Showing posts with label My Greatest Adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label My Greatest Adventure. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2014

The Guinea Pig From Hell

Sunday Meskin Measures.

After sidestepping for a while to Mort Meksin's earlier stuff, we come back to the never dwindling resource of his later work for DC. Maybe a bit too stylized for my liking and his monsters never are really scary, but still it's Meskin. Signed even, which means he probably did the whole job himself.

Sunday, December 01, 2013

Morty and the Pirates

Sundat Meskin Measures.

Like many artists of his generation, Mort Meskin was heavely influenced by the big adventure novels of the nineteenth and early twentieth century. Among them the still inspiring adventures of Young Squire Hawkins in Treasure Island. He had used pirates before and even tried to sell a newspaper strip (and comic book) in the same setting in the early fifties. His love of the subject and his artistry as an illustrator show up in the multi layered early pages of this story.

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Old Fossils Come Alive

sunday Meskin Measures.

My Mort Meskin pages till attract some fans, alhough I feel the quality of his work is now dropping off quickly. I wonder what I should do: stick it out to the end or go back and find another run I haven't shared yet.

Monday, November 18, 2013

Destinguished Competition

Sunday Meskin Measures.

The next Meskin adventure is a little more mundane, especially if you compare it to the story by Alex Toth in the same issue.


Toth had been doing terrific work like this for some issues of My Greatest Adventure now. Like Meskin (who he admired), he worked with simple building blocks, but his composition and sense of excitement are all his own.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Natural Beauty

Sunday Meskin Measures.

How is it that most people agree the later period of Mort Meskin's work was not his best, but almost every single story I see has something impressive to be noted? I see two factors: the subject matter of these stories did not always agree with Meskin's best qualities. Whenever he had to draw strange imaginary beasts or aliens, he was never as good as is contemporaries (especially Lee Elias, in my opinion). But when he was asked to draw exotic locales or landscapes that occur in nature, it was always impressive. Too bad the editors at DC seemed to be more occupied with trying to get Meskin to do things their way than with tailoring stories to his strengths. Fortunately, sometimes it all worked out, such as in this beauty. Only too bad about the menacing hamster at the end.