Nov 28, 2022

100 Comics qui ont marqué l’histoire!

Art by Laurent Lefeuvre
Above, cover for the French book 100 Comics qui ont marqué l’histoire! published by Ynnis Editions.
The book is an essay presenting a selection of 100 comics (la bande-dessinée anglo-saxonne) from 1966 up to 2022.

Cover art by French comic book artist and illustrator Laurent Lefeuvre. On the upper side of the illustration you can identify the blue legs of Doc Manhattan and... a V mask.
Art by Laurent Lefeuvre

Nov 23, 2022

Pixel Moore by Turbogamma

Art by Turbogamma
Above, an essential Moore portrait by pixel artist Turbogamma.

For more info about the artist: Instagram - Twitter

Nov 22, 2022

Dreaming Moore and... Elvis

Some days ago, acclaimed British comic book artist and creator Liam Sharp posted the following text on his Facebook page (you can read it here):
I dreamt that Alan Moore lived on the moon, and used a space ship/throne, given to him by Elvis, in the shape of an E.P belt buckle, to fly back to earth, where he embarked on a comic odyssey from Clapham to Northampton, meeting Dave Gibbons and others along the way… - Liam Sharp
For more news about Liam Sharp: Official site

Many years ago a friend confessed to me that she dreamed that Alan Moore and Melinda were the owners of a pastry shop and while selling sweets they also provided love advice to the clients.
Dreaming is a strange land, you know!

Nov 20, 2022

The Queen, Thunderman and Long London

Excerpt from a great interview by Séamas O'Reilly published on his site few days ago.
[...] This interview took place on 14th September. As it was six days after the Queen’s death, I began by offering what little consolation I could to one of Her Majesty’s most doting subjects.
As we speak, we’re all in mourning here in Walthamstow. How are you finding yourself in these sad times?
Alan Moore: I’m taking each day as it comes. Being familiar with this country for nearly 69 years now, I have been avoiding any contact with the media or the world since we got the sad news. I figure that give it another a month and it might have died down to a manageable level.

There seems to be a fear within the media that they’re going to get leapt on by a public clamour which does not really appear to exist

I notice that most of my comedian friends are apparently only commenting within a fairly exclusive site where they can avoid getting piled upon by, what have been referred to as, flag-shaggers. I’ve seen there’s been a couple of nice comments. My friend Barney Farmer had noticed that a lot of food banks had been closed for the queen’s funeral, which is of course what she would have wanted. Barney posted a picture of the Swedish Chef from the Muppets giving one of his signature kisses. These are certainly eventful times. [...]

might the passing of the Queen mark a psychic shift in how people relate to that institution? That her being replaced by a King who enjoys a slightly less worshipful reverence, might make some of the arguments against the wider institution break through?
That had occurred to me. That this might be the beginning of the end of the Royal Family, which perhaps wouldn’t be before time. It’s about how relevant the Royal Family are to our current state of affairs. I tend to consider that, with or without a monarchy, this country will probably carry on as the conservative/fascist utopia that it has been for a long while.

I’m not sure how much, at least in the 21st century, that was dependent on the Royal Family. It would be a step in the right direction though, if only that. 

[...]

So maybe you can assuage my embarrassment and talk a little about how you assembled such a big, complete world for [What We Can Know About Thunderman]?
Well, it came from a strange place, it came from something I think I have one of the characters in there expressing, which is that leaving comics is one thing — and I’d done that, which seemed like a massive relief — but stopping thinking about comics is another. Especially when you’ve been working at them for forty years, which is a fairly long career by anyone’s standards. So, I tend to find these annoying, often negative, thoughts about comics swirling up in my mind when I didn’t want them there.

And there was also an image that came with them, it was something to do with, I dunno, old copies of Superboy or something like that. Some kind of Curt Swan scene with someone walking across one of those generic midwestern landscapes that used to appear in Superboy and adventure comics. And, coming the other way, there was somebody who was one of the original Legion of Superheroes in their original, twelve-year-old-kid incarnations. And I’d got no idea what this meant but there was a sort of obsessive quality about it.

So, when I was putting together the proposal for Illuminations I thought this would be a good place to actually exorcise some of that stuff as some form of art rather than some angry mutterings in the bath.

[...]

Will there be more of these short stories, is there a drawer full of these or you can return to the unwieldy space operas?
I’m probably not going to return to the space operas anytime soon but, for the time being, what I am committed to is a quintet of books I promised, which is the Long London series. I’m about halfway through the first one, which is entitled, at least at the moment, The Great When. I’m having enormous fun with them, when I get the chance to write them, which is one of the reasons why I’m finding the publicity circuit a bit of a pressure, because I’m just aching to get back to where I left Long London.

The first book is all set in 1949 with London pretty much destroyed, in pieces, and the national psychology in a similar state. Everybody important in magic has just died. Aleister Crowley, Dion Fortune, Arthur Machen, Harry Price, Uncle Tom Cobbley, so there’s a gaping hole in English magic and English psychology.

It’s nice to get back into London again, it’s a city that have always enjoyed fictionally. I haven’t been down there for years but to get back into that fictional territory where there are all these figures from the different periods that I’ll be setting the various books in. I suppose those figures are the reason why I wanted to write the book. There’s something in those kinds of liminal characters and their histories and how they all interwove.

