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.

Album Covers · Illustration Art · Look Here · Roger Huyssen

Look Here: Two classic album covers with amusing airbrush art by Roger Huyssen

Freshly scanned from my personal collection of old vinyl, here are two classic album covers with art by Roger Huyssen:

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The above scans were made possible by our recently acquired cheapo 11 x 17 inch flatbed scanner, although it still takes two passes per album cover, plus a bit of stitching with Microsoft Image Composite Editor, and some futzing around in GIMP, to get to the final JPEGs.

It’s a thankless job, but…

Keywords: Picnic Suite by Claude Bolling, Jean-Pierre Rampal, and Alexander Lagoya; Suite for Violin and Jazz Piano by Pinchas Zukerman and Claude Bolling, Roger Huyssen.

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

Look Here: Two SF covers with antiseptic airbrush art by the great unknown

Neither of the following two SF covers from the mid 1970s includes a credit for the cover artist, neither artist signed his work in a spot that couldn’t easily be cropped out, and neither artist has been identified by other means by the folks at isfdb.org or any other reputable site, but based on appearances, I would say that the two covers are, at the very least, very likely by the same hand…

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UPDATE:

Shortly after I posted the above scans, a reader, Cyrille, delurked to say that the artist might be Peter Lloyd. And you know what? I think Cyrille is right!


RELATED LINK (added 06 October 2013):

Look Here: One lovely cover with antiseptic airbrush art by Peter Lloyd — which brings the total number of “Lloyd” covers here at RCN to three (so far).

Keywords: CenterForce by T. A. Waters, Away and Beyond by A. E. Van Vog, Peter Lloyd.

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

Look Here: Three SF covers with atmospheric art by Chris Foss

Time for some more cover scans from the library of yours truly! This time around, I’ve got three SF paperbacks with art by British illustrator Chris Foss, whose airbrushed visions of massive starships, architecture, and hardware spawned a legion of imitators back in the 1970s (and beyond):

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Keywords: The Reality Trip and Other Implausibilities by Robert Silverberg, The Caves of Steel by Isaac Asimov, Midsummer Century by James Blish, Chris Foss.

Fine Art · Look Here · Rene Magritte

Connections: Rene Magritte (1962) and G. Loois (2013)

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I have already posted these two images, the Loois yesterday and the Magritte today, at TRANSISTORADIO, but I think the connection might be of interest to folks here, too. And I suppose it also gives you an idea of what you’ve been missing if you’ve not been paying attention to what I’ve been posting over there.

Bill Draut · Comics · Here, Read · Look Here

Look Here, Read: “Cagey Mary,” with art by Bill Draut

From Young Romance vol. 5, no. 2 (#38), here’s “Cagey Mary”; the script and art are uncredited, and comics.org doesn’t attribute the work to anyone, but I am quite sure the artist is Bill Draut, whose early, underappreciated contributions to comics have been featured here at RCN several times over the years:

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The printing on “Cagey Mary” is atrocious, but also, in a strange way, lovely…