Greg Goldstein's Comic Art Gallery

Dave Berg — Back From Vacation

“The Lighter Side of…,” Mad #305, September 1991

Dave Berg loved to draw his friends, neighbors and colleagues into his Mad Magazine “Lighter Side”  series. On this great strip, Mad Publisher William (Bill) Gaines and other staffers get the full Berg treatment. I love this.

Mad staffers here are — 

Leftside, front to back:

Lenny Brenner, Tom Nozkowski, Charlie Kadau, Joe Raiola

Rightside, front to back:

Nick Meglin, John Ficarra, Sarah Friedman, Andrew Schwartzberg

(Thanks to my pals Joey Cavalieri and Charlie Kochman for filling in the names of folks I didn’t know.)

Antonio Prohias — A MAD Look at Spies

Mad # 170, October 1974

One punch line panel of the iconic Spy vs. Spy gag strip often sported more violence than an entire episode of Looney Tunes. (That’s saying something.)

And we loved it.

Prohias, a Cuban refugee, was a genius.  He didn’t speak very much English. And he didn’t have to. Humor is a universal language. 

And me personally? I love wordless gags.  After all, cartooning is a visual medium.

Mort Drucker — A MAD Look at Movies

Mad #154, October 1972

I heard the best story recently:

When artists Mort Drucker and Angelo Torres were creating those amazing Mad movie parodies (especially the earlier ones) they often had trouble acquiring official photo references. The solution? Torres would sneak a camera into the movie theater and quietly snap some photos for himself or Drucker.

In other words, the Mad artists were the original film pirates.

You have no idea how much I love that.

This classic Drucker page from a parody of the film “The Hot Rock” comes with a personal anecdote as well:

I discovered my pal Stuart Ng had three original pages from this story for sale about six or seven years ago. I didn’t want all three, I only wanted one (they’re huge — about 18×24), but even if I did, we couldn’t agree on price. (Hot Rock is one of my favorite films, and it’s one of Stuart’s also, and besides, it’s not like Drucker pages are lying around.)

So of course, every so often, I would revisit the pages, and of course, following the rest of the original art market, the price would increase and I couldn’t bring myself to pull the trigger.

(Insert emoji of me slapping myself here.)

Finally… A few months ago, we had a meeting of the minds. He sold me one, and he knows it’s going into a good home. I paid more than I wanted to, he sold it for less than he wanted to, and that seemed like the making of a decent compromise.

And I think he still has the remaining two available, in case other Hot Rock fans see this post. Tell him Greg sent you.

Al Jaffe — A MAD Look At Gags

Mad #141, March 1971

Ah, more memories of a misspent youth.

Once upon a time, Mad Magazine was a users manual for anti-establishment thinking among the baby boomer generation. Think of it as an introductory guide to counter culture.

And my personal sweet spot for devouring each issue (around 1970-1976) coincides with its biggest circulation success — reaching sales of more than 2million copies per issue, and rivaling TV Guide and Reader’s Digest as an American magazine powerhouse. 

In other words, a lot of kids got the joke. 

The art styles of its stars — Mort Drucker, Sergio Aragones, Jack Davis, Dave Berg, et al — were instantly recognizable.

Including, of course, the legendary Al Jaffee.  In an incredible 50-year span (1964-2013), only one issue of Mad doesn’t feature a gag from him. He actually holds the Guinness World Record as the comic artist with the longest career. Jaffe “retired” from cartooning just shy of turning 100-years old.

When the original art for this page appeared for sale a few years ago, I remembered the gag vividly. I can’t remember what I ate for lunch yesterday, but a 50-year old cartoon from Mad? 

No problem.

Happy 70thanniversary, Mad. 

Johnny Craig — Extra!

Extra #5, December 1955

Johnny Craig helped usher in the classic era of EC comics and here he helps bring the curtain down on that same era.

Craig, The EC crime and horror stalwart, creates a typically clean and graphic page in this final issue of a title he also edited.

EXTRA! was one of the seven comic book titles in ECs’ “New Direction” series launched in 1955 to satisfy the Comics Code Authority, the industry’s new self-censorship body, created in the wake of Senate hearings on comics and juvenile delinquency. None of the seven could survive the distribution pushback on EC, and by early 1956, EC Comics existed in legend only.

“EXTRA! built an impressive cast with an image of journalists that fit neatly into professional and gender stereotypes of the era. The male journalists were young, rugged, and handsome… more likely to use their fists or a gun than a pen or camera.”

-Tom Brislin, Extra! Journalism History v21 p123-30 Autumn ’95

Wallace Wood — The Truth Is Out There

Weird Science Fantasy #26, December 1954

I love stories about UFO sightings. As a kid, that was a (small) section of the library I often haunted.

I don’t believe that aliens are touring our planet, but I’d love to find out I’m mistaken. The problem, of course, is that the science, as we understand it today, makes it pretty unlikely. (A fun book on the subject, The Physics of Star Trek, dives into the detail.)

I like UFO stories so much that this was one of the first actual EC back issues I ever forked over my hard-earned allowance for back in the early 70s. 

I don’t own that issue anymore, I sold it when Russ Cochran’s reprints started covering the EC bases.

But I own this great “one-pager” of Wood original art — something I could never have conceived of as a kid.

And who knows? Maybe one day, extraterrestrials actually will land on the White House South Lawn and tell us: “Einstein, nice man, he just had one part of the formula incorrect.”

Happy 50th EC Comics!

Jack Davis — Casualty Of War

Frontline Combat #5, March 1952

Concluding (for now) our 60th anniversary celebration of the legendary EC “New Trend” comics with another classic piece of great art from the legendary Jack Davis.