I’m talking about people like Prince Monolulu, the imaginary African, who was probably the most famous black man in Britain in his time. He was a racing tipster and he was acting the exotic very skillfully to work his audience.

People like Iron Foot Jack, the King of the Bohemians, with his huge built-up shoe. Austin Osman Spare figures quite prominently, and odd figures like John Gawsworth who was Arthur Machen’s biographer and publisher. Arthur Machen’s a big off stage presence, having died a couple of years before. It’s taking off from some ideas of Arthur Machen’s, along with the way that they overlapped with other bits of London lore and legendary London figures.  

 The complete interview is available HERE.

Nov 18, 2022

Moore 69: a gift from Gianluigi Concas

Art by Gianluigi Concas
Let's keep celebrating today Moore's 69th birthday! So, above a spectacular portrait of The Man by Italian water-colorist and designer Gianluigi Concas

Again... Happy birthday, Alan! A Chent'annos!

For news about the artist, visit his Instagram page: HERE.

Moore 69: a gift from Zander Cannon

Art by Zander Cannon

Today is Moore's 69th birthday! So, above a phenomenal portrait of The Bearded Man from Northampton by the great comic book artist and creator Zander Cannon
 
Grazie, Zander for such a great homage! And... Happy birthday, Alan!

For news about the artist, visit his Instagram pageHERE.

Nov 17, 2022

Eternity for V

Page from Eternity vol.1. Art by Sergio Gerasi
Above, a page from the first volume of Eternity, a new intriguing deluxe series created by writer Alessandro Bilotta and published in Italy by Sergio Bonelli  Editore; volume one, titled La morte di un dandy (Death of a dandy), has been drawn by the great Sergio Gerasi.

The series - set in a strange, alternative Rome where futuristic technologies coexist with a sort of pervasive nostalgia for the '60ies - follows the adventures of tabloid journalist Alcide Santacroce (above, enjoying an animated party!).

You can read a review here (in Italian).

Nov 16, 2022

Brian Bolland 1986

Above and below, pages from IT'S ABOUT TIME: A Memoir in Pictures and Words by Brian Bolland, due Spring 2023. Shared by Bolland on his FB page
Don’t know whether this is of interest. Pages 27 and 28 of my memoir part 2 “Where Was I?”  I’m in 1986 here I think. Bolland

Nov 15, 2022

Eulogy for Kevin O'Neill

Art by Kevin O'Neill
Above excerpts from a moving eulogy that Moore wrote in memory of Kevin O'Neill
[...] What made him unique amongst his generation of comic creators was the breadth of his influences and experience. While most of his contemporaries were modelling their styles solely upon the incoming wave of great American talent, Kevin was assimilating the angular transatlantic elegance of, say, Spiderman creator Steve Ditko, without abandoning his love for the manic cartoon grotesquery of England’s Ken Reid. The result was an astonishingly flexible ability to shift from the bold designs of the Edwardian illustrators he had a passion for, to the deranged absurdities of the British children’s fare that he’d been absorbed in since infancy.

Nobody drew like Kevin O’Neill. As a result of one of our more innocuous collaborations, Kevin received the supreme compliment of having his entire artistic style – whether he was drawing a table-leg or a baby carriage – ruled unacceptable by the American industry’s then-extant Comics Code Authority. [...]

Working with him was an honour, a pleasure, and an education. His knowledge of the culture we were mining was easily as extensive as my own, and in most instances was marvellously complementary. [...]

Not only a working relationship, the connection with Kevin was one of the most important friendships of my life. As well as being one of the medium’s most individual and exciting draftsmen, he was also exceptional in being one of the very few working-class creators working in a trashy, gutter art-form that was originally intended only for the poor and supposedly illiterate, since become a gentrified middle-class district with graphic novels in the stead of studio loft-apartments. Of all my mainstream collaborators, Kevin was the only one who stood solidly beside me in our difficulties with the comic-book publishing industry, and whose commitment was always to the work, like my own, rather than to the financial inducements and bullying of the companies; the manufacturers.

He was also one of the warmest, funniest, most erudite and most courageous people that I’ve ever met. [...] I am going to miss him like I’d miss sunsets.

In the words of English music-hall legend Max Miller, ‘Take a good look, missus. You’ll never see another one.’

Alan Moore,
Northampton,
November 9th, 2022
Read also HERE and here.

Nov 14, 2022

Rorschach by Mike Perkins

Art by Mike Perkins
Above, a great Rorschach portrait by the excellent British comic book artist Mike Perkins.

For more info about the artist: Official site - Wikipedia 

Nov 11, 2022

Italian Maxwell

During the past Lucca Comics Con, Panini announced that in February 2023 they will publish Maxwell The Magic Cat, in hardcover format. Italy is the second country, after Brazil, to get a collected edition of this Moore's early work.

Nov 2, 2022

Eyes Wide Open

Art by Sergio Vanello
Above, a fantastic portrait of Alan Moore by acclaimed Italian comic book artist, graphic novelist and illustrator SERGIO VANELLO
Vanello's most recent work is L'uomo lupo, a great graphic adaptation of The Wolf Man, George Waggner's iconic horror movie; published for the Italian market by NPE.
 
For more info about the artist visit his Instagram pageHERE.