I’m adding another to the group of fake covers I had a hand in creating sometime back for “The Big Bang History of Comics” issues of Big Bang Comics. Credits on this one take a little explanation. Pencils were by Frank Squillace, inks and lettering by me. Frank did a color comp on a photocopy with markers, which I marked up with color formula callouts to create a colorist guide.
This cover ended up being repurposed as an actual Big Bang cover for issue #34, with different trade dress. For that instance, I believe someone at Image actually generated the color file used to print it, based on the color guide we’d provided. I don’t think I actually did that one myself in Photoshop, because after much searching, I don’t seem to have a file for it. Which means the version you see here has been totally recolored by me from scratch in Photoshop, referencing the color guide. I tweaked the rendering in a few spots to plus what was in the printed version a little bit, so a sharp eye might spot some of those differences.
I suspect most visitors will immediately realize that Frank and I were shooting for a Jack Kirby style here. I always thought of Big Bang as sort of “comics history through a funhouse mirror.” It’s known that when Jack Kirby jumped from Marvel to DC, they offered him any book he wanted. Jack wasn’t comfortable with putting anyone out of work, so he said, “give me your least-selling book.” That’s how Jimmy Olsen ended up as part of Jack’s Fourth World Saga at DC. Anyone who’s studied Jack’s work knows he had a lifelong fascination with myths and legends. So I thought, what if instead of Jimmy Olsen, Jack had taken on Wonder Woman? In Big Bang terms, that would’ve translated to Joe Kingler (Big Bang’s Kirby equivalent) taking on the character Venus.
This is the first time this has appeared in color with the original Venus masthead. Hope you enjoy it!