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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Mon Jul 20, 2009 1:39 pm 
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I thought this was an interesting read...

http://www.avclub.com/articles/seth-on- ... ors,30538/

Seth on Ditko: Ditko’s work is totally interesting for his continuing desire to communicate. The big problem is, the later work is simply unreadable. I’d like to appreciate everything Ditko’s done since he stopped working on Spider-Man, but the truth is, it’s just not that interesting to me. I’d rather sit down and read some of those pre-hero monster books he did. I think that stuff’s always a lot of fun to read, and it’s great cartooning. Obviously it’s just cultural junk, but that’s the stuff I’d rather look at than Mr. A, or, God knows, all the stuff that followed it.

Seth on Gil Kane: I think Gil’s work was very nicely drawn and composed, had a nice classical quality to it, but he was not one of my favorites as a child. I think the work was kind of cold, in some manner, to me as a kid. I was drawn more to the cartoonier cartoonists, which I think is obvious, because my work has ended up being more cartoony and stylized. The comic-book artists I was most drawn to when I was young would probably be Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko. Later, I made some bad choices. I was really into John Byrne for a while. I actually think that ties into a love of cartoony artwork too; I think Byrne’s work is closer to Kirby than to Kane, for example.

Seth on Byrne and Perez: Yeah, I liked both of them at that time, and in retrospect, I can look back and see what I liked. I don’t think they were bad cartoonists, I just have no interest in them now. I’m not interested in reading what they’re doing today, because I’m just not interested in those kinds of comics anymore. And, I must say, I’m not really all that interested in the work I liked then, either—I don’t have a great nostalgia for it. I wouldn’t pull out like an old Byrne X-Men or something, though it sure had potency to me as a teenager. I do think they were both doing a kind of Kirby-inspired cartooning that was really appealing at the time. I sometimes think it had a lot to do with how they were inked. It was really slick work, and something about that appealed to my teenage mind. Slick in a different way than Neal Adams was slick. There was something about it that… I don’t know why you’re attracted to things, but they both seemed very rounded and shiny to me. That work really pushed my buttons as a teenager. It was fetishistic in some way. When I look at the bad teenage comics, I was drawing at the time, I can see a lot of the stylizations that both of them were using: those shiny reflections on metal, or the way they would use a broken line to create effects when they were drawing musculature. I sometimes think maybe Terry Austin is who I really liked; I don’t know.

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Last edited by Rawburn on Mon Jul 20, 2009 1:40 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Mon Jul 20, 2009 1:39 pm 
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Seth MacFarlane?


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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Mon Jul 20, 2009 1:41 pm 
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No... Seth: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seth_(cartoonist)

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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Mon Jul 20, 2009 1:43 pm 
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Oh, he drew Mister X. I used to own that... great, great cartooning.


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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Mon Jul 20, 2009 6:22 pm 
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Seth has done a great parody of a comic book collector, "Wimbledon Green, The Greatest Comic Book Collector in the World". I heartily recommend it! It's essential reading if you collect comics.

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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 7:28 am 
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Wimbledon Green is an absolute masterpiece, in my opinion. It's one of the greatest things I've ever read, period. I just love it.


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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 9:06 am 
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GoogaMooga wrote:
Seth has done a great parody of a comic book collector, "Wimbledon Green, The Greatest Comic Book Collector in the World". I heartily recommend it! It's essential reading if you collect comics.


Is this a book or a graphic novel? I'm intrigued, I've never heard of it.


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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 9:24 am 
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1966 and all that

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Noto wrote:
GoogaMooga wrote:
Seth has done a great parody of a comic book collector, "Wimbledon Green, The Greatest Comic Book Collector in the World". I heartily recommend it! It's essential reading if you collect comics.


Is this a book or a graphic novel? I'm intrigued, I've never heard of it.


A graphic novel. It should still be available.

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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 9:53 am 
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I also endorse Wimbledon Green. Amazing that Seth did it kinda as a toss off. Lots of fun with unexpected depth.

A wonderful book to hold in your hand as well. Its only in hardcover right?

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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 1:10 pm 
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1966 and all that

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Rawburn wrote:
I also endorse Wimbledon Green. Amazing that Seth did it kinda as a toss off. Lots of fun with unexpected depth.

A wonderful book to hold in your hand as well. Its only in hardcover right?


Yep, with rounded corners for those of us who don't like dog-eared copies.

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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 2:01 pm 
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All I've read by Seth was his "George Sprott" graphic novel serialized in "The New York Times Magazine" a while back. I clipped and saved all the pages. He is an impressive artist.

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 Post subject: Seth on classic cartoonists and illustrators
PostPosted: Tue Jul 21, 2009 4:17 pm 
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1966 and all that

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That meddlin kid wrote:
All I've read by Seth was his "George Sprott" graphic novel serialized in "The New York Times Magazine" a while back. I clipped and saved all the pages. He is an impressive artist.


With an impressive knowledge of the old artists.

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