4.23.2012

"MDCCLXXVI:::MMXII"

A while back I was commissioned to do a drawing. First time that's ever happened. Here it is:



Fans of art that isn't drawn inside panel borders will have no trouble spotting my swipe of Myron of Elutherae's "Discobolus". For the rest of you, check it out:



The commission itself was super simple -- so simple, in fact, that it kind of presented a problem. I had a blank copy of Avengers X-Sanction #1, and the order to "just draw a Captain America". Probably unfortunately, I am enough of an eggheaded Serious Comics Artist that those instructions don't get me juiced to bang out a dope superhero drawing, but instead get me worrying about how to make a single drawing of a character a million better artists have drawn even remotely interesting. I had to worry about simplicity too, since the paper that Marvel prints these blank cover variants on is pretty wretched and doesn't stand up to much working over. (I know because I did a Daredevil one of these a while back that interested parties can see on display above the counter at the world's best comic book shop.)

Anyway this thing sat on my desk blank for day after day until the "duh" moment that the Discobolus suddenly popped into my head. After that I did it in about an hour. Captain America's creator, Jack Kirby, was always drawing poses that called back to classical statuary, so I figured I might as well go right to the source. I had to mess with Myron's pose a little bit to make it work in silhouette, but in the end I think I managed to do a decent job of capturing the mix of contortion and relaxation that makes the original so enigmatic. The graphic figure-on-graphic background approach is a total swipe from Kyle Baker's awesome "Truth" covers for Marvel, which made a big impression on me as a kid. As for my "Kirby Lives" defacing of the Marvel logo... well, fucked if I'm gonna make a piece of art that advertises a company whose practices I can't even talk about without starting to hyperventilate in rage, ha ha.

So yeah, I do commissioned drawings now too, if anybody wants one.

4.19.2012

Your Wednesday Sequence

Yesterday I brought my "Your Wednesday Sequence" column on Robot 6 to a close with an analysis of the George Herriman page below.



I'll be back soon with another weekly column, but in the mean time, here's an index of all 51 of my little craft workshops:

1. Frank Quitely


2. Guido Crepax

3. Dash Shaw

4. CF

5. Hal Foster

6. Marc Smeets

7. Brendan McCarthy

8. Winsor McCay

9. Moebius

10. Steve Bissette

11. Dino Buzzatti


12. Doug Wright

13. Paul Pope

14. Yuichi Yokoyama

15. Blaise Larmee

16. Brecht Evens

17. Marcos Martin

18. Dave Gibbons

19. Frank Santoro


20. Kevin Huizenga

21. Osamu Tezuka

22. Eduardo Risso


23. Atak

24. Jack Kirby

25. Herge

26. Will Eisner

27. Frank Miller

28. Al Columbia

29. Jaime Hernandez


30. Milo Manara

31. Carmine Infantino

32. Frank King


33. Victor Moscoso

34. Marshall Rogers

35. John Romita

36. Gary Panter


37. Steve Ditko

38. Bernard Krigstein part 1

39. Bernard Krigstein part 2


40. Eddie Campbell

41. Mike Mignola

42. Joe Kubert

43. Roy Crane


44. Kyle Baker

45. Hugo Pratt

46. Chris Ware

47. George Herriman

SupaSpecTac Deluxxxury Edition #1: The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo trailer


SupaSpecTac Deluxxxury Edition #2: Jim Steranko's "Frogs!"

SupaSpecTac Deluxxxury Edition #3: How To Draw Comics The Ben Marra Way

SupaSpecTac Deluxxxury Edition #4: David Mazzucchelli's "Year One"

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Thanks for reading.