I like drawing Silver Surfer, although I never owned a single issue of his comic nor any comic in which he appears! Amazing.
Silver Surfer from a sketchbook, colored with markers. |
Inked with a brush pen, of course. And a Micron. |
Al Pérez is an artist I discovered on Instagram, where his handle is Ramone Sketch. He draws wild and wicked designs that would be at home on your arm, your skateboard, or your van. Definitely has overtones of Rick Griffin and I love it. EYEBALLS, am I right? I have fallen in love with eyeball carton characters.
Ladies and gentleworms, welcome to the DOOM SKULL DOME! Here I will select a handful of my own drawings utterly at random and rate them with little hearts. The one that gets the most hearts is the fuckin' winner. Ties are settled the same way they did it in ancient times: a d20 vs. d20 roll off.
GO!
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The clear-eyed will have noticed that this week I introduced a new feature: the smiley face. The smiley does not count towards heart count, but is only there to let you know that I find the image fun or funny in some way that isn't relevant to how good it is, in my eyes. In theory, I could have a drawing show up that gets one heart and a shitload of smileys because the drawing sucks but it's monumentally funny to me.
Have a great Saturday!
Dave Cooper is a weird, weird artist and I love him with all my heart.
I first ran across him probably in the early 2000s when a friend loaned me a stack of books that included Ripple. I was blown away by the book's honesty, ugliness, and beauty all at the same time. That's Dave Cooper. Honest, ugly, and painfully beautiful. Not for kids, though he did do some kids' TV shows such as Pig Goat Banana Cricket and The Bagel and Becky Show.
His paintings have a wet glow that I adore. I don't know how he pulls it off. They simultaneously look weird and creepy but also warm and happy and sensitive. I guess if you have trypophobia or scoleciphobia some of his work might set you off. I'm sorry about that. It's a hard world for the small things, isn't it?
Throwdown! Dice cast, random art selected... which will survive the brutality of my wrath?
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Matthew Adams is an artist I first encountered in the original Yoon Suin (a wonderful randomly-generated setting for OSR games).
Adams' art is wonderfully quirky and weird. It's also quick, messy, and pure. I know he loves to play around with MS Paint, doing pixel art. Who does that? It's a whole thing, I know. His pixel sketches are really great and full of texture and suggestion. I think that's what I like most about his work... the suggestion of something. He's painting ideas without giving them final form. I love that. Looking at one of his drawings, it appears there's a lot more to it. But zooming in only reveals there isn't more to it. It's an illusion. But that's the magic, isn't it?
This was a nuclear bomb in my head. |
Opening my drawing and pulling out my giant metal d3000... GO!
Oh this week's winner is easy. That robot soldier, who appears as the Infantry Bot in Cozmic Metal Heads, is a fave of mine. I love that guy. Rock on, soldier.
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Yet another great artist I really like. And this one isn't trivial... Jaimie Hernandez is a giant of comics, a trend setter, a legend.
Now, I didn't really read Love & Rockets. I knew of it, but didn't see it or have access to it back in the day. What I did have is the trade paperback of Eros Comics' Birdland by Gilbert Hernandez... but that's for a different post.
Jaimie is amazing. How can one artist do so much with so few lines? A shadow here, a bold line there, and done. Hell, many of his faces are just like 2 or 3 lines. It's magic.
Jaimie's representations of various body types is truly inspiring. I remember seeing these comics back in the day, but not reading them, and was super inspired by this fact. No two characters look the same. Everyone has a vibe and a style that feels authentic. The bodies feel like they are real.
This grounding is present for all the art, including backgrounds. Reading a page of his work, you get a strong sense of place. You are never lost or wondering what the panels are doing (unless that is the goal). And his consistency across panels and pages is unparalleled.
I think if we can ever use the phrase "a comics genius", we can use it for Jaimie Hernandez.
This really is the good shit.