Showing posts with label Carl Barks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Carl Barks. Show all posts

Monday, March 28, 2011

Whitney Museum and the Comic Book!

As I continue to share my scans of the Whitney Museum of Art comic art exhibit co-magazine, the chapters veer from comic strips (which I like to highlight on Sundays here) to the other worlds of cartoons, the comic book and animation, so I'll keep these posts going and conclude this week.

Here's the first of two chapters on the comic book. "Representing Force: from Superman to the Fantastic Four".

Enjoy!





Talk to you soon.

Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Nemo #7: Carl Barks part 2...the "Year of the Duck"

"Nemo: the Classic Comics Library" continues it's first year anniversary with more of it's spotlight on "Duck" comic great Carl Barks and the 50th anniversary of Donald Duck.













Talk to you soon.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Nemo #7: Carl Barks part 1 and Donald Duck

"Nemo: the Classic Comics Library" issue #7 from 1984 celebrated their first anniversary with a bang!

Carl Barks was finally garnering recognition for all his decades of work on Walt Disney comic books, most notably the line of Duck comics. Considered "The Good Duck Man", Carl added to the mythos with his creation of such characters as Uncle Scrooge.

Being that 1984 was also the 50th anniversary of "Donald Duck", "Nemo" kicked into full swing and even sprang for a few pages in glorious 4-Color!

Here's a glimpse at the Duck-laden issue...

...an editorial by Richard Marschall on the excitement of a meeting of minds. Carl Barks and "Mickey Mouse" comics' Floyd Gottfredson.

Here's the first 4 articles in Nemo's Carl Barks Tribute....enjoy!

Beginning with a conversation between Barks and Gottfredson.





...more on Barks...




...more...FROM Barks...



...and a look at how his training in animation benefited his work in comics.






...more coming tomorrow with some of Barks' original Duck oil paintings.

Talk to you soon.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Thursday Comics - Lost Carl Barks and Alfred Andriola and "The Yankee Rangers"

Here's more of the amazing articles featured in "Nemo: the Classic Comics Library" #1 dated June 1983.

A single page devoted to a then-newly discovered piece of work by the great Carl Barks. At the time Carl was still with us here in the land of the living and had recently started to achieve praise for his decades of anonymous work as "The GOOD Duck Artist" in Walt Disney comic books. I'm glad he got to hear the "Thanks" of fans while he was still around.

And a tribute to a forgotten strip that only ran for a few weeks in 1942 called "The Yankee Rangers" by the prolific, if not widely known, Alfred Andriola. What a wonderful time to read the "Funnies" it must have been, when even the unsuccessful entries to the comics pages were this damn solid!










I'll conclude Nemo #1 tomorrow. See y'all then!

Saturday, March 27, 2010

The GOOD Duck Artist - Carl Barks!

Born March 27, 1901, Carl Barks would have been 109 years old today!

During my series on the "History of Golden Age Comic Books" I am focusing on the super hero genre, but there were a lot of other things happening in other fields of comic books at the time. Like a lot of comics, they were often published without a byline, especially in the field of humor comics. Even more especially in the line of Disney comics.

Walt was after all working hard to "brand" everything that came out of his studio, so most every thing simply said "by Walt Disney". This was a great way to gain a footprint in the publics' consciousness, but the downside was, allot of great artists went unheralded. The deal was though, that even we feeble minded comics readers could tell one issue was drawn by someone different that another issue, and though he was unidentified, Carl became known for his work on Donald Duck stories as "The GOOD Duck Artist". The public discovered his true identity as comics fandom grew in the 1960's and 1970's, and fandom was able to let Carl know how much he was appreciated.

Carl Barks went to work for the Walt Disney studio in 1935 working as an inbetweener animator and eventually a story man, working closely with Donald Duck director Jack Hannah. So closely, in fact, that when Western Publishing was doing it's first Donald Duck comic book for United States publication, it was Jack who did half the book and Carl who did the other.

By 1942, Carl was becoming unhappy with the war time working conditions at the studio (money was tight and the war department took over a lot of the studio to produce content for them), and he had also suffered from am on-going sinus condition which was aggravated by the air conditioning in the studio. He opted to resign his job at Disney and move to Hemet, CA. (still the arm pit of the Inland Empire) and become a chicken farmer.

He didn't do very well as a chicken guy, so to subsidize himself he contacted Western Publishing again to see if they had any more work. Carl went to work on Donald Duck comics and didn't stop until 1966!

Carl's was influenced by adventure story tellers like Hal Foster's work on Prince Valiant, so his duck stories began to more and more incorporate adventure into the humor of Duckburg. His classic stories of Donald Duck and his nephews going on grand adventures are legendary in the world of comics. At one point he invented a one-shot character for a Christmas story, Donald's Uncle Scrooge McDuck. This one-shot character took off and Carl's Uncle Scrooge is probably the most famous Disney character NOT to be created for animation, but who was really born from a Hemet chicken farmers pen.

There are lots of bigger appreciators of Barks than I who know a lot more about the incredibly detailed stories he did. Lots of folks still talking about him 10 years after he passed away too.

Doug Grey over at his great blog "The Greatest Ape" has done a number of postings about Carl, check them here!

Coincidentally, over at the "Ten Cent Dreams" blog, Lysdexicus is focusing this week on comics with giant robot antagonists and protagonists, and just yesterday spotlighted a Barks Uncle Scrooge/giant robot story! Check it out here!

Here's my contribution to the Barks birthday! Click the pics to embiggen...you won't be sorry!

Lots of stuff to see, but hell man, it's Saturday! Take your computer out to the back yard and sit under a tree and have some adventure with Barks' Ducks!






















Thanks Carl! For taking the time to fill your comics with so much!

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