Back in the day, RCN had an “About” page that featured the following image:
Look Here: Ten SF paperbacks, 1958 to 1977, with cover art by Richard Powers
From my own library:
[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]
To view all of the paperbacks with cover art by Richard Powers that I’ve posted so far, click here.
Heads Up: Fantagraphics to publish the EC Comics Library and the Complete ZAP Comix
Two big news stories were unleashed yesterday via the Fantagraphics FLOG! Blog!
BIG NEWS STORY #1:
Fantagraphics Books to Publish the EC Comics Library by Gary Groth. Here are a couple of excerpts:
The first four books in the series [writes Groth] will be:
- “Corpse on the Imjin” and Other Stories
by Harvey Kurtzman. This will reprint all the war stories Kurtzman wrote and drew himself in Two-Fisted Tales and Frontline Combat, including all 23 of his covers — each a masterpiece in its own right. This volume will also include all the war stories that Kurtzman wrote and laid out but were drawn by artists who weren’t regularly featured in his war books: Gene Colan, Joe Kubert, Alex Toth, Dave Berg, Ric Estrada, Russ Heath, and others. (The regulars were Jack Davis, John Severin, Wally Wood, and George Evans, each of whom will later be the subject of their own war comics collections). Kurtzman’s war comics are still considered to be the gold standard for the genre, with a devotion not only to historical accuracy but also to resisting any impulse to glamorize wartime; a WWII veteran himself, Kurtzman’s humanistic approach was in stark contrast to the simp- leminded, jingoistic efforts of EC’s rival publishers, and paved the way for other popular media to depict the true face of war.- “Came the Dawn” and Other Stories by Wally Wood: Though often remembered for his science-fiction work, Wood’s heavy, noirish brushstrokes were perfectly suited for EC’s rough-hewn suspense stories in (the appropriately titled) Shock SuspenStories and this volume will collect them all for the first time.
- Jack Davis’s horror stories (exact title t.b.a.): Jack Davis’s gift for caricature has made him an icon in the advertising world and helped define MAD magazine, but he was also one of the most versatile cartoonists of his generation; after “Ghastly” Graham Ingels, Davis was EC’s most prolific horror artist, appearing in all three of EC’s horror titles — Haunt of Fear, Vault of Horror, and Crypt of Terror. This will collect the entirety of Davis’s horror work, all of which was written by Al Feldstein.
- Al Williamson’s science-fiction stories (exact title t.b.a.): EC published two SF comics — Weird Fantasy and Weird Science — and Williamson was one of the stars, with an illustrative style that carried on the tradition of the great adventure comic strips like Alex Raymond’s Flash Gordon. This volume will compile all 174 pages of Williamson’s SF stories.
Also:
Fantagraphics will be publishing four EC collections a year, beginning in Summer 2012.
“Corpse on the Imjin” and Other Stories
By: Harvey Kurtzman et al.
Release Date: July 2012
ISBN: 978-1-60699-545-7
Black & White • Hardcover • 7” x 10”“Came the Dawn” and Other Stories
By: Wally Wood, Al Feldstein, et al.
Release Date: July 2012
ISBN: 978-1-60699-546-4
Black & White • Hardcover • 7” x 10”
BIG NEWS STORY #2:
Fantagraphics to Publish The Complete ZAP Comix by Eric Reynolds. Here are a couple of snippets:
The Complete ZAP Comix will be published as a two-volume, slipcased hardcover set, printed slightly larger than the original comics, and shot from the original negatives to the comic books, ensuring the finest reproduction ever seen of the material. It will also include the rarely-seen ZAM, a one-shot mini-comic/jam spinoff of ZAP from 1974, as well as other supplementary features, interviews with the artists, and other surprises.
Also:
Fantagraphics will be publishing The Complete ZAP Comix in Fall of 2012.
The Complete ZAP Comix
By: R. Crumb, S. Clay Wilson, Robert Williams, Spain Rodriguez,
Gilbert Shelton, Victor Moscoso, Rick Griffin, & Paul Mavrides
Release Date: Fall 2012
Page Count: 800 PP
Black & White • Two-Volume, Slipcased Hardcover Set
According to Reynolds, The Complete ZAP Comix collection will be designed by Victor Moscoso.
