Create Web Sites

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Wednesday, 15 June 2011

Joe Cleary & Boy's Life Magazine

Posted on 07:20 by Unknown
Gregory Manchess







I found it fascinating when I was a kid that Boy’s Life Magazine embraced science fiction.  Strong illustrations, like this one by Joe Cleary, made time travel stories my favorite.
With such a lose application of line and tone, Joe still captured a feeling of the realness of the machinery. Indications of hardware with nuts, bolts, joints, dials, and wheels are placed just so, just enough to fill the scene with possibility. Even the faces depict a moment of caution, excitement, urgency. Joe had that mastery of composition that never allowed anything to seem like it wasn’t meant to be there.
I took a class from Joe when I went to the California College of Arts and Crafts for a year, so I know something of the technique used here. It is as radical now as it was in the 60’s.
Joe laid down a loose wash of colorful and rich dyes, then poured on a layer of Elmer’s glue. The glue made a strange and soft blur of the first washes, running them together. He would wait for it to dry into a glassy layer, then painted the shapes and lines in acrylic strokes on top of it. More dye washes, Elmer’s, and acrylics repeated until sometimes the illustration board was a quarter inch thick of glue and paint. It was luminous and seemed otherworldly on it’s own.
My imagination was not, and still is not, stimulated by detail. It’s excited by accuracy. Give me the elements to spark my memory of things, and I’m there. Loose and vibrant, even abstract and bold, Joe could get you to believe it.
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Frank McCarthy
    -by Arnie Fenner While putting together my previous post about movie posters, scratching my head and trying to remember who did what, I a...
  • Art Might - online art museum
    Just a quick post this time around... I’m spending the remaining time trying to track down Spectrum entries! D'oh! Plan on spending a co...
  • How to Draw the Head From Any Angle: Part 2
    Thanks to the great reception his first video received, Stan Prokopenko , has decided to do a follow up to his ' How To Draw the Head fr...
  • Paja Jovanović ( Vršac 1859 – Vienna 1957)
    by Petar Meseldžija Paja Jovanović is one of the greatest Serbian painters. Uroš Predić, another great painter, is perhaps the only artist f...
  • Painting Spider-Man
    By Paolo Rivera Mythos: Spider-Man, Page 22 . 2007. Gouache and acrylic on bristol board, 11 × 17″. Just a quick post today (but with lots o...
  • Sketchbook 2012 Shipping Out!
    by Justin Gerard Sketchbook 2012: Ents & Orcs  ships out today!    The first 50 are individually numbered and have a personal drawing in...
  • Virtual Sistine Chapel
    Virtual Sistine Chapel Tour and others... The Vatican has released virtual tours of their various churches and chapels. Please use the below...
  • Paleo-Illustration Into Creature Design, A Natural Partnership
    -By Terryl Whitlatch I am first and foremost, a paleo illustrator specializing in vertebrate, or back-boned, animal anatomy.  When I observe...
  • The History of Dragons in Art
    -By William O'Connor 'Flight of the Paladin', by William O'Connor, ©2012 The most iconic image in all of fantasy art is the ...
  • Appreciating Rembrandt
    -Justin Sweet Here's a couple of my favorite Rembrandt's. Great pictorially in every way...

Categories

  • Dan dos Santos
  • Justin Gerard
  • Paolo Rivera

Blog Archive

  • ►  2012 (266)
    • ►  September (4)
    • ►  August (36)
    • ►  July (33)
    • ►  June (36)
    • ►  May (36)
    • ►  April (26)
    • ►  March (31)
    • ►  February (30)
    • ►  January (34)
  • ▼  2011 (234)
    • ►  December (25)
    • ►  November (34)
    • ►  October (36)
    • ►  September (27)
    • ►  August (29)
    • ►  July (35)
    • ▼  June (31)
      • Zero to Sixty
      • Flesk Prime
      • Mark Twain Stamp
      • St. George Drawings
      • GovDeals
      • Previews
      • La Planete Sauvage
      • Hope Gallery & Brian Despain
      • I'd rather be painting...
      • Your own IMC
      • Cheap Thrills & Painted Nightmares
      • The Debbie Reynolds Collection
      • Tim Bruckner
      • Kent Williams Signing
      • They did it!
      • IMC Visitor Day
      • Who did it?
      • Joe Cleary & Boy's Life Magazine
      • Harry Potter Show at Gallery Nucleus
      • Now I REALLY Wish I Was There!
      • Tips and Tricks and your suggestions #4 - Workstat...
      • Summer Camp
      • New Work in Progress
      • In case you missed it...
      • At the Met (again)
      • Scholarship Deadline Reminder
      • Exercise
      • Secret recipes and tricks from my art kitchen - Pa...
      • Finally!
      • TODD LOCKWOOD: Curvilinear Perspective, Part 2
      • TODD LOCKWOOD: Curvilinear Perspective, Part 1
    • ►  May (17)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile