| Jones, Jeff | |
| The final spate of Jones cover art was for a re-release of Robert E. Howard material. By this point there was a mannered, painterly, almost N.C. Wyeth feel to his art. I'll show you some, but first a little detour to Idyl and The Studio | |
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Frank Frazetta's
Conan covers had hacked their way into the public consciousness in
1966 and 1967 and the art directors had their goal: find people who could
paint like Frazetta. It's obvious that Jones' early sf work owes much to Mr.
Frazetta, but it's a very serious mistake to relegate all of his early work
to the sf and fantasy categories. The painting for City of the Chasch, above right, is one of his very early attempts, but that first year, 1968, saw his work on literally dozens of books of all genres. Just take a look at the sampling at right, all from 1968. From series adventure books like Nick Carter's Amsterdam to Pulitzer Prize winning titles like Ellen Glascow's In this Our Life to romantic adventure, gothic romance, sexy black comedies and more. Jones was all over the newstands that first year. I was 22 in 1968 and had so incredibly much more time that I was able to make a weekly (sometimes twice weekly) trip to a local book store to walk up and down the aisles looking for new Jones covers. I'd seen his work in the sf section and thought I'd check out the rest of the store. Kepler's Books (it's still around today and prospering in the face of the monolithic chains) had the wonderful practice of displaying the newly arrived books with their covers face out while prior weeks' material was visible only from the spine. By coming in every week, I was able to discover these and many other obscure Jones covers. I'm sure someone else would have (and may have) found them, too, but every list of his work to which I contributed was missing a dozen or more of these non-sf titles. |
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Jones illustrated his second book that year,
doing four color plates for Red Shadows - a collection of Solomon
Kane stories by Robert E. Howard. But back to my point: Jones was never a Frazetta clone. I'm sure he got some assignments because he was able to provide a passable version of the style, but one look at A Woman of Bangkok at right and it is obvious that he had a style and a talent very early on that had nothing to do with muscular barbarians. He provided over 150 covers for many different types of books through 1976. |
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Jones always contributed to many
different markets. He created a sculpture (see above) that he cast and had
to re-cast, as many that were sent to buyers through the mail arrived in
pieces. (Mine was one of the fortunate ones). He was still providing elegant
illustrations to Amazing Stories and Fantastic, the sf pulp
digest, in 1972. That same year he had an illustration in Esquire
magazine and a painting in the first issue of Gallery as well. He had
a two-page strip that ran in Swank magazine for seven months, stories
and covers in Psycho (a Creepy competitor), covers for some DC
comic books, and in January of that year he began a long-running page in
National Lampoon called Idyl. It was originally intended to be painted and in color, but the effort was too much and only one partially completed example exists. But of the b&w version, every issue of NatLamp from Jan. 1972 to Aug. 1975 had one page of his delicious pen work and his outrageously wry humor. If Seinfeld was the TV show about nothing, Idyl was the comic strip. At left is one of the two pages that appeared in the special 3-D issue (the one with Stevie Wonder on the cover) in July 1975.
In 1993, with the release of a
set of art trading cards, Jones captured a second generation of fans. A
follow-up set and the Since he left the studio in New York, Jones has lived in Woodstock, NY. In 1995 we saw some of his pleine air paintings which he was kind enough to show us at San Diego. I hope somewhere out there is a publisher with the courage to produce a book devoted to this type of work. These small paintings, mainly landscapes done outdoors, are precious jewels that shouldn't be hidden away. They're one more side of a multi-faceted talent. One of our favorites. |
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| Information supplied by: http://www.bpib.com/illustrat/jonesjf.htm | |