This lovely drawing was a single panel in a story by Mort Drucker for MAD Magazine in 1972.
It occupied a mere 3.75 inches x 12.75 inches in the magazine. You could not possibly see or appreciate the variety of faces in this panel.
Until now.
Here are 25 of my favorites, larger than life:
The brilliant Drucker drew for MAD for over 50 years, producing hundreds of stories containing thousands of such panels overflowing with distinctive faces. Also hands, figures and complex backgrounds. He dispensed his talent with an abundance that I still find astonishing.
16 comments:
Drucker is a genius.
Its humbling to see his linework at this level of definition and see how much his masterpiece seem almost indistinguishable from scribble lines, and yet when present the right way its downright inspiring.
Thanks for taking the time to zoom in on all the different characters for us, guys like this need to get their due appreciation.
Comic Genius!
JPEG: Godfather wedding 033i, is that Tricky Dicky creeping about?
Oh the time I spent copying Drucker and Davis. Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad world. Thanks for this.
those faces are SO much fun - true master making it look easy :D
MORAN-- Agreed.
Erik Johnson Illustrator-- Glad you like them. Keep in mind that these images are two or three times the size of the original drawings, which accounts for some of the roughness.
Nathan Fowkes-- Good to hear from you. Yes, there are a lot of great, unsung talents out there whose work deserves more attention. It seems to me that Drucker is an artist who is revered by other artists, and who was hugely influential because his work was read by young adults at formative stages, but who still doesn't get the fame and respect he is due from the broader establishment.
Kev Ferrara-- right on!
अर्जुन -- Thanks for the slice of history. The good thing about Drucker is that when he wants to draw Tricky Dick, you know exactly who it is. His caricatures of Nixon were the best.
bill-- Me, too.
Katana Leigh-- Thanks, I'm glad you enjoyed them.
incredible understanding of facial variations.USA's greatest caricaturist?
The writing in Mad sometimes didn't do justice to the artistry of the images. Drucker filled panel after panel with well staged, composed, spot on gestures and caricatures that captured the actors likenesses no matter what the angle or lighting. He also got the backgrounds right. What a draftsman! I often wonder how he did his research and if a copy of the film or production stills were available to him?
There was a time when a copy of Mad poking out of the back pocket of Levi's defined cool.
Alex-- Different caricaturists excel at different things,so it is very difficult to say unequivocally that a particular artist is the "greatest." However, if you want my purely subjective opinion, I'd say "yes."
Joel Brinkerhoff-- I understand that Drucker was permitted to see movies before the general public, as studios were happy to have MAD parody their work. However, Drucker has also said in interviews that it would be impossible to do what he did taking faces from movie stills because the angles, shadows and expressions would all have to change to adapt to the script.
ScottLoar-- for me it still does (as long as the issue of MAD is an older issue. I don't care much for what MAD is doing these days).
Mad magazine from inception to the early 80's should be it's own required course of study for design and illustration students.
Thanks so much! No question but that my ten-year-old self didn't appreciate these drawings as much as I do now, but I now that the gist of Mort Drucker's style got into my bones at that tender age. I hardly had a clue what most of the stories were about (what parents was going to take their ten-year-old kid to see "The Godfather?"), but I was solidly addicted to the look and feel of the art, and I still am.
sehr guter Beitrag
Post a Comment