Showing posts with label John Totleben. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Totleben. Show all posts

Jun 4, 2022

The page with the giant zipper and all the watchparts

Swamp Thing n.60, page 12. Art by 
From the stunning collection of Keith Veronese, above the extremely eye-popping page 12 from Swamp Thing n.60, "Loving the alien" memorable story! 
Extraordinary art by John Totleben!
Veronese writes: "In the midst of writing Watchmen, Alan Moore paired with the long-time illustrator/inker of his Swamp Thing run, John Totleben, for a one-off issue just months before Moore left the book. What was created is the issue entitled "Loving the Alien," with the name stemming from the David Bowie release of a year and a half before. In my mind, this issue stands out as the most adventurous and bizarre offering of the mainstream modern comics era. It features a mix of pen and ink, spray paint, found art including zippers and watchfaces, and other sundry materials to create the individual pages of the issue, in what one could consider a harbinger of the forthcoming work of Dave McKean. The process by which it was scripted is unique as well. To begin, Totleben created 11 pages and labeled them as A through K. He then sent them off to Alan Moore so that he could craft a story around them. Moore then wrote 11 additional pages to finish the story, with Totleben then providing the art for them.

An image of this piece of original art was included in the extra materials for Absolute Swamp Thing Vol. 3, along with the script for this issue and an essay from Totleben describing how it came into being. The letter designation for the page is unknown, but from the script devised by Alan Moore for this issue, it is noted to be of the initial batch of 11 sent by Totleben.

I feel this is easily one of Totleben's best pages from his tenure on Swamp Thing (and maybe the most adventurous of his career) - it is a standout page from a run that Totleben calls, "one of the greatest mainstream horror comics of all time." This page itself has a certain heft to it, with a plethora of watchfaces and even a zipper sturdily attached to a piece of roughly 11x17 illustration board. Glad to have this one, it has been one of my favorites on CAF for quite some time."

Feb 5, 2020

DAILY MOORE [5]

Art by Steve Bissette & John Totleben.
From: The Saga of Swamp Thing n. 22.
First edition: 1983, DC Comics.

