagavia

Again, covers from my collection:

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The main sources of Ochagavia’s Universe 8 cover/pastiche are obvious — Vermeer, Ernst, Tanguy, perhaps de Chirico — but the painting is attractive enough, I guess.

Keywords: Universe 9, edited by Terry Carr; The Nemesis from Terra by Leigh Brackett; science fiction; SF; surrealism; Carlos Ochagavia.