“We got into the Civil War thing.  It was a favorite project of mine.  We were hot to do the story of the Civil War from front to back.”
— Harvey Kurtzman, 1972 EC fan convention panel.

War stories were among EC’s many strengths, and many of those, thanks to Harvey Kurtzman’s obsessive editorial attention, were accurately based on historical events.

“Stonewall Jackson!” is a perfect example. Jackson, a brilliant Confederate military tactician, was accidentally shot by his own men in a nighttime battle. This Kurtzman story retells that tale through the voice of the supposed soldier who shot him.

Lighting is an illusion created by a creative combination of black ink and negative space. On this splash, one of my personal favorites, Davis indeed creates a beautiful illusion of campfire light. There is no actual illumination here of course, but thanks to the well-crafted art, our mind’s eye sees it.

The storytelling is equally effective. The camera work closes in on one figure through multiple panels — we instinctively know that this is our narrator and his story, even without reading the dialogue.

Kurtzman and Davis were a terrific team.

All our stories really protested war.  I don’t think we thought war was very nice generally.  The whole mood of our stories was that war isn’t a good thing.  You get killed.  That’s the way war is; you get killed suddenly for no reason. — Harvey Kurtzman, 1972 EC fan convention panel.

In 2011, Davis told The Wall Street Journal about his early career and his breakthrough with EC:

I was about ready to give up, go home to Georgia and be either a forest ranger or a farmer. But I went down to Lafayette St., up in an old rickety elevator and through a glass door to Entertaining Comics where Al Feldstein and Bill Gaines were putting out horror comic books. They looked at my work and it was horrible and they gave me a job right away!

Every time you went in to see Bill Gaines, he would write you a check when you brought in a story. You didn’t have to put in a bill or anything. I was very, very hungry and I was thinking about getting married. So I kept the road pretty hot between home and Canal Street. I would go in for that almighty check, go home and do the work, bring it in and get another check and pick up another story. [Edit: the actual cross street to Lafayette was Spring Street, not Canal.]

Jack Davis — Kurtzman’s Obsession

Two-Fisted Tales #21, May 1951

Continuing our 60th anniversary celebration of the legendary EC “New Trend” comics with another classic piece of great art from the legendary Jack Davis.

This is actually the fourth issue of EC’s Two-Fisted Tales. William Gaines — and other publishers — used a variety of title and numbering gimmicks to ensure they didn’t lose a slot in the challenging newsstand system.

It’s a Korean War story — ongoing at the time of publication — and one of many published prior to the “ceasefire” that ended the war.

Davis, in one of his early war stories, does a fantastic job following — and enhancing — Harvey Kurtzman’s very specific layouts.

Very specific layouts? Kurtzman was obsessive about the storytelling and the detail. If he couldn’t draw the story himself, e wanted to ensure that the finished result would be as close to his own material as possible. Again, because this is an early Davis war story, even the art style itself is mimics Kurtzman’s in places.

Davis and Kurtzman (and others) discussed Kurtzman’s methodology at the 1972 EC fan convention, and took a question from the audience…

QUESTION:  I’d like to know how the individual artists felt working with the very strict layouts.

KURTZMAN:  I’d like to hear that, too.

DAVIS:  I don’t know.  I think the end product came out pretty good – the detail and all.  There are a lot of people that appreciate detail and there are a lot of people that don’t.  Once you do something you like it to be authentic.  Where doing the horror books you didn’t have to be authentic, this was something that you’d like for it to come across as true, and Harvey felt very strongly about truth – the way the weapons worked and everything.  We did the best we could, and I enjoyed it.  It wasn’t that bad.  I’d hate to do it all the time.

Jack Davis — Wolfman Jack

Tales From The Crypt #46, March 1955

2020 is the 60th anniversary of the legendary EC “New Trend” comics. William Gaines and his masterful crew published some of the most enduring comics and stories in the medium’s history, raising the bar in all categories — humor, science fiction, war, crime, and of course, legendarily, horror.

To celebrate this anniversary, we take a look at one of EC’s greats — Jack Davis.

This Davis page is from Jack’s last horror story, “Upon Reflection,” from Tales From The Crypt #46, the final issue. Gaines, under censorship pressure — and unable to ensure distribution — raised the white flag and cancelled his horror and crime titles.

Davis telltale style drips all over this page. The old crone, the angry mob, and the tense claustrophobia in each panel spell out impending doom… for someone. (If we know the EC M.O., it will be a twist.)

The cover from this werewolf story has become one of the most iconic in horror comics history.

By 1955, Davis had easily become one of the most important artists in the EC “bullpen.” He was unfailingly reliable, tremendously gifted, and ridiculously prolific. Under the gun, he could pencil and ink three pages in day, without taking quality shortcuts.

Gaines, Davis, and nearly all of the rest of the EC mainstays reunited at the 1972 EC fan convention, organized by fans Bruce Hershenson and Ron Barlow. At various panels throughout the event, they reminisced about EC’s halcyon days, and the two spoke about Jack’s association with horror stories:

JACK DAVIS:  I enjoyed doing the horror bit and they liked it, and so I kept at it.  But when I looked back on it after things began to get very ticklish with the Code and everything, I began to ask – am I doing something constructive or good.  I still, I don’t know, I don’t think it’s really that bad.

WILLIAM GAINES:  You have to understand Jack comes from another era, and another kind of background.  Jack was, and still is, a very moral, religious person.  He came up here from Georgia… [laughter]…I’m serious now…and Jack did this stuff because it was his job as an artist.  Jack has always had some misgivings about it, and I respect his misgivings.  Jack has been more comfortable with other types of material than horror.  But the fact that he’s a real pro is evident from the fact that although he wasn’t 100% comfortable with it, you see the job he did.

EC publishes its own obituary.