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ERBzine hogarth
and
Volume 6600
TARZAN SUNDAY PAGES BY BURNE HOGARTH
Hundreds of Reprints in ERBzine
HOGARTH MAIN CONTENTS PAGE 1937
HOGARTH MAIN CONTENTS PAGE 1938/39
HOGARTH MAIN CONTENTS PAGE 1939
HOGARTH MAIN CONTENTS PAGE 1940
HOGARTH MAIN CONTENTS PAGE 1941
HOGARTH CONTENTS PAGE: 1947-1949
HOGARTH CONTENTS PAGE: 1949/1950

Click for full-size Promo Collage
Burne Hogarth (1911.12.25-1996.01.28) enrolled in the Chicago Art Institute at the age of 12 and became an assistant cartoonist at Associated Editors' Syndicate at 15. Eleven years later he was chosen from a pool of a dozen applicants to be Hal Foster's successor on the United Features Syndicate strip, "Tarzan". His first strip was released on May 9, 1937. He gradually evolved the look of that series of Tarzan Sunday pages to his own unique and dynamic style.
In 1947, he co-founded the School of Visual Arts in which he passed his unique methods of illustration on to his students. In 1958, he wrote and illustrated the first of many art books: Dynamic Anatomy. His anatomy and drawing books have become standard references for artists of every style. In 1970 Hogarth moved on to a number of different art instruction schools in California.

After more than 20 years away from strip work and being hailed in Europe as "the Michelangelo of the comic strip," Hogarth returned to sequential art in 1972 with his groundbreaking Tarzan of the Apes followed by Jungle Tales of Tarzan adapted from the Burroughs novels of the same name. These were large format hardbound books published by Watson Guptill in 11 languages. It marked the beginning of what became to be known as the graphic novel format.

Hogarth looked at all things from different angles to get his perspectives; he was never satisfied with surface assessments. He wanted to get at the core of art, of language and linguistics, history, literature and science. He came closer than most. Through art he mapped out the possiblities that his inqwuirning mind suggested not unlike Leonardo. His students were bombarded with new ideas from his lectures aon freehand drawing and anatomy, and he challenged them to cross boundaries and invent new landscapes.

He was a "natural" for Tarzan, having been born in Chicago on Christmas Day, 1911 -- the same city, month and year in which Burroughs was busy creating Tarzan of the Apes. Coincidence? Probably, but it remains an interesting fact. Hogarth, the artist, would have looked at it from angles before entwinting himself in the theorectical threads of destiny. Nevertheless, he seemed destined to idealize the Tarzan image through the Sunday comics for a dozen years, and through two Tarzan graphic novel adaptations from Watson-Guptill publishers a quarter of a century later:

An entire generation, grew up with Hogarth's Tarzan -- they remembered that image because he designed it to be memorable. In an age of great comic strip artists like Hal Foster, Alex Raymond and Milt Caniff, his Tarzan stood out from the crowd. A generation read the Tarzan books as children and, when they reached maturity, Tarzan had become idealized in their minds to such an extent that ordinary comics failed to "click" in our minds as authentic. Hogarth understood this and idealized Tarzan for us, creating the greatest paper image of the ape-man outside of the Burroughs books themselves. It was a heroic image, both noble and ldarger than life.

In later yehars he began experimenting with symbology in the Tarzan art, showing mystic relationships beween  man and beast, man and jungle, man and man, and man and god. His intellect kept driving him forward, and he loved what he saw and tried to take us with him. His slide lecture on the symbology of the Watson-Guptill books kept Louisville Dumdummers enthralled in 1984. They felt they had looked at the Tarzan pictures without really seeing them untl he told his audience what to look for.

A litany of his accomplishments is not necessary to any of his fans. He did just about everything a comic strip artist can do, and lived long enough to receive the recognition he desered. He was president of the National Cartoonists Society, founder of the School of Visual Arts in New York City, and exhibited in one-man shows all over the world, including the Louivere in Paris. It may be that Europeans are more demonstrative than Americans, but the French and Italians lavished more honours on him than did his own country men. There is an old Chinese proverb which states: "He who stands still goes backwards." Hogarth never stood still.

Because of Hogarth, we habe seen the best in comic art. The Hogarth idea is more than a textook phrase, it is a graphic  record which has impinged on our consciousness and, like all great ideas, will have its inevitable renaissance as comic art moves into a new century.

Burne Hogarth passed away quietly in his sleep on January 28, 1996 at a hotel in Paris. He had spent the weekend at a comic book convention in Angouleme and had motored back to Paris on Sunday evening.

~ Adapted from George McWhorter's Tribute in The Gridley Wave
One of 3 Louiville ERB Conventions: Frank Shonfeld (founder of E.C.O.F.), Hogarth, Danton Burroughs, Peter Ogden and George Mchorter
 
 


 

co-owner of a cartoonist and illustrative school in New York, was accused of being a member of the communist Party at a Senate Investigations Subcommittee.
 




The Reprints of Hogarth Tarzan Strips from Titan Books


 
 

I've been his reprinting '47/'48 Tarzan Sunday pages every week in ERBzine Webzine
http://www.erbzine.com/mag69/6900.html

An Informal Chat with Burne Hogarth
(I've added some items to this)
http://www.erbzine.com/mag2/0298.html

Interview: Burne Hogarth on ERB
http://www.erbzine.com/mag67/6798.html

Hogarth's strips were reprinted in many UK Tarzan Adventurea Comics in the '50s
I've featured dates at:
www.erbzine.com/mag0/0092.html
with more info and covers starting at:
www.erbzine.com/comics/uk1.html

Directory of Hogarth's Tarzan Sundays and Dailies
www.erbzine.com/mag0/0064.html

Hogarth Art in Tarzan Superscope Story Teller Editions 1977
www.erbzine.com/mag62/6269.html

Tarzan At The Earth's Core daily strips
http://www.erbzine.com/mag49/4902.html

Hogarth Estate's Attack On ERB, Inc.
http://www.erbzine.com/mag63/6322.html

Hogarth Covers in Sparkler Comics
http://www.erbzine.com/mag60/6030.html

Hogarth Remembered
http://www.erbzine.com/gwbb/gw161.html

Hogarth Memorial Tree at Greystoke Castle
http://www.erbzine.com/gwbb/gw162.html

Hogarth Collages
http://www.erbzine.com/mag2/hogarthtarzan.jpg
http://www.erbzine.com/card/art3/hogarth2tarzan.jpg

http://burnehogarth.com/pdf/Artists_Monthly_Burne_Hogarth.pdf
http://www.artnet.de/k%C3%BCnstler/burne-hogarth/

TARZAN SUNDAY PAGES BY BURNE HOGARTH
HOGARTH MAIN CONTENTS PAGE 1937
HOGARTH MAIN CONTENTS PAGE 1938/39
HOGARTH MAIN CONTENTS PAGE 1939
HOGARTH MAIN CONTENTS PAGE 1940
HOGARTH MAIN CONTENTS PAGE 1941
HOGARTH CONTENTS PAGE: 1947-1949
HOGARTH CONTENTS PAGE: 1949/1950


Click for Full-Size Promo Splash Bar
 



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