notebook reviews #1


by

Tuesday, February 5, 2008


I wrote these notes while traveling this weekend. They’re sort of reviews, but really just riffing on color and composition. I’m obsessed with HOW color comics used to be made and want to write about it here for fun.
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“The Inheritors”, by Bruce Jones and Scott Hampton
Alien Worlds no. 3
Pacific Comics, 1983
full color

Looks like Kaluta, Wrightson. Reads like an old Unknown Worlds ACG comic but is beautifully painted. Each panel like a small Frazetta fantasy world. And that’s sort of the problem. I like the story, but it’s so serious and heavy and important. No Twilight Zone economy, no pacing, just a slow, laborious plodding. “We were aliens; creatures from another world come to the salvation, not of humankind, but of the planet itself.” A story of immigration, essentially, hacked out by Jones. Tolerable stuff, not great. The art saves it but really it’s just a fairly authentic blend of Frazetta, Wrightson, Kaluta, Vess. Nothing special really but beautiful.

I love the way these old Pacific Comics look. The colors on all the stories are great. All the Pacific Comics back then were done with that crazy process that was called “Greyline”. Steve Oliff actually colored a story in the back, but the Hampton story in the front is colored by Hampton I believe. Anyways, it looks fantastic like some comic straight out of “The Studio.” Plus, I bought it for a quarter. Whatever.

Oh, yes, back to the story. Well, I never finished reading it. I do love this passage (above, bottom panel) however, where a landscape panel has no black-line “overlay.” The landscape is not delineated by black marks, lines that are colored, filled in with paint. The landscape is just pastel colors that recede and allow the inserted black ink’d shadowed image — and the panel itself — to “float” above the color plane. That’s why I bought this one.
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Special Forces no.2, by Kyle Baker
DC, 2007
full color

I don’t really want to review this comic, I just want to write about the color and how fresh it looks. Plus, I’m such a Baker fan it’s hard for me to review anything of his fairly. I mean, I could give a shit about a war comic but Baker’s approach, his humor and his vantage point (read: not white) on the subject makes it, um, enjoyable. Remember this is the comic whose opening volley was a (black) guy getting his head blown off.

Baker has been creating his comics on computer for over ten years now. They “worked” for me back in the ’90s; I always thought he struck a balance between the generic Photoshop look of all computer “constructed” comics (meaning: no inked panel borders, floating computer fonts and text all arranged in Photoshop). It’s an interesting mix of approaches that Baker has developed. He seems to be using all the same filters and settings that everyone else is in Photoshop, but since he can draw better than just about anyone (uses no photo references for the figures as far as I can tell, has mastered a sort of Aragones-inspired comical realism, plus he has a real eye for movement, no staged “realistic” photo ref’d scenes that jar the narrative flow to a halt, no spending days playing photo-shoot director, dressing up as the characters for “believability.” Nah … none of these games for Baker, who’s got the time? He’s got kids, man. Plus he can draw. Did I mention that?), and since his use of color is so inventive and comic-booky and fresh — it all simply overrides the sensors in my brain that normally dismiss such “computerized” comics. In fact I actually like the economy of the easy-to-read simplistic layouts. I think they allow his drawings & sequences to breathe. There’s a real organic feel to his customized approach that carries the narrative along quite beautifully.

I really just want to write about the color tho’, so here goes: in many sequences, Baker will switch from the “realistic” color of the Iraqi landscape and replace it with “knockout” color in the action sequences. Meaning Baker will reduce entire backgrounds to a single color like blue while figures in said background are, say, red. This was very common in the four-color era of comics, but it’s rather uncommon these days to switch from “realism” to “symbolism” on the same page.

Baker’s “realistic” color is, I think, a perfect example of using the contemporary approach to color (Hyper-realism: everything molded and highlighted, shiny and video game-like), but using it with restraint so that the drawings are not overpowered by the colors. His “realism” is also served by alternating back to knockouts and the use of pure flat color. This approach develops a rhythm that allows Baker to use the symbolic and “the real” within the same sequence to great effect.
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Archie no.170, by Harry Lucey
1967
four-color

This is an all Harry Lucey issue. You don’t know who Harry Lucey is? He was the best Archie artist. That’s all you need to know. The whole issue is an amazing display of composition, pure drawing, and gag humor cartooning. It’s a fucking clinic, actually. I’ve been doing these warm-up exercises everyday where I just draw from Lucey. I just look and learn.

Anyway, check out the color in this splash page. Stare at it and break it down. Remember this is four-color process, so its simplicity may fool you. For me, it’s the super simple use of the black and green of the girl’s dress in the foreground, which is a darker green and blue, playing off the wall behind her which is a lighter, 50% green and blue behind her. Big deal, you say? Well, look how the shapes unite and allow the central figures to remain on the left of the composition. The lines of the the wall AND the united color shapes create a plane and piece the wall and the foreground girl together in a really pleasing way. It’s a minor thing, really, but these masterful touches throughout each of the 4 stories in this comic all add up to one remarkable reading experience. (For 3 bux.)

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19 Responses to “notebook reviews #1”
  1. Dustin Harbin says:

    Mm! I just read the first half or so of Comics Comics #3, and I have to say I’m really digging the tone of you guys’ reviews. Especially that usually there is something much more interesting at work than “…and let us not forget about Blah Blah’s incredible artwork” or just a blanket dismissal. Very edifying stuff, with a lot of food for thought. Keep it up!

