Updated June 6, 2014.
This colored greyline with linework on an acetate overlay
would have been the cover to a one-shot issue of Ms. Megaton Man. Announced in Yarn
Man #1 (1989) as “Coming in April” of that year, the cover was used in a
full-page house ad with a Kitchen Sink Press logo. After severing ties with
that imprint, I embarked on Don Simpson’s
Bizarre Heroes through my own imprint, Fiasco Comics, which ran for 17
issues in 1994-1995. It was at that time that I colored this piece of art, and was
contemplating an entire issue devoted to Clarissa James at that time.
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Cover to Ms. Megaton Man #1, Cel-Vinyl paints on greyline with acetate linework overlay (unpublished), c. 1995. |
The basic composition for the cover had originally been
worked out as a
Supergirl sample for
DC Comics. I have a photocopy of the original layout somewhere in my files, but I
can’t recall whether I ever finished the artwork for it or not; if I did, I may have
sold it off at a convention. In any case, I always liked the composition, which
is why I reworked it as a Ms. Megaton Man piece. It also further underscores
the fact Ms. Megaton Man, although originally a female variation on the more
decidedly humorous
Megaton Man, always had a more dramatic side, and to my mind
could conceivably work as a plausibly dramatic megahero.
Although the issue never appeared, and frankly I can't recall having much of a plotline in mind beyond the futuristic
War of the Worlds image, I am currently devising a storyline that will involve Ms. Megaton Man traveling to the future and battling the Big Two. What is remarkable about the image, even today, and about Ms. Megaton Man in general, is that she heralded a more realistic superhero style for me that was way ahead of its time in the late 1980s. Drawing the
Megaton Man supporting cast always presented a problem for me (should they be drawn in a humorous or more realistic fashion?), and Ms. Megaton Man showed me that I could blend a satirical style with a more straight approach (and by utilizing the Megaton Man costume, no less).
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House ad for Ms. Megaton Man #1, a projected one-shot that was never published, from Yarn Man #1 (1989), a one-shot that was. |
Speaking of Yarn Man, below is the original acrylic painting
for Yarn Man #1, the only cover I
ever fully painted. I have worked with oils, acrylics, gouache, watercolor,
Cel-Vinyl, and digital coloring for a variety of pieces, ranging from personal
studies to professional work, but I have found acrylics to be the most
difficult medium with which to paint. In fact, unless one specifically wanted
to create some wall-sized abstract sofa art (which I’ve done for my own
gratification), I’m not sure why anyone would find acrylics useful. But that’s
just me.
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Cover of Yarn Man #1, original acrylic painting on illustration board, 12.5" x 18". |
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Cover of Yarn Man #1 (Kitchen Sink Press, 1989) as published. |