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Auction archive: Lot number 144

Original Layouts for "GUYNEMER!" (Two-Fisted Tales No. 34), Seven Pages, Conte Crayon on Large Vellum Sheets, Rare

Estimate
US$5,000 - US$8,000
Price realised:
US$2,400
Auction archive: Lot number 144

Original Layouts for "GUYNEMER!" (Two-Fisted Tales No. 34), Seven Pages, Conte Crayon on Large Vellum Sheets, Rare

Estimate
US$5,000 - US$8,000
Price realised:
US$2,400
Beschreibung:

Original Layouts for "GUYNEMER!" (Two-Fisted Tales No. 34), Seven Pages, Conte Crayon on Large Vellum Sheets, Rare Author: [Original Comic Art] Kurtzman, Harvey Place: Publisher: [Entertaining Comics] Date: 1953 Description: Full seven-page layouts. Conte crayon on vellum sheets. 14" x 18.5". Pages 1, 3 & 5 in excellent condition; pages 2 & 5 have taped-on vellum patches with corrected artwork; pages 6 & 7 have marginal chips. According to publisher Denis Kitchen, Harvey Kurtzman's storyboarding process for every story he wrote involved two preliminary stages: first he created small “thumbnail” breakdowns of the full story in pencil. Then he created much larger layouts on vellum sheets, using blunt pencil or conte crayon. These layouts are about the same size as the completed original art. Artists were expected to adhere faithfully to Kurtzman's layouts. "This is a Story of Miracles!" -H. Kurtzman, "Guynemer!" For scholars of the comic art medium, Kurtzman's layouts are masterpieces of bold and confident form, bristling with a manic energy that sometimes gets subsumed in the finished artwork. Kurtzman created these large vellum layouts as a story blueprint for "Guynemer!" artist George Evans Evans later complained about Kurtzman’s insistence upon absolute fealty to his layouts. “He had put all this time and effort and so on into his meticulous layouts, and he would go over them and he would explain what he had in mind,” Evans said. “You were allowed to do it in your own style, but he did not want one facet of his pictures changed… and that I didn’t like.” Although they often disagreed, and Evans occasionally defied Kurtzman by making unwelcome changes to his designs, a comparison of these roughs with Evans’s final renderings shows that Kurtzman’s vision prevailed. Denis Kitchen, who inventoried Kurtzman’s estate, says that “because such layouts were not considered of value in the 1950s, they were routinely tossed by collaborators. Of the hundreds of such EC layouts Kurtzman created, only seven sets survived.” Of the seven surviving sets, "Guynemer!" is the most significant, offering a window into Kurtzman's most fruitful period as an artist. “Guynemer!” was written and storyboarded by Kurtzman in 1953 when he was suffering from a serious bout of acute short term hepatitis. As Bill Schelly relates in Harvey Kurtzman The Man Who Created MAD and Revolutionized Humor in America, “While working on Two-Fisted Tales #34, Kurtzman’s exhaustion turned into real illness… He checked into Mount Vernon Hospital for what turned out to be an extended stay.” Bill Gaines described the episode in an editorial note in TFT #34: “A few words about the unique and unprecedented circumstances surrounding the production of this issue! Harvey Kurtzman… Two-Fisted’s brilliant writer-artist-editor, who generally masterminds the mag from cover to cover… suddenly developed a serious case of yellow jaundice and has quickly retired to a hospital bed! Harvey managed to write the Guynemer story for Evans while the nurse wasn’t looking….” In Kurtzman's foundational myth, the birth of MAD and the genesis of "Guynemer!" were inextricably twined. He liked to tell the story of how he dreamed up MAD when he was bedridden with yellow jaundice and needed a publishing project that didn’t require the extensive research of the war comics. The story was repeated by the New York Times: "Mr. Kurtzman, who had been interviewing Korean War veterans for combat comic books, came down with jaundice and decided to create something that he could write from his sickbed" [NYT, Feb. 23, 1993]. Although Kurtzman’s memory of events was incorrect (MAD was already on its fifth issue when Kurtzman was hospitalized), it is significant in that, in Kurtzman's imagination, the three things were somehow conflated: the hospital bed, the WWI ace, MAD. For a man confined to his sickbed, the idea of flight may offer a sort of escape. The story of the chronically ill Georges Guynemer, who triump

