FRANK BELLAMY - design and technique
Part Five: 1970-1976
By David Jackson
[Part One]
[Part Two]
[Part Three]
[Part Four]
[Part Five]
1970-1976
One day in the early 1970s
the Bellamy's telephone rang and the voice asking to speak to Frank
Bellamy was Paul McCartney. As David Bellamy later remarked, there was
always some joker who'd ring up and say they're 'Elvis', but no, it
really was. Word had it that Ringo Starr was also a fan. The outcome
being a meeting with Paul and Linda and a commission for concept artwork
(unpublished) around the idea of a winged figure and/or for the cover
of a solo album by Linda under the project title of
"Linda and the Red Stripes". According to an article titled "Seaside Woman by Suzy and the
Red Stripes", Paul called the group Suzy (Linda) and the Red Stripes
(Wings) and they signed with Epic under that name. The name Red Stripes
is from one of Paul and Linda's favorite drinks.
[The above summary is from a description by Nancy Bellamy in her own words, transcribed from a radio interview on this blog on 26 May 2007].
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Wall's Wonderman by Frank Bellamy |
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Wall's Wonderman by Frank Bellamy |
Lintas Advertising Agency contacted Frank Bellamy to draw
"Wall's Wonderman and the Bridge of Terror" and "Wall's Wonderman and the Martian Inferno", two
b/w full page ads which appeared in
Smash and in
Valiant comics.
FA: "You also did five months of work for IPC's Look and Learn..."
FB:
"Yes. Illustrating a First World War series, mostly filling a spread,
for Jack Parker. I tried a variety of techniques on this one -
something I'm eternally grateful to Jack Parker for allowing me to do."
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Look and Learn #452 |
The
Great War series appeared as interior illustrations in
Look and Learn from June to November 1970, (No.437 to No.462), and the cover of
No.452. In terms of the variety of techniques, the cover and interior
art of that issue, and immediately subsequent issues, are rendered in
minimal linework with a sort of scrubbed drybrush effect. Despite not
being in the continuity picture-strip format, the artwork is mainly
comic-strip style rendering but - with what would be relatively small
single frames in any comics page - actually at full-page size.
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Look and Learn #455 |
Radio Times
commissioned a number of covers and full colour interior pages and b/w
spot illustrations on a broad range of BBC output, from sf, fantasy and
horror, to military ceremonial and movie stars.
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Radio Times 1-7 January 1972 Cover |
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Radio Times (11 May 1974 - 17 May 1974)
"The Movie Quiz Late horror show "
p.54 |
|
Some of the Doctor Who cameos accompanying listings |
"Star Trek" featured in the
Radio Times as a full colour page in comics format and, later, small b/w illos.
Frank
Bellamy Doctor Who artwork for
Radio Times became the benchmark style
for illustrations of the series, launching the collection with a three
page picture-strip.
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Radio Times (16 December 1972 - 29 December 1972)
Doctor Who and the Sea Devils [Omnibus edition], p.82 |
There is an interesting similarity
in terms of Frank's interpretations being actual improvements on the
reference sources from real life - the same way reference was improved
upon in FB's depictions of the Apollo 11 moon landing
[see the previous part of David's article ~Norman] is also evident in
his interpretation of The Sea Devils: "..ENJOY YOUR REVENGE!". In both
instances the innovative dynamic quality put into the art does not
exist in the source material to be copied from in the first place, never
mind accurately..!
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Timeview by David Bellamy |
Frank's Doctor Who illustrations
for
Radio Times were later collected in
Timeview with a commentary by
David Bellamy. He notes the contrast between his father's method and
approach and that of the generality of other artists who normally use
tracings and try-outs in a series of steps towards assembling the final
image. And he described seeing his father colouring the background of
the illustration for the Loch Ness storyline "WE ARE DEALING WITH A
MONSTER THAT IS NOT OF ORDINARY FLESH AND BLOOD" It was really whizzed
in!
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Radio Times (29 May1971 - 4 June 1971)
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"The Movie Crazy Years" front cover featured FB's own 'director's chair' in the foreground as a visual reference 'prop'.
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Radio Times 7-13 July 1973
"Saturday Night Theatre: The Ministry of Fear" |
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Daily Mirror Garth: Ghost Town G152 |
Another
of Frank's self-posed photo shots, salvaged from his studio and,
as noted by Alan Davis, was used both as reference for
Radio Times (7 July
1973) "Saturday Night Theatre: The Ministry of Fear" and for Garth:
"Ghost Town" G152 centre panel.
