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Icon: A Retrospective by the Grand Master of…
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Icon: A Retrospective by the Grand Master of Fantastic Art (original 1998; édition 2003)

par Frank Frazetta

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Frazetta is without question the master of Fantasy Art. He exploded all the old preconceptions of Fantasy as a pastoral realm of cute elves, sprites and wise wizards, and re-envisioned it as a brutal wilderness inhabited by virile, ruthless warriors hewn from pure muscle, and armour-clad amazons with astonishingly voluptuous bodies, locked in perpetual combat with horrific primeval monsters and demons. Once Frazetta had wielded his paints Fantasy could never be the same again. Born in Brooklyn in 1928, he absorbed the colourful pulp adventures of Tarzan and Flash Gordon, and in the fifties he excited the next generation of Fantasy-lovers with his comics and illustrations for the seductive lady blood-sucker, Vampirella, and most fatuously Robert E. Howard's hero, Conan The Barbarian. His work, with its high levels of testosterone, wicked humour and compositional skill, has been a profound influence on film-makers such as John Milius, Clint Eastwood and George Lucas. In the sixties Frazetta's images became the poster art for psychedelic counterculture. Frazetta was no political radical, but his art ripped apart the clean, ordered world of suburban America and replaced it with a gorgeously rendered wasteland of violence and sensuality.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:memo
Titre:Icon: A Retrospective by the Grand Master of Fantastic Art
Auteurs:Frank Frazetta
Info:Underwood Books (2003), Edition: Reprint, Paperback
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Frank Frazetta Le maître du fantasy art par Frank Frazetta (1998)

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A superb introduction to the art and life of Frank Frazetta, one of the foremost fantasy artists of the last half century. This book reproduces full colour examples of his works, from magazine and book covers to film posters and comic strips. The man is a legend and influenced a raft of artists who came after him. ( )
  David.Manns | Nov 28, 2016 |
This is a wonderful book. It covers Frazetta's history from comics all the way to the late 1990's, where he was mostly doing oil paintings. There is a good sized section devoted to his illustrations, another devoted to his entanglement with Hollywood posters, actors, etc.

The largest section, of course, is the gallery which has 150+ pages of art, including oil, watercolor, drawings. These each have at least a small amount of information detailing what was going on at the time, or what the goal was for each art. There are also a lot of examples of where they show the original, as published piece, and then they will have next to it the re-worked version. The artist will go back a lot of times and modify a painting if he didn't like something in it.

As far as the art goes, this book is a straight up 5 stars.

I knocked off a half star because of some serious reservations I have regarding a few comments the editors decided to put in regarding Robert E. Howard. Really unnecessary. I don't want to get into it here, but if you are interested in REH, don't use this book as a source lol. Better to investigate the names Mark Finn, Rusty Burke, Del Rey REH releases etc. ( )
  NightHawk777 | Jan 3, 2010 |
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Frank Frazettaauteur principaltoutes les éditionscalculé
Fenner, ArnieDirecteur de publicationauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Fenner, Cathyauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
Fenner, CathyDirecteur de publicationauteur principaltoutes les éditionsconfirmé
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Frazetta is without question the master of Fantasy Art. He exploded all the old preconceptions of Fantasy as a pastoral realm of cute elves, sprites and wise wizards, and re-envisioned it as a brutal wilderness inhabited by virile, ruthless warriors hewn from pure muscle, and armour-clad amazons with astonishingly voluptuous bodies, locked in perpetual combat with horrific primeval monsters and demons. Once Frazetta had wielded his paints Fantasy could never be the same again. Born in Brooklyn in 1928, he absorbed the colourful pulp adventures of Tarzan and Flash Gordon, and in the fifties he excited the next generation of Fantasy-lovers with his comics and illustrations for the seductive lady blood-sucker, Vampirella, and most fatuously Robert E. Howard's hero, Conan The Barbarian. His work, with its high levels of testosterone, wicked humour and compositional skill, has been a profound influence on film-makers such as John Milius, Clint Eastwood and George Lucas. In the sixties Frazetta's images became the poster art for psychedelic counterculture. Frazetta was no political radical, but his art ripped apart the clean, ordered world of suburban America and replaced it with a gorgeously rendered wasteland of violence and sensuality.

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