Auction archive: Lot number 144
Auction:
Datum:
4 Jun 2020
Auction house:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
United States
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
Beschreibung:

Original Layouts for "GUYNEMER!" (Two-Fisted Tales No. 34), Seven Pages, Conte Crayon on Large Vellum Sheets, Rare Author: [Original Comic Art] Kurtzman, Harvey Place: Publisher: [Entertaining Comics] Date: 1953 Description: Full seven-page layouts. Conte crayon on vellum sheets. 14" x 18.5". Pages 1, 3 & 5 in excellent condition; pages 2 & 5 have taped-on vellum patches with corrected artwork; pages 6 & 7 have marginal chips. According to publisher Denis Kitchen, Harvey Kurtzman's storyboarding process for every story he wrote involved two preliminary stages: first he created small “thumbnail” breakdowns of the full story in pencil. Then he created much larger layouts on vellum sheets, using blunt pencil or conte crayon. These layouts are about the same size as the completed original art. Artists were expected to adhere faithfully to Kurtzman's layouts. "This is a Story of Miracles!" -H. Kurtzman, "Guynemer!" For scholars of the comic art medium, Kurtzman's layouts are masterpieces of bold and confident form, bristling with a manic energy that sometimes gets subsumed in the finished artwork. Kurtzman created these large vellum layouts as a story blueprint for "Guynemer!" artist George Evans Evans later complained about Kurtzman’s insistence upon absolute fealty to his layouts. “He had put all this time and effort and so on into his meticulous layouts, and he would go over them and he would explain what he had in mind,” Evans said. “You were allowed to do it in your own style, but he did not want one facet of his pictures changed… and that I didn’t like.” Although they often disagreed, and Evans occasionally defied Kurtzman by making unwelcome changes to his designs, a comparison of these roughs with Evans’s final renderings shows that Kurtzman’s vision prevailed. Denis Kitchen, who inventoried Kurtzman’s estate, says that “because such layouts were not considered of value in the 1950s, they were routinely tossed by collaborators. Of the hundreds of such EC layouts Kurtzman created, only seven sets survived.” Of the seven surviving sets, "Guynemer!" is the most significant, offering a window into Kurtzman's most fruitful period as an artist. “Guynemer!” was written and storyboarded by Kurtzman in 1953 when he was suffering from a serious bout of acute short term hepatitis. As Bill Schelly relates in Harvey Kurtzman The Man Who Created MAD and Revolutionized Humor in America, “While working on Two-Fisted Tales #34, Kurtzman’s exhaustion turned into real illness… He checked into Mount Vernon Hospital for what turned out to be an extended stay.” Bill Gaines described the episode in an editorial note in TFT #34: “A few words about the unique and unprecedented circumstances surrounding the production of this issue! Harvey Kurtzman… Two-Fisted’s brilliant writer-artist-editor, who generally masterminds the mag from cover to cover… suddenly developed a serious case of yellow jaundice and has quickly retired to a hospital bed! Harvey managed to write the Guynemer story for Evans while the nurse wasn’t looking….” In Kurtzman's foundational myth, the birth of MAD and the genesis of "Guynemer!" were inextricably twined. He liked to tell the story of how he dreamed up MAD when he was bedridden with yellow jaundice and needed a publishing project that didn’t require the extensive research of the war comics. The story was repeated by the New York Times: "Mr. Kurtzman, who had been interviewing Korean War veterans for combat comic books, came down with jaundice and decided to create something that he could write from his sickbed" [NYT, Feb. 23, 1993]. Although Kurtzman’s memory of events was incorrect (MAD was already on its fifth issue when Kurtzman was hospitalized), it is significant in that, in Kurtzman's imagination, the three things were somehow conflated: the hospital bed, the WWI ace, MAD. For a man confined to his sickbed, the idea of flight may offer a sort of escape. The story of the chronically ill Georges Guynemer, who triump

Auction archive: Lot number 144
Auction:
Datum:
4 Jun 2020
Auction house:
PBA Galleries
1233 Sutter Street
San Francisco, CA 94109
United States
pba@pbagalleries.com
+1 (0)415 9892665
+1 (0)415 9891664
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