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Frazetta barsoom ink drawings
Frazetta barsoom ink drawings










frazetta barsoom ink drawings
  1. Frazetta barsoom ink drawings movie#
  2. Frazetta barsoom ink drawings series#

His subject matter is visceral and as utterly testosterone-led as the stories behind them, which probably explains more than it needed be said why my earliest brush with the master's work was some sneaky peaks at my older brother's borrowed volume of Frazetta art as a very young teen each portrait a doorway into older, wilder, savage and erotically-charged worlds. But Frazetta had flow, the style that oils and brushes demand, the medium being so very unforgiving. Small wonder then that as ideal body shapes changed into the Eighties Frazetta's work was seen less, and for a good time the airbrush became the champion of fantasy artists.

Frazetta barsoom ink drawings movie#

Great fodder, as I mentioned earlier, for album covers, movie posters and panel vans, the pop culture canvases of the Seventies. It's work in caricature sometimes - the warriors sinewed, biceps and thighs bulging as they pose, crouch and fly in battle, their womenfolk equally underdressed to show off the curves, the flowing locks, the undulating concupiscence. Where other artists sometimes use terrain as a backdrop or pagefiller, Frazetta's appear to rise from that chalky earth, his heroines graced with the same watery luminosity of their dungeon environments, or as perpetually buoyant as the Martian gravity around them. He remains a colossus in his field, his heroes seemingly hewn from the same rocky terrain they inhabit naturally. I wasn't always a fan of Frazetta, and didn't come to reassess his work until seeing Bisley's work which some at the time and since have called derivative (the irony remains however that for nearly ten years on from Slaine the King 2000AD's pages were cursed with the mud-coloured muscled monstrosities of lesser artists, each bearing the unmistakeable hallmarks of slavishly copying Bisley himself). Bisley's tribute marked something of a visual homecoming for a fictional hero whose legend-based roots owed as much to Howard's barbarian hero.

frazetta barsoom ink drawings frazetta barsoom ink drawings

Remains a highlight for Bisley's studied and faithful homage to Frazetta (even down to the aforementioned palette) as much as Mills' own stripped-down narrative. The previously angular and robotic ABC Warriors became heavy metal beefcake (though done in Bisley's earlier line drawing style) and Celtic hero Slaine in the acclaimed Slaine the King

Frazetta barsoom ink drawings series#

Bisley was directly influenced by Frazetta's oils as well as his pen and ink washes, and his adoption of those styles, borrowing Frazetta's earthy palette and accentuated musculature both reinvented the look of two key series by Pat Mills. As I mentioned earlier in my Erol Otus piece the works of Frazetta and to a lesser extent Boris Vallejo were probably the leading examples of 1960s and 1970s fantasy art, and Frazetta went on to inspire a host of artists and cartoonists of the next generation including White Dwarf's Peter Jones, and Carl Critchlow (whose style he initially lampooned in his Thrud the Barbarian), and in 2000AD most crucially, Simon Bisley.

frazetta barsoom ink drawings

Despite this, his line work is amazing and adds plenty of atmosphere to his Barsoom.For many his name will be synonymous with the pulp fantasy and SF of Robert E Howard and Edgar Rice Burroughs - his Conan is simply definitive, and his approach to the human form of both genders made him the foremost and most logical artist of Burrough's Barsoom/ Mars books. Their clothing has a very real Roman feel to it. Crandall’s tharks are more human-looking than many of his predecessors. Though he did do comics for EC and Warren, he never drew a John Carter comic. Reed displayed much of his work in fanzines such as Erbdom or Erbania, allowing him much less restraints around nudity. Lupoff’s Canaveral Press that published the last of the unpublished ERB manuscripts. During the 1960s he drew a lot of Burroughs related art but did not usually sell it to paperback companies or comic book publishers. Reed Crandall is an artist who needs mentioning here. He was also the mentor of perhaps the most important fantasy artist of the 20th Century, Frank Frazetta. Krenkell would become associated with ERB and dinosaurs as the title of his collection, Swordsmen and Saurians: From the Mesozoic to Barsoom (1989, Eclipse Books) clearly shows. John tradition, wearing helmet and straps. Krenkell doing their ERB covers with one thark-related cover for Thuvia, Maid of Mars, duplicating the scene featured on the original magazine cover back in 1916.












Frazetta barsoom ink drawings