…And an Encore!

Well, we just com­plet­ed anoth­er Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month (curat­ed and cre­at­ed by Howard Simp­son). I guess you could call this the bonus round. Like last year, I decid­ed to try to assem­ble all of these into one, big image. With the excep­tion of yes­ter­day’s “wild card” round, which was not a Jack Kir­by cre­ation, so it does­n’t belong here. Plus 30 images just group togeth­er a lot eas­i­er than 31!

See­ing all of these togeth­er, I’m struck by how busy the end result is! There’s a lot going on. I guess that’s a result of my try­ing to give each pan­el a sense of nar­ra­tive, as if they were each ran­dom­ly plucked from the midst of larg­er stories.

A lot­ta work there! See­ing them all togeth­er makes me real­ize that. But it’s cool see­ing them all in this context.

Will I do this again next year? We’ll see. I may tweak my process a lit­tle bit. I did this year, by adding the nar­ra­tive aspect.

I hope you’ve enjoyed this trip with me, found it fun and inspirational.

It’s “Harriet,” not “Hatter”

We’ve made it to day 30 of this year’s Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month! I was­n’t sure I would make it this far, but here we go. It’s still Granny Good­ness’ Orphan­age week, fea­tur­ing char­ac­ters who grew up in that insti­tu­tion on Apokolips. And today’s prompt is Mad Har­ri­et of the Female Furies!

Like all the Furies, her first appear­ance was in Mis­ter Mir­a­cle #6 (the infa­mous “Funky Flash­man” sto­ry). And she shows evi­dence there of liv­ing up to her name!

She’s a chal­lenge to draw, because while visu­al­ly mem­o­rable, once you get beyond her face and hair, her metal­lic clawed gaunt­let and pow­er spikes, it was like the remain­der of her out­fit did­n’t seem to be quite ful­ly nailed down. Fig­ur­ing out what the rest of her looks like was a chal­lenge, so I took what cues I could from var­i­ous pan­els scat­tered across sev­er­al stories.

I was also unsure what col­or to make her lips, as the col­orist back then kind of did­n’t both­er to give them a col­or. But going with kind of a blue-black for the high­lights seemed fit­ting to me.

One more day left in this year’s Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month! What’s up next? You’ll have to come back tomor­row to see!

Lashing Out

We’re in the final days of this year’s Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, and this week’s theme has been char­ac­ters who grew up in Granny Good­ness’ Orphan­age, that won­der­ful insti­tu­tion on Dark­sei­d’s Apokolips. Today’s prompt is Lashina, mem­ber of the Female Furies.

Her com­bat spe­cial­ty is the use of the var­i­ous whips or lash­es that are part of her uni­form, which she’s very quick to unfurl and use. Her design is sim­ple, but visu­al­ly strik­ing (pun unavoid­able; sor­ry)! With such a sim­ple design, you’d think she’d be easy to draw, but I found that not to be the case. I end­ed up doing it twice here. After I got my first draw­ing done and inked, I real­ized it did­n’t look right, so I redrew her body a sec­ond time, mor­tis­ing out the orig­i­nal and replac­ing it with my sec­ond (improved) drawing.

Hope you enjoyed my take on Lashina. And feel free to tune in again tomor­row to see our next vis­i­tor from Granny Good­ness’ Orphanage!

The Song of Bernadeth

As you might know, we’re in this year’s Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, cre­at­ed by Howard Simp­son. A new, cool thing Howard intro­duced this year has been weeks with over­all themes to them. This week’s theme is Granny Good­ness’ Orphan­age, with char­ac­ters who grew up there on Apokolips. Today’s prompt is Bernadeth of the Female Furies.

I’ve nev­er attempt­ed to draw her before. Jack gave her a very dis­tinc­tive look. She tend­ed to be a back­ground play­er when the Furies would show up, and did­n’t usu­al­ly get much dia­logue. Prob­a­bly the most screen­time and dia­logue she got was in her first appear­ance, in Mis­ter Mir­a­cle #6 (the infa­mous “Funky Flash­man” sto­ry, where all the Furies first appeared). We learn that she’s the sis­ter of Desaad, Dark­sei­d’s mas­ter tor­tur­er. A cool and dis­pas­sion­ate per­son, her weapon of choice is the Fahrenknife, which can “pen­e­trate dimensionally–and bar­be­cue [you] from the inside!!” Chill­ing idea!

