Why are you so popular ?
Jacob Berget
berget at raptus.dk
Mon May 13 14:02:33 CEST 2002
> It's funny, that those three persons are always mentioned, considering
> that we have plenty of newer and IMO more skilled artists around. I
> think it was Ole, who once asked why Barks is called "Den Gode Tegner"
> (=the good drawer) in Denmark. He certainly--in his drawings--is
> surpassed by another CB, namely Carl Buettner. And in fact, I find e.g.
> Strobl's art in the 60s much more interesting and dynamic than Barks'
> art during that same period.
I think, that Barks' art is very different in each story - for example "Chirstmas on Bearmountain" is very different from "Statue spechifi... (i don't know, how to write that word! =))" - and "The lives and times of Scrooge McDuck" is drawn in a totally other style than "Gyro's first invention"! I think that Barks´stories was best in the beginning of the 50s - some will not agree in that, and THAT will just confirm, that the is a so big style-diffence is his (and many others) drawings - THAT thing will do, that the "målgruppe" will be larger, and i think thats why there is so many that likes him - because of that, and because of his GREAT, and i mean GREAT, stories! =)
> As for Don, he certainly is a splendid story teller spiced up with so
> much humour, a bit too strict and conscise in certain places, but
> that's his style apparently. However, the art itself...hmmm...can't say
> I dislike it, but clearly it doesn't come fluently and as natural as
> with
I like Rosa's drawings in "The lives and times of Scrooge McDuck" but not in the new story, "Gyro's first invention" - the drawings in "Gyro's first invention" looks so poor to me!
> What I notice, while reading less good stories, is that most artists
> seem to have left the original cartoon background completely. A duck is
> now a character with both feet safely placed on the ground, perhaps one
> arm is lifted a little bit to show a gesture or whatever, the eyes may
> show a bit of anger etc..., but hey, where is the dynamic?! Who can
> draw a duck that runs (and I really mean RUN) nowadays? Who can draw a
> Donald sighing over his greedy uncle, without making him look like
> Garfield not having his morning coffee served properly? Nah.
Agreed!!!!
/Jacob Berget
http://www.donaldisten.dk
----- Original Message -----
From: "Søren Krarup Olesen" <sko at acoustics.dk>
To: "Disney Comics Mailing List" <dcml at stp.ling.uu.se>
Sent: Saturday, May 11, 2002 1:15 AM
Subject: Re: Why are you so popular ?
> On Friday 10 May 2002 21:07, 99E wrote:
>
> > -And I agree. No doubt, Don Rosa is a great storyteller. As long as
> > it comes to longer adventurestories - Barks, Rosa and Rota are, IMHO,
> > the greatest tellers... Lots of other folk write great scripts for
> > shorter stories - but not as consistently as the three mentioned
> > above.
>
> It's funny, that those three persons are always mentioned, considering
> that we have plenty of newer and IMO more skilled artists around. I
> think it was Ole, who once asked why Barks is called "Den Gode Tegner"
> (=the good drawer) in Denmark. He certainly--in his drawings--is
> surpassed by another CB, namely Carl Buettner. And in fact, I find e.g.
> Strobl's art in the 60s much more interesting and dynamic than Barks'
> art during that same period.
>
> As for Don, he certainly is a splendid story teller spiced up with so
> much humour, a bit too strict and conscise in certain places, but
> that's his style apparently. However, the art itself...hmmm...can't say
> I dislike it, but clearly it doesn't come fluently and as natural as
> with
>
> Rota, who is (in comparison to other Italians) a "mid-range" artist but
> nevertheless with a very personal style, that fits the universe
> perfectly. Still, I've often wondered why Rota would go be so popular.
> His stories are not *that* interesting (not in comparison with Don's
> anyway). Most of Rota's panels are sort of isolated "events" - each of
> them being brilliantly drawn, but that doesn't necessarily make a
> "fluent" (yes, that word again) story.
>
> What I notice, while reading less good stories, is that most artists
> seem to have left the original cartoon background completely. A duck is
> now a character with both feet safely placed on the ground, perhaps one
> arm is lifted a little bit to show a gesture or whatever, the eyes may
> show a bit of anger etc..., but hey, where is the dynamic?! Who can
> draw a duck that runs (and I really mean RUN) nowadays? Who can draw a
> Donald sighing over his greedy uncle, without making him look like
> Garfield not having his morning coffee served properly? Nah.
>
> Søren
>
>
>
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