Frank Bellamy was
interviewed in the BBC TV programme about journalism,
Edition, presented
by Barry Askew, broadcast on Friday 30th November 1973.
Edition
began with a close-up on a Bellamy drawing of Barry Askew in a hectic
pose, at his desk, paper strewn about, above him is the legend "POW!"
[Unfortunately this is not known to exist in film or paper form ~Norman]
BA:
"Edition... POW! That's one man's view of me sitting here in the
Edition studio. The only thing he hasn't drawn are my tortured tonsils,
for which, my apologies at the outset! Frank Bellamy, whose cartoons
have a unique, unchanging quality, stretching from Dan Dare in the
EAGLE, to Garth, which he now does in the Daily Mirror..".
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John Allard's artwork on the first 2 episodes of "Garth: Sundance" |
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Frank Bellamy's first 2 episodes on "Garth: Sundance" |
Garth.
The newspaper strip represented a change in format, both in terms of
the scale and quantity of the original artwork and its visual and
narrative themes targeted at the newspaper readership.
Having
expressed a preference in the
Fantasy Advertiser interview for drawing at same-size and
not more than a quarter-up, the lettering by John Allard had
established that originals were drawn at two and a half times printed
size (original image area 5ins x 20½ins).
It also
unavoidably represented a return to working with an art assistant, John
Allard, who had been the
Daily Mirror editorial assistant to Garth creator Steve
Dowling from the strip's beginning and creditably succeeded him for a
time as the artist on Garth in his own right.
John
Allard, in addition to lettering the strip and applying mechanical
tints, continued to draw backgrounds and some fill-in frames, for the
early stories; but again, as with Dan Dare, where the art assistant
contributes to the actual drawing, there is a marked incompatibility in
individual art styles when they are mixed and not matched.
Fantasy Advertiser asked Frank Bellamy what he thought of artist's aids like zip-a-tone, letrafilm and mechanical tint.
FB: "I can't comment on them because I've never used them."
FB:
"Another thing I've never used is process white. I'm not showing off
here, but I'll give you a prize if you can find any correction done with
process white on any of my work. It's a bit more purism, but if you
slap a piece of process white or process black on a piece of artwork,
over a mistake, on the way to the engraver it could flake off, or the
camera could pick up the grey unevenness. But in the first place -
although it sounds hard - you shouldn't have had to use process white in
the first place."
The Newspaper Strip Society
Newsletter No.4, February 1981 features "In Conversation with John
Allard" by John Dakin covering his time as art assistant from the
beginning of the Garth strip and concluding with his working with FB
under Mirror editor Mike Molloy:
"... John
Allard was told at very short notice that he would revert back to
assistant artist on the strip. After just two weeks of illustrating
Sundance, John stepped down and Frank Bellamy began in mid-story [28 Jun
1971]. Under the terms of the agreement John Allard continued to do much
of the background artwork and he even drew the occasional complete
panel (the last panel of Sundance for example). This situation
continued until the end of Ghost Town.
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Last strip in "Garth: Sundance" |
Beginning with his eighth story
Frank Bellamy drew the strip entirely on his own. The title strip of Mask of Atacama [12 Jul 1973 G165] is the first Garth strip to bear the famous Bellamy signature.
With sex and violence becoming commonplace in
the media, to coincide with the change in artists it was decided at
editorial level to make several changes. Now Garth would kill,
sometimes quite viciously; and although there had always been a certain
amount of nudity in the strip, it would now become more sensual by the
inclusion of bedroom scenes. As John Allard recalls with amusement the
sexual element was included partly to dispel some of the unsavoury
rumours, that had been circulating around the newspaper offices, about
Garth's relationship with Professor Lumiere. As well as these changes
there was also the more realistic Bellamy style to turn the strip into
something very different. Garth himself looked broader in the shoulder
with slimmer hips and a more contemporary hairstyle; and his features
were more strongly defined.
All this led to a completely
unexpected occurrence, the Daily Mirror offices were flooded with
letters complaining about Garth's changed appearance. Charles Roger,
the then head of the Mirror's strip department asked Frank Bellamy to
adapt his pencils to the old style in which Garth had been drawn.
Understandably Bellamy angrily refused, and there the matter was left,
never being taken as far as editorial level. John says it was the only
time he ever saw Frank Bellamy lose his temper. John had lunch with
Frank a few times and found him to be nervous, quietly spoken, courteous
and proud of the recognition his work received."
