Joel Peter Witkin’s Woman Once a Bird, one of Witkin’s less shocking pictures, believe it or not. McKean uses the same techniques—the dark framing around the edges of the picture, the use of harsh physical imagery to convey ideas from myths, the ornamental constriction of his models’ bodies—to make much stranger but less horrifying images. Witkin’s work predates most computer effects; he used pieces of corpses in some of his photographs and people with birth defects—"extraordinary bodies,“ he called them—in others. There’s a glorification of the necrotic that I find disgusting in his work, and a celebration of weirdness that I find really reassuring and uplifting.
A really lovely Sandman painting by the frankly unbelievable Dave McKean. Will be posting a few of his inspirations today, too.
And while I’m Alex Ross-ing around, here’s another one of my very favorites (got a bunch of these; will put them all up eventually): a hi-res of his all-Kirby, all the time painting from a few years ago.
Also, here is a page from what I—seriously now—truly think is probably the greatest serial comic book ever created, Groo, by Sergio Aragones with Mark Evanier. It’s funny as hell, drawn with a level of sustained technical expertise totally unmatched at its length on any other title, and it even manages to pack a real satircal wallop in its later issues. I love old-fashioned swords-and-sandals adventure stories, and Groo manages to both fulfill that genre and add immeasurably to it at the same time.
Don’t get me wrong, there are better graphic novels, better story arcs and maybe even funnier humor titles (if you can think of one, by all means tell me), but pound for pound, no series has ever managed to maintain such an incredibly high quality for so long. Read the early issues (back before computer coloring), and you can practically hear colorist Tom Luth screaming across the drafting board, “FOR GOD’S SAKE, SERGIO! AFTER THE THIRD TIER THEY’RE JUST ALL GOING TO BE FUCKING BROWN!”
Most Christians seem to be stuck in a time warp where the most recent cultural touchstones available are the Narnia Chronicles. Somebody please notice Stephen Colbert, practically dripping with righteous anger during what is maybe the funniest bit on the funniest show on television. Go, Stephen, go!
And here, for reference, is a great one by Alphonse Mucha, an artist whose work you’re going to recognize if you’ve ever fawned over a great J.H. Williams III layout or enjoyed a good Melinda Gebbie page. He did posters all over New York in the 1920’s, though he was personally Czech. More on him here; consider this clause a reminder to myself to put up some Virgil Finlay and Arthur Rackham so you know where greats like John Totleben and Charles Vess are drawing from, too.
While I’m posting comic art, here’s one of my very favorites: Gene Ha’s beautiful, beautiful cover to one of the sadly never-reprinted ABC Tomorrow Stories specials that wrapped up the loose ends still hanging after Alan Moore finished the half-dozen series he’d created for WildStorm. Enjoy.
Gorgeous Alex Ross cover painting from an ish of Grant Morrison’s bugnuts Batman run, which is arguably the best stuff done with the character since the days of the great, underrated Doug Moench/Kelly Jones team. Interiors by Tony Daniel, which Sandu Florea inked with his ass.
A page from Paul Pope’s unbelievably good Strange Adventures strip in DC’s awesome, AWESOME Wednesday Comics, a full-blown broadsheet newspaper with work by a couple dozen of the best artists and writers working.
Gustave Moreau, Herakles and the Hydra