Monthly Archives: August 2024

Milady

This makes Day 21 now of this year’s Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month. And we’re work­ing our way through Asgard week, fea­tur­ing char­ac­ters who appeared dur­ing Jack­’s Jour­ney into Mystery/Thor run. Today’s prompt is the Lady Sif!

Ini­tial­ly, the Thor strip in Jour­ney into Mys­tery had a run­ning sub­plot that Thor loved the mor­tal Nurse Jane Fos­ter, who worked for him in his human iden­ti­ty of Dr. Don Blake. Thor’s father Odin had trou­ble with this idea, and Jack and Stan got a lot of “soap opera” style mileage out of this rela­tion­ship for a long time. But some­thing like this could only be car­ried on for so long, with­out it becom­ing tiresome.

So they found a sat­is­fy­ing way to resolve this sto­ry­line in Thor #136, “To Become an Immor­tal!” I don’t want to spoil the sto­ry for those who haven’t read it for them­selves yet, but at the end, Sif shows up. And from that point on, she became a reg­u­lar sup­port­ing char­ac­ter in the book, as the sto­ries became more epic.

An inter­est­ing thing is that Sif’s look kind of fluc­tu­ates a bit more than you’d think. She looks dif­fer­ent­ly on the splash page of issue #137 than she did at the end of #136. Her cos­tume had a lot more detail. She starts off in #137 with a full hel­met sur­round­ing her head (with orna­men­tal wings, no less!), which over time morphs into more of a small hel­met pro­tect­ing just the top of her head, before van­ish­ing entire­ly. Her cos­tume becomes very sim­pli­fied over time too. For my ver­sion, I brought in a lit­tle bit of the orig­i­nal detail, just to make it more interesting.

Tune in tomor­row to see who’s next for Asgard Week!

Big Daddio

We’ve made it to day 20 of this year’s Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month (cre­at­ed by Howard Simp­son). The theme has been Asgard this week: char­ac­ters who appeared dur­ing Jack Kir­by’s run on Jour­ney into Mystery/Thor. And today’s prompt is none oth­er than Odin!

Fans will know that Odin is the ruler of all Asgard, and Thor’s father. If you’ve read a lot of the Lee/Kirby sto­ries, you’re aware that their rela­tion­ship is com­pli­cat­ed, to say the least.

An inter­est­ing aspect to Odin is that visu­al­ly, apart from hav­ing a sol­id frame and the white hair and beard, he has no fixed look! Pret­ty much every time you see him, his attire is dif­fer­ent. And more often than not, it’s quite ornate! In comics, this is very unusu­al. But appar­ent­ly Jack liked the chal­lenge of com­ing up with some­thing dif­fer­ent for Odin each time you saw him. It was­n’t just from issue to issue; some­times his appar­el would change from scene to scene in the same story!

As a result, what I’ve drawn here is inspired by, but not based off of, any one spe­cif­ic out­fit worn by Odin. I pulled my col­or cues from how he was col­ored too (crazy things some­times like the green shad­ows on the blue gloves!). I don’t know that Jack ever hid a face any­where in his designs, but that felt right to me to do that (as kind of a tip of the hat to Walt Simon­son and his Thor run, sec­ond best only to the orig­i­nal. Simon­son would do things like that).

Hope you like my take on Odin, and tune in tomor­row for our next vis­i­tor from Asgard!

Three Is a Magic Number

Here on the 19th day of Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, we’ve moved into Asgard week, fea­tur­ing char­ac­ters from Jack­’s Thor run. Today’s prompt is the War­riors Three! In front from left, we have Hogun the Grim and Fan­dral the Dash­ing. Behind them is Volstagg.

As seen in Thor Annu­al #2 from 1966, the War­riors were good friends of Thor. They would often end up going into bat­tle togeth­er. Fan­dral had a dev­il-may-care atti­tude, smil­ing and jok­ing as he bat­tled, seem­ing­ly mod­eled after Errol Fly­nn (per­haps with Fly­n­n’s ver­sion of Robin Hood in mind). Hogun came by his appel­la­tion “the Grim” hon­est­ly, as he rarely smiled or said much in bat­tle (he appeared to be some­thing of a mash-up of Charles Bron­son and Genghis Khan, odd­ly enough). Vol­stagg at this ear­ly point in time was often more of a com­ic relief fig­ure, though lat­er he was shown to be as brave and respect­ed as the rest. He appears to have been inspired by Shake­speare’s Falstaff.

