Showing posts with label Joe Sinnott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Sinnott. Show all posts

29 August 2017

The Kirby Conversion (King Kirby 096)


One of the Odd things about the artistry of Jack Kirby is that, not infrequently, people just don't appreciate it, or sometimes even like it, upon first encounter.
Talk to any fair sized group of Kirby fans and you'll find those who merely shrugged or actively disliked his work at first. And then one day - a light goes on and suddenly they connect to it somehow.  It happens differently to different people, for different reasons. Sometimes it's a slow conversion, more often there's a single trigger moment that alters perception, and then the conversion follows.

Chris Sims wrote of his experience in some detail, tracking his own unique path to The King. Others have spoken of seeing Kirby's originals and the sudden clarity that strikes them - the power in those panel boards.

I've heard people speak of learning to love Kirby by stealth. They find themselves reading an exciting comic, totally drawn into it. Then they go back to see who it was and are shocked. Only then do they go back and find that something changed without them even realizing that they loved Kirby now, and couldn't say why things were different.

Sometimes, it's a learned response. To many readers of DC comics in the early '70s, Jack's comics felt wrong because he didn't follow the House Style. They had been taught most of their lives that 'this' is what comics are supposed to look like. DC reinforced that perception by having Kirby's art redrawn to make Superman and Jimmy Olsen conform to the house style. This caused a lot of readers to dismiss the work without delving into it personally, thereby never making the connection.

Sometimes it's nothing more than finding the wrong Kirby. Jack did so much over the years, working in every genre and even creating new ones. It's quite possible to first encounter him in ways that have no personal appeal. There are times when Kirby draws 'with the cap lock on', so to speak. For those who haven't learned the language, that can be overwhelming and as off-putting as having someone shouting their thoughts at you. After making the connection at a calmer level, returning to those tales becomes more like someone leading a cheering crowd, rather than screaming in your face.

Personally, my connection to The King was almost immediate. Living in Asia, my perceptions of the range of comic art were rather wide - no house style limitations or that sort of thing. And the first Kirby that fell into my hands was over a dozen issues of early Fantastic Four. Soon after, a batch of his monster comics passed my way.
Jack didn't just win me over to him in that time - he started whispering about art and creation, nudging toward a path unseen before.


...at least, i've tried. But really, as close as i can get to actually following in his path is just coloring his drawings.


FF Scene by Jack Kirby & Joe Sinnott, colours & Kirby's Gate by -3- (2017)

28 August 2017

Kirby Love (King Kirby 094)


Jack Kirby touched and influenced many younger artists, helping to shape and define us in some ways. So it's no surprise that you'll find artists creating works honoring The King. I showed you mine last time - let's look at some others as we celebrate Jack's 100th today.

Though it could be argued that he should be saved for the big finish, let's open with someone whose Kirby love we've seen before, Alex Ross-


We usually know him for his inks, but Joe Rubenstein captures his old friend wonderfully in pastels -


From the man who truly earned the name Big John when he stepped into Kirby's shoes to take of the Fantastic Four, John Buscema-



We've previously seen John Byrne & Joe Sinnott's collaborative tribute to The King from FOOM, so here's Joe's solo tribute-


 ...and John Byrne's centerfold from that same issue of FOOM, inked by Duffy Vohland-


Tom Palmer's portrait & tribute to Kirby's influence at 75-


Terry Beatty's tribute to both King and creations-


Richard A Fuscia Jr and young Kirby's creative destiny-


JF Woodward's portrait of power-


...and another look at the Power of Kirby from Luis Chichón-



Thomas Boatright tries to capture Kirby's creative energy...


Moti Friedman makes me want to see the insane animated adventures of the King -


The final page of Orbit's Jack Kirby  bio comic sums things up nicely, drawn by Paul Cox with words by John Judy-


Surprise! We did save Alex Ross for the big finish, with his new portrait of Celestial Kirby for his Jack Kirby 100th Birthday Tribute.


