Showing posts with label Kirby Art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kirby Art. Show all posts

30 August 2017

Odd Encounters with The King (King Kirby 098)


Previously, we heard from Ahmet Zappa comments Jack Kirby had made while dining with his father, Frank. Despite the colossal Oddness inherent in this situation, we skipped blithely on by with a promise to come back to it later.
(Let's be honest - there's only 2 more entries in the King Kirby 100, so we won't be getting back to everything during this event. But i've ingested so much Kirby this month, that you can be sure that he'll be a popular topic for months to come.)

But back to the subject at hand-



Yup. That's Frank Zappa & Jack Kirby doing the buddy/buddy bit in Zappa's living room. And this wasn't a singular occurrence. Though rather shocked by Zappa's language in his recordings, Kirby liked the man himself and was a recurring dinner guest at the Zappa house.
Zappa was obviously a Kirby fan, having written a song based on one of his old monster tales*, and even taking out the first rock & roll comic book ads in Kirby's books, like Thor #150:


At one point, they even considered collaborating on a project - Jack Kirby doing a comic strip called Valley Girl, a concept that Frank's daughter, Moon Unit, would go on to popularize later-


It always seems that talking about Kirby & Zappa leads to Kirby & Paul MacCartney, here with Linda...



Younger readers may not remember that Paul MacCartney & Wings had an early number entitled Magneto And The Titanium Man (which also featured the Crimson Dynamo).


It was an odd little song in which thing singer's rivals in love manifest to him as super villains. And when they performed it, the stage looked like this:


Jack wasn't really a fan of their music - he was more big band, and wasn't expecting MacCartney to stop the show at this point and introduce him to the audience. Even with a minor name flub (quickly corrected by Linda) it was a fairly huge thing for the time. Most surprising for Kirby since he was seated next to Kirk Douglas and at first thought the spotlight was for the actor.
But what's really amazing out of that night is this drawing that Jack did for them-



Steve Sherman, one of Kirby's primary assistants and party to arrangements at the event, informs us that this drawing was done in the gap between when Kirby was called and when the car arrived - about 45 minutes.
Amazing.

Now, one might think that all of this lead to the drawing like this:



But that meme actually dates back more than a decade earlier, to 1965 in Fantastic Four #34. A mysterious package has arrived for Ben...


page art by Jack Kirby & Chic Stone from Fantastic Four #34 (1965)

===

*("Billy the Mountain" on The Mother's Just Another Band From L.A., performed with Flo & Eddie (Of Turtles fame and Illegal, Immoral & Fattening infamy) after "Spragg, The Living Mountain" (Journey Into Mystery#68))

18 August 2017

What's on Your wall? (King Kirby 067)


Very simple post this morning, just one piece by Jack Kirby. This one is a bit different than most for the simple fact that it wasn't drawn & painted for anything other than personal pleasure. Jack drew it and then Mike Thibodeaux inked the piece, after which Jack returned to the piece with his water colours. The painting hung on Kirby's wall at home where he and the family could enjoy it.
Eventually it wound up with art collector Vince Oliva, who offers much of his collection for viewing via an online gallery at Comic Art Fans.
Both a Bravo! and a personal thanks to Mr. Oliva for letting the superb work in his collection be seen.

As always, click on the image to enjoy a larger view of Kirby goodness:


Hulk gets lost for Jack Kirby's personal amusement (1982)

15 August 2017

No Wonder that Deadline Doom was Dreaded (King Kirby 056)


An Artist In Contention With A Contentious Monster.
This is unarguably my favorite Jack Kirby drawing of Jack Kirby. I'm just going to leave it laying here and see if it doesn't become your favorite, too.


Jack Kirby by Jack Kirby (1978)

14 August 2017

Green - Not Just For Anger Anymore (King Kirby 053)


It's Monday once again, and usually we have our Blue Monday feature. But both Jack Kirby and the King Kirby 100 are generally Safe For Work. Next week, Blue Monday will return, but not as a part of the KK100. This week, we have another special edition of


One place Kirby played around with slightly more adult content was in a couple of his collages. Unfortunately, these are old and glue rippled, no longer in the best of shape. It almost makes me want to start an insane project of trying to identify all of the source images in order to recreate the collages anew.
Yeah... Insane.
Let's just take a look and push those thoughts away.



Goddesses by Jack Kirby (1960s)

13 August 2017

Mighty Fine Jack (King Kirby 050)


We heard Jack Kirby talk about not having the right outlook for fine art, lasting only 1 day at the famed Pratt Institute. But that doesn't mean he didn't indulge in painting for his leisure, nor that he did not have the facility for "Fine Art". There was simply too much art bottled up in the man to release it that slowly.
When painting, he often favored what is, for me, the hardest medium to work with - water colours. I can only assume his speed helped him there. I have to cheat. (I work digitally, and so can alter the laws of physics governing paint drying and dynamics) That he so well mastered such a difficult type of painting in his spare time just impresses me all the more.
So let us take a pause on this fine Sunday afternoon and just enjoy the paintings of Jack Kirby. Not surprisingly, some were combination of inks and watercolours, for expanded comic style paintings of familiar(ish) superheroes like Captain America...


 ...and Coal Tiger (You can call him Black Panther)



Some combined his collage work, too, as these paintings of Metron and Darkseid of the New Gods:


 The gods roamed through Kirby's paintings...


Some of his paintings from the late 60s, before heading over to DC to unleash the New Gods foreshadow his work to come. Given the time frame and psychedelic styling, i call them his Acid Gods, but Jack didn't need the LSD to create them.




Or, how about Acid Kree?


 Or a home for the Acid Gods?


Captain Glory looks like he knew those acid gods...




This is delightfully titled When It Is Spring:


The Mechanoid appeared briefly to ask a question previously, here's a better look:






Probably one of the oddest pairings for me is Jack Kirby and the NFL. Here's Fran Tarkenton and a true Fantasy Football League player:


Yeah. We're gonna have to come back to that...

Always finish big, they say. So here's a Galactic Head (Not to be confused with a Celestial Skull as we saw in the first Guardians of the Galaxy movie - but that traces back to Jack, too)


 all art by Jack Kirby, painted over time

08 August 2017

There's Somthing About Ben (King Kirby 029)


You know who Jack Kirby liked? Jack liked Ben Grimm. Oh, yes - The King loved The Thing. Publicly, he identified himself with Ben, which makes perfect sense. Ben Grimm, the scrapped with the pure heart who often finds himself the moral core of the team. But Jack just plain had fun with Ben:


Ben makes great Convention Art, with or without the Doctor's help 


Yes, that's Little Ben Fauntleroy. (youngsters, look up Little Lord Fauntleroy) If that's too dated for you, how about some cowboy Ben?


Even Holiday Ben:


Cave dweller me is rather fond of Ben & Friend here:







Thanks, Jack.

Ben Grimm sketches by Jack Kirby (various & unknown)