General Category > Artist Spotting
Charles Voight...
Calamity Jon:
Hey all,
I'm trying to identify the collaborator on a couple of stories for which Charles Voight (Betty, Jeep and Peep, Boom Boom Brannigan) seems to have provided the inks. Comics.org identifies Voight as a contributor, but with a question mark in all of these instances. Nothing about the pencils stands out to me, I just don't see a familiar style in there. Any ideas?
First up: Dr.Styx (Treasure Comics No.4). Voight's expressive, gestural linework is on display, but the figures lack his casual stage-setting. Here's the first three pages of the story...
Calamity Jon:
The other one is the inaugural "Boom Boom Brannigan" tale from Prize Comics No.47. "Branningan" was one of Voight's signature titles, along with "Sir Prize" and "Teeny McSweeny," but this first tale seems stiffly unfamiliar. Voight had been working as a professional illustrator for more than forty years at this point, and had helmed a popular Sunday strip since 1920, so you'd expect that his style would burst from the page. This one might have a layout artist working in pencils, which would see Voight inking. Here are some example pages:
Calamity Jon:
Thanks in advance!
Yoc:
Hi CJ,
thanks for you posts here. While I'm not an art spotter but Jim Vadeboncoeur Jr (JVJ) is one of the most respected in the hobby. He and his sadly now passed compatriot Hames Ware took a look at Treasure #4 and shared their opinions on who did what in the issue on the last pages of our scan of the book.
You can read it at THIS LINK:
https://digitalcomicmuseum.com/preview/index.php?did=16997&page=54&nav=top
You can see Giunta with a question mark which means they weren't 100% sure on it but it is their best guess.
--- Quote from: Calamity Jon on August 14, 2019, 02:03:37 PM ---Hey all,
I'm trying to identify the collaborator on a couple of stories for which Charles Voight (Betty, Jeep and Peep, Boom Boom Brannigan) seems to have provided the inks. Comics.org identifies Voight as a contributor, but with a question mark in all of these instances. Nothing about the pencils stands out to me, I just don't see a familiar style in there. Any ideas?
First up: Dr.Styx (Treasure Comics No.4). Voight's expressive, gestural linework is on display, but the figures lack his casual stage-setting. Here's the first three pages of the story...
--- End quote ---
Yoc:
Hi CJ,
JVJ and Hames didn't index #47 but they did do both the issues before and after.
You can see their index cards here:
https://digitalcomicmuseum.com/preview/index.php?did=19195&page=54&nav=top
And here:
https://digitalcomicmuseum.com/preview/index.php?did=19197&page=54&nav=top
I hope that helps.
-Yoc
--- Quote from: Calamity Jon on August 14, 2019, 02:11:04 PM ---The other one is the inaugural "Boom Boom Brannigan" tale from Prize Comics No.47. "Branningan" was one of Voight's signature titles, along with "Sir Prize" and "Teeny McSweeny," but this first tale seems stiffly unfamiliar. Voight had been working as a professional illustrator for more than forty years at this point, and had helmed a popular Sunday strip since 1920, so you'd expect that his style would burst from the page. This one might have a layout artist working in pencils, which would see Voight inking. Here are some example pages:
--- End quote ---
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