Showing posts with label Joe Simon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Simon. Show all posts

Monday, October 09, 2017

Ve Haf Vays To Make You Laff

Monday Cartoon Day.

MOnday Cartoon Day.

In making Behaving Maly we had so much material from all of the Mad magazine imitations that we were relieved when we decided not to use any pages from the first 15 issues of Cracked or the first 60 or so issues of Sick. Not that they were not worthy of inclusion. But both magazines appeared quite late and evolved into a more juvenile and watered down version of Mad itself. And both magazines had so much great material that they deserve a book of their own. I understand some people are working on a Cracked reprint book and also that Jim Simon (son of Sick's originator and editor for the first 60 issues, Joe Simon) would like to do a Sick volume himself. Well, if he wants my help, he can have it. To whet your apetite, here is a little something from Sick Vol 3 #3 by Jack Davis (who is also on the cover of that issue and does 15 pages in total). Written by Dee Caruso, this is a mini version of a very popular thing in the early fifties, the satirical coloring book. Mort Druck did a few of them and some other people as well. In fact, Jack Davis and Dee Caruso's coloring book can be seen as a spoof of the already satirical Kennedy coloring book Mort Drucker did.


Sunday, March 20, 2016

Too Silent To Be True

Sunday Meskin Measures.

Skipping his one page contribution Young Brides #4 (not available on the Digital Comic Museum, although I may have it myself) we find him in #5 with a story that is probably inked by Joe Simon (explaining the slight Kirby look). A special story with one (!) silent panel.

Monday, May 18, 2015

Romancing The Show

Sunday Meskin Measures.

As I said last week, around the start of 1952 we get to the point where Mort Meskin's work for the romance comics (like that of Bill Draut and Jack Kiby himself) gets to be near perfect. It helps that in this issue he is not inked by George Roussos, who was a functional inkter but did not bring out the best of Meskin's work. He needed more detail, not less. According to Jim VandeBOncoeur Jr. the two pages was inked by Joe Simon and I guess Meskin himself did the other two. I have also include a onepager by Rousos for comparison.

Monday, March 02, 2015

Individually Together

Sunday Meskin Measures.

Here, from Young Love #30, are the three artists who are often thrown together and mistaken for each other. Of course, it doesn't help that they worked in all sorts of combinations as well, with or with the other Simon and Kirby studio personel. But here they are in their serperate glory, Mort meksin, George Roussos and the Simon/Kirby partnership.

Monday, December 15, 2014

To (Kir)by Or Not To (Kir)by

Sunday Meskin Measures.

Today we have a very special treat for all you Mort Meskin lovers. It's a Mort Meskin story that has not yet been listed on the Mort Meskin checklist. As I have been saying, the Digital Comics Museum has been putting up lots of Simon and Kirby books in the Prize Spotlight Month. Many of these come from the annotated copies of Jim Vandeboncoeur, arguably the best art identifier out there. He'll certainly tell you so himself. But the title is deserved. In the days when collecting was still affordable (although a lot harder without the internet) he amassed many comics, especially from the lesser appreciated companies, which at the time included Prize. He used those book to create the first list of comic book credits with James Ware and because they had so much to compare it to (and backed their research up with visits to artists, asking them what they worked on and who they knew worked with them) most of these identifications still stand.

One of the books recently uploaded from Jim's collection (with one of his identification cards) has a story he identifies as being drawn by Mort Meskin, that wasn't named as such in a larger forum yet. It is from Headine #28 and it is indeed an oddity. First have a look and then we'll talk.


First of all, Mort Meskin is not supposed to be at Prize at this time of his career. In 1946/47 when this story probably was drawn, he was finishing up a great career at DC, drawing The Vigilante. This had brought him together with James Robinson, who helped him with some stories. They became a partnership and together went out to look for work. This did bring them to Prize eventually, where they did a couple of stories for Young Love, published in 1948. But they also took on two titles and other work at Standard and their schedule must have been pretty full, there. So why Mort Meskin would do a story like this for Jack Kirby and Joe Simon is a mystery. All of the work he did was with James Robinson, so why go out and do something on his own? Especially when it is clearly a try-out, like this.

Because that's the second point I want to make. Some commenters on the Digital Comic Museum were doubting if Jim's attribution of Mort Meskin was correct. It looks like Meskin, but it parts of it look like Jack Kirby's work as well. Now at some points in his career, Jack Kirby tried to increase his output by 'jumpstarting' other artists with either thumbnails or drawing alternate story pages. This looks like one of those jobs, where Jack Kirby drew some parts of some pages and no pages of some of the other pages. It is those other pages we can clearly see Mort Meskin. But I suspect he is there as an inker on the other ages as well. Now it could be that Meskin was merely mimicking Jack Kirby for his first job for the illustrious duo. But I agree with the commenters that some of the faces look just too much like Kirby to me just imitation or swipes. To further complicate things, it seems that Mort Meskin may not have inked all of the story himself. At that point Jack Kirby drew all his pencils is sharp lines without shadows. Those pencils were then inked very loyally (almost traced) by someone at the studio (maybe even by Joe Simon himself). After which Kirby himself (or when he wasn't available anyone else at the studio) added the blacks. Mort Meskin was capable of doing such tight pencils as well and it seems the same process was followed here. If you look at the first page, it also seems to me that he added the blacks to all the pages, even the ones that may or may not have been pencilled by Kirby.

Now you go through my collection of early Meskin and Kirby material to make up your own mind.