Friday, March 02, 2007
greatcoat 5

Here's the latest in the Greatcoat 'student party' story...



Friday, March 02, 2007 8:22:14 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
gerard 6

The next Gerard page...

The pitcher and mugs in the last frame are based on a set designed by my father, and the some of the faces in the same frame are inspired by some of Goya's grotesques.



Friday, March 02, 2007 11:41:43 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Thursday, March 01, 2007
gerard googlewhack

Antonella found something funny this afternoon. If you go to Google, then type in "gerard teamsputnik" as your search string, you get the Jazma Online interview we did recently. This is the only hit - in other words, we're a googlewhack! Well, strictly speaking we're not a googlewhack because it's not our website, but we're at least the subject of a googlewhack.

The thought of it kept us amused this afternoon, anyway.



Thursday, March 01, 2007 7:09:23 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
gerard 5

Here's the next Gerard page...

I hadn't drawn horses in any great detail before this strip, just cartoony horses, which are basically made up of cocktail sausages joined together with sticks. I needed something more realistic for this strip - you'll see why later - and I owe a lot to Walter T. Foster's Horses, part of his how-to-draw series (now 80 years in print), for guidance. I also found Edweard Muybridge's sequence photos of horses in motion useful. The big frame, in case you missed the reference, is based on David's painting Napoleon Crossing the Alps.



Thursday, March 01, 2007 10:35:13 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Wednesday, February 28, 2007
brigadier gerard 4

Here's the next page of the Brigadier Gerard story...

This was the first page in which I had to draw Napoleonic uniforms in any great detail. By the end of the strip, I'd become something of an expert. Reference was easy to find - there are an awful lot of war gamers and model-makers out there on the Internet - but I had a problem because Conan Doyle didn't specify which brigade of light infantry Gerard was in. The uniform differs slightly in detail from brigade to brigade. In the end, I decided on the 3rd brigade, since this was the uniform I had the most detailed reference for. It was a lucky guess - in the second story we did, the 3rd Hussar of Conflans is specifically mentioned by the author.

Gerard has never appeared in colour, but his uniform should be a really bright orange with a dark blue coat and blue and red shako (it helps if you take LSD at this point). Unless it's dark blue all over. I've also seen versions of the uniform with cream trousers and a red coat, and a painting of Gerard, by Eric D'Antin, with a uniform that was bright blue with red bits all over. God knows which one is correct. I decided to stop worrying at this point and get on with drawing the strip.

Later on in the story, Gerard wears a busby rather than a shako. It's black.

Credit is due to Tex Avery or possibly Chuck Jones for the corny joke in frame 3, by the way. I think it comes from a Bugs Bunny cartoon. If anybody knows which one, please don't tell me.



Wednesday, February 28, 2007 10:53:47 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Tuesday, February 27, 2007
greatcoat 4

Here's the latest episode of the Greatcoat...

There's a bit of a kerfuffle surrounding the Greatcoat strip. For the full story, check out John freeman's blog. The story has also been covered in Forbidden Planet's blog, and also in Journalista, but briefly, last year John set up a page about the Greatcoat in Wikipedia, which was then deleted by a Wikipedia editor on the grounds that it was insufficiently "noteworthy". The decision has been contested, the page has been re-instated but it's status is now open for discussion. If you're a Greatcoat fan, and you'd like to contribute to the debate, please, follow the links to the wikipedia page and add your two-pennorth. John and I would welcome your input.



Tuesday, February 27, 2007 9:42:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
brigadier gerard 3

Here's page three of the Brigadier Gerard story...

The French general Massena (the one using the telescope) is based on an engraving I found on the internet. I can't remember where I found it so no link this time, although there's a nice entry about him in Wikipedia.

It's basically a nineteenth-century publicity shot. Apparently he had these printed up so that people would recognise him. By the end of the Torres Vedras stalemate, which was the French disaster in which this story is set, he may well have wished he had remained anonymous.



Tuesday, February 27, 2007 10:20:45 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, February 26, 2007
brigadier gerard 2

Here's page two of the Brigadier Gerard story The Crime of the Brigadier; or How Brigadier Gerard Slew the Fox.

 

You will notice as the story progresses that Etienne Gerard is a man unencumbered by false modesty. Therefore, we decided to give him a big entrance, with a whole third of the page to himself. In fact, the frame 2 entrance is inspired by a popular series of adverts for a French car, starring Catherine Deneuve, which Antonella remembered from her days in Italy. The tag line of each ad was "Oui, je suis Catherine Deneuve!" When she writes, Antonella always works out the page layouts very carefully, and credit belongs to her for the appearance and pace of the story.



Monday, February 26, 2007 10:23:59 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Sunday, February 25, 2007
brigadier gerard 1

Here's a strip Antonella wrote and I drew which was published last year in Graphic Classics in the US. It's an adaptation of one of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's comical Brigadier Gerard stories, in which he has an encounter with an English fox-hunting party.

This is set during Napoleonic times, during the Penninsular War ("Sharpe's war"). Conan Doyle seems to have done quite a bit of historical research when he wrote the original story, and because the action takes place during actual historical events, I tried to make things like uniforms and kit as accurate as possible. Some actual historical figures are included, like Wellington, Massena the French commander, even minor figures like Sir William Murray and Sir Stapleton Cotton, Viscount Combermere, and I based these on portraits I found in places like the National Portrait Gallery's website. Other characters are based on people whose images Antonella and I found elsewhere on the Internet: the older Gerard, for example, is partly inspired by Gerard Depardieu as he appears in Cyrano de Bergerac (but without the nose!

 

Our French cultural advisor was M. Prof. Ronan Jouan de Kervanoel, a French academic who quite usefully happened to be living next door to us at the time we were doing this. Credit is due to him for all the French swearwords, which but for him we would not have known how to spell.

Anyway, there's another 17 pages of this, and I'm going to post one every day until somebody tells me to stop.

Antonella and I did another Brigadier story, 21 pages this time, for a later edition of Graphic Classics, and I'm thinking of posting it after this one is finished. Consider yourself warned.



Sunday, February 25, 2007 8:25:41 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Friday, February 23, 2007
greatcoat 3 of 8
Here's the third Greatcoat episode. Enjoy.

If you have enjoyed this strip, you might like to consider reading other strips by this artist. Check out the TEAM SPUTNIK website www.teamsputnik.co.uk for further details.



Friday, February 23, 2007 7:31:16 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Sunday, February 18, 2007
greatcoat 2 of 8

Here's the next episode of the Greatcoat "student party" saga. Sorry.

By way of explanation, the British government were actually issuing these 'Five-a-Day' leaflets at corner shops and supermarkets at one point. If you're a vegetarian, you may not have noticed. Sorry.

The cat's name is Dennis. He has his own spin-off strip, which I may decide to post later. Sorry.



Sunday, February 18, 2007 10:54:10 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]