I’d nev­er attempt­ed to draw these char­ac­ters, so it was fun to take a crack at them! Hope you enjoy, and tune in again tomor­row if you’re curi­ous to see who in the Thor cast shows up next!

Sneaky!

We’ve made it to the 18th day of this year’s Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month (cre­at­ed by Howard Simp­son)! A new week means a new theme: Asgard week, fea­tur­ing char­ac­ters who appeared in Jack­’s run on Jour­ney into Mystery/Thor. And this first day, the prompt is none oth­er than that wily ras­cal, Loki!

Loki made a pret­ty good ongo­ing threat to Thor and Asgard. He was always very crafty in how he went about his schemes, and even man­aged to gain con­trol of Asgard at one point! A lot has hap­pened to the char­ac­ter in the years since, but that “trick­ster” ele­ment has remained a part of his character.

I’ve said this pre­vi­ous­ly, but Jour­ney into Mystery/Thor is an impor­tant book to look at when study­ing the body of Jack­’s Mar­vel work. All his Mar­vel work is worth look­ing at, but I’ve come to the con­clu­sion that there are two books that are the pil­lars of his Mar­vel work, that must be tak­en into account. I’m talk­ing about the Fan­tas­tic Four, and Jour­ney into Mystery/Thor. Those are the two books where you not only see a storyteller/artist work­ing at the top of their craft, you also get to see a glimpse of Jack Kir­by as a per­son, the things that inter­est­ed and moti­vat­ed him. Thor shows the inter­est that Jack had in myths and leg­ends which ran through his career.

It was fun to take a shot at draw­ing a clas­sic-style Loki here. If you’re curi­ous as to who might be next, pop by again tomorrow!

Wild Thing

Today wraps the sec­ond full week of this year’s Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month. This week’s theme has been the D.N.Aliens gen­er­at­ed by the DNA Project and the Evil Fac­to­ry, from Jack­’s Jim­my Olsen run. Today’s prompt is Jim­my “Homo-Dis­as­trous” Olsen.

As men­tioned before, one of the tropes that had long been part of Jim­my Olsen sto­ries was to put poor Jim­my through strange changes. And when Jack took over the title, using DNA as a plot ele­ment allowed him to take Jim­my through some very strange trans­for­ma­tions! Most were in the form of clones, but in this instance, Simyan and Mokkari of the Evil Fac­to­ry altered Jim­my him­self into this very sav­age and dan­ger­ous form. They over­es­ti­mat­ed their abil­i­ty to han­dle the altered Olsen. Or some of the oth­er crea­tures he freed from their menagerie.

I must admit that it was kind of fun to draw a sav­age Jim­my Olsen! Hope you enjoyed this, and please tune in again tomor­row to see a new week’s new theme!

It’s All Their Fault!

Today makes day 16 of the sec­ond annu­al Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, which means we’re offi­cial­ly over halfway through! If you’ve been keep­ing score, you know that this week’s theme has been the D.N.Aliens cre­at­ed by the DNA Project or the Evil Fac­to­ry, as seen in Kir­by’s run on Jim­my Olsen. Today’s prompts are the heads of the Evil Fac­to­ry, Simyan and Mokkari.

Work­ing on behalf of Dark­seid to wreak hav­oc on Earth from their secret loca­tion, Simyan and Mokkar­i’s Evil Fac­to­ry cre­at­ed a num­ber of crea­tures that they seemed in some cas­es to not even real­ly have any con­trol of. It was sci­ence run amuck! They were def­i­nite­ly respon­si­ble for cre­at­ing some “inter­est­ing” times for our heroes and the DNA Project. There’s also a sense that maybe the alliance between the two is on the frag­ile side, that each has their own inter­ests and ought to watch their back.

These guys were fun to try to draw. It struck me that those facial tat­toos (or mark­ings, or what­ev­er they are) on Mokkari kind of make me think of some­thing Steve Ditko might’ve designed.

Hope you like my take, and stay tuned! There’s one more day of this week’s D.N.Aliens theme, which you’ll see tomorrow!

Don’t Be so Angry!