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Menomonee Falls Gazette #157 showing the start of FB's signature
now it was all his own work |
It
must have been a feeling of deja-vu all over again - flashback to Dan
Dare when FB not only began work part way into an already running story,
"Sundance", but again, as with Dan Dare, some readers noticed the change
and wrote in..!
But, quite avoidably, it might be
assumed, had management dealt with staffing issues more adroitly, the
situation had created something of a turf war, or, given the western-themed first story, a range war, albeit with the shooting only on paper.
Having brought in Frank Bellamy he had
then not given a free hand to do his work in the way he saw fit. The
resulting problems were still in evidence even after he was drawing and
signing the work as his own. Examples from "The Mask of Atacama" and "The
Wreckers" (and, thanks to
Alan Davis, now online) demonstrate there still
existed a quite remarkable situation where the lead artist was being
expected to fill-in the actual drawing as best as could be done, in and
around whatever space was left by the previously set-out lettering
panels and word-balloons. These comparisons show him reworking a
particular strip to make better use of its layout possibilities,
including breaking-up the dialogue to improved dramatic effect, as only
he could have visualised it.
That the scripted visuals
were also subject to revision by the excising of extraneous elements
unnecessary to the dialogue is demonstrated by a comparison of the
scripted directions with the finished strip for "The Women of Galba"
[Again see Alan's great site ~Norman].
Scriptwriter
Jim Edgar, who lived not far from Frank Bellamy's home in
Northamptonshire, was interviewed by John Dakin in
The Newspaper Strip
Society Newsletter (No.2 July 1980):
JD: "Did Frank Bellamy have any say in the scripting or plotting of Garth?
JE:
"Frank Bellamy had little or no say in the scripting or storyline of
Garth. However, some of the stories emerged from discussions between
myself and Frank. He certainly was fond of the western aspect and
accordingly several westerns were written. Frank usually worked tightly
to the scripts which were always written by me."
In
Edition, presenter Barry Askew questions Frank Bellamy about the scripts.
BA: "Does the scripting give you a problem - I mean how do you relate the script to your work?"
FB:
"I keep in general to the script. But occasionally, you get little
things on a typewritten manuscript don't work visually. Then it's up to
me to, er, re-draw, or re-think, or present it, in a different manner."
BA: "If you find a script that you're not, yourself, in sympathy with, can you draw to that or not?"
FB: "Well yes but er..".
BA: "If you don't actually 'feel' the script?"
FB:
"Well, I try to make myself feel it and it's much better if I can get
one that I am interested in in the first place. For instance, the
western one, I was thoroughly interested in drawing a western because I
wanted to get the little bits of authenticity into it, instead of it
just being a cowboy story."
"A Cowboy Story" was,
coincidentally, a two page western spoof in full colour for
Bert Fegg's
Nasty Book for Boys and Girls, aka
The Nasty Book by Terry Jones
and Michael Palin, republished as
Dr Fegg's Encyclopeadia of All
World Knowledge.
FB: "But I do find that
when starting a new story, it takes a while to get into it, so I can
feel about what I'm drawing. There's nothing worse than just getting
the first script, and not knowing anything more about what's going on
than a reader would. Like an actor I need to understand the character I
am drawing. If I was drawing a western, for instance, I'd feel like I
was walking around with bow legs, and a .45 strapped down low."
When interviewed for
Look East, Frank said:
FB:
"There's one thing while drawing a strip, I get very, very involved, I
must get involved. ... Well, I have to. All my strip career I've tried
to get involved in the characters, whether it's war, space or whatever;
you must get excited about it, get the old adrenalin going. There's
much more to it than just drawing the thing. It's not a hobby. It's a
serious business. That's how I treat it. I shall always do so. And
any development that I can think of I can assure you I shall put them
in."
FB: "Accuracy is very important,
because the readership - for instance The Daily Mirror, could be between
thirteen and fourteen million - somewhere along the line, if I'm
drawing a western, there's someone there who is probably a buff on
western arms, ammunition, clothing, and I must be correct because they
always like to write in and say, 'You've made a mistake'.
In
Edition, Barry Askew said:
BA:
"But to bring it right up to date, of course, you are, I suppose, most
famous for Garth and here we have one or two examples of Garth. I
think the first one is from last April."