Hope you like my take on her. For who’s next, feel free to come back by here again tomorrow!

No, Not Barbara!

Still doing Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, we’re in the midst of Granny Good­ness’ Orphan­age Week, fea­tur­ing char­ac­ters who grew up in that insti­tu­tion on Apokolips. Today’s prompt is the one and only Big Bar­da, erst­while com­man­der of the Female Furies!

There’s some­thing real­ly neat about her bat­tle armor that makes it a fun chal­lenge to wrap your head around and try to draw it. I took a shot at it last year too.

Appar­ent­ly at one point, Jack had want­ed to star Bar­da and the oth­er Furies in their own book, but I gath­er by that point, DC felt sales on the Fourth World books weren’t enough to jus­ti­fy doing it, sadly.

Hope you like my take on Bar­da here, and please feel free to come back by here tomor­row to see who’s next from the Orphanage!

A Walking, Talking Miracle!

It’s day 26 of this year’s Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, and the theme we’re work­ing with this week is char­ac­ters raised in Granny Good­ness’ Orphan­age on Apokolips. Today’s prompt is Mis­ter Miracle!

I’ve drawn him before, not just for last year’s Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, but also a few times when I was younger. Some­thing about the char­ac­ter caught my eye. I’ve got a soft spot for him. Maybe it was the fact he was the clos­est thing in Kir­by’s Fourth World titles to look­ing like a reg­u­lar super­hero, or the bright col­or scheme. Per­haps it was also the super-sci­en­tif­ic escape act, that had him get­ting out of sit­u­a­tions that looked impos­si­ble. Maybe I was­n’t alone in being fas­ci­nat­ed, because appar­ent­ly sales fig­ures prompt­ed DC to keep Mis­ter Mir­a­cle going longer than any of the oth­er Fourth World titles.

It looks bad for our hero, but I’m sure he’ll get out of this at the last pos­si­ble moment! Tomor­row will be anoth­er for­mer res­i­dent of Granny Good­ness’ Orphanage.

Do the Stomp!

We’re still in Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, and a new week means a new theme! This is Granny Good­ness’ Orphan­age Week, fea­tur­ing char­ac­ters who grew up in that august insti­tu­tion on Dark­sei­d’s Apokolips.

Today’s prompt to kick off the theme is the Female Furies, but I’ve decid­ed to go slight­ly off-menu and give you only one Fury today: Stompa.

Stom­pa (and the oth­er Furies) were first intro­duced in Mis­ter Mir­a­cle #6. You can prob­a­bly guess her spe­cial­ty by her name. Sounds sim­ple, but she made very effec­tive use of her abil­i­ty. Stom­pa and the oth­er core Furies appar­ent­ly decid­ed to defect to Earth from Apokolips, and became semi-reg­u­lars in the book for the rest of its run.

I had a bit of a time try­ing to nail down her col­or scheme, as it seemed to sort of shift around a lit­tle bit. I end­ed up with this as a good com­pro­mise for consistency.

Stom­pa was kind of fun to draw! I hope you enjoyed my take, and tune back in tomor­row to see who’s next.

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!

Jolly and Green

We’re at Day 11 of the sec­ond annu­al Jack Kir­by Trib­ute Month, start­ing the sec­ond full week of the month. A new week means a new over­all theme: D.N.Aliens (from the DNA Project and the Evil Fac­to­ry in Jim­my Olsen). Today’s prompt is the Giant Jim­my Olsen.

When Jack Kir­by decid­ed it was time to leave Mar­vel for green­er pas­tures and jumped over to DC, it was a Big Deal! Report­ed­ly, Jack was offered his pick of any DC book he want­ed. Jack though was very much a work­ing man at heart; while he was an artist, he was also very con­scious of the fact he was work­ing hard to pro­vide for his fam­i­ly as best he could. And he was mind­ful that oth­er artists were in the same boat, so he was ret­i­cent to get any­one boot­ed from a reg­u­lar assign­ment that helped to pay their bills. As a result, when offered his choice of any book in the DC line, Jack said, “Give me your worst-sell­ing title,” since he would­n’t be putting any­one out of work by doing that. This is how Jim­my Olsen (of all books) wound up being an inte­gral part of Jack­’s Fourth World Saga at DC.

