Precept upon precept, line upon line
Occasionally, one individual handles more than one of these tasks this is more common in independent comics than in books published by one of the larger concerns but whether by one hand or many, each job contributes to the finished art.
Let's use a piece from my Common Elements gallery to illustrate how the pencil, ink, and color artists all add their unique talents to a single artwork.
Comic Art Friday regulars have seen these pencils before. This is Dave Hoover, known for his work on such series as DC's Starman and Marvel's Captain America, with a beautiful rendering of a pair of psi-powered heroines: the X-Men's Phoenix, and Looker from Batman's Outsiders.
After Dave created the original pencils, the page traveled to the drawing table of Bob Almond, one of my favorite inkers to commission. (Bob's published work has appeared most recently in Wildstorm's A Nightmare on Elm Street series and Marvel's Annihilation: Conquest - Quasar.) The completed page art looks like this, after the Almond touch.
Ah, but we're not done yet. Colorist Blake Wilkie, who like both Dave Hoover and Bob Almond is represented by Bob Shaw's Serendipity Art Sales, applies the magic of digital color to produce an image that would look spectacular on the cover of Common Elements Comics. (Hey, now...!)
Here at last, we can see another common element that our fetching heroines share they're both redheads.
About 27 centuries ago, the prophet Isaiah wrote:
Precept upon precept, precept upon precept, line upon line, line upon line, here a little, there a little.As appropriate as his words are, I doubt that Isaiah knew anything about the process of creating comic art. But you never know. Inspiration is a marvelous, mysterious thing.
And that's your Comic Art Friday.
Labels: Comic Art Friday
9 insisted on sticking two cents in:
I love that. I don't believe that I have ever heard that line before.
Now you have to find a tattoo artist to tattoo the the final piece onto your chest. Or something. I think it would make a great tattoo, anyway.
Shelli: That passage is a favorite of mine. It's really talking about divine revelation, but it's applicable to so many aspects of life. We learn and grow by tiny steps far more often than by monumental leaps.
If you think I'm the kind of guy who'd be getting anything tattooed onto my body, sugarlump, you don't know me very well. :)
I don't think I've ever been called Sugarlump before.
Okay, well, no tattoo thing then.
Shelli: When you get your own personal nickname, it's a sign that you've arrived.
Tattoos are like strawberries. I know that a lot of people like -- even love -- them, but they're just not for me. Different strokes. :)
So you don't care if I have one, then? Would that totally ruin your image of me?
Shelli: You wouldn't get rid of me that easily. ;)
Someone else having a tattoo (or several tattoos, as far as that goes) doesn't trouble me a bit. Just like I don't get queasy if someone else puts strawberries on her plate. I just wouldn't care to replicate the experience.
Your body, your canvas. I do, after all, admire art. ;)
Ok, you two, get a room already;-)
Bob: All it took was the mention of the word "art," and up pops a real live artist! Ever design a tattoo, Bob?
Not really...closest I got was being commissioned to ink Sal's BP tatoo design:
http://www.almondink.com/gallery/bptat.html
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