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Archive for May, 2010
Alan Kupperberg | Comics Autobiographer
May 25th
Alan Kupperberg is perhaps on of the more versatile artists to have worked in the medium. His long held infatuation and career in the comics is a testament of an unending search for the beauty of essence that the graphic story narrative strives for. Though he no longer worked at Continuity when I arrived in late 1975, we met often at parties and gatherings of the comics community. While his brother Paul worked his way up the corporate ladder as writer and editor at DC, Alan bounced around through the entire range of publishers and studios operated by the more notable comics legends of our time, and forged a career that’s touched virtually every outlet for comics art in existence.
The best way to get an idea of the scope of Alan’s career is through his own website and also his Wikipedia biography. But more than the countless mainstream Superhero comics that he’s drawn, and the array of comic strips and commercial illustration under his belt, the works which most stand out are his biographical comics, some of which are viewable in the Profusely Illustrated section of his site. It’s here that Alan puts his storytelling and drawing talent to the utmost use in chronicling the life and times of the comics industry, as it touched him throughout his career. Alan doesn’t mince words. He tells the stories as he remembers them and the impression they made on him. His personal experiences and the candor with which he tells them are the fuel. His point of view was not uncommon at all in his circles at the time. The difference between Alan and other colleagues is that he felt the stories of the comics community were worthy to become comics themselves. It is a wonderful chronology of a time in the industry that no one else has put to words and pictures quite as he has.
We’ve become very good friends over the years since my leaving Continuity in the early 1990′s. In that friendship, I’ve come to know a remarkably humble, witty and delightfully good natured colleague with a great measure of unheralded craftsmanship and talent that doesn’t receive its due regard in the more populist comics media of our time.
Alan Kupperberg - Portraits of the Creators Sketchbook.
Old Martian Manhunter Convention Sketch
May 25th
From 1977. Via Will King, who purchased it on eBay about a year ago.

Commissions in progress
May 14th
Detail of Wildfire and Dawnstar in Xmen 141 cover reconstruction, after John Byrne. Click to enlarge.
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Detail of figure from Tarzan commission while it was in progress. Click to enlarge
Gentleman Jim Mooney | Print Edition
May 13th
Daniel Best‘s latest foray into biographical books on comics creators, Gentleman Jim Mooney, is now available in print at Lulu.com.
Gentleman Jim Mooney was written with the direct involvement of Jim Mooney. It features rare and unpublished art, direct from Mooney’s files, plus previously unseen personal photos. The book features contributions from Steve Gerber, Gene Colan, Roy Thomas, Joe Sinnott and others, plus all-new art as Sinnott, Norm Breyfogle, Bob Almond, Mark McKenna, Jim Tournas and Bob McLeod exclusively ink previously unpublished Mooney pencils. Also features is Mooney’s niece Libby Titus, wife of Steely Dan Founder Donald Fagen plus an introduction by Stan “The Man” Lee.
Published in conjunction with Blaq Books, it promises to be 111 masterful pages on one of the more memorable icons of comic art in the Silver Age.
Order your copies at Lulu.com and help support the chronicling of comics creator giants by Daniel Best.
Star Reach Day on Grantbridge Street
May 12th
For those who remember Joe Bloke’s Grantbridge Street and other Misadventures from A Groovy Diversion, Joe’s recent posts have been part of a Star Reach day, where he brought a few stories from the Michael Friedrich‘s ground breaking and visionary independent comic book series of the 1970′s.
The three stories uploaded from Star Reach begin with Howard Chaykin’s Cody Starbuck and end with P. Craig Russell’s Parsifal. Both stories are iconic creations from two legendary artists/writers at the onset of their foray into independent creator owned work. These properties are amongst the rare ones of that era which set the stage for what’s become the thriving independent comics market of today. Follow the links for a taste of fine comics history at one of its more critical junctions.
Sandwiched between the two, Joe ran my one contribution to Star Reach, The Old, New and Future Testament, produced at one of the more volatile times of my career back in late 1977, as told in The San Fransisco Treat at Steve Leialoha’s abode, who also colored the story. This is one of the first few times this work has been mentioned in the comics industry or when Star Reach is referenced. Most industry and fan reactions to it have been closer to outright fright on the emotional scale. It seems that popular culture of the 1970′s was not very keen on such a mixture of religious history, pseudo-hedonistic imagery and futuristic vision. It is to Joe’s big credit that he breaks this unspoken taboo on this work in his wonderful blog and phenomenal archive of Bronze Age comics. It’s also good to see that things have changed since the fearful days in mainstream pop culture. The aim of this story was exactly for that purpose, to allow us one day to candidly open the book on our history and spiritual aspirations, without fear of criticism or recrimination from hard-line thought systems and creeds.
I like Joe’s title change from “Final” to “Future”, as it better reflects the overall scope of the work. The scans for the post are in better high-rez and original color than the ones in our gallery, which had undergone some Photoshop manipulation and lost detail and grittiness. So I highly recommend having a fresh look at these pages.
I also took the opportunity to ask Joe for a scan of the editorial that Mike Friedrich wrote for it. I haven’t had a copy of this issue to include the editorial with the art published in the galleries. So this is a good opportunity to finally have this as a reference on this site. The image to the right shows the original editorial page with the paragraphs that reference this story marked in red. Below is a close-up of the text, spliced together for this presentation.
Much gratitude to you, Joe, for being the first to dare bring this story to light in recent times, and for the very nice and warm words accompanying the post. You are a treasure as is the fabulous online museum you curate.
Here’s the link again to this story at Grantbridge Street and other Misadventures.