Rest in Peace: Lucian Freud (1922 – 2011)
“A painter must think of everything he sees as being there entirely for his own use and pleasure. The artist who tries to serve nature is only an executive artist. And, since the model he so faithfully copies is not going to be hung up next to the picture, since the picture is going to be there on its own, it is of no interest whether it is an accurate copy of the model. Whether it will convince or not depends entirely on what it is in itself, what is there to be seen.”
— Lucian Freud
FORMAL OBITUARIES:
BBC News > Obituary: Lucian Freud
Bloomberg > Lucian Freud, Painter Who Stayed Loyal to Realism, Dies in U.K. at Age 88 by Laurence Arnold
CBC News > British artist Lucian Freud dies at 88
Daily Mail > Realist painter Lucian Freud, famed for his nudes of family and friends, dies aged 88
guardian.co.uk > Lucian Freud obituary
The Independent > Lucian Freud, the man who revitalised the fine art of portraits, dies by Rob Hastings
NYtimes.com > Lucian Freud, Who Recast Art of Portraiture, Dies at 88 by William Grimes
The Telegraph > Lucian Freud, OM
NOTICES AND APPRECIATIONS:
The Chronicle of Higher Education > Brainstorm > Lucian Freud, Painter of Flesh (1922-2011) by Laurie Fendrich, who writes:
Freud’s paint handling seems to miraculously turn paint into flesh. His pictures owe a lot to the great English painter Sir Stanley Spencer. Actually, all painters who move thick paint around in a way that makes it seem as if it’s not paint, but real physical flesh, ultimately claim roots in Rembrandt and Velázquez. But where those two painting giants retrieved human dignity from out of its fleshly variations, Freud carried on in the more brutal, modern understanding of flesh — an approach that amounts to saying, “Nothing to do about it; we’re stuck in these things called bodies.”
guardian.co.uk > Lucian Freud dies aged 88 by Vanessa Thorpe
guardian.co.uk > Lucian Freud: life writ large by Laura Cumming. Here’s a taste:
Lucian Freud was frequently described as a contemporary old master, a Rembrandt for our times. But his work was in fact a radical breach of tradition. He painted people, but not quite (or not often) portraits. He painted from the life, but his life paintings were clearly not moments in the lives of those he painted — models, magnates, office workers, whippets, his many lovers, his many daughters — so much as scenes of their physical presence in his studio.
That bleak room in west London (its address carefully guarded), with its bare floor, discoloured walls and heaps of paint-smutched rags, was the constant theatre of his art. It became as familiar as his figures and their poses: huddled, sprawling, crouched or splayed, genitals dangling or parted, head thrown back or lolling, sometimes in pairs, but most often alone, bodies removed from their clothes, and perhaps even separated from their selves, their souls.
The Independent > Freud model mourns artist’s death
The Independent > A huge talent, and a singular force of creative energy until the very end by Michael Glover
lines and colors > Lucian Freud by Charley Parker
Making a Mark > Lucian Freud (1922-2011) – an appreciation by Katherine Tyrrell — a compilation of quotations by and about Lucian Freud.
NYmag.com > Vulture > Jerry Saltz on Lucian Freud: Why Artists You Don’t Love Can Still Be Great. Saltz’s conclusion:
For the longest time, Freud seemed a throwback, someone who addressed and battled School of Paris painting. As the world lurched away from French traditions, toward abstraction, pop, and beyond, Freud seemed to stand still.
Yet this is his salvation — and what makes him such an important artist to come to terms with. He is so dogmatic and insistent on doing what he does in spite of whatever trends come and go, while at the same time being world-famous and famously consistent, that his art now exists as a champion island in the mainstream for artists. Every artist will one day face the moment when he or she is doing what he or she does after the style has passed and the art-world heat-seeking machine has moved on. Lucian Freud’s career affirms that the only thing an artist can do is remain true to whatever vision, (lack of) talent, or ideas that happened to pick them in order to be made known to the world.
NYtimes.com > The Artist as Provocateur, Set in His Ways by Michael Kimmelman
The Telegraph > Lucian Freud: he was wise in his way by Martyn Gayford. Here’s an excerpt:
His wildness, even in youth, was only half the truth. Lucian was also, as he put it, “very steady in his way”. He told the story of Augustus John’s son, Caspar, who in later life became an Admiral. Someone once remarked to him on the contrast between his career in the navy, and the rackety bohemian milieu of his father. “To be a painter”, answered Admiral John, “requires enormous discipline”. That was true of Lucian too: the astonishing determination needed to carry on painting, decade after decade, through every sort of discouragement, all day every day. His whole career was a tremendous gamble, on his own talent.