I’m sure that any reg­u­lar Jim­my Olsen fans’ heads were prob­a­bly spin­ning, over all the wild, crazy action and con­cepts Jack threw at them. DNA? Cloning? The Hairies? The Moun­tain of Judg­ment? In some ways, Jack was prob­a­bly a bit too far ahead of his time for DC, or for most read­ers then. It was­n’t until years lat­er that sub­se­quent Super­man cre­ative staff seemed to final­ly catch up with Jack and revis­it­ed some of his concepts.

Even before Jack took on the book though, there was some­thing of a tra­di­tion of Jim­my Olsen under­go­ing strange changes or trans­for­ma­tions from time to time (look up Giant Tur­tle Boy, for exam­ple). Bring­ing DNA into the sto­ry­telling mix allowed Jack to put a fresh spin on this idea. The Giant Jim­my Olsen was genet­i­cal­ly engi­neered from DNA sam­ples tak­en from Jim­my by the Evil Fac­to­ry. He was cre­at­ed to break into the DNA Project , kill Super­man and destroy the Project.

I don’t know if Jack was respon­si­ble for his col­oration, but some­one must have amused them­selves by col­or­ing Giant Jim­my green, which gave him some­thing in com­mon with a cer­tain big, strong, rag­ing (ahem!) Incred­i­ble char­ac­ter at anoth­er company.

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

New Genesis Is Calling

This is Day 22 of Howard Simp­son’s month-long Jack Kir­by Trib­ute, in hon­or of the King’s birth­day this month. It’s open to all cre­atives, and you can find their trib­utes on your favorite social media plat­forms by the hash­tag #Kir­b­yArt­Trib­ut­es.

Today’s prompt is Jack Kir­by’s New Gods. This was a key book in his Fourth World saga. Those who know their Kir­by know that one of the things that always fas­ci­nat­ed him and found its way into his work were myths and leg­ends (as seen in Thor for Mar­vel). The con­cep­tu­al seed of New Gods seemed to be “The old gods in the myths and leg­ends of the past are some­thing of a larg­er-than-life embod­i­ment of the qual­i­ties those peo­ple prized. What are the con­cepts we val­ue in our mod­ern world, and how would you embody those?”

Obvi­ous­ly this isn’t all of the New Gods char­ac­ters. It would’ve been impos­si­ble to do in this space. So I lim­it­ed this to those who appeared in the New Gods title, who I had­n’t already depict­ed (like Ori­on), and only those from New Gen­e­sis, not from Apokalips (like Dark­seid). That leaves (from left to right) Metron in his Mobius Chair, High­fa­ther, and Ligh­tray. At the bot­tom is young Esak. It was still a chal­lenge to try to fit all these char­ac­ters in!

I hope you like it, and please feel free to come back again tomorrow.

You Wouldn’t Like Him When He’s Angry!

We’ve made it now to Day 18 of Howard Simp­son’s month-long online cel­e­bra­tion of Jack Kir­by! It’s open to all cre­atives, and you can find their work on your favorite social media plat­forms by the hash­tag #Kir­b­yArt­Trib­ut­es.

Today’s prompt was Ori­on, from the book New Gods. Though he’s most def­i­nite­ly on the side of New Gen­e­sis and fight­ing against Apokolips, he has his demons! His sto­ry is inter­twined with Scott Free/Mister Mir­a­cle’s, and rather than spoil it for you, you can read about it in “The Pact” (New Gods #7).

It was fun to try to cap­ture some of the “angry ener­gy” Ori­on often has in this draw­ing. Hope you enjoy! Please tune in again tomorrow.

Just Don’t Get on Her Bad Side!

It’s now Day 17 of Howard SImp­son’s month-long trib­ute to Jack Kir­by! Can you believe it? If you’d like to see what oth­ers are post­ing in order to par­tic­i­pate, you can find that work on your favorite social media plat­forms by the hash­tag #Kir­b­yArt­Trib­ut­es.