  2. Frank Santoro says:

    thanks, but I’m concerned that there aren’t enough “literary comics” being reviewed here. haha.

  3. Alan David Doane says:

    I noticed the foreground girl’s dress design in the Archie splash before reading your comments, so now I feel really smart.

    I also like how the black borders along the bottom of the walls anchor the sense of place. The borders and the dress and the colors seem like the elements that make this a noteworthy image…

    More posts like these, please, Frank.

  4. Luke Pski says:

    Why is Archie walking like he just had ball surgery?

  5. Frank Santoro says:

    why do you generally submit comments that make me think less of you, Luke? You’re a smart guy, but I notice you enjoy being snide on comments boards. Sometimes it’s funny, usually not tho. Please don’t do that here, cool?
    Cool.

  6. Luke Pski says:

    Are you taking my comment personally?
    I thought it was a funny aside, that’s all.
    I do think it detracts from the supposed greatness of the art too, that he’s posed in a weird way, but it wasn’t serious.
    I don’t get this at all. I will stop posting here though.
    I think you’re taking it all too seriously.

  7. Luke Pski says:

    Is it that you don’t like things I’ve written on other boards?

  8. Luke Pski says:

    NOw that I think of it, its sorta fucked that you’d think I should be concerned about how “much” you think of me, or anyone else who posts here.
    Who the fuck are you anyway? A guy who writes a blog and does comics? Big fucking deal.

  9. I am Hawker, MSGboard Stalker says:

    Anyhow, I for one am glad Comics Comics (or F.S.?) is wading through the glut of horrible comics, and providing a case for/against them. I disagree with some of you criticisms, but that’s life. Your quest inspired to go to the local comic shop here and dig through the dollar crates. I found a 4 issue sci-fi mini-series by Frank Thorne , called Ribit. It’s really well done, with some of the most bizarre storytelling I’ve seen in a while, and the art is top notch. Also found a 3 issue Power Lords mini-series. Haven’t had time to look through that. 2 bucks for 7 comics. Thanks for reminding me about the fun of comic shop dollar boxes. Being a consumer does have it’s rewards after all. Much peace.
    I’ll check back in about an hour and a half to deride you, for some reason or another.

  10. I am Hawker, MSGboard Stalker says:

    Make that two minutes. Sorry about the spelling errors. Wait, why am I sorry? You are the one that should be sorry! After all this is YOUR message board! Right? JK. (“you criticisms”, should read “your criticisms”. And throw a “me” between “inspired” and “to”) Thanks. Now I am off to the TCJ message boards, where people care. About me.

  11. I am Hawker, MSGboard Stalker says:

    In the post prior to the last one I wrote about two minutes ago, I said – “Anyhow, I for one am glad Comics Comics (or F.S.?) is wading through the glut of horrible comics, and providing a case for/against them”. Replace the “them” with “the potential gems”, and I think I am done.

  12. Frank Santoro says:

    back issues are getting cheaper and cheaper, I’ll go in and buy a couple new comics for like 4-5 dollars each and then buy complete sets (like all the archer & armstrong issues by Barry Smith for 7 bucks!) and dig through the quarter boxes and only spend, like, 20 bux total for a huge stack of stuff.

  13. by Michael DeForge says:

    I like your comments on Kyle Baker’s use of Photoshop. He’ll take these filters that look really tacky and awful when anybody else uses them, but he always manages to pull it off.

  14. Lauren R. Weinstein says:

    Thanks for putting those pages up, Frank, especially that Kyle Baker one. It really is beautiful. What should I read of his stuff?

    Just out of curiosity, where do you draw the line about “using photo references”? I feel like Kyle Baker must have at least glanced at a photo or two of those guns? Do you just mean the roto-scoping equivalent of cartooning, where every panel is staged with a group of badly cast friends, and meticulously copied, draining all the soul and flow out of every image? In general I think cartoonists use many photo refs, even if they don’t come through in the finished work. Like the first thing Bob Sikoryak does is create a giant morgue of photos for each of his comics. Maybe you talked about this on the blog in more detail somewhere else. I am procrastinating right now.

  15. by Michael DeForge says:

    “Thanks for putting those pages up, Frank, especially that Kyle Baker one. It really is beautiful. What should I read of his stuff?”

    “I Die at Midnight” and “You Are Here” both give a pretty good feel of his work, I think. His Plastic Man series was fantastic as well.

  16. Marc Arsenault says:

    The really offensive photo refs are the full-on shots copied out of body building magazines.

    There a great old issue of the Shadow that Marshall Rogers pencilled and Kyle Baker inked. I found it for only a quarter the other day. Got that one Frank?

  17. K. Thor Jensen says:

    I think the Baker photo-ref thing is more about how most mainstream cartoonists use photo reference for their figure drawing to an excessive degree nowadays – that’s why so many mainstream comics look stiff and posed, because the figures don’t have the flex and bend of somebody constructing them, but rather they’re simply “pasted” into a scene. I don’t think anybody faults an artist for using photo reference to draw guns or other complex machines, to be honest.

  18. Kat says:

    Frank…I would like to hear more about the use of color, the changes to comics now…what changes have you seen and why its so important to the reader.

  19. Frank Santoro says:

    Hey Kat, I have comics for you that will explain it better, I’ll show you when I see you!

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