“I want paint to work as flesh, I know my idea of portraiture
came from dissatisfaction with portraits that resembled people. I would wish my portraits to be of the people, not like them. Not having to look at the sitter, being them. As far as I am concerned, the paint is the person. I want it to work for me just as the flesh does.”
— Lucian Freud
OTHER RESOURCES:
Artcyclopedia > Lucian Freud
Squidoo > Lucian Freud – Resources for Art Lovers
Wikipedia > Lucian Freud
Look Here: An ORC STAIN original by James Stokoe
Here’s yet another recent addition to our art collection; it’s a signed original page from the fourth issue of James Stokoe’s Orc Stain (July 2010). I’ve included a scan of the full-colour published version of the page for comparison. Sorry the bottom corner of my photo of the original art is a bit out of focus. I’ll try to do better next time.
Pages from James Stokoe’s Orc Stain can be purchased online from McConnell Art.
Heads Up: ARCHIE: THE BEST OF HARRY LUCEY
Coming in August from IDW:
Other artist-centred collections of Archie Comics have either been published or are in the works, but Archie: The Best of Harry Lucey (ISBN-10: 1600109934; ISBN-13: 978-1600109935) is definitely the collection I would buy if I could only buy one.
Like other Archie collections from IDW, The Best of Harry Lucey is scanned from original art and digitally re-coloured using the original comics as guides to match the original published comics as closely as possible — only with better production values.
Though the cover design gives no indication, Archie: The Best of Harry Lucey is apparently volume one in a series of collections of Lucey’s work for Archie Comics, and of course, I WILL have them ALL!
Look Here: PARIS, page 73, art by Simon Gane
In May of this year, my wife and I purchased the following page from the graphic novel, Paris, by writer Andi Watson and artist Simon Gane (SLG Publishing, 2007), at a very reasonable price, via Simon Gane’s online art store:
BONUS LINK:
The Comics Reporter > CR Holiday Interview #3: Simon Gane — posted 17 December 2007 by interviewer Tom Spurgeon.
Look Here: Another “Miss Peach” original by Mell
My wife and I already own two “Miss Peach” daily strips by Mell Lazarus. And now we own a third, courtesy of ebay:
Funny thing is, even though we bought the above strip from a different seller than the other two, and we had to outbid another person to get it — it wasn’t a “Buy It Now” listing — the final price, shipping included, came to US$55.00 even, almost exactly what we paid for each of the other two strips.
Not sure we’ll buy many more “Miss Peach” dailies after this, but I’d sure love to own a Sunday strip or two.
BONUS CONTENT:
Mell “The Ladies’ Man” Lazarus visits the Sun-Times public service lounge on 09 April 1962:
Look Here: Two framed prints by Maxfield Parrish
[CLICK IMAGES TO ENLARGE]
Heads Up: Buy some art, comics, and/or prints and help Dustin Harbin pay some bills
On his tumblr account today (and via a message on Google+), cartoonist/illustrator Dustin Harbin announced a sale in his big cartel store, otherwise known as The Dharbmart. Earlier this year, I purchased two “Ten-Dollar Fourths” (for US$10.00 each, natch!) and one “One-Hour Drawing” (for a mere US$30.00) from The Dharbmart, and I must tell you, I am delighted with my purchases. (Don’t trust my judgment? Do yourself a solid and check out the scans in Dharbin!’s Flickr photostream.) In fact, I was so delighted with my purchases that earlier this week I ordered a second “One Hour Drawing,” and today, after reading about the sale, I purchased a copy of the following limited edition, 9 x 12 inch colour print, entitled “The Devil You Know”:
So, dear reader, if you have a little money burning a hole in your pocket, and have a hankering to be a patron of the graphic arts, please consider a purchase from Dustin Harbin. He’s a skillful, thoughtful, dedicated artist and a disarmingly nice person who would love to sucker punch you to the funny bone with an original drawing, comic, and/or print. But if you’re interested, don’t delay! Dustin says that the sale will only run until Friday 22 July 2011, or until he runs out of stuff, whichever comes first.
BONUS LINK:
The Comics Reporter > CR Holiday Interview #5 — Dustin Harbin — posted by interviewer Tom Spurgeon on 24 December 2010.
BONUS IMAGE (added 14 December 2013):






