Jan 23, 2020

On Bissette, Totleben and Swamp Thing

Original art by S. Bissette and J. Totleben from Saga of the Swamp Thing n.22, page 11 (DC, 1984).
Excerpt from "SOPHISTICATED SCRIPTWRITING Part.3", an interview by Paul Duncan from Arken Sword n.13/14 (double issue), May 1985.
Paul Duncan: Steve Bissette and John Totleben draw Swamp Thing from your scripts. Do you get much cross-pollination of ideas from them since they live a couple of thousand miles away?
Alan Moore: Steve and John are some of the nicest and most straightforward people that I've ever worked with. Unlikely as it sounds, they are a lot closer, as people, to the sort of person that I am than a number of artists over here. We all clicked together on the book straight away, and since then we've been throwing ideas backwards and forwards with wild abandon, the end result being what you see in Swamp Thing each month. A good example of how this curious and haphazard process actually works would be the way by which we arrived at the two-part underwater vampire story that's coming up in Swamp Thing issues 38 and 39. John Totleben had an urge to draw some sort of primeval water-deity, and he mentioned it to me in a letter. I'd already been thinking along the lines of doing an underwater vampire story, and it struck me that there may be a way in which the two could combine effectively to make one really good story. We tossed this idea back and forth between the three of us in the various multi-page letters that we write from time to time, and finally got to thrash the whole thing out in full while sitting out in the woods of Vermont during my visit over there last year. Steve, a soul finely attuned to all the most slimy and repulsive aspects of nature, suggested that the underwater vampires should spawn like salmon, laying lots of eggs. I suggested that, like real salmon, they should start to rot and fall apart immediately after spawning. Between the three of us, using the Hypothesis that Richard Matheson gave for a scientific explanation of vampirism in 'I am Legend' as our starting point, we worked out exactly how this could be explained in credible terms. Then, somebody suggested that the spawning vampires would lay hundreds of eggs, although we really only wanted one creature in our story. Steve, bless his badly disturbed soul, came up with the concept of the hundreds of tiny little hatchings, once birthed, all starting to eat each other in a terrible demonstration of the principle of survival of the fittest, until only one was left; a huge and bloated thing that incorporated John's original design for his underwater horror-elemental and which had a valid reason for being in the story.
Once all the basic information concerning this foul and unnatural reproductive cycle had been finalised between us it only remained for us to work it all into some sort of coherent story that involved Swamp Thing and which had some sort of point to it other than just scaring our audience shitless with a string of unspeakable ideas and disturbing concepts. Another good example would be the werewolf story that is featured in issue 40. This grew out of a comment that Steve made to me about the way that in Jamaica there still exists a strong taboo amongst Rastafarian men against the idea of having contact with a woman while she is menstruating. This inspired an exchange of information between us on the subject, both of us raking up lots of other tribal traditions that suggested the same sort of idea: i.e., that a menstruating woman is the receptacle for a terrible and destructive form of magic, and that she should be isolated completely from any contact with the community during that time of the month. This finally led to me realising that there might be some mileage in considering the possible connection between the menstrual cycle of women and the lunar cycle of the werewolf. Once I'd mentioned this idea, lots of people started slinging in associated concepts. Nancy, Steve's wife, told me some stories about the adolescent women that she works with at the school for autistic children, including one about how she'd been ferociously attacked by a snarling naked woman who's period seemed to have triggered an unusually violent fit of aggression. Cindy, Rick Veitch's girlfriend, chimed in by sending me a book about ancient women's mysteries that included a vast amount upon the menstrual taboos practised by various old tribes, and which I was able to refer to extensively in coming up with the story. As I see it, it's my job as writer to sit back and absorb everything that's thrown at me and then try to rationalise it into a coherent story that will make it's point in the most direct and powerful way. If that material is something that the artists have suggested to me then it means there's more chance that my story will be something they're interested in drawing, thus turning in a more inspired job as a result.
To answer your question, I love working with Steve and John on the book, and I'm really happy at the way in which we've sorted out a nice, easy-going way of assimilating all our ideas on the book so that we get a good end result without any unnecessary ego clashes or crap of that nature. Two thousand miles away isn't that great a distance since the introduction of an efficient postal service and the telephone, and while it would be nice to actually see the pair of them in the flesh a bit more often, just because we like each other as friends, this doesn't present any problems in getting the work done to our satisfaction.

Jun 21, 2018

John Constantine and Sting

Alan Moore: But I can state categorically that the character only existed because Steve [Bissette] and John [Totleben] wanted to do a character that looked like Sting. Having been given that challenge, how could I fit Sting into Swamp Thing? I have an idea that most of the mystics in comics are generally older people, very austere, very proper, very middle class in a lot of ways. They are not at all functional on the street. It struck me that it might be interesting for once to do an almost blue-collar warlock. Somebody who was streetwise, working class, and from a different background than the standard run of comic book mystics. Constantine started to grow out of that.
 
2018: Sting will pen the foreword to the Constantine, Hellblazer: 30th Anniversary Celebration commemorative collection to be published this October. More HERE.
John Constantine aka Sting.

Mar 3, 2016

John Totleben talks drawing Swamp Thing and Miracleman

Miracleman advertising art (1986) by John Totleben.
Excerpt from an interview with John Totleben published on popOptiq.com

popOptiq: How did you transition from Swamp Thing to Miracleman?
John Totleben: There wasn’t much of a transition. I’d always drew the drew the way I drew. It was just a different approach because Miracleman had a superhero, sci-fi kind of look to it whereas Swamp Thing was more horror and organic. The horror element was in Miracleman too, but it wasn’t essential to Miracleman as it was in Swamp Thing. The difference really for me was that Swamp Thing was organic in nature, in terms of the way we approached it. Miracleman was architectural in nature. It seemed it had to be built because there was a lot of figuring out such what the designs were like in Olympus and even the story construction of the panels.

The complete interview is available here.