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The Voord

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Posts posted by The Voord

  1. On 11/11/2022 at 4:11 PM, Bronty said:

    Thanks Terry.    I wonder.   I do see a couple tiny apparent paste ups but not enough to really convince me that it couldn't be production art either.    hm 

    It's a quick camera phone shot.  The cover, as printed, does show tape and paste-ups more clearly.  I'm not 100% convinced on this one, but don't always keep up to date on things like this (possibly) re-surfacing . . .

  2. On 11/11/2022 at 3:49 PM, Bronty said:

    I don't have any particular knowledge on this, but can you post the exact description?

    Description reads:

    "(Page 18) Reed, Sue, Johnny and Ben saw their early adventures veer decidedly into sci-fi, as shown on this original cover art for Fantastic Four No. 2, etc."

     

  3. Just received the latest oversized Taschen Marvel Comics release that reprints the first 20 issues of Fantastic Four, plus Annual # 1 and house ads.

    The introductory essay features lots of original art scans, including two unpublished covers and the published #2 which, if the description is correct, is the original art, not a recreation.

    If this does, indeed, exist . . . it's a new one on me.

    Thoughts?

     

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  4. An original movie campaign painting by Tom Chantrell for the unmade Hammer film, A SCENT OF NEW-MOWN HAY, circa 1969. Based on a book by John Blackburn, the story featured a Cold War setting and a deadly virus that transforms females into mutant beings. Chantrell's visualisation shows the mutation in process and in typical fashion (for both Chantrell & Hammer), the campaign artwork features some over-the-top nudity (that would never have been allowed on any kind of General Release material).
    To help secure financial backing for proposed Hammer Films projects, artist Tom Chantrell would frequently be called-upon to create artworks that would best visualize the kind of movies they were looking to produce.
    With a plot featuring Cold War intrigue, Nazi mad scientists, and a pandemic that threatens to destroy humanity by mutating people into fungoid monsters, it is not hard to see why A SCENT OF NEW-MOWN HAY (1958) became a bestseller on both sides of the Atlantic and an instant science-fiction classic.

     

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  5. CATACOMBS (1988) Movie Poster comp by Lee MacLeod.

    Catacombs (also known as Curse IV: The Ultimate Sacrifice) is a 1988 American horror film directed by David Schmoeller and starring Tim Van Patten, Ian Abercrombie, and Laura Schaefer.

    "In the 17th century, an order of monks in Italy capture and entomb a demon that has possessed a member of their group. 400 years later, school teacher Elizabeth Magrino (Laura Schaefer) visits the monastery in order to do some research. What she and the current monks do not realize is that the evil hiding within the catacombs has unwittingly been released."

     

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  6. OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN  (1983) movie poster comp by Lee MacLeod.

    OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN was a 1983 Canadian-American horror film directed by George P. Cosmatos and starring Peter Weller. It was written by Brian Taggert and based on the novel The Visitor by Chauncey G. Parker III. It was filmed on location in Montreal, Quebec but set in New York City. The film won two awards at the Paris Film Festival.

    "Mild-mannered everyman Bart Hughes has a great life in New York City. When his wife and child leave for a vacation, Bart stays behind to work on a project that should get him a promotion. Some sort of rodent in his basement starts to bother him and consumes his time. Bart becomes obsessed with it and eventually starts losing his mind while trying to kill the creature, destroying most of his house in the process. The film's title comes from research Bart does and which he shares at a dinner party, stating erroneously that rats have no known origin."

     

     

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  7. Vic Fair prototype artwork for the highly-regarded 1981 movie, THE FRENCH LIEUTENANT’S WOMAN.

    For his prototype artwork, displaying a high degree of finish (for what is effectively a prelim), British artist Vic Fair chose a simple but very effective design of the Meryl Streep character’s portrait enveloping a key moment from the movie. As good as the idea might have been, the design was rejected in favor of what appears to be a mostly photographic image for the resulting movie poster campaign (that still managed to retain much of Fair’s original concept).

    “In the history of British film posters there are few characters as significant and influential as the designer and artist Vic Fair. During a career that spanned close to forty years, many of them spent as part of the same ever-evolving agency, Vic lent his inimitable style to several of the most iconic British movie posters ever printed. He designed marketing campaigns for most of the big film studios and distributors, including for the likes of Hammer Films and all of the posters for the very British ‘Confessions…’ series of bawdy comedies. Over the years, Vic also developed a strong working relationship with many of the British film industry’s leading directors, including Nicolas Roeg, Terry Gilliam and Michael Winner.

