Showing posts with label Bill Holman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Holman. Show all posts

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Sunday Funnies - A Retrospective, 5 of 5!

Richard Marshall and Bill Blackbeard's grand "The Sunday Funnies" from 1978 comes to a close this week with coverage of the 1940's.  The decade of WWII and when America truly reached maturity.  Not modernity maybe, but certainly we knew who we were then, like that "All in the Family" theme song says.

The apex of the Sunday Funnies before they started their slow decline into banality.  Sure there were still plenty of highlights to come.  "Peanuts", "B.C.", Doonesbury", "Calvin & Hobbes", "The Far Side" and a few others but for the most part, more and more mainstream guidelines and financial shifts in importance and competition from other mass media limited the gorgeous tabloid, four-color landscape from here on out.

Luckily, thanks to publication like these by Messrs Marshall and Blackbeard and mass ready inexpensive communication media like the World Wild Iintertube, we'll never lose the art these masters created.  

From just a few decades ago, but seeming so far away, here's the mastery of Chester Gould ("Dick Tracy"), Burne Hogarth ("Tarzan"), Bill Holman ("Smokey Stover"), Clifford McBride *"Napoleon"), Bill Freyse ("The Nut Bros.", "Our Boarding House"), Jerry Siegel/Joe Shuster ("Superman"), Hal Foster ("Prince Valiant"), Milton Caniff ("Terry & the Pirates"), Ham Fisher ("Joe Palooka"), Al Capp ("Li'l Abner") and Walt Kelly ("Pogo") all side by side and delivered to your doorstep for mere pennies.  

There's lots of reasons that "the good 'ol days" weren't really so good.  This is one of the reasons they were great.











Talk to you soon.

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Nemo Returns!!

Sunday Funnies, Kiddoes and the return of my sharing of "Nemo: the Classic Comics Library"! After the first years run of this great magazine published by Richard Marschall and the good folks at Fantagraphics, they ambitiously published an annual. Still all in black & white, but printhed in a BIG 11x17 format. They never published a second annual, but this first was impressive. Focusing on the "Screw-Ball" comics that were so popular in the 1920's and 30's, it spotlighted the works of Milt Gross, Bill Holman, Rube Goldberg and the seldom-seen comic work of Dr. Seuss! Here's the Editorial, forwarding chapter and a chapter on Holman's "Smokey Stover" and "Spooky". Enjoy!














Talk to you soon.

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