ua

ua
Showing posts with label Arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arts. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Hipgnosis: Masters of Album Cover Art


 

Hipgnosis is The Beatles of album cover art —  nobody has ever done it better than the British design firm founded by Storm Thorgerson and Aubrey Powell.  Their first cover was Pink Floyd’s 1968 album A Saucerful of Secrets and their last was Led Zeppelin’s Coda, released in 1982.  There’s quite a bit of poetry in that.  In their fifteen years together the firm produced many of the most iconic covers in music history.

PINK FLOYD - ATOM HEART MOTHER 1970

            


QUATERMASS - QUATERMASS 1970

                      


TOE FAT - TOE FAT 1970

                       



Imagine record sleeves without the advent of Hipgnosis, the photo-design company responsible for Pink Floyd‘s mysterious black prism, Led Zeppelin‘s flaxen-haired nudist children, AC/DC‘s censored everyday villains, Black Sabbath‘s copulating escalator robots and Peter Gabriel‘s melted grilled-cheese face.

HOLLIES - DISTANT LIGHT 1971

                  


THE NICE - ELEGY  1971

            


WISHBONE ASH - ARGUS 1972

       



Although the psychedelic era produced beautifully filigreed LP sleeves like Love’s Forever Changes and, of course, Sgt. Pepper’s, album covers largely were portraits of the bands and artists. Hipgnosis – cofounded by artists Aubrey “Po” Powell and Storm Thorgerson in 1967 – flipped the script on rock art.

RENAISSANCE - PROLOGUE 1972

              


PINK FLOYD - THE DARK SIDE OF THE MOON 1973

               


                 

A new book, Vinyl . Album . Cover . Art: The Complete Hipgnosis Catalogue – due out May 16th – will celebrate the company’s 50th anniversary. It collects the 373 sleeves Powell, Thorgerson and their compatriots made together between ’67 and 1982 with commentary by Powell and Thorgerson, among others, and a foreword by Peter Gabriel.

LED ZEPPELIN - HOUSES OF THE HOLY 1973

   


VARIOUS ARTISTS - MUSIC FOR FREE CREEK 1973

              


GENESIS - THE LAMB LIES DOWN ON BROADWAY 1974

                   


“You can see the development of Hipgnosis, and how we got more sophisticated, more sleek and clever at photography, graphics, lettering and text,” Powell tells Rolling Stone. “We didn’t have Photoshop. Everything had to be shot on film and done by hand. And average artwork could take three to six weeks, whereas you could do some of these album covers in an afternoon now.”

NAZARETH - RAMPANT 1974

    


BAD COMPANY - STRAIGHT SHOOTER 1975

               


10CC - HOW DARE YOU! 1976

         


BLACK SABBATH - TECHNICAL ECSTASY 1976

              


As Powell looks back on the history that he made with Thorgerson, who died of cancer in 2013, he’s most proud of the creativity they shared. “We always tried to think laterally and not go for the obvious,” he says. “When we saw Sgt. Pepper’s, we went, ‘Oh, my gosh, there’s another way of doing this.


GENESIS - A TRICK OF THE TAIL 1976

            


THE ALAN PARSONS PROJECT - TALES OF MYSTERY AND IMAGINATION 1976

                    



"We were both fresh out of art school, and we said, We can do this, but let’s think differently. By 1973, when we did Dark Side of the Moon, Houses of the Holy and Band on the Run, we had discovered our métier, and we had the great privilege of being trusted by the bands we worked for. It was amazing.”

YES - GOING FOR THE ONE 1977

      



               

STYX - PIECES OF EIGHT 1978

                    


He recently took some time out from working on an exhibition at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum celebrating Pink Floyd, for whom he is the creative director, and picked 15 covers he felt were turning points for the company. Here, he tells the story of Hipgnosis – which, he points out, is still a functioning company, making designs and films – through some of its most brilliant album sleeves.

PETER GABRIEL - PETER GABRIEL 1978

           


STRAWBS - DEAD LINES 1978

              


PETER GABRIEL - PETER GABRIEL 1980

                


Covers like this don’t happen anymore. The golden age of album covers is gone. We had the best 15 years of it. The money was there. We were so privileged to be able to go and do a picture like that.

BY RORY GROW 20 MAY 2017.