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Reprint from Menomonee Falls Gazette #135 |
FB:
"Yes. In fact it is a western strip. Previous to the first one,
which was of course taking place in the present day, he arrives in a
ghost town and gradually changes off into the old west."
BA: "He's a remarkable character there, isn't he?"
FB: "You see in the second episode there, he is a western marshal."
[Camera then cuts to (est.G.282 / G.283) strips from The Wreckers].
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Garth: The Wreckers G282 |
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Garth: The Wreckers G283 |
BA: "And then we bring him right up to date, if we look at, for example, yesterday's and today's. What's he doing here?"
FB:
"This is, er, what we usually call a 'suit story' - where we have
people walking around in suits, this is espionage sort of thing. I
can't tell you further because that would be giving the show away on a
present running story.
BA: "How long has that got to run?"
FB: "They usually run about seventeen weeks, it varies one way and another."
Day
to day, the newspaper strip (the clue is in the name), being
effectively a single bank of panels, is a limited format in terms of
design options per se, let alone in comparison with a full colour
centrespread.
Within these limits, the "Sundance" story
makes early use of the design idea of figures which stand in front of,
as distinct from within, a panoramic landscape frame background, in a
'tip-of-the-hat' to classic illustrator
Fortunino Matania.
FB:
"I've often been asked if people have influenced me. I find it
difficult to sort out the difference between people who influence me or
impress me with their work One person who did impress me was Fortunino Matania, an artist who specialized in highly detailed work on Greece,
Ancient Egypt and World War One. I have a great admiration for him."
Apart
from the restrictions placed on the artist in terms of available space -
being at one and the same time drawn over-size but reproduced very
small - also there was also the loss of colour, and the strip was
rendered in pen and ink very much in a way to take this fact into
account - never imagining let alone intending that it ever would be
coloured.
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Garth: The Cloud of Balthus E275 |
Black and white letterpress newsprint was
never more limiting than the second Garth script - "The Cloud of
Balthus" requirement to depict the detonation of a rocket
vehicle in space. The newsprint format made technically difficult that
which would be more straightforwardly rendered in colour. Although the
creation of spectacular explosions on paper had long since been a
Bellamy signature effect, the methodology of their creation involved
colour washes of waterproof inks for photogravure, or even halftone, not
b/w letterpress reproduction. None of which proved to be any sort of
impediment whatsoever! As the innovative graphic realisation of that
frame in b/w line ultimately demonstrated.
[As David mentions colour, we can take a look at how Martin Baines handled the explosion ~Norman]
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Daily Mirror 15 March 2012 coloured by Martin Baines |
The
innovative design of the aliens (the eponymous Balthus and his minions)
is compelling. It would be interesting to compare such strikingly
original visuals with their scripted descriptions. Even the matching
costume designs worn by Garth and his female companion (revealed on
removing their spacesuits - technically convincing outfits in
themselves), are both sleek and inventive, particularly so considering
their tops in fact consist of two sets of running contoured parallel
lines!
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Garth: The Cloud of Balthus E272 |
Otherwise, in costume design terms, Frank
Bellamy invariably depicted a distinctive tapering sleeve and the folds
they produce - purely as a visual improvement - irrespective of whether
any official reference sources provided had this design or not.
Consistencies
in Bellamy design forms, as part of a thought-through repertoire, such
as the previously described sandstone geology landscapes, also included
Scots pine trees - a design element which the artist had completely
understood and internalised and could be produced to match whatever was
required to fit a given design space. The effect of light on
distinctive cracked bark and spiked greenery has a extremely pleasing
design aesthetic. A possible further consideration may have been, being
an evergreen, it also avoided any necessity of having to keep in mind
seasonal considerations which might be set out in a script.
The
Newspaper Strip Society Newsletter (No.2 July 1980) interview with Garth scriptwriter Jim Edgar concludes:
JE:
"Frank lived in the village of Geddington. He was the
ultra-perfectionist, the only artist I ever met who worried over getting
the right shade of black. Garth was the first national strip he ever
handled, and I think it was Frank's first true bid for recognition as an
artist. I think his chief failing was that he never quite learned to
relax on the job. This is a failing of other fine artists I have worked
with. Maybe it is endemic to the profession."
But what the readership got was five years of day after day of inventive unrelenting quality.
