Book/Magazine Covers (Jones) · Connections · Fine Art · Jeffrey "Jeff" Catherine Jones · Look Here

Connections: Luis Ricardo Falero and Jeffrey Jones

I saw the painting Crescent Moon (a.k.a., Moon Nymph) by nineteenth-century Spanish painter and astronomy enthusiast Luis Ricardo Falero for the first time about an hour ago, when I read an article about Falero’s work that Ron Miller wrote for io9 and posted earlier today. And as is my wont, I immediately noticed a possible connection between one of Falero’s paintings and an SF illustration by one of my favourite artists, Jeffrey Jones, the promotion of whose work has been a frequent theme of my posts here at RCN (although not so much lately as it has been in the past):

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BONUS IMAGE (added 27 December 2013):

Heads Up! · Illustration Art · Look Here · Mirko Ilic

Heads Up: “Fist to Face” — The Art of Mirko Ilic

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VIA

On Monday 03 September 2012, “Fist to Face,” a one-man show of Mirko Ilić’s comics, illustration, and design, will open at the National Museum of Montenegro in Njegosev Muzej Biljarda in Cetinje. Mr Ilić will attend the opening and lecture. All are invited.

Truth be told, I suspect that few if any of the people who read this blog will be able to make it to the show in Montenegro, but I really like Mr Ilić’s poster and wanted to share it with you all.

Also, I think that some of you might be interested to know that exhibition coincides with the publication of Dejan Krsic’s Fist to Face, a 320-page, career-retrospective book on Mr Ilić’s work that is scheduled to be published in October.

Here’s the publisher’s description:

Mirko Ilić has a reputation as a rebel, but his iconoclasm is matched with tremendous gifts as an illustrator, a designer, and an educator. Ilić is a visionary and a leading voice of visual culture across disciplines and continents.

This visual biography of one of the most prolific and distinguished designers of the last half century traces Ilić’s formative years as a precocious youth in Yugoslavia during the Communist-bloc era; his early illustrations for comic books and magazines; and his eventual move to the United States, where he quickly achieved notoriety as the art director of Time magazine’s international edition and The New York Times’ op-ed pages. As a designer, Ilić has constantly pushed his craft to new limits, experimenting and reinventing himself at every turn.

Throughout his illustrious career, Ilić has collaborated with design luminaries like Steven Heller and Milton Glaser. He has designed album covers for Rage Against the Machine, created film titles for You’ve Got Mail, and written or designed a number of books, including Genius Moves, The Design of Dissent, The Anatomy of Design, and Stop Think Go Do.

He has taught advanced design classes at Cooper Union with Milton Glaser and now teaches illustration at the School of Visual Arts. His studio, Mirko Ilić Corp., has received awards from the Society of Illustrators, the Society of Publication Designers, the Art Directors Club, I.D., Print, and HOW.

If you can scroll through Amazon’s extensive “LOOK INSIDE!” preview of Fist to Face and still resist pre-ordering the book, you’re a much stronger man than I am…


UPDATE (06 January 2012):

I didn’t have Fist to Face in hand when I posted the above notice, but I DO have it now, and I’m thrilled to report that the book is a must-have for anyone with a love of first-rate, politically engaged, razor-sharp illustration and graphic design. If you’re a fan of Mr Ilić’s comics, however, the news isn’t quite as good. Yes, the book reprints a number of short comics by Mr Ilić, with an emphasis on one- and two-page stories, but not all of the pieces are translated into English and some are excerpts only. And yet, if your only language is English, and you’re a fan of Mr Ilić’s comics, you will almost certainly discover work here that you’ve never seen before, and perhaps you will even be inspired to agitate for an English-language collection of “The Complete Comics of Mirko Ilić.” (I know I want one — I’m looking at you, Fantagraphics!)

Certainly, Fist to Face is a book you will want to read from cover to cover — the story of Mr Ilić’s journey from Yugoslavia (now Bosnia) to the big time in New York City makes compelling reading — but it is also a book that one can easily dip into from time to time for inspiration. The two main features that make the book so accessible to casual browsing are 1) an extremely generous selection of illustrations and designs from every phase of Mr Ilić’s illustrious career and 2) the inclusion of numerous comments and observations from Mr Ilić’s co-conspirators and contemporaries as well as provocative quotations, in boldface type, from the man himself, distributed throughout the book, posted in blocks alongside the images.

All of which is to say, whether you have hours or minutes to spare for looking and reading, Fist to Face delivers the goods. In every respect, the book is a knockout.

Comics · Connections · Here, Read · Jack Kirby · Look Here

Connections: Jack Kirby (1974) and Jean-Paul Goude (2006)

So I clicked a link, posted on Twitter, that led to an article entitled “Jean-Paul Goude’s legendary photographs inject a bit of humour into fashion,” and since I rather liked the image of fashion models sprinting down a track and crossing the finish line…

… I clicked through to the photographer’s website and began to browse through the images. And then I noticed the image of a woman, in parts, in a box, an image that bears the title Anatomically Incorrect:

Which, if you read comics, will no doubt instantly remind you, as it did me, of one of the most startling covers and opening sequences ever created by the great Jack Kirby, whose legendary body of work is packed to the rafters with startling, visionary imagery:

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jack-kirby_omac-n1_sept-oct1974_cover

jack-kirby_omac-n1_sept-oct1974_p1

jack-kirby_omac-n1_sept-oct1974_p2

jack-kirby_omac-n1_sept-oct1974_p3-4

jack-kirby_omac-n1_sept-oct1974_p5

 

Book/Magazine Covers (All) · Connections · Fine Art · Illustration Art · Look Here · Robert Foster

Connections: Zurbaran, Dali, Vallejo, Foster

At first, I just planned to post a couple of covers by Robert Foster, scanned by me from my personal collection of SF paperbacks, but I have since decided that it might be more interesting to trace one warm line up through the chain of influence that led to Foster’s arresting illustrations for the front and back covers of Michael Moorcock’s Behold the Man. So here goes:

The typography on the cover of Behold the Man perfectly complements Foster’s painting, don’t you think? The whole package, front and back, is a real stunner!


BONUS IMAGE:

Since I already scanned Foster’s collage-like Alternities cover, I suppose I might as well post that image, too:

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Another strong image, I think.

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

Connections: Vallejo vs. the unknown

I’m not actually a fan of Boris Vallejo’s work, but when I came across the Monica Hughes novel, Sandwriter, on the shelf at a local thrift shop, I knew I’d seen a better version of the cover image before, and here’s the ocular proof:

Notice that the unknown artist not only swiped the creature, rider, and composition from Vallejo’s painting but also saw fit to turn the somewhat phallic head and neck of the creature into a raging vein-wrapped erection, with the hint of a scrotum and elements of bondage thrown in to up the sexual ante. Because that’s what passes for creativity in some circles, folks. It’s not about what marvels you can conjure in your imagination and capture with the tools of art but about what you can get away with on the cover of a novel written for teenagers…

P.S. I don’t own either of the above novels. The Boris cover scan is from McClaverty’s flickr stream, the Sandwriter scan is from the Amazon website.

Keywords: The Space Guardians, Sandwriter.

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

Connections: James Bama and Dean Ellis

The V. cover (1964) is by Bama; the Eleventh Commandment (1970) is by Ellis. Both are attractive and effective variations on a “surrealist” theme, and both were scanned earlier this morning by me from my personal library of folded, spindled, and mutilated paperback fiction.

Keywords: V., The Eleventh Commandment, surrealism.