Ships in: June 2012 (subject to change) Price:
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Ranked #7 on The Ten Best Reissues/Collections of 2011 by Paste
Jack Davis arrived on the illustration scene in the euphoric post-war America
of the late 1940s when consumer society was booming and the work force
identified with commercial images that reflected this underlying sense of confidence and American bravado. Advertising agencies were looking for new ways
to tap a rich and expanding market, and there was a vast array of media that
needed illustrations. Davis’ animated and exuberant images possessed a sense
of spontaneous energy that proved to have universal appeal in every medium
he worked in.
Beginning with his masterful pen and ink cartooning at EC Comics, he
quickly forged a reputation as one of the most versatile artists in comics, drawing humor, horror, and war stories. In
Harvey Kurtzman’s MAD, especially, Davis made a mark as a master of caricature, composition, and wild, anarchic
crowd scenes, practically vibrating with energy.
After stints at MAD, Trump, and Humbug — three humor magazines that defined the satirical zeitgeist of the ’50s —
Davis went on to become the most successful commercial illustrator of his generation, illustrating movie posters, magazine articles, magazine fiction, LP jackets, and more.
Jack Davis: Drawing American Pop Culture is a gigantic, unparalleled career-spanning retrospective, between whose
hard covers resides the greatest collection — in terms of both quantity and quality — of Jack Davis’ work ever assembled!
It includes work from every stage of his long and varied career, such as: excerpts of satirical drawings from his college
humor ’zine, The Bull Sheet; examples of his comics work from EC, MAD, Humbug, Trump, and obscure work he did
for other companies in the 1950s such as Dell; movie posters including It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, The Bad News
Bears, Woody Allen’s Bananas, The Party, and others; LP jacket art for such musicians and bands as Hans Conreid and
the Creature Orchestra’s Monster Rally, Spike Jones and Ben Cooler; cartoons and illustrations from Playboy, Sports Illustrated, Time, TV Guide, Esquire, and many others; unpublished illustrations and drawings Davis did as self-promotional
pieces, proposed comic strips that never sold (such as his Civil War epic “Beaureagard”), finished drawings for unrealized
magazine projects — and even illustrations unearthed in the Davis archives that the artist himself can’t identify!
Much of the material will be scanned directly from original art, showing the painterly brush strokes and black and
white pen work with far greater fidelity than any previous reproduction ever has. Many paintings and illustrations are
accompanied by preliminary drawings that demonstrate the evolution of Davis’ drawing process.
In the back of the book you'll find a biography of Davis by Gary Groth, as well as tributes and testimonals written by a spectrum of Davis's cartoonist contemporaries and fans including Sergio Aragonés, Peter Bagge, Coop, Bob Fingerman, Drew Friedman, Bill Griffith, Al Jaffee, Joe Kubert, Peter Kuper, Tony Millionaire, Nate Neal, Spain Rodriguez and Jim Woodring.
Download a PDF excerpt (33.2 MB) with a smattering of 22 pages from the book.