The
Fantasy Advertiser interview was recorded in May 1973. In the
introduction to its later re-publication in
Warrior (1984) Dave Gibbons gives
an account of Dez and he seeing the episode of Garth which Frank was
working on that day, and (as with the 'work-in-progress' page of Thunderbirds described previously above) Dave reports:
"He
had already inked the first two pictures but the third was a loose,
expressionistic pencil 'doodle'. Again, he seemed embarrassed by its
sketchiness, unused to others seeing this usually private stage of the
work. To our amazement, he told us that it was his practice to then go
straight to ink, without further pencilling. He seemed unmindful of the
incredible boldness and skill that this represented, particularly in
view of the deft crispness of his finished work.
"Finally,
as Dez and I were just about to leave, we asked if he ever had the
chance to do anything purely for his own pleasure. Again, Frank rushed
off, this time reappearing with several huge sheets of his favourite
CS10 board. Evidently he'd been missing colour during his Garth years,
for here were the most stunning full-colour fantasy drawings, surpassing
even his Heros the Spartan work in vigour and excitement. Despite our
entreaties, he was unconvinced that anyone else would be interested in
seeing them, let alone publishing them and so they went back to the
privacy of his studio."
Frank Bellamy being
unconvinced that anyone else would be interested in seeing the above
work might be thought at this distance as being entirely self-effacing
but today is another age. The conception of such work up to that time
was wholly commercial. And Frank had already had the lived experience
of even his best efforts failing to help save
Eagle or
TV21 from their
eventual commercial failure.
The market at that time
consisted of a readership who, it may seem odd to realise, were not
fans! Comics fans were, then, a minority interest group - within a
minority of fantasy fans - within a minority of science fiction fans. I
seem to recall from the time that someone estimated there were about a
thousand comic fans, reading fanzines, attending comic marts. The
actual readership of comics as such (of whom the sf and fantasy readers
were another minority), generally had no idea who drew, let alone who
wrote, the stuff - their interest was genre character led, plus the
dictates of their age and fashion generally meant a limited shelf-life.
That
such commercial work could be in any sense a form of self-expression of
an 'author' published in their own right, was then an idea in the minds
of only a very few.
|
Unpublished - from Bob Monkhouse's collection |
An unpublished 'Heros' type themed montage spread which has since come to light was in the FB collection of Bob Monkhouse.
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Garth: Wolfman of Aussensee F130 - note the flowery-shirted David Bellamy |
Some
'guest-appearances' in the Garth strip include his son David, in a
flowered shirt, at the party in the "Wolf Man of Ausensee" story.
Previous to this, Garth is driving Frank's Datsun 260Z Sports. And,
(assuming Garth's adventures are related in chronological order, which
they may not be), it is subsequently destroyed by an alien spacecraft in
"Women of Galba" - and replaced (presumably from the insurance
write-off payout) with RYK 274L, which features in "Freak Out to Fear".
The Star Inn at Queen Eleanor Cross, Geddington appears as a location
in "The Spanish Lady" (K.67 and K.76). David Bellamy has said the
place is exactly as quiet as the postcard of it itself. This location
also appeared in an episode of David Dimbleby's "Seven Ages of Britain"
(shown Sun 7th Feb 2010).
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Garth: Wolfman of Aussensee F127 - note the Datsun 260Z Sports |
As with the
previously mentioned parallel inspiration and motifs found in
contemporary movies, there is a 'Garth'-look Robert Redford (in a
sequence while clean-shaven) of the movie
Jeremiah Johnson, which may
possibly have influenced FB's subsequently revised styling of the
character - assuming it isn't a complete coincidence (worldwide premiere
at Cannes 7 May 1972 - the US premiere was not until the December) -
which I would very much doubt!
It likely wouldn't have been entirely gone from FB's mind that he had taken over Dan Dare and Garth mid-story and readers had noticed and commented on the abrupt stylistic change.
So once again another stylistic change by FB was not conveniently between stories break point. And FB resorted to subtlety - or, out and out subterfuge - (seeing that the style change is extraneous to the context of the storyline) - by gradually, unnoticeably, adapting Garth's Greek god statue type close cropped hairstyle (as FB had inherited it - as originally depicted - and up to the Wolf Man opening scene) to 'Jeremiah Johnson' style - over several banks of daily strips in 'The Wolf Man of Ausensee': from/between F.125 to F.143. This final form is as appears on the 1975 annual cover
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Daily Mirror Book of Garth 1975 |
The covers of the Garth Book collections gave FB two opportunities for Garth in colour.
