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Blog by Erik Weems, graphic artist, website designer and sometimes cartoonist. His design business site is here. All pages site map.
     
   

WRITING

Carillon Park Snow

Recent Posts:

DC Comics THE SPIRIT #12 and 13 reviewed.

Memorial Bridge History and Pix

Dennis Miller the comedian and radio talk show host on Marvel comics' Captain America

Barbara Tuchman and Francesco Traini the 1350 fresco painting "The Triumph of the Dead" and a modern revision as the contents spread in Emphemera of War, a 2003 comic book.

Snowfall Pictures in Richmond, Virginia, at the Carillon Tower in Byrd Park, and Maymount Park

Heat: A two-page comic book story to read online

Countdown Arena #3 drawn by Scott McDaniel from DC Comics

Jim Aparo Index for this site

Mercury Probe to the planet Mercury, photos, history and graphics

Photography pages of Washington DC Three pages

The Spirit #9 By Darwyn Cooke from DC Comics

Batman Black and White Volume 3 from DC Comics

Jack Kirby Fourth World Omnibus Volume 1 from DC Comics

Detective Comics #831 by Paul Dini and Don Kramer

Abandon the Old in Tokyo by Yoshihiro Tatsumi

Shazam #1 by Jeff Smith DC Comics

Fun Home by Alison Bechdel

The Creeper #6: DC Comics

Justice Society #1 and #2: DC Comics

Rush City: DC Comics

Catwoman Orange

Protect

ART AND ARTIFICE

Comics Reporter

Philippine Comics Museum

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Frank Robbins

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Fistful of Ink

Art and Artifice

Lady of Richmond Small

   

Barbara Tuchman
Barbara Tuchman 1912 - 1989

Barbara Tuchman
An American writer who won Pulitzer's for the 1962 Guns of August, and the 1970 Stillwell and the American Experience in China. She spent seven years writing A Distant Mirror, the Calamitous 14th Century.

[The topic below refers to the Contents page spread to Ephemera of War (2003) my online comic book here. ]

Below is a brief excerpt from Tuchman's nearly 700 page history A Distant Mirror (published 1978). This page is from her chapter on The Black Death plague years of the Medieval age:

"A strange personification of Death emerged from the plague years on the painted walls of the Camposanto in Pisa. The figure is not the conventional skeleton, but a blackcloaked old woman with streaming hair and wild eyes, carrying a broadbladed murderous scythe. Her feet end in claws instead of toes. Depicting the Triumph of Death, the fresco was painted in or about 1350 by Francesco Traini as part of a series that included scenes of the Last Judgment and the Tortures of Hell. The same subject, painted at the same time by Traini's master, Andrea Orcagna, in the church of Santa Croce in Florence, has since been lost except for a fragment. Together the frescoes marked the start of a pervasive presence of Death in art, not yet the cult it was to become by the end of the century, but its beginning.

Usually Death was personified as a skeleton with hourglass and scythe, in a white shroud or bareboned, grinning at the irony of man's fate reflected in his image: that all men, from beggar to emperor, from harlot to queen, from ragged clerk to Pope, must come to this. No matter what their poverty or power in life, all is vanity, equalized by death. The temporal is nothing; what matters is the afterlife of the soul.

In Traini's fresco, Death swoops through the air toward a group of carefree, young, and beautiful noblemen and ladies who, like models for Boccaccio's storytellers, converse and flirt and entertain each other with books and music in a fragrant grove of orange trees. A scroll warns that "no shield of wisdom or riches, nobility or prowess" can protect them from the blows of the Approaching One. "They have taken more pleasure in the world than in things of God." In a heap of corpses nearby lie crowned rulers, a Pope in tiara, a knight, tumbled together with the bodies of the poor, while angels and devils in the sky contend for the miniature naked figures that represent their souls. A wretched group of lepers, cripples, and beggars (duplicated in the surviving fragment of Orcagna), one with nose eaten away, others legless or blind or holding out a clothcovered stump instead of a hand,implore Death for deliverance. Above on a mountain, hermits leading a religious contemplative life await death peaceably.

Below in a scene of extraordinary verve a hunting party of princes and elegant ladies on horseback comes with sudden horror upon three open coffins containing corpses in different stages of decomposition, one still clothed, one halfrotted, one a skeleton. Vipers crawl over their bones. The scene illustrates "The Three Living and Three Dead," a 13th century legend which tells of a meeting between three young nobles and three decomposing corpses who tell them, "What you are, we were. What we are, you will be." In Traini's fresco, a horse catching the stench of death stiffens in fright with outstretched neck and flaring nostrils; his rider clutches a handkerchief to his nose. The hunting dogs recoil, growling in repulsion. In their silks and curls and fashionable hats, the party of vital handsome men and women stare appalled at what they will become."

A revision of Traini's fresco from my Ephemera of War comic book (2003):

Click to view larger verson
Traini Ephemera What you were

The Francesco Traini Fresco painting of 1350 "The Triumph of Death."
Click to enlarge
Traini Triumph of Death

   
The Interview Erik Weems

Japan as viewed by 17 creators

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Art Out of Time

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Kirby pages on this site:

Kirby Fourth World Omnibus
Kamandi #19 Jul 1974
Kamandi #20 Aug 1974
Kamandi #22 Oct 1974
Kamandi #23 Nov 1974
Kamandi #4 and #29

     
 
                     
                       

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