Comic-Con provides a true kaleidoscope of popular culture. Where else could you find Neal Adams competing with Sergio Aragones-- his artistic opposite-- in a "quick draw" competition? Where else would author Neil Gaiman discuss the merits of Jack Kirby's different inkers? One of my favorites: 20th Century Fox, promoting the new blu-ray edition of The Predator, used 3D copiers to scan the heads of the first 500 customers and create an action figure of the Predator holding up the customer's severed head.
The loud, pounding base line from amplifiers in some of the booths made your lungs compress as if you were in the front row at a Metallica concert (yes, the band Metallica was at Comic-Con too).
But Comic-Con is governed by the same laws of physics that apply to the rest of the universe, so many of the most interesting things took place quietly at the subatomic level. This year's lesson in quantum mechanics comes from these tiny preliminary sketches by illustrator Saul Tepper, found in a quiet corner of the exhibition hall:
For scale, those holes are staple holes. |
Each one is about the size of a postage stamp, yet they have all the DNA necessary for a larger, more elaborate image.
Tepper has worked out all the fundamental creative choices. His composition is settled, his priorities are established, his lights and darks are in place, he has decided on the gestures and the movement of each picture.
From tiny acorns such as this grew finished drawings, then big oil paintings on canvas, then pictures that moved and talked, and then 3D digital animation on IMAX screens.
In their rush to get to the flashing lights and big screens at the LucasFilm and Sony Pictures displays, I'm not sure many of the participants recognized the seeds from which those mighty oaks grew. But the genetic code starts right here.
(Thanks to Comic-Con exhibitor Taraba Illustration Art for these sketches.)