Everything
about Frank Frazetta's art is bigger than life. Born in
Brooklyn, NY, in 1928, his talent was so prodigious that he had his first
professional comic story, "The Snowman" in Tally-Ho Comics (see panel
at left), published in 1944 at the tender age of 16. During the 1940's, his
primary outlet was Standard (or Nedor) Publishing Co. for which he did
hundreds of small illustrations that were used to illustrate text stories.
Titles include Barnyard, Coo Coo, Goofy and Happy.
He did a few stories for these titles, plus occasional forays into "serious"
genres like crime and westerns. And even then, he was learning how to paint,
as the fairy from 1949 attests.
In
the early 1950's, Frazetta burst upon the mainstream comic scene with an
incredible explosion of talent and energy. He did series for DC ("The
Shining Knight" in Adventure Comics), ME ("White Indian" in
Durango Kid - see image at right), Toby ("John Wayne" in John Wayne
Comics, with Al Williamson); covers for Eastern (Heroic
Comics), Famous Funnies (Famous Funnies Comics - the classic "Buck
Rogers" covers), ME (Bobby Benson's B-Bar-B Riders, Ghost Rider, Straight
Arrow, and Tim Holt); and stories (some solo and some with
Williamson and friends) for ACG, Avon, DC, Eastern, EC, Standard, and
others. Plus he was doing his own newspaper strip, "Johnny Comet".
In
1953, this amazing powerhouse of energy was harnessed by a combination of
laziness, money and his love of goofing off and playing baseball (Frank was
scouted by the pros - I'm glad he chose art!). He went to work for Al
Capp assisting him on "Li'l Abner" - a position he held for eight
or nine years. His comic book work tailed off to nothing by 1955 and he
seemed to simply disappear from the world of art and comics, smothered under
the Capp house style.
The Capp experience took a couple of years to
recover from. When he quit he thought he'd just storm back into comics, but
the market had drastically changed by the early '60s. His first jobs were
for men's magazines (like Gent and Dude) and for a couple of
sexy paperbacks referred to as "The Midwood Doubles". For these, Frazetta
did interior drawings which have since been reprinted as The Sensuous
Frazetta, The Frazetta You Didn't Know About, and elsewhere.
He
never really did get back to comics, though.
Roy
Krenkel, one of the Fleagles from the EC days, convinced him
to try his hand at painting paperback covers and helped him out on his first
few jobs - "Tarzan" covers for Ace Books. In 1964 Jim Warren
recruited him to do a comic story for the first issue of his new magazine,
Creepy. It was to be the last pen & ink comic strip Frank was to do.
At about the same time an issue of Mad Magazine appeared with a
Frazetta back cover painting of Ringo Starr as a model for Blecch Shampoo
and the direction of his career was forever altered. Frank Frazetta wasn't a
comic book or comic strip artist, Frank Frazetta was a painter.

The
1965 to 1973 period was as explosive for Frazetta the painter as the early
'50s were for Frazetta the comic book artist. Most of the seminal images
we're so familiar with were done at this time: the Warren Creepy, Eerie
and Vampirella covers, the Conan paperback covers, dozens of
other covers for magazines and paperbacks (like Black Emperor right),
the movie posters, Science Fiction Book Club ERB Martian series and other
hardback dust jackets, and a slew of fanzine appearances that served to keep
his reputation as a pen & ink master alive through the years. One of the
unusual places his art appeared was in the magazine Elements,
published by Dow Chemicals in 1973. A full-page color piece, at left, and
two pen & ink drawings accompanied an article on the future of recycling.
During this period Frank also became the
primary influence on the world of science fiction art. Artists like
Jeff
Jones, Berni Wrightson, Michael Whelan, Don Maitz, Boris Vallejo and
many others were inclined, inspired or instructed to paint in this new,
dynamic "Frazetta" style. The echoes of his work still resound in the s-f
covers of today's bookstores.
The late Seventies and the Eighties saw a
series of limited edition portfolios (Kubla Khan, Women of the Ages, Lord
of the Rings), a film (Fire & Ice), a five volume series of books
devoted to his work (The Fantastic Art of Frank Frazetta and Frank
Frazetta Books 2-5 from Ballantine), occasional paperback covers,
limited edition prints (selling for thousands) taken from the covers of
The Writers of the Future paperback series from Bridge Publications, a
series of paperbacks featuring his Death Dealer (written with Jim
Silke), and little else. His impact was still being felt in the art world as
Arthur Suydam and Simon Bisley came under his spell.
 Much
of this time he was fighting an undiagnosed thyroid condition that robbed
him of much of his vitality and inspiration. Now recovering, but physically
weakened from the trauma, Frank is once again creating exciting and stunning
images that will surely serve to inspire another generation of artists. And
once again, he's doing it in comics.
Recently, several great books have been
published on Frazetta. The Alexander Gallery Retrospective is out of
print, but I think Bud Plant Comic Art just got a couple of copies into
stock. The trio of Icon, Legacy and Testament from
Arnie Fenner and Underwood Books is not to be missed.
We've both been collecting Frazetta since the early '60s and his work is a
perennial seller. Works we try to keep in stock include: many original
paperback covers, the books from Ballantine 1, 2 , 3, 4, and 5 that
reprinted his work, his National Lampoon covers, Johnny Comet
strip reprints, The Gods of Mars & The Warlord of Mars and others in
the SFBC Burroughs series, as well as lots of appearances in fanzines, and
his series of portfolios: the Famous Funnies covers, Kubla Khan,
The Lord of the Rings and The
Women of the Ages signed/limited portfolios, etc. |