    One of the things that really set Vic apart from his contemporaries were his skills at developing concepts that were unique and stood out from what was often a sea of other ideas, depending on how many design agencies a distributor might have been working with. He had a natural talent for concepts that used ingenious juxtaposition of elements to create surprising layouts and he wasn’t one to shy away from risqué concepts.

     

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  8. On 10/13/2022 at 7:01 AM, mtlevy1 said:

    Awesome set of strips

    If you are in touch with Mr. Jordan - can you ask him who might have helped him ink this one?

    Also, maybe folks have educated opinions?

    Mark

    P.S. Sorry for any kinked necks - it is landscape on my laptop...

     

     

     

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    Sydney Jordan tells me that an artist named Thayen Rich provided the finishes on your daily.

  9. Tom Chantrell's finished Movie Poster painting of the 1962 sword & sandals epic, THE 300 SPARTANS. Image measures approximately 28" x 21".
    Essentially true story of how Spartan king Leonidas led an extremely small army of Greek Soldiers (300 of them his personal body guards from Sparta) to hold off an invading Persian army now thought to have numbered 250,000. The actual heroism of those who stood (and ultimately died) with Leonidas helped shape the course of Western Civilization, allowing the Greek city states time to organize an army which repelled the Persians. Set in 480 BC.
    Extract from a Frank Miller interview (when questioned about his later retelling of the story): ". . . it was a product of my entire life. I’ve loved the story ever since I saw The 300 Spartans, starring Richard Egan, when I was a young kid in the ’60s, and I researched it as thoroughly as I could. It’s as pure a story of heroism as I could find. Our version would probably be the Alamo, in terms of the overwhelming size of the enemy."

     

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  10. Tom Chantrell’s original (prototype) movie poster painting for Elia Kazan’s 1969 movie, THE ARRANGEMENT. Despite turning in a nicely painted image for consideration to spearhead the UK cinema front-of-house advertising campaign, British distributors for this American-produced film opted to go the route of a photographic movie poster image and Chantrell’s artwork remained unused . I bought this painting from the Chantrell family, via their art agent.

     

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  11. On 10/14/2022 at 1:04 AM, grapeape said:

    I'm interested in what people think about censoring art. Those are the takes I'm looking for on this OA thread.

    Well, a few years ago CGC here deleted my thread (and I got a temporary ban) for posting the image of a movie poster painting I bought . . . the printed poster from which would have been displayed on front-of-house cinemas where people of all ages would have seen it at the time of the movie's release!

    THE VICTORS (1963) - movie poster painting, in Terry Doyle's 2. MOVIE POSTER paintings Comic Art Gallery Room (comicartfans.com)

    What do I think about that?  I think that some people have an over-active imagination and see what they want to see . . . 

    Bit like someone looking up at the skies and seeing the shape of a face in the clouds.

    Nah, they're just clouds . . . 

     

  12. On 10/13/2022 at 7:01 AM, mtlevy1 said:

    Awesome set of strips

    If you are in touch with Mr. Jordan - can you ask him who might have helped him ink this one?

    Also, maybe folks have educated opinions?

    Mark

    P.S. Sorry for any kinked necks - it is landscape on my laptop...

     

     

     

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    It's from a story called 'Basebuilder' (1981), when Jeff Hawke became Lance McLane.  Not sure who assisted but I'll ask Sydney next time we speak.

     

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  13. During the mid-1980s, Titan UK reprinted a two-volume selection of classic strips from the long-running UK science-fiction strip, Jeff Hawke, by Sydney Jordan.  This was my first exposure to the strip, which was originally carried by a single newspaper, The Daily Express, that neither myself nor my family ever bought.

    The two reprint editions were given a touch of class up-front by sporting Brian Bolland covers (Bolland had assisted Sydney Jordan on one of the latter Jeff Hawke strips, so there was a connection of sorts).

    The first two strips of the reprint Volume One, 'Overlord' and 'Survival' (circa 1960) saw Jordan's layouts being finished by an artist named Colin Andrew.  Andrew took inspiration for his finished art by channeling the works of EC artists such as Wally Wood, Al Williamson, Frank Frazetta and even Johnny Craig.

    This morning, I received two daily 'Overlord' originals directly from Mr. Jordan (now in his 90s), following an earlier purchase of several months ago of six 'Survival' episodes.  These would appear to be the last examples from the two stories as he's now exhausted his search and can find no more.

    Larger scans can be seen in my CAF Galleries at:

    Comic Art Gallery of Terry Doyle at ComicArtFans.com

     

     

     

     

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