Skip to content

MASTERS OF BRITISH COMIC ART

Written By:

Tim Robins
comic

AUTHOR: DAVID ROACH | PUBLISHER: REBELLION | RELEASE DATE: OUT NOW

David Roach’s Master of British Comic Art is as much curated as authored, gathering some 200 of its 385 pages of work from artists past and present. In some respects, the book is a long-overdue reply to P.R Garriock’s 1978 Masters of Comic Book Art, a much slimmer volume that opened many fans’ eyes to the diversity of comic book illustration including works by Moebius, Eisner, and Britain’s own Barry Windsor-Smith and Frank Bellamy. It can’t be a coincidence that Roach’s new book reproduces a page from Dan Dare that has a panel that Garrock’s book used for its cover. Windsor-Smith and Bellamy are the only artists to appear in both books.

It is not just the focus on British artists that makes Roach’s work different from its Seventies counterpart. There is an air of nostalgia and loss in Masters of British Comic Art that comes partly from the demise of many of the creators being celebrated but also the terrible loss of comics themselves. It is not surprising that the book contains a great many versions of Judge Dredd as the character represents virtually the only surviving comic title in the UK (although the Commando pocketbook line is still available from good newsagents everywhere – whatever a ‘newsagent’ is these days!).

Roach’s collection obviously reflects available material, rights, and the author’s own interests although the latter are at their most diverse here. Still, the book needed pages more devoted to the humour/cartoon genre and there are notably omissions, especially from the long-running Doctor Who Magazine strip. That said, the book does contain examples of Jon Pertwee’s Doctor from the painterly Gerry Haylock (TV Action) and Harry Lindfield (Countdown).

In many ways, Britain has been a great home for comics. It has benefitted from reprints from the American superhero genre, perennially popular European strips such as Tin Tin and Asterix but also, as Roach demonstrates, an incredibly rich history of indigenous art and comic publishing including the wonderful silliness of Ken Reid and Leo Baxendale in The Beano, Cor! and Wham!, the illustrative realism of boys and girls adventure strips and the painterly tradition found on the covers of Look and Learn, The Sphere, and Once Upon a Time.

Roach’s book is an education in comic illustration. The text pages are incredibly well-researched and take the reader on an informative and entertaining journey to a time when there were comics for everyone from the so-called ‘nursery’ comics (Playhour, Pippin, Teddy Bear) though the comedic silliness of the Dandy, Buster, Sparky et al) to the thrills and spills of adventure strips for boys and girls (such as Lion and Misty) and the ‘grown-up’ world of Britain’s underground including Street Comix and Sin City: Tales of Urban Paranoia. 

Back in the day, Masters of Comic Book Art was an important validation of drawing comics as valuable contribution to popular visual culture. It’s to be hoped that Masters of British Comic Art, through its  research, archival work and copious examples (often reproduced from original artworks) will further this process although I suspect that Roach is preaching to the converted. Despite this,  this is a must-have for anyone who takes pleasure in illustration and cartooning and a valuable souvenir of an industry on the brink of disappearing. Comics! Read ’em or lose ’em; ahh, too late, most have already gone.

Tim Robins

You May Also Like...

still from titane film by julia ducournau, who has set her third film, titled alpha

TITANE And RAW Filmmaker Sets Her Third Film

French filmmaker Julia Ducournau should be a name well-known to any self-respecting horror fan, the mind behind the cannibal film Raw and the wild, genre-defying Titane. And in some good
Read More
godzilla x kong filmmaker adam wingard has upcoming film onslaught scooped up by A24. Still from The New Empire

A24 Scores Adam Wingard’s Action-Horror ONSLAUGHT

A24 has come out on top of an auction to pick up Onslaught, an action thriller directed by Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire filmmaker Adam Wingard, which he’s co-writing
Read More
louis leterrier to direct and produce sci-fi horror feature 11817

FAST X Filmmaker To Direct Sci-Fi Horror Film 11817

Fast X and Transporter filmmaker Louis Leterrier has been tapped to direct and produce the sci-fi horror film 11817, based on a script by Matthew Robinson (The Invention of Lying,
Read More

Emily Booth Teams Up with NYX at HorrorConUK

Genre legend and all-round icon Emily Booth will be joining forces with free-to-air TV channel NYX UK at this year’s HorrorConUK, which takes place at Magna, Sheffield on May 11th
Read More
kristen stewart to star in vampire thriller flesh of the gods. still from twilight franchise

Kristen Stewart, Oscar Isaac To Star In Vamp Thriller FLESH OF THE GODS

Kristen Stewart and Oscar Isaac will star in vampire thriller Flesh of the Gods, the next project from Mandy filmmaker (and STARBURST favourite) Panos Cosmatos. Adam McKay is aboard to produce the feature with
Read More

Get Ready for Take-Off With the SUPER WINGS: MAXIMUM SPEED Trailer

Animated TV spin-off Super Wings: Maximum Speed is heading to cinemas! Check out the trailer below… Synopsis: Young airplane Jet is proud to be the fastest in the world, but
Read More