andy
24.06.2002, 11:15
Tja, Erlangen hab ich zwar verpasst, aber dafür eine Unmenge neuer alter Comics in meine Webbseite gestopft. Alle Neuzugänge sind jetzt auf der Heimseite aufgelistet und verlinkt. Sollte man sich echt mal ansehen, so als Comickenner und so. Hier:
http://bugpowder.com/andy
Um euch den Mund etwas wässerig zu machen, hier der Inhalt:
(24. June 2002)
The 1880s magazine 'Chat Noir' is a great source of wordless comics. You can buy a book published by the French Comics Museum (see Books in Print) and also some examples here:
Caran d'Ache (one new page)
T. Steinlen (three new pages)
Willette
Heidbrinck
Poitevin
Uzès
(23. June 2002)
New Page listing (and showing all the covers of) in-print books of early comics, and also some books about them.
(22. June 2002)
Combat between Anger and Patience (c. 970-990)
Willam Hogarth (1730) got several new scans
J.F. von Goez 'Lenardo und Blandine' (1783) - The first 36 pages of this 160 page/panel book have been rescanned
Johann Wilhelm Meil (1785)
John Nixon (1792)
Richard Newton (1793)
James Gillray (1793, 1797, 1800) was partly re-scanned (larger)
William Elmes (1812)
Three Books for Children (1819, 1823) 'Old Mother Hubbard and her Dog' (1819) and 'Dame Wiggins and her Seven Wonderful Cats'. (1823) (nice large scans)
Rodolphe Töpffer (1827) got a bunch of new pages added, especially the complete 'Monsieur Trictrac' and new scans of the 1839 pirate version.
Robert Seymour (1830)
Charles Philipon (1832)
Adolf Schrödter (1848)
John Leech (1850) Probably the most important new entry, a series of cartoons and comics featuring the first recurring comics character ever.
Alexander VerHuell (1851)
John Tenniel (1853) Very large scans of the short series of comics that the famous illustrator of 'Alice in Wonderland' created 10 years earlier.
'Mr. Slim' (1855)
The Wilhelm Busch Section was greatly enlarged, with several Bilderbogen scanned or rescanned (check out the 'Virtuoso', looks completely different in this larger version)
Angelo Agostini (1868) My second South American entry, a crazy dream comic. (in English translation)
Georges Chicki (1870)
Jan Linse (1870s)
Frank Beard (1889 etc)
Dalrymple (1889)
Syd B. Griffin (1889)
The Tom Browne Section(1890s) has doubled in size.
Eugene Zimmerman (1890s)
F. M. Hutchins (1892)
Rudolf Dirks Pre-1900 pages of Katzenjammer Kids.
R.F. Outcault four sequential pages of The Yellow Kid
The 20th century also got its share of new entries:
Karl Arnold
Harry Grant Dart
David Louis Ghilchik
Milt Gross new pages
Olaf Gulbransson new pages.
Tack Knight
Winsor McCay - all the old pages (small scans) have been thrown out and replaced with large, non-eyestraining ones.
George McManus Large scans of 'Nibsy the Newsboy' page.
F.Opper - Happy Hooligan, two Sundays in large scans.
http://bugpowder.com/andy
Um euch den Mund etwas wässerig zu machen, hier der Inhalt:
(24. June 2002)
The 1880s magazine 'Chat Noir' is a great source of wordless comics. You can buy a book published by the French Comics Museum (see Books in Print) and also some examples here:
Caran d'Ache (one new page)
T. Steinlen (three new pages)
Willette
Heidbrinck
Poitevin
Uzès
(23. June 2002)
New Page listing (and showing all the covers of) in-print books of early comics, and also some books about them.
(22. June 2002)
Combat between Anger and Patience (c. 970-990)
Willam Hogarth (1730) got several new scans
J.F. von Goez 'Lenardo und Blandine' (1783) - The first 36 pages of this 160 page/panel book have been rescanned
Johann Wilhelm Meil (1785)
John Nixon (1792)
Richard Newton (1793)
James Gillray (1793, 1797, 1800) was partly re-scanned (larger)
William Elmes (1812)
Three Books for Children (1819, 1823) 'Old Mother Hubbard and her Dog' (1819) and 'Dame Wiggins and her Seven Wonderful Cats'. (1823) (nice large scans)
Rodolphe Töpffer (1827) got a bunch of new pages added, especially the complete 'Monsieur Trictrac' and new scans of the 1839 pirate version.
Robert Seymour (1830)
Charles Philipon (1832)
Adolf Schrödter (1848)
John Leech (1850) Probably the most important new entry, a series of cartoons and comics featuring the first recurring comics character ever.
Alexander VerHuell (1851)
John Tenniel (1853) Very large scans of the short series of comics that the famous illustrator of 'Alice in Wonderland' created 10 years earlier.
'Mr. Slim' (1855)
The Wilhelm Busch Section was greatly enlarged, with several Bilderbogen scanned or rescanned (check out the 'Virtuoso', looks completely different in this larger version)
Angelo Agostini (1868) My second South American entry, a crazy dream comic. (in English translation)
Georges Chicki (1870)
Jan Linse (1870s)
Frank Beard (1889 etc)
Dalrymple (1889)
Syd B. Griffin (1889)
The Tom Browne Section(1890s) has doubled in size.
Eugene Zimmerman (1890s)
F. M. Hutchins (1892)
Rudolf Dirks Pre-1900 pages of Katzenjammer Kids.
R.F. Outcault four sequential pages of The Yellow Kid
The 20th century also got its share of new entries:
Karl Arnold
Harry Grant Dart
David Louis Ghilchik
Milt Gross new pages
Olaf Gulbransson new pages.
Tack Knight
Winsor McCay - all the old pages (small scans) have been thrown out and replaced with large, non-eyestraining ones.
George McManus Large scans of 'Nibsy the Newsboy' page.
F.Opper - Happy Hooligan, two Sundays in large scans.