Today’s prompt is Big Bar­da. Part of Kir­by’s Fourth World saga at DC, she was a key sup­port­ing char­ac­ter in Mis­ter Mir­a­cle, first appear­ing in issue #4. Raised on Apokolips to be part of a group of war­riors called the Female Furies, she lat­er met Scott Free (Mis­ter Mir­a­cle) and fell in love with him. Even­tu­al­ly, she fol­lowed Scott to Earth.

Bar­da’s bat­tle armor is one of those Kir­by cos­tumes with a lot of detail. It’s con­sis­tent in the broad strokes, but has a ten­den­cy to morph a bit from page to page or pan­el to pan­el as far as the spe­cif­ic details go. I like how it looks, and thought a straight-ahead pre­sen­ta­tion from the front would be the best way to show it.

Hope you like it, and please come back again tomorrow.

It’s a Miracle!

We’ve hit Day 16 of Howard Simp­son’s month-long cel­e­bra­tion of the work of Jack Kir­by! It’s open to all cre­atives, and you can find the work peo­ple are upload­ing to your favorite social media plat­forms by the hash­tag #Kir­b­yArt­Trib­ut­es.

The prompt for the day is Mis­ter Mir­a­cle. The lead char­ac­ter in the com­ic named for him, he was part of the Fourth World saga Jack Kir­by spun over at DC. Known as Scott Free in his civil­ian iden­ti­ty, Mis­ter Mir­a­cle lived here on Earth and worked as an amaz­ing escape artist. Mis­ter Mir­a­cle’s back sto­ry is actu­al­ly pret­ty pro­found. I don’t want to spoil it for those who haven’t read it, but it’s cov­ered in the sto­ries “The Pact” (New Gods #7), and “Himon” (Mis­ter Mir­a­cle #9).

I recall tak­ing a crack at draw­ing Mis­ter Mir­a­cle a few times back in high school, as I was a big fan of the Fourth World mate­r­i­al. It’s been a long time!

Hope you enjoy, and stay tuned!

It’s Dark Outside!

We’re almost halfway there! Day 15 of this month-long trib­ute to Kir­by. Howard Simp­son’s brain­child, it’s open to all cre­atives, and you can find what peo­ple are post­ing on your favorite social media plat­forms by the hash­tag #Kir­b­yArt­Trib­ut­es.

Today’s prompt is Dark­seid. The pri­ma­ry antag­o­nist of Kir­by’s Fourth World books at DC, Dark­seid was a real gift Kir­by gave to DC: a vil­lain con­cep­tu­al­ly much larg­er than any oth­er DC had ever had up to this point. It could be argued that with the excep­tion of Galac­tus, Dark­seid even topped most of Kir­by’s pre­vi­ous vil­lain cre­ations for Mar­vel. He was in search of some­thing called the Anti-Life Equa­tion, which would enable him to take over the minds and will of every­one in the Universe!

Hope you like my Dark­seid draw­ing, and feel free to come back and see what’s new tomorrow!

Why So Angry?

We’re at Day 14 of Howard Simp­son’s month-long online cel­e­bra­tion of the work of Jack Kir­by! It’s open to all cre­atives, and you can find the work peo­ple are post­ing by the hash­tag #Kir­b­yArt­Trib­ut­es.

Today’s prompt: “Draw a mon­ster or an alien cre­at­ed by Jack Kir­by.” There are many pos­si­bil­i­ties out there! As men­tioned pre­vi­ous­ly with Groot, Kir­by did a whole bunch of mon­sters dur­ing the Atlas era. But instead of one of those, I opt­ed for the one you see here: Angry Char­lie. His visu­al called out to me.

Angry Char­lie was a Kir­by Kreation dur­ing his run on the Jim­my Olsen com­ic for DC, which he’d made part of the titles where he was unfold­ing his “Fourth World” sto­ries, along with For­ev­er Peo­ple, New Gods and Mis­ter Mir­a­cle. Angry Char­lie was a cre­ation of the Evil Fac­to­ry, which was ulti­mate­ly destroyed at the end of that sto­ry. Char­lie was­n’t real­ly bad, and the gang had a soft spot for him, so they took him home with them.

Hope you liked Char­lie, and tune in again tomorrow!