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Unemployed Man Getting a Little PR
May 7th
I’ve sent out press releases for the upcoming Adventures of Unemployed Man to a handful of comics news sites, but doing these one by one is a bit of a chore. Which brings me to wonder if we don’t have a comics industry news wire agency, where a press release can be sent out to all the comics news sites at once, like in the real world. There are so many good news sites out there that it’s perhaps about time someone also establishes such a service. If it does exist and I’m not aware of it, then please do let me know.
In the meantime here are a few places that picked up the release:
- 20th Century Danny Boy: Daniel Best, one of our site complex’s oldest and most dedicated friends, and exemplary activist on behalf of the comics creator community, offers an enthusiastic response to news of the project.
- Bleeding Cool: Rich Johnston’s cool comics news site, a subsidiary of Avatar Press, carries the press release and gives it a creator oriented title. On the forum thread for that item, Josh Adams, son of Neal Adams, makes an appearance to voice his enthusiasm for the creators working on the project, surreptitiously leaving out Joe Rubinstein and myself. Josh seems to have an ax to grind since leaving his less than flattering comments on the Supergod item Rich Johnston ran some time ago. I tried then to explain to him that there’s more to his frustration than he even understands himself right now, but it apparently didn’t sink it well enough to help him overcome the urge to continue poking. So, maybe Josh just needs a little hug or something, He is just a growing boy, after all.
- First Comics News: Rik Offenberger and company’s excellent new site, setting up to also conduct an interview on the project, perhaps coming soon.
- Comics Bulletin: Jason Brice and Jason Sacks leading comics news, reviews and commentary site, formerly Silver Bullet.
- Comics Should be Good: The Comic Book Resources blog runs a nice profile of the project by Brian Cronin.
- Millarworld Forums: Posted the press release there and received a couple of nice comments.
That about covers it for now. The press release needs to make the rounds but I’m presently too busy doing the actual artwork for the project. That’s one good reason for needing a comics community news wire agency.
Martian Manhunter’s Favorite Blog
May 7th
The special affinity I’ve cultivated with The Idol-Head of Diabolu Martian Manhunter blog appears to have become reciprocal, to the degree that I’ve become perhaps the creator most related to, or identified with, this wonderful ongoing chronicle of the life and times of J’onn J’onzz. And it seems to become more so when the rotating banner and design of the site lands on the one I was inspired to produce for it couple of years ago, as is the case now.
As I’ve become so busy drawing actual comic books again, rather than just talking about them, and have far less time to post than I’d like to, I haven’t been able to respond to a series of posts there relating to my work. But this is a good time to point to a couple of items that carry an added biographical value. Presently at the top of the site is Frank-Lee Delano’s short biographical profile of myself that sums up my comics career and some extra-curricular activities quite nicely, Creators of Mars: Michael Nasser/Netzer. Some time ago he also ran a summation and links to the Whizzard fanzine interview I gave back the days before leaving the U.S. for Israel. 1980 Whizzard Fanzine Cover Art by Michael Nasser and Terry Austin. This interview was not the most cohesive I’ve given and it came at a volatile time when I was wrestling with some rather big ideas and attempting to articulate them for the first time, while running against the wind of the workplace I conducted the interview from, which was Continuity Studios of 1980. So, it is interesting, in hindsight, that Whizzard decided to run it at all, and even gave it a rather complimentary introduction. I’ve been wondering when someone in comics will notice this interview or comment on it because it does stand out in its ambition, at least, if not in the actual clarity with which it’s expressed. A couple of additional posts, here and here, feature some convention sketches I’ve done with the Martian over the years.
I know that all this isn’t enough to make Idol-Head a favorite Martian Manhunter blog. It only adds a touch of appreciation to all of the other marvelous content there. Frank-Lee Delano doesn’t miss a beat and is dedicated to this site as if it was was a primary bread and butter enterprise. So do visit and have an updated look of what’s new with the resurrected Martian. The darkest days appear to be behind the DC Universe of late, and old favorites are shining in brightest day again, as is the Idol-Head of Diabolu. Seems like a good sign for aficionados of illuminated environs.
The Adventures of Unemployed Man
May 6th
Coming this Fall
Ramona Fradon, Rick Veitch and Michael Netzer in an Origen & Golan epic satire…
Click image for full screen navigation with image scaling and scrolling, courtesy of ISSUU.
An 80-page, full-color superhero comic satire from New York Times bestselling authors Origen & Golan (Goodnight Bush), In this hilarious and poignant book, Unemployed Man finds a new sidekick, Plan B, and teams up with other everyday heroes to fight The Human Resource, Outsourcerer, The Invisible Hand and other economic villains ripped straight from today’s headlines.
THE ADVENTURES OF UNEMPLOYED MAN features art by Ramona Fradon, Rick Veitch, Michael Netzer, Josef Rubinstein and Terry Beatty.
Origen and Golan deliver a riveting, hilarious and moving satire on the economic malaise of our time. The book is a brilliant comics rendition by Ramona Fradon (two of its four chapters), Rick Veitch (one chapter), and myself drawing the last chapter along with a few additional pages in the others. Joe Rubinstein and Terry Beatty share the inking chores. The art morphs in style from Golden Age in the beginning towards a more Silver Age look leading to the triumphant victory of Unemployed Man and the Just Great Society over the evil economic menace. The story is both sad and funny at once. A brilliant satire in exquisite comics iconography, of how the world economy has become of the greatest oppressors of our time.
Now available for discounted advance orders from Amazon.








