Today makes day 15 of the sec­ond annu­al Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, cre­at­ed by Howard Simp­son. If you’ve been fol­low­ing along, you know the theme this week is the D.N.Aliens from the DNA Project and the Evil Fac­to­ry, as seen in Jack­’s run on Jim­my Olsen. And the prompt for today is Angry Charlie.

Angry Char­lie was a prod­uct and sur­vivor of the Evil Fac­to­ry, but not real­ly bad in him­self. He was more of a chaos agent, act­ing in unpre­dictable ways. His appear­ance was weird and a lit­tle off­putting, yet some­how also man­ag­ing to be kind of cute, in a way. The News­boy Legion (espe­cial­ly Gab­by) kind of adopt­ed him as a pet. Angry Char­lie had an odd propen­si­ty to snack on fur­ni­ture on occasion.

This isn’t the first time I’ve drawn Angry Char­lie! Last year’s Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month had a prompt for Kir­by’s mon­sters, and out of all the crea­tures I could’ve done, I chose to draw Char­lie. Guess I have a bit of a soft spot for him.

Hope you enjoy, and that you tune in again tomor­row to see the next D.N.Alien!

Takes All Kinds

Here’s day 14 of of the sec­ond annu­al Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, cre­at­ed by Howard Simp­son to hon­or the month of Jack Kir­by’s birth. The theme this week is the D.N.Aliens of the DNA Project and the Evil Fac­to­ry in Jim­my Olsen. And today’s prompt is Arin, the Armored Man.

Arin only appeared in one short tale, part of a few one-shot extras Jack did under the umbrel­la title, “Tales of the DNA Project.” Arin was cre­at­ed by the Project to be able to live and thrive in the vac­u­um of space. He had with him a red back­pack that…well, I don’t want to spoil the sto­ry for those who haven’t read it. We only get to see him for three pages in Jim­my Olsen #146, so who knows what comes next?

Arin seems to be metal­lic in nature, but he appears dif­fer­ent from the kind of shiny met­al com­pos­ing char­ac­ters like the Sil­ver Surfer. I tried to get that sense here too.

I hope you enjoy my take, and feel free to tune in tomor­row for anoth­er D.N.Alien!

 

Two and Two Is…

It’s now day 13 of the sec­ond annu­al Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, and we’re in the midst of a week themed for the D.N.Aliens from Jack­’s time on Jim­my Olsen. Today’s prompt is the Four-Armed Ter­ror, anoth­er char­ac­ter I’ve nev­er tried to draw before.

The Ter­ror was part of a batch of D.N.Aliens cooked up in secret by the Evil Fac­to­ry to wreak hav­oc on their oppo­site, the DNA Project. Feed­ing on radioac­tive ener­gy, the Four-Armed Ter­ror and his sib­lings came dan­ger­ous­ly close to end­ing the Project in a nuclear fire­ball! But Super­man saved the day at the last moment.

To be hon­est, the Ter­ror was a bit of a chal­lenge to draw. His appear­ance did­n’t seem to be com­plete­ly locked down, and the inks by Vince Col­let­ta did­n’t real­ly help in that regard either. So hope­ful­ly this com­bines enough of what I saw in all those pan­els to work.

Tune in again tomor­row for anoth­er D.N.Alien!

Think of a Number Between One and Ten…

On day 12 of the sec­ond annu­al Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month (cre­at­ed by Howard Simp­son), this week’s theme is the D.N.Aliens from Jack­’s time on Jim­my Olsen. Today’s char­ac­ter prompt is Dubbilex.

Dub­bilex was one of the D.N.Aliens from the gov­ern­men­t’s secret DNA Project, intro­duced in Jim­my Olsen. Though per­haps some­what off­putting at first glance, Dub­bilex was actu­al­ly quite friend­ly and intel­li­gent. Though cre­at­ed at the Project, he worked along­side the sci­en­tists, help­ing with research. He was the face of the Project, intro­duced to any vis­it­ing dig­ni­taries who were allowed through their doors. Lat­er in Jack­’s run, Dub­bilex was shown to have devel­oped Telekine­sis too.

I’d nev­er drawn Dub­bilex before (or most of the oth­er char­ac­ters that are prompts for this week). He was fun to take a shot at. Hope you like my take, and that you come back tomor­row to see the next D.N.Alien!