Spectrum 18 Jury Announced! Call For Entries Poster by Bill Carman!

The jury for Spectrum 18 has been announced. This esteemed group of professionals includes: Julie Bell, Nathan Fox, Gregory Manchess, Brandon Shiflett, Jarrod Shiflett, Boris Vallejo, and Shena Wolf.

Bill Carman illustrated the Call For Entries poster, which will be mailed out at the end of October 2010. The deadline for entries is January 28, 2011.

You can see the step-by-step process of the poster at Bill Carman’s blog. He also offers a witty look into his brain and showcases his latest twisted (in a good way) works. The title of his blog is “My stuff because I’m too stupid to update my website.” You’ll know what he means if you try checking out his website, which he never updates and is entirely blank at the moment. Maybe it’s some sort of artistic statement. Only Bill can tell you. I’m a huge Bill Carman fan, and his art is pretty good, too. (Hi, Bill!)

One more thing. Spectrum 17 is going to be available soon! The Spectrum website has a video preview of the book. Take a look!

Enjoy,

John

John Fleskes
Flesk Publications

Help Steve Rude and His Family Save Their House by Buying Some Original Art!

The Rude family is facing a difficult situation as they may lose their home if funds aren’t raised fast. They have made available the entire 100 original art pages for Next Nexus #1-4, published in 1989 by First Comics, which Steve both drew and inked. Your purchase of 100% Dude art will go towards a great cause.

You can visit the Steve Rude art website to see what is available.

John

John Fleskes
Flesk Publications

Gary Gianni Original Prince Valiant Strips For Sale!

Original Prince Valinat art for sale at www.garygianni.com
Original Prince Valinat art for sale at www.garygianni.com
Original Prince Valiant art for sale at www.garygianni.com
Original Prince Valiant art for sale at www.garygianni.com

Gary Gianni is offering a few of his original Prince Valiant strips for sale. Each piece of original artwork is drawn on heavy Strathmore paper using pen and ink. The paper dimensions measure 14.5 x 23”. For a list of pieces, pricing and contact information visit Gary Gianni’s website here.

Enjoy,

John

John Fleskes
Flesk Publications

Remembering Al Williamson Article by Alex Deuben at Comic Book Resources. Plus, John Fleskes Interview Regarding Al Williamson Archives Volume 1.

Alex Deuben has written a touching and well thought out article exploring Al Williamson’s career and the person, which has been made available on the Comic Book Resources website. You can read it here.

He covers all the major highlights from Williamson’s days at DC, EC, Marvel and Warren to working on Flash Gordon, Star Wars and X-9. Also featured is an exploration of the books collecting his work, including Al Williamson Archives and Al Williamson’s Flash Gordon, as well as material reprinted by IDW and Dark Horse.

Anyone interested in a good introductory Williamson biography will enjoy this article.

John Romita, Jr., George Lucas, Tom DeFalco, Mark Schultz and myself were all interviewed and have quotes in the article. Alex asked me a series of questions for possible use. He was able to use a handful of my responses. I am sharing our question and answer session in full here.

John Fleskes Interview Regarding Al Williamson Archives Volume 1. Conducted in July, 2010.

Alex Dueben: How did you first come to be introduced to Williamson as a person and his work?

John Fleskes: My first exposure to Al Williamson was his work as an inker over John Buscema, John Romita Jr, Rick Leonardi, and Mike Mignola. This was during the mid to late eighties when Al wasn’t doing much pencil work. I was in my early teens and just getting into comics. His collaborations with these artists are still some of my favorite comic runs from that time period, especially the Daredevil run with Romita Jr.

It wasn’t until about 1991 that I discovered EC comics and Al’s pencil work in Weird Science and Weird Fantasy. Soon after I learned about his work in Atlas comics in the mid-fifties, followed by his various movie adaptations and individual stories appearing in the early to mid-eighties. By the time the 1995 Marvel Comics two-issue Flash Gordon that Al illustrated came out I had a substantial collection of material he was involved with. Something about his art resonated with me. He has a streamlined classic approach, combined with a hip feeling that was alive and real to me. I think Al was one of my influences to look outside of superhero comics and branch out more to the adventure realm and to the past illustrators. He was an early bridge for my discovery of Alex Raymond and Roy Krenkel, to name a few.

