Showing posts with label General Motors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label General Motors. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

The General Feeling

Wednesday Advertising Day.

One of the more enduring legends of comic book history is the idea that Will Eisner was a good businessman. The evidence of that seems to be the fact that he sold his comic shop to his partner Iger for a tidy sum when he got the opportunity to start his own newspaper insert series The Spirit, the fact that he always kept all the original art for The Spirit 'knowing' that one day it would be worth a lot of money (when all around him most publishers were throwing 'their' original art away), the way he set up several comic illustrated magazines about safety and maintanance in the army in WW II, and the way he built that into a little empire of informational comics called American Visuals (producing, above all the army's PS magazine). The ony problem with that, is that for all his enterpreneurial flair, he never became very rich and in fact, the number of books produced by American Visuals uncovered sofar can be counted on the fingers of four hands. Especially the claim that he worked exclusively for General Motor's Information Rack Services seems to have been an overstatement at least. The majority of booklets from this service seem to have been book condensations or flower or recipe books made without any illustrations whatsoever, by all sorts of companies. And some of those that did use comics (like the Steel! booklet I shared a couple of weeks ago by Lou Fine) were produced by a totally different company. So imagine my surprise when I came across not one, but two Americal Visuals produced 16 page books using not comic style illustrations by boted comic bok and newspaper strip illustrator Alex Kortzky. As far as I know, Kotzky never worked for PS, so he must have been especially assigned for these books (and maybe even more). As with the Philip Morris ad series 'Duke' Handy, he did not long after these, Kotzky does a bang-up job on them. The first one is signed on one of the later page, but the second one is filled with typical Kotzky shots and poses. In fact, it reminds me more of his later Appartment 3G strip than the more Milton Caniff influenced 'Duke'Handy (which I will show in full someday, it's just a lot of scanning, you know).

I was surprised to find some comments recently on one of my favorite comic book groups by people declaring that they found the later work of Lou Fine dull and bland and too slick. I must confess, I like the slick work better than the showy and more effeninate work he did in the forties. Kotzky's work here is slick too and again I have to confess I like it better than either the work he did in the early forties imitating Fine (so much so, that some of his pages have long been attributed to Fine) or the work on Appartment 3G from the seventies onward, which to my eyes look as if a costume designer has accidentally walked unto the comic page.

So, not one, but two samples of books done by American Visuals. I should dig up a third one I have with a more comical story (possibly by Klaus Nordling) and scan that as well. If anyone has or knows of any more samples, I'd love to have them as well.


















Wednesday, October 20, 2010

The General Principle

Thursday Yet more Advertising Day.

Here is the promised comic strip booklet done for the General Motors Rack service, a series of thousands of informational books and booklets GM produced for their employees. Yes, I know it's a bit ickey and paternal to our taste, but isn't it a great idea that a company would spend some of their dough on stuff like this instead of management training courses and research into how they can make everyone work harder?

Steel! was produced by Johnstone and Cushing in 1954 and as I said, it looks like it's by the same artist as the other stuff I have been showing this week. If that is Lou Fine, he must have been asked to do this especially as he is known to have left J&C in the late forties to work on his own. He is also reported to have worked on their Space Conquerors strip for Boy's Life, but I am not sure in wht period that was. All the ons I have seen are by George Evans with some of the earlier ones probably by Al Stenzel, who was credited for that feature throughout. On Heritage, there is one Space Conquerors original signed by Lou Fine, that's from 1964, which makes it more likely Fine did that at the end of his career rather than in the fiftes.

Charles Pelto from Classic Comic Press was so kind to send some of the samples through to Mr. Starr, who replied quickly: "I don't think I started working for J & C until the 50s The art all looks to be by the same guy and first rate (hard to tell, the pics are so small) so the best guess would be Lou Fine. I never met him so it would be before my time. I don't think I started working for J & C until the 50s." Classic Comic Press publishes the ongoing Complete Heart of Juliet Jones series (three tome now) as well als Leonard Starr's Mary Perkins on Stage (they are up to #8 already). Mr. Starr provides stuning new covers for what is easily the best written strip of it's time. I highly recommend them, as well as the other fine books at CCP. I have added a link for you to follow.

So the mystery stands. I leave it up to you to conclude if the strips I showed here are all by the same artist. They remain som eof the best drawn advertising strips I have ever seen, maybe excluding the GM rack books done by Dan Barry in the late forties. But Ill get to those some other time...

This story is especially impressive to me, since my father worked at a Dutch steel mill (as an accountant) and as a boy I did a company tour very similar to this one. As far as I can remember it's all very accurate and I get the impression these drawings were made from life rather than from photo's.



















And here's the Space Conquerors I mentioned: