150 Greatest Cartoonists Countdown: #138 Frank Quitely

#138 Frank Quitely



Click the above image to see the full-size version on the site I found it on.

Frank Quitely’s work is usually wild, fast-paced, cinematic and detailed… with a strong dose of trippy cartooniness bending it at the edges. He is a frequent collaborator with author Grant Morrison, and they do great stuff together. My favorite thing they have collaborated on is the brilliant Flex Mentallo, which tragically will probably never be reprinted due to legal pressure from Charles Atlas, if you can believe that.

Click here to see the entry on Frank Quitely at lambiek.net.

Crumbling Paper: Happy Hooligan (1905) by Frederick Opper (strip #15)

Here’s another example of Frederick Opper’s strip Happy Hooligan from June 18, 1905. Click the image to read the strip.

You can see more examples of Happy Hooligan (and many other classic comics) at Barnacle Press. Here are some other Opper strips at Barnacle Press.

Here are some other Happy Hooligan examples from Bugpowder.

Here are some other Opper strips from Coconino Classics.

150 Greatest Cartoonists Countdown: #139 J.H. Williams III

#139 J.H. Williams III

J.H. Williams III collaboration with writer Alan Moore on Promethea was beautiful and mind-bending… some of the most gorgeously drawn meta-comics ever attempted. Being a super-genius, Moore gets much of the (well-deserved) credit for the success of Promethea, but few other artists could have done so much with his psychedelic scripts.

Click the above image to see the full-size version on the site I found it on.

150 Greatest Cartoonists Countdown: #140 Archer Prewitt

#140 Archer Prewett

Archer Prewitt‘s Sof’ Boy is hilarious and beautifully drawn and designed… Sof’ Boy is perpetually the victim of extreme violence, but to our semi-oblivious hero, this violence comes as naturally as the breeze going by. Sof’ Boy is kind of like if Casper the Friendly Ghost couldn’t figure out how to die, and was forced to walk among the living as a goony ball of dough in limbo, with bowery bums, prostitutes and hungry sewer rats. Like his friend Chris Ware, Prewitt has a great eye for design, and the Sof’ Boy books always look beautiful. Unfortunately, a new issue only happens every couple of years or so… they are always worth the wait, though.

Click the above image to see the full-size version on the site I found it on.

Click here to read the entry on Archer Prewitt at lambiek.net.

Crumbling Paper: Happy Hooligan (1904) by Frederick Opper (strip #14)

Here’s another example of Frederick Opper’s strip Happy Hooligan from March 6, 1904. Click the image to read the strip.

You can see more examples of Happy Hooligan (and many other classic comics) at Barnacle Press. Here are some other Opper strips at Barnacle Press.

Here are some other Happy Hooligan examples from Bugpowder.

Here are some other Opper strips from Coconino Classics.

150 Greatest Cartoonists Countdown: #141 Al Hirschfeld

#141 Al Hirschfeld

Pictured above: Glenn Miller, Artie Shaw, Benny Goodman, Count Basie and Duke Ellington… click the image to see a larger version on the site I found it at.

Al Hirschfeld did more with a few lines than any other cartoonist in history. His caricatures captured the essence of people perfectly, simplifying them and stripping them down to the bare essentials. They were always immediately recognizable in spite of this extreme distillation. Anyone who has attempted caricature knows how difficult it is to do well at all, let alone using so few lines. His ability to do this consistently regardless of the subject is nothing short of amazing… that he did it that well for 70 or so years is mind-blowing.

Hirschfeld has no competition as the greatest caricaturist of all time.

There’s an excellent gallery of some of his work here.

Here’s a video of him drawing at age 99…


Click here to read the entry about Al Hirschfeld at lambiek.net.

150 Greatest Cartoonists Countdown: #142 Harold Gray

#142 Harold Gray

I’ll start with saying I haven’t read nearly as much Harold Gray’s Little Orphan Annie as I would like… I’ve picked up some reprints recently that I haven’t got to yet that I’m looking forward to. That said, what I have read has been extremely impressive. I love Gray’s bleak, straightforward art, his sparse, simple backgrounds, and his sense of composition. His storytelling skills made Annie one of the most popular comic strips of the thirties. Fantagraphics did some reprints a while ago… recently IDW Publishing picked it up. A number of different Annie reprints can be found here, including some very cool facsimile editions of her old reprint books from the 20’s and 30’s that were published by the Pacific Comics Club.

Click the above image to see the full strip at comicartfans.com. One other interesting thing I ran across at comicartfans.com while making this post… the last Annie strip by Harold Gray (from 7/20/68).

Click here to read the entry on Harold Gray at lambiek.net.

Crumbling Paper: Happy Hooligan (1911) by Frederick Opper (strip #13)

Here’s another example of Frederick Opper’s strip Happy Hooligan from 1911. Click the image to read the strip.

You can see more examples of Happy Hooligan (and many other classic comics) at Barnacle Press. Here are some other Opper strips at Barnacle Press.

Here are some other Happy Hooligan examples from Bugpowder.

Here are some other Opper strips from Coconino Classics.