Less than a week until the always excellent Ultimate Hobby and Toy Fair. For those who haven't been it's much more than the name let's on - more of a mix of comic convention, collectable fair, costume contest, book sale, hobby and craft fair, and lot's more all mixed in. I'll be in the Artist Alley section showing and signing my original art and prints (with an emphases on my recent comic book and strip style work) and demonstrating how I make those goofy pictures. See you there!
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Thursday, April 4, 2013
4C For Me... (and Thee!)
A quick reminder in case you missed it... I'll be a guest at this Sunday's Camosun College Comics Conference showing my work along with a plethora of other talented Victoria and Vancouver area illustrators and comic artists. It's free to the public and a swell time for those into graphic novels, comic books and other graphic forms of storytelling.
Click on the fab photo below for a recent news piece on the conference and the program featuring my pal, and program creator, Ken Steacy...
Tuesday, April 2, 2013
Bob Clarke: 1926-2013
(* My own illustrated wedding proposal to my wife-to-be was as much a take on Bob's version as the original.)
I thought I was growing up, and out of silly kid's stuff like Mad (and honestly, the quality of the mag was starting to slip into the 80s) so I lost touch of Mr Clarke's work for a few years until the early 1990s when I rediscovered him again. Soon after that a chance acquisition of 150 issues of Mads from the first magazine issue, #24, to the late 1970s issues cemented my love of his work.
His influence on my own illustration style soon was clear. I don't get to drop names very often, so forgive the indulgence, but Bruce Timm once said to me that with all the legendary artists at Mad to be influenced by (Jack Davis, Wally Wood, Don Martin, Mort Drucker, ad infinitum), I was the only one he had heard of influenced by Bob Clarke. He was puzzled. I was not. Bob had an amazing way to clearly illustrate whatever was needed with a brilliant sense of design and a load of cartoony fun. It's always struck a chord with me. His late 1950s to mid 60s work is simply my favourite magazine work of any artist... period.
I was lucky enough in the late 1990s to purchase (although had I not been broke at the time I would have bought more) a piece from an early Mad (#39, May 1958) that hangs in a place of honour above my drawing table. It inspires me to this day and is pictured below. The published magazine spread is shown below that.
I never had the opportunity to talk to Mr Clarke - although I did write him a letter in the 90s to let him know how much I appreciated his body of work and how it influenced my own, I never heard back that he had received the message. I hope he did.
So I thought it might be fitting to celebrate the legacy of Bob Clarke by sharing a few 1950s to 1970s images of his work, gathered from my own vintage Mad Magazine copies, my original Bob Clarke art, and some other original art scans from Heritage Auctions (much appreciated, folks!)
Bob Clarke, 1926-2013... thank you.
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