Howard Pyle's Pepper and Salt: or, Season For Young Folk was first published in 1885. The book contained eight stories written and illustrated by Pyle. It also contained 24 illustrated poems. All of the illustrated poems are featured below. Please click on them for a larger view. These drawings are wonderfully detailed and whimsical, showing a different side of Pyle from his more action and costume oriented painting of pirates and historical scenes.
Friday, July 31, 2009
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Sgt. Rock: Showcase #45
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Charles Vess and Spiderman
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Monsters & Heroes: Bernie Wrightson Profile
Larry Ivie's Monsters and Heroes was a magazine devoted to monster movies, old movie and radio serials, and comics. It ran for seven issues from 1967 to 1970.
Issue #3 (March 1968) featured a write-up on Bernie Wrightson. This is probably one of the earliest things written about Bernie in the fan or professional press. There was an interview and a short article published on Wrightson in early issues of Infinity and I'll Be Damned, but those did not appear until 1970. This issue also featured two early drawings by Bernie that to my knowledge have not been printed anywhere else.
Issue #3 (March 1968) featured a write-up on Bernie Wrightson. This is probably one of the earliest things written about Bernie in the fan or professional press. There was an interview and a short article published on Wrightson in early issues of Infinity and I'll Be Damned, but those did not appear until 1970. This issue also featured two early drawings by Bernie that to my knowledge have not been printed anywhere else.
Monday, July 27, 2009
Maxfield Parrish: Puss in Boots
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Robert E. Howard Art
Friday, July 24, 2009
Bernie Wrightson and The Shining
Bernie Wrightson has long been associated with the works of horror author Stephen King. Wrightson's first collaboration with Stephen King was the comic book adaptation of the 1982 film Creepshow. Bernie went on to illustrate Cycle of the Werewolf in 1984 and the restored version of The Stand in 1990. Wrightson also illustrated the limited edition of From a Buick 8, The Wolves of Calla, and King produced an introduction to Bernie's edition of Frankenstein.
One more place where Wrightson has illuminated the words of Stephen King was in one of the most widely circulated magazines in the United States: TV Guide. In conjunction with the premier of the television mini-series of The Shining, TV Guide published King's prologue to the novel titled "Before the Play." The prologue had been cut out of the 1977 novel. It had eventually been printed in a 1982 issue of a small press horror magazine called Whispers. The prologue's appearance in the April 26 - May 2, 1997 edition of TV Guide marked its first publication for a mass audience. Wrightson contributed the cover, one color illustration and two small B&W illustrations. To be honest, there is a lot Bernie's work I like better than these drawings. But I've always had a soft spot for these because this was probably the most widespread distribution of Wrightson's work to a mass audience. For a couple weeks in the Spring of 1997, a Bernie Wrightson painting of a maniac with a roque mallet was in every grocery checkout lane in America.
One more place where Wrightson has illuminated the words of Stephen King was in one of the most widely circulated magazines in the United States: TV Guide. In conjunction with the premier of the television mini-series of The Shining, TV Guide published King's prologue to the novel titled "Before the Play." The prologue had been cut out of the 1977 novel. It had eventually been printed in a 1982 issue of a small press horror magazine called Whispers. The prologue's appearance in the April 26 - May 2, 1997 edition of TV Guide marked its first publication for a mass audience. Wrightson contributed the cover, one color illustration and two small B&W illustrations. To be honest, there is a lot Bernie's work I like better than these drawings. But I've always had a soft spot for these because this was probably the most widespread distribution of Wrightson's work to a mass audience. For a couple weeks in the Spring of 1997, a Bernie Wrightson painting of a maniac with a roque mallet was in every grocery checkout lane in America.
Thursday, July 23, 2009
Roy Krenkel & Creepy
House of Mystery #212
Here is a scan of the original cover art by Michael Kaluta for House of Mystery #212 (March 1973) and a scan of the published comic book.
Labels:
comic books,
horror comics,
House of Mystery,
Michael Kaluta
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Fang Mail
Illustration by Bernie Wrightson for the letters page of Famous Monsters of Filmland magazine. This is from issue #109, dated August 1974. I don't know which issue the drawing first ran or the last issue it appeared in.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Bad Girls of the Wild West
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Friday, July 17, 2009
3 Cool Comics
Planet Comics #53, March 1948. A classic bondage cover, there's really not much to say about it that isn't painfully obvious.
Strange Tales #78, November 1960. Cover by Jack Kirby and Dick Ayers. This cover of one of my favorites from era of Strange Tales. It's a little more subtle than most of Kirby's covers for this title. Well, it is subtle compared to Taboo!.
Adventure Comics #425, January 1973. Cover art by Michael Kaluta. I've always like this one. A lot of wonderful covers came off Kaluta's drawing board during this period. I mean A LOT. He has consistently produced a lot of really nice covers throughout his career.
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