Showing posts with label Al Wiseman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Al Wiseman. Show all posts

Monday, July 08, 2013

The Art of Summer Reading: Al Wiseman

You can tell by the heat and humidity around these parts that summer has definitely arrived. As an adult, I find myself hiding inside, enjoying the comfort of my air conditioned studio. But as a kid, I spent days like this riding my bike, fishing for brook trout in a nearby stream, going swimming at the pool or playing baseball at our local park...

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... and reading under a big shady tree. Reading comic books and chapter books; that was probably my favourite summer activity.

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Among my favourite things to read were these thick, digest-sized collections that reprinted old Dennis the Menace comic books from the 1950s. I still have a pile of them, purchased at our local used book store for a quarter a piece when I was probably eight or nine years old.

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I didn't know it at the time, but those comics weren't drawn by Dennis creator, Hank Ketcham. The early Dennis comic books - the one's reprinted in those digest-size paperbacks - were drawn by a tremendously talented and largely unknown cartoonist named Al Wiseman.

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Wiseman was, in no uncertain terms, a brilliant cartoonist.

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Using a refined, almost 'technical' line, Al Wiseman managed to capture all the character of his subjects and impart a range and subtlety of motion - and emotion - missing from the vast majority of work done by lesser cartoonists.

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Wiseman's impressive drawing skills are evident in every panel of any page he drew...

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... but nowhere more so than in panels that show the human form is motion.

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Combining slapstick body language and the accuracy of superior draftsmanship gave Wiseman's work a believability that had me hooked from the first page of every hilarious story.

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Wiseman's Dennis lived in an alternate reality of suburban mundanity I could totally accept as being 'a real place.' It looked very much like the neighbourhood I was growing up in...

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... which made Dennis' outrageous antics all the more appealing to me as a kid.

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I could relate because Wiseman seemed to be drawing my world with tremendous accuracy - but with more crashing, smashing and yelling!

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One thing I was oblivious to at the time but now have tremendous admiration for is Al Wiseman's expert use of silhouette.

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No doubt Wiseman intended to save some time rendering detail... but drawing a well-defined silhouette is not easy to do well.

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Wiseman's silhouettes were always attractively designed, easy to read, and told the story of the picture in a clear, concise manner.

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When he really wanted to show off though, Wiseman would spare no detail in delineating the complex chaos and joyful mayhem only Dennis Mitchell could create!

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This week: a look at some of the great illustrators of books (and comic books) from my childhood summers.

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* Al Wiseman's grand daughter has created a blog about her grandfather with some biographical information. Click here to take a look.