Sunday, December 04, 2022

Vicente Segrelles: The Mercenary

 

This 40th anniversary edition features better reproductions than ever and all-new scans of the original paintings overseen by the master himself, presented in handsome, large, quarterbound collectors editions.
                                                    


In a lost and long forgotten valley high up in the mountains, The Mercenary has been contracted to save a woman from the mysterious and powerful Cult of the Sacred Fire.
                                     

"A great valley lost in the upper reaches of the mountains had remained isolated from the evolution of the planet. This rough, steep and arid area had evolved its own fauna.
                

Vicente Segrelles was born in Barcelona (Spain) on September 9, 1940 during the postwar period after the Spanish Civil War.
                               

His childhood lapsed in a peculiar atmosphere: his father loved paintings and inventions, and his uncle, José Segrelles, had international prestige as illustrator and watercolorist. This atmosphere influenced his innate passion to drawing, to which he dedicated any free moment, and just inclined him towards illustration.
                        

In 1980, attracted by comics, Segrelles created THE MERCENARY, a character who reported him world-wide reputation and was even praised by film director Federico Fellini. Painted in oils and published in 14 countries, THE MERCENARY was a beautiful fantasy comic-book in full colour that evidenced all Sheriff Pathis experience and hobbies.
                            

Segrelles gained popularity in Europe for his painted comic book epic The Mercenary (El Mercenario), started in 1980. Segrelles was also the cover artist for the Italian science fiction magazine Urania from 1988 to 1991.
                                  

The great reptiles had not disappeared - natural selection had them evolve into great winged creatures. As for man, an unrelenting barrange of clouds had isolated him from the lower regions. A whole different civilisation had thus developed."

Exotic cults, mounted dinosaurs, and daring rescues feature in this fully-painted escapade from France. The Mercenary, a solitary warrior who lives by his fists in the Land of Eternal Clouds, becomes ensnared by the Cult of the Sacred Fire after he rescues a ransomed damsel.
                  

The cult’s origin is as mysterious as its intentions. This is a visually sumptuous work: Segrelles depicts everything from craggy mountaintops to a woman’s startled eye with the same lush detail.
                          

This clashes, occasionally, with the rather stiff translated dialogue—especially discomfiting are the multiple exclamations of “we’re toast!”—and the extremely compressed nature of the story. This is an epic adventure squeezed into a mere 50 pages, and it shows. Regardless, Segrelle’s talent as an artist makes it a worthwhile jaunt.  
                            

Each volume is complemented with articles at the back about the history and the making of this series over its gloried, decades-long history.
                          

An unusual feature for a comic book, every panel is painted in oil, a time-consuming technique.THE MERCENARY tells the story of a mysterious and anonymous mercenary from a hidden valley called The Country of the Clouds.
                          

In this secluded region, the human race develops a culture different from the rest of the world, all while confronting flying dragons, reptilian giants, monsters, Amazons, and other characters familiar from the world of heroic fantasy.
                             

Although the setting resembles the medieval milieu of classic fantasy tales, it is actually a science fiction story.
                              

Magic is due to advanced technology and aliens, while giants and monsters are natural fauna or the results of radiation.
                       


The Mercenary is hired to rescue the kidnapped wife of a local ruler, and discovers the truth about the people who live on the mountain above the clouds.
Book 1:
                   


In "The Cult of the Sacred Fire," the Mercenary rescues the kidnapped wife of a wealthy man.
                     

She wants to have sex with the Mercenary, but he refuses, so when she's delivered home she claims that he raped her.
                         

Chased, he falls into the lower valleys of the world, where he almost suffocates before he is rescued by an old man who gives him an herbal extract to enable him to breathe normally.
                      

It turns out that the the daughter of the chief of this society is being held captive in a cage hanging from an unseeable place within the mists.
                

The demand: 1,000 skins of alcohol. The Mercenary agrees to rescue the girl, and when he does he discovers a gigantic balloon occupied by women who escaped harem captivity from another culture.
                        

They need the alcohol for fuel... and they're not inclined to let the chief's daughter go.
                      

"The Formula" introduces an enemy that will plague the Mercenary through the subsequent books: Claust the Alchemist.
                  

