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           | Posted: 20 May 2024 at 2:23pm | IP Logged | 8 | post reply |  
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 |  There's an interesting linage of artists that flows from the very first days of newspaper comic, and in particular Alex Raymond's Flash Gordon, through the a second generation cohort at EC comics that included Wally Wood, Frank Frazetta, Roy Krenkel, and Al Williamson---and eventually a third through the Madison Avenue ad world (which included Neal Adams).
 
 An interest think I never appreciated is how famous, influential, and wealthy those early newspaper artists (Hal Foster, Raymond & Milt Caniff) were and how that rippled down through the decades.
 
 As a younger man, I never really appreciated the talent on display in the newspaper comics, and looked down my nose at it from the loft perspective of superhero mags (i.e. Marvel/DC). 
 Going back now and looking at for example, Frazetta's Tarzan ink-drawings, I now view them as close to the pinnacle of black & white fantasy art.  Insanely good brush work!  Those tapered ends & atmospheric perspective fades!
 
 It's been fun tracing the genealogy of the genre.
 
 Edited by Steven Queen on 20 May 2024 at 2:23pm
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