The first time I met Al was at the San Diego Comic-Con in 1997. I was shy at the time and had to build my nerve to talk to artists and professionals. Al made me feel comfortable right away and gave me considerable time. He answered my questions, signed some of my comics and did a sketch in my sketchbook. He was a combination of the perfect gentlemen coupled with a hysterical wit. I found this personality to be consistent every time I saw him.

Dueben: The first volume of the Al Williamson Archives comes out this month. How long has this project been in the works?

Flesk: I wasn’t in the works for that long. I believe we began talking about the idea soon after Al’s Flash Gordon book was published last summer. Mark Schultz and I visited the Williamson’s in early January of this year to go through Al’s artwork and select and scan what we would use for the first two volumes of the Al Williamson Archives. I planned for us to do the first two volumes at the same time. Within four months we had volume one complete and off to the printer. The designer, Randy Dahlk, already has the second volume about 80% complete.

The idea behind this series was to do a book of Al’s personal work that is mostly unpublished, while providing the viewer of the book to have an intimate experience with Al’s art. What I mean by that is to reproduce the artwork in its original form as if you were actually flipping through the originals. Al was a generous host and friend. This book serves as an extension of his enjoyment in sharing his art collection with his guests. We want to mimic a personal experience as best we can so there is a feeling of the artwork actually being in your hands.

Dueben: He of course died last month and towards the end of his life suffered from Alzheimer’s, but how involved were his wife and the Williamson family on this?

Flesk: As Al’s affliction steadily took its course Cori served as an extension of Al’s desires and wishes, and she continues to do so now. She is a steady rock and helps to guide us so Al’s art is represented appropriately. For the Archives books Mark Schultz, Cori and myself had a discussion about how Al would like to see his work reproduced. I then provided Randy with our feedback and roughly 230 selected images and turned him loose to design the first two volumes. Once the first book was complete, I provided Cori with a print out for her thoughts. Then we make any corrections, if necessary–then it’s off to the printer.

Dueben: This is going to be a series and there are themes to each volume. How did you decide on them and what is the theme of the first one (and the next few if you’re willing to) and what were you trying to achieve with the book? Is it just a sketchbook or is it something more?

Flesk: I’d like to think of these as something more than sketchbooks. I’m always thinking of how we can push the quality and design of the book to make them stand out and better represent an artists’ work.

Al’s artwork fell easily into different categories and we then grouped the art together based on what felt natural. The first two volumes show a range of preliminary works spanning 50 years, from the late forties to the late nineties. So you get bits of early work from his pre-EC days all the way to his later personal drawings. There is fantasy and sci-fi pieces, fifties western and unfinished strip art, dinosaurs, female renderings, just a broad array of the various genres that have made Al’s work memorable and different enough to stand out from the pack. Even though they can be classified as such, personally I find them to be more than sketches. They serve as the evolution and thought process behind a master storyteller.

After volume two the themes will focus more on specific projects he worked on. I would be willing to mention the planned ideas for volumes three and four now, but I need to get the permissions sorted out first. You can also expect to see more historic essays relating to each theme. So, the first two will be a range of personal works, and then we will get into more specific themes.

I want to make sure each book is an improvement on the previous volumes. Otherwise they wouldn’t be worth doing. We’ll keep going as long as we can improve each volume.

Dueben: Now you published Al Williamson’s Flash Gordon last year and you’ve published a lot of amazing books on illustrators and artists like Joseph Clement Coll, Franklin Booth, James Bama, Harvey Dunn, and then more contemporary figures comics fans are likely more familiar with like Mark Schultz, Steve Rude, Gary Gianni. Where do you feel Williamson and his work and his influence fits?

Flesk: This isn’t something I have thought about before. It’s a good question. Each of the artists I have published had a personal impact on me in some form. To me, these artists represent those who I feel have made an impact in their chosen field. Who I publish is based mostly on my gut. I like a broad range of art and genres, so I try not to limit myself in the artists I publish.

I don’t think I would try to put Al into a certain category outside of the field he worked in, comics and strips. The only comparison I can think of in regards to the others artists I have published books on is my feeling they are all exceptional.

Dueben: Are there any entertaining stories of Williamson that you’d like to share or great stories he told that stand out?

