Sunday, December 16, 2018

Virgil In Blue

To wrap up this week's look back at the artwork of Virgil Finlay, let's take a look at some of his more 'adult oriented' imagery -


Original Caption: "Watchers saw her white body gleaming amidst the spray." -Weird Tales, June 1937








We've seen previously how Finlay would sometimes redraw earlier works. The piece above repurposes a figure study from two years earlier...


(The magazine wasn't titled Weird Tales for nothing)



It's interesting to note how much of this work came from the late 1930s leading into the early '40s - the same time period that Margaret Brundage was doing so much of her work for the same publishers. In fact, the first image in this post (among others) comes from an issue with a Brundage cover (The Carnal God - see this post)

artwork by Virgil Finlay

Sunday, December 2, 2018

Blue Monday Calendar 2018 Week 49

The Blue Monday Calendar typically runs on the main site, but this week's painting needed to be moved to our adult 'back room' as Gil Elvgren offers us a more open look at the lovely lady featured in Captivating from 1962 -


Well titled, Master Elvgren.

painting by Gil Elvgren (1962)

Tuesday, July 31, 2018

Flash Does Tijuana

We've been talking Flash Gordon parodies, so let's look at the Tijuana Bibles, or 8-Pagers as they were sometimes known, though that was sometimes a lie. (And, oddly, the page count didn't include the cover. Printed only on one side and flat stapled, the usual multiply by 4 rule doesn't apply to them.)

There were three of which i'm aware, and one of those was 16 pages in length - an Epic! (Your mileage may vary). In our first, Flash lures Dale into a Moon Voyage...



Obviously, that wasn't enough for I. Wantzum Tuu, and so we got the double length Azura, Queen Of Magic -



Lastly, another standard 8 page tale, Red Hot...


...but this copy later had colour added, so let's use it instead of the original black & white version -


It's a good thing that these were made before Buster Crabbe played the role in the movies, or the puns would have been unending...

art by unknown (1930s?)

Monday, July 30, 2018

The Art Of Flesh (and Friends)

We've been looking at a bit of Flash Gordon parody lately, which quite naturally leads to the most ambitious effort in that arena - Flesh Gordon. We're looking at the artwork, so we're only looking at the first movie. Flesh Meets The Cosmic Cheerleaders used no artwork for the title sequences, so they don't get to play today. But, no worries - we've got some others to join us in a bit.

But, first, from Cornelius Cole III, the title sequence artwork for -


It can be a bit difficult to look at the artwork with credits scrolling all over the place and rocket ship pokings going on, so here is the artwork from the title sequence without all them dang words hanging out blocking the view -


And thus began the film...

Of course, if one is looking at the art of Flesh Gordon, a peek at George Barr's poster is probably warranted, too -


I'm not certain that this one is by Barr as well. Certainly they followed close on the face of Flesh if it wasn't him, but i don't see his signature anywhere (look left of Dale's legs above)...


Meanwhile (okay - actually two years prior), over at the journal of used bicycle seat sniffing, Harvey Kurtzman brings us...


...but only a single "newspaper strip" to accompany the cover...


And, a few years later, from Bill Pearson, having taken over Wally Wood's pro/fanzine, Witzend...


We've already seen Wally Wood's Flasher Gordon 1 & 2 previously, but let's look at that sequel again, this time with the rough page layouts set side-by-side for comparison (and for a look at that rejected alien!) -



Wally Wood brings us the big finish, too -


artwork from Flesh Gordon (1974), Snarf #5 (1972), Witzend #11 (1978), and Naughty Knotty Woody (2007)