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Original art for Daily Mirror Book of Garth 1976 |
[I wasn't clear on why David said this and put together a montage to ask him for further details and David, true gentleman that he is added this paragraph~Norman]
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Garth morphs under FB's pen. I added Redford as a comparator |
In Frank's first daily strips, Garth's close-cropped, Greek god statue style, is long down his neck but otherwise short curls in outline devoid of internal linework detail (no bulk to the hair) (E.162-E.166 and so on, such as last frame E.185, E.229 - E.235; Balthus E.240, and still sort of ad hoc indeterminate in definition to F.109 first frame, say and the end of Orb, to Wolf Man F.125), at which point it is still a 'moveable feast' as it were but this time, I surmise, with intent, to F.175 for example and mutating to F.194 and F.208 and from then on: i.e. the outline of the top of the head transmutes from short curls (almost 'spikey') to a smooth wavy cut, as you say, outline depicting bulk.
DISC music magazine also featured a distinctive colour full page cover of
Garth - an example that areas can sometimes be more effective without a
border, vignette shape - plus some b/w interior illustrations and
interview with Garth by Fox-Cumming and scriptwriter Jim Edgar.
Two
posters in comics line and full colour style for
Gerry Cottle's Circus:
one of the sensational Cimarro Brothers high wire act and one featuring
Khalil Oghaby "Mighty strongman from Persia". Probably not
coincidentally, Gerry Cottle was in the same class at school as Frank's
son David - then already knowing that Cottle wanted to run his own
circus when he left school.
|
From Once Upon a Time by David Larkin
Plate # 13: "Lord of the Dragons Unpublished Illustration 1975". |
Once Upon A Time - some
contemporary illustrators of fantasy - edited and the artists introduced
by David Larkin (A Peacock Press/ Bantam Book, 1976) includes, "Lord of
the Dragons" unpublished illustration and a reprint of the Doctor Who
'Loch Ness monster' interior colour illustration for
Radio Times. There
is no further information on the reasons for the original creation of
"Lord of the Dragons" but it is self-evidently an exemplar demonstration
of fine line and wash pen control.
Frank Bellamy's dynamic depictions of hands and fists are another recurrent signature design motif.
In
contrast to the anecdotal stories of certain artists so unconfident of
their attempts to render the complexities of the human hand, that they
resort to posing their subjects with their hands in their pockets or
behind their backs to avoid dealing with the problem!
In the words of John Constable, "We see nothing truly until we understand it."
The
hand is so anatomically complex that ad hoc observation alone - without
knowledge and understanding - is generally not sufficient to bring to
an artist's attention the actual form of the structures they are looking
at.
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Garth: Wolfman of Aussensee F128 - note the fists and hands |
It needs to be known and understood for example
that the webs of skin between the fingers are half-way along the finger
joint and not at the knuckle-joints themselves.
A
characteristic aesthetic of Frank Bellamy hands and fists is the
particular notice he must have taken of the slight convex curve along
the backs of curled fingers for this to become such a distinctive
feature in his work.
FA: "One famous Bellamy trademark has always been the hand, with its fingers pointing out of the frame at you..."
FB:
"Yes, this is another little thing of mine. I like to give another
dimension to my artwork, a sort of 3D effect. The fingers pointing out
are just a part of this development. I've always had a great regard for
professionalism. One of the best things that was ever said to me was
when I was called a "professional's professional". And this just
underlines what I mean. I'm a great believer in doing a professional
job. This kind of work has been under-rated for many years. Throwaway
artwork to be looked at and immediately discarded. This is a viewpoint I
strongly disagree with."
|
Garth: The Women of Galba G11 - note the 3D effect of the pointing finger |
FA: "How much comic strip work do you think you have done to date?"
FB: "A rough estimate would be about 20,000 frames - most of them being in full colour."
FA: "And that's since 1953?"
FB: "Yes. It might not sound much, but it has been a lot of very hard though enjoyable work."
==================================================
Well, that's it! Many, many thanks to David Jackson for this excellent overview - he certainly challenged me to provide images to accompany the five parts of this overview of FB's life. I've written roughly 35,000 words of a biography myself and when retired will add more but until that time I am so grateful that we have an extensive biography on these pages. But more than that David has challenged me to look more closely at FB's work.
So that's another article added in this the celebration of the 100th anniversary of Frank Bellamy's birth. Is there anything more to add? YES. I have plenty more surprises up my sleeve!
If you would like to write an article, I'd be extremely happy to add it to this blog, just let me know