Flesk: The generosity and openness of both Al and Cori is something I will always be grateful for. The opportunity to meet and be able to spend time in the Williamson home is something I will never forget. Al was a warm and friendly host. He was very open about his life and those he cared deeply about. He spoke of Roy Krenkel often and shared many moving and entertaining stories. Al had a big heart and genuinely cared about our comfort and time spent while visiting.

A funny little story I can share is when Mark Schultz, Randy Dahlk, Steve Kammer and I spent two days at Al and Cori’s house to work on the Flash Gordon book. One of us, I forget who, was holding up his art for the King Comics Flash Gordon #5 cover from the sixties. Al had an old toy metal ray blaster, which reminded us of a Flash Gordon style weapon. Al was holding this toy gun while looking rather jokingly serious, then dropped to his knee in the exact pose of the cover art. Then he broke out in his big grin. It was completely spontaneous and funny.

You read biographies of artists, but it is a completely different experience to hear about their life direct from them. What I got from Al is not only what an amazing artist he is, but also what a great guy he was.

John

John Fleskes
Flesk Publications
© 2010 John Fleskes

Al Williamson 2010 Recipient of the Spectrum Grand Master Award!

Al Williamson
Al Williamson

Cathy and Arnie Fenner have announced on the Spectrum Fantastic Art website that Al Williamson is the 2010 recipient of the Spectrum Grand Master Award! A short biography and the official news release can be read here.

The Grand Master Award is presented annually to an individual whose art has been acknowledged as being superior, coupled with a career that has been influential to the fantastic genre. A full biography and appreciation will appear in Spectrum 17, available later this fall 2010.

John

John Fleskes
Flesk Publications

Update: The following is the official press release.

Spectrum Press Notice 9-21-10

For immediate Release

AL WILLIAMSON: Spectrum Grand Master

Cathy Fenner, co-director of Spectrum Fantastic Art, today announced that the recipient of the 2010 Spectrum Grand Master Award is legendary artist, Al Williamson.

Born March 21, 1931 in Manhattan, Al Williamson spent much of his youth in Bogotá, Columbia; he returned to the States in 1943 and eventually resettled in New York. A deep interest in comics < and particularly the works of Flash Gordon creator Alex Raymond < led him to enroll in the Cartoonists and Illustrators School (the forerunner to the School of Visual Arts) where he studied under Burne Hogarth and met and befriended Roy Krenkel and Wally Wood. He quickly began working in the comics industry and gained recognition for his science-fiction/heroic fantasy art for the EC Comics Weird Science and Weird Fantasy in the 1950s. In the 1960s he became famous for carrying on Raymond’s illustrative tradition with his work on the Flash Gordon comic-book series for King Features and was a seminal contributor to Warren Publishing’s black-and-white horror comics magazines, Creepy and Eerie. Williamson spent most of the 1970s drawing his own strip (from scripts by Archie Goodwin), Secret Agent X-9 (which coincidentally was another Raymond creation); in the ’80s he became known for his work adapting the Star Wars films for newspaper strips. From the mid-1980s to 2003 he was primarily active as an inker < mainly on Marvel Comics superhero titles featuring Daredevil, Spider-Man, and Spider-Girl. Early in his career Williamson often collaborated with other artists including Frank Frazetta, Krenkel, Angelo Torres, George Woodbridge, and George Evans; after he became established he also helped fellow artists that were down on their luck by hiring them to assist on jobs or steering clients in their direction. Williamson has been cited as a stylistic influence on a number of younger artists and nurtured and encouraged many. He was inducted into the Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame in 2000.

Long considered an “artist’s artist,” Williamson’s friend and fellow illustrator Mark Schultz says, ³What made his work unique is that he incorporated the fluid motion of cinema into his drawings. No other illustrator or cartoonist has approached his ability to create an illusion of action.² Flesk Publications has recently produced several books by Al, including Al Williamson¹s Flash Gordon: A Lifelong Vision of the Heroic and Al Williamson Archives Vol. 1. Al Williamson Archives Vol. 2 will be released in 2011. An exhibit of his art will be on display October 8th – October 12th at the Mahady Gallery, Marywood University, Scranton, PA. Opening reception is Friday, October 8th 6-9 PM. Directions found at http://cwis.marywood.edu/galleries

The Grand Master Award is presented annually to a living artist whose career excellence has proven to be an influence on both readers and fellow artists; sadly, Al Williamson passed away June 12 this year. “The Advisory Board selected Al for this honor back in February,” Cathy notes. “So while this announcement is being made several months after Al’s death, he was very much with us when the decision was made that he be this year’s honoree. It’s appropriate that his award be both a recognition and a remembrance of an important artist and member of the arts community.”

