Friday, October 3, 2014
Monday, April 14, 2014
The Work of Frank Frazetta
On May 9, 2010, the art world lost a great legend.If you were lucky enough to grow up as a young boy in the 1970′s, than you would remember the bigger than life artwork of comic artist Frank Frazetta, who recently died at the age of 82. His work and style were instantly recognized: Massive muscles, swords and axes, busty and scantly clad women, legions of the damned, and battle… lots of battle. His work was the epitomy of the Heavy Metal movement of the 1970′s and rock bands like Molly Hatchet.
As boys, we grew up desiring the physique and the call to battle. I remember having a poster of Fire and Ice on my wall. It was “fantasy” art, but not the kind of fantasy you would typically attribute to young adolescent boys. I’m talking about The Call of grand adventure in far off lands. At least that is what I remember.
Whether, it was a enormous barbarian on horseback or a pencil sketch of Tarzan, the work of Frank Frazetta was world-renown and instantly recognizable. He contributions will be greatly missed, but his legacy will be here for a long time.






Monday, March 24, 2014
Monday, March 3, 2014
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
20 Iconic Weapons From the Most Legendary Gunslingers in Film
Kelsey Campbell-Dollaghan -
Mauro is an award-winning commercial director, but in his free time, he hones his rendering skills with projects like this one: Famous Guns, a collection of guns used by classic film characters. “There’s an iconic legacy between an object and a famous person,” he told Gizmodo over email, “be it real or imaginary.”
His collection includes plenty of actual guns (like Samuel Jackson’s 9mm pistol from Pulp Fiction), but the best ones are the fictional weapons. They range from District 9‘s Arc Generator to Rick Deckard’s Blaster pistol from Blade Runner, and the Ghostbusters Proton Pack even makes an appearance, too. Check ‘em out below.



















Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)