I hope you snagged your copy of the print at San Diego, because now the best you can do is get put on the waitlist to hope for another limited release.

This is, of course, only a small sampling of the Kirby Love offered up to the world, and today being the 100th anniversary of Jack Kirby's birth, there's bound to be many new offerings today.

 Jacky Kirby by Alex Ross, Joe Rubenstein, John Buscema, Joe Sinnott, John Byrne, Duffy Vohland, Tom Palmer, Terry Beatty, Richard A Fuscia Jr., J.F. Woodward, Luis Chichón, Thomas Boatright, Moti Friedman, Paul Cox & John Judy

10 August 2017

Branding Kirby (King Kirby 038)


As we saw earlier today, Jack Kirby did cartoon parody art, too. One of the first places those who know that side of The King might think that ad we looked at came from Not Brand Echh!. Others might now be going Not Brand Wha-? To explain:
Back in the 1960s, Mad Magazine forged a market for a slew of comedy/parody comic magazines. (Cracked.com readers might be interested to know it used to be a cheap imitation print magazine that we didn't read back before the internet gave them new life) Marvel Comics, always eager to fill as much shelf space as possible ever since they got out of that distribution deal with National Periodicals, decided they needed a comedy parody book. For a fair bit they'd been calling the competition Brand Echh, and so a new title was born - Brand Echh! August 1967 Marvel titles like the Fantastic Four ran full page ads featuring the cover of the first issue, and it was proudly proclaimed in the top bulletion of the BBP that month:


Notice that it's called "Brand Echh!" while i referred above to "Not Brand Echh!" That's the fault of their title slogan on the cover...


Who says a comic book has to be good??
not Brand Echh
And everybody ignored the line at the top as intro and called the book Not Brand Echh. Take a look at the contents page for the first issue:


Note that it is listed as Brand Echh in the indicia at the bottom of the page. By issue #5, they gave up and changed it to Not Brand Echh (Possibly in issue #4. I don't have that issue)
For younger readers, PG is an abbreviation for 'page', not a movie rating. The ratings board wouldn't change the designation from M to PG for another 3 years at this point.
Of course, to lead off a parody of Marvel comics, you pretty much have to do a parody of Marvel's First Family, the book that embodies Marvel comics - the Fantastic Four. But who are you going to get to parody Jack Kirby? Well, Jack Kirby, of course. They brought in Frank Giacoia to ink Kirby's pencils and give them a different feel than Joe Sinnott's work over on the FF's home book, and - Presto!:


But, no - Comet Feldmeyer isn't from Not Brand Echh.

Cover & story art by Jack Kirby & Frank Giacoia for Not) Brand Echh! #1 (1967)

22 July 2017

A Far More Fearsome Manner Of Garb

It seems that i just cannot stop imitating Snell. He has a regular feature over at Slay, Monstrobot that (usually rightly) mocks bad costume design.
He's got it covered. I had no intention of running this feature. None at all. But (and there's always one of those, ain't there?), when reading this morning this outfit just leapt off the pages and bitch-slapped my eyes while that word balloon mocked my sense of reality:


"A Far More Fearsome Manner Of Garb"?!?

Now, don't get me wrong. I love Gil Kane - He rocks up in the top pantheon of my comic book world. But there's been a serious miscommunication somewhere along the way here.

Let's place the blame on M.M. Jr. there, okay? After all, he grew up alone with his father in an alien dimension after some form of divine birth? Spontaneous generation? MM trying to use that wand on his 'biological material' and succeeding? The story never makes clear HOW Molecule Man has a son. Maybe Earth's superheroes threw an infant in with him when they ousted him to that dimension? You wouldn't think they'd go along with something like that, but then - look at what happened to Carol Danvers...

Anyway, the combination & juxaposition of word and image here hit so hard, it even formed a logo:



And so a feature is born. But, damn.
Folks gonna have to work to to get their weak dren over this starting bar.


From Marvel Two-In-One #1 by Steve Gerber, Gil Kane & Joe Sinnott (1974)