Past recipients of the Spectrum Grand Master Award are Frank Frazetta, Don Ivan Punchatz, Leo and Diane Dillon, James E. Bama, John Berkey, Alan Lee, Jean Giraud, Kinuko Y. Craft, Michael William Kaluta, Michael Whelan, H.R. Giger, Jeffrey Jones, Syd Mead, John Jude Palencar, and Richard V. Corben.

An Al Williamson biography and appreciation will appear in Spectrum 17.

Spectrum: The Best In Contemporary Fantastic Art was established in 1993 with the intent of providing creators with a regular showcase for the best fantasy, science fiction, horror, and imaginative artwork created each year.

A “Call For Entries” was mailed to the arts community and the response was overwhelmingly positive. A blue-ribbon jury convened to make selections from the work submitted and the results appeared in the first full color book, Spectrum 1, published by Underwood Books in 1994. Quickly becoming a visual who’s-who for the fantastic art field, a new installment in the Spectrum series has appeared every year since. Spectrum 17 will be available in bookstores in November, 2010.

For additional information about Spectrum, please visit the official website: http://www.spectrumfantasticart.com/

Stuart Ng Books Featured on MSNBC “Your Business” Profile! Flesk Books and Booth at Comic-Con Shown!

Stuart Ng Books has had a business profile shown on MSNBC. The segment covers how a small business can compete against bigger chains. Stuart explains how he not only competes, but succeeds with sustained growth. Congratulations to Stuart for being featured! The clip can be seen online by clicking here. You can also find the clip on the “Your Business Video Archive” found beneath the most recent show. You can search using the title “American Business: Super Niche” or date, Aug 27, 2010.

Stuart Ng Books carries a wide assortment of animation, illustration and comic related titles, including our books. You can see their inventory by visiting their website here.

There are brief shots of my Flesk Publications booth at Comic-Con International in San Diego, along with book cover shots of William Stout Prehistoric Life Murals (ISBN: 978-1-933865-10-2), New Dinosaur Discoveries A-Z (ISBN 978-1-933865-23-2), and Gianni’s Twenty-Thousand Leagues Under the Sea (ISBN: 978-1-933865-08-9).

There is also a good interview with Adam Hughes.

Enjoy,

John

John Fleskes
Flesk Publications

William Stout Signing at Stuart Ng Books, Saturday August 28, 2010 from 2:00-4:00 PM!

William Stout will be signing his latest book Hallucinations at Stuart Ng Books on Saturday August 28, 2010 from 2:00-4:00 PM! Meet and talk to William Stout, illustrator, underground cartoonist, movie poster and album cover artist, visual development artist, production designer, muralist, paleo-artist, wildlife painter, and Antarctic explorer!

Stuart Ng Books will have copies of both the softbound edition and sold out hardbound edition of Hallucinations, as well as other books by Stout. For event directions and details you can visit the Stuart Ng Books website here. You can also click here for full details on the book.

Enjoy,

John

John Fleskes
Flesk Publications

Into the Land of Shadows: A Prince Valiant Collection by Gary Gianni and Mark Schultz!

Gary Gianni has self-published a new collection of his Prince Valiant work under his Hieronymus Press imprint. Into the Land of Shadows: A Prince Valiant Collection features a complete Prince Valiant adventure dating from 5-10-2009 to 7-4-2010. Written by Mark Schultz with superlative art by Gary Gianni, this 64-page 9” x 12” softbound collection is in glorious black and white and shot from the original artwork. Design is by Jim Keegan.

You can get your copy direct through Gary Gianni at his official website.

John

John Fleskes
Flesk Publications

Victor de la Fuente 1927-2010

The Spanish artist Victor de la Fuente passed away in June 2010. While I never had the honor of meeting him, I have long marveled at his art. I have heard many kind things about Victor from my friend Manuel Auad, who had a four-decade friendship with Victor. Manuel has written a long tribute with biographical notes supplemented by samples of Victor’s art on his Auad Publishing blog. You can read it by clicking here.

John

John Fleskes
Flesk Publications