In exchange for a beautiful suit of armor, Claust hires the Mercenary to accompany him to a secret monastery in a dangerous place.
                      

They survive several traps and monsters and arrive at the monastery, where Claust has been buying alchemical formulae with drugs.
                         

But the monastery has learned how to make the drugs itself and no longer will deal with Claust.
                  

In revenge, Claust knocks out the leader and steals his amulet for the civilization-altering formula it supposedly contains.
                       

The Mercenary, disgusted with Claust, refuses to go with him, and offers to help the monks retrieve the amulet. He joins the monks' champion, female Nan-Tay, in the search. 

                         


Book 2:   The Formula
In "The Trials," the Mercenary wishes to join the monks. He must undergo a series of trials to test his fighting ability, his bravery, his willpower, and his loyalty. After he succeeds, he and Nan-Tay must face one hundred dragon-mounted warriors.
                    
  
"The Sacrifice" is a young boy, the son of the chief of government security. The boy has been given to a cult to sacrifice to their god.
                 

Although the Mercenary rescues him, he learns that the father of the boy already handed over the city's power to Claust in exchange for the boy's safety.
                     

Claust is also planning to destroy the crater in which the monastery sits. The good guys' one chance is to detonate explosives in a weak point of the crater's subterranean rock wall--but whoever lights the explosives is going to die....
                      
                       

Book 3: The Fortress.

                 


After failing to destroy the monastery, Claust concentrated on building an impregnable fortress. With Nan-Tay acting as spy, the monks and the Mercenary have discerned a weakness in the fortress.
                   

The Mercenary commands a small boat loaded with special guns to attack the fortress. However, Nan-Tay is discovered, and she's tied up right where the boat is going to be firing.
                    

The initial pages seem influenced by Arzach as the mercenary serenely heads between mountains toward a distant tower saddled on a flying dinosaur.
                

It’s an effective homage that also comprehensively establishes the scene.
Vicente Segrelles sets his stories in a mist-shrouded area high in the Himalayas lost to time, where giant saurians are a constant danger, yet man also exists amid complex minaret towers and vast bridges spanning even vaster chasms.
              

The Mercenary has no other name, but his warrior’s skills and ingenuity ensure employment wherever he finds himself. Here it’s on two rescue missions of women held for ransom.

              


We met Claust in The Formula, an alchemist in need of a bodyguard, and feared by the Monks of the Crater, who we see in the opening sequence discussing how to infiltrate his fortress within which he hoards a vast arms cache.
                  

The mere threat of this enables him to intimidate neighbouring states. The monks believe, however, that they’ve found a weakness in Claust’s defences, and now all they need is someone foolish enough to risk their life to exploit that.
                   

The Mercenary’s odds are slightly bettered by virtue of the monks having developed a form of cannon.
              

The Mercenary may fly, and the structures occupied may be ornate and strange, but remove the fantasy trappings and he occupies a world roughly comparable to Earth’s middle ages, with the clothing and decorations reflecting this.
Something Vicente Segrelles is excellent at is establishing just how much difference a suit of armour makes, and dealing in scale. Claust’s fortress, for instance is a massive structure, and therefore extremely intimidating when compared to the dwellings of ordinary people.
                  

There are a few exceptions, but Segrelles almost always avoids lettered sound effects in his art, which gives a feeling of quiet and serenity.
               


It’s entirely appropriate when the Mercenary is riding his dragon across the skies, but the lack of sound works against him on occasions such as the foundry scene on the sample art, where it’s equally calm. And in a strange coincidence, the way Segrelles draws the Mercenary in the final panel makes him resemble Dave Gibbons.
                  

What can it mean? While we’ve been used to great sky scenes over previous Mercenary volumes, Segrelles here provides equally impressive art showing a great wooden boat sailing at night, and then into the fog.
                  

Every panel being an individual, carefully considered painting means there’s little sense of movement, but Segrelles is aware of this and constructs his story requiring as little movement as possible.
                

If the setting is medieval, then the ending is pure James Bond, and even after just five stories (the opening two volumes combined two apiece) there’s a certain predictability about who’s going to survive to see another day.
It’s still grand adventure, though, and both fans of quality painting and fantasy are still going to find much to enjoy in The Fortress. The Black Globe contains the Mercenary’s next adventure.