The First Fifth: Plates #1-3 (1985) Art by Dave Sim & Gerhard (Click Image To Enlarge) |
(from an essay posted at The Beguiling, July 2004)
This was a recent discovery in unearthing the Cerebus
Archive, several complete sets of The
First Fifth series of prints which Ger and I did in the unsettled days when
Aardvark-Vanaheim, Inc. had just been permanently divided into my Aardvark-Vanaheim
imprint and Deni's Renegade Press imprint. Among the various clauses we had mutually agreed to: I agreed not to
contest or compete for any of the services of the cartoonists or of the books
we had been jointly publishing to that point; I agreed to assume all of the
debt incurred in the publication of The Animated Portfolio (roughly
seventeen thousand dollars owing to my serious overestimation of the incentive
value of a low price, $12.00 for 45 colour plates) and we agreed to divide the
cash-on-hand between us. This
essentially allowed Deni to start with a clean slate and encumbered Aardvark-Vanaheim
with a debt-to-assets ratio of about three-to-one...
So, one of the first things I chose to do was
something I had been loathe to do from the beginning: to essentially reverse
the structure of the Animated Cerebus (an
excessive number of prints, 45, for a dramatically low price, $12) and to rush
into production a modest number of prints, 6... for a cost of what I considered at the time and still consider today to be an excessive
amount of money, $100; $300 for Gerhard’s hand-coloured version (of which there
is only one copy of the original 30 sets in the Cerebus Archive and, no, you
can't have it): in this case a series
of six prints, each of which would represent ten issues of the 60-issue "First Fifth" of the 300 issues we were
shooting for. Print one, issues 1 to
10, print two, issues 11 to 20 and so on up to issue 60. They sold well enough to pay off many of our
most pressing debts and to pay down a chunk that was owed on the Animated Cerebus, bringing our
debt-to-assets ratio down to something more manageable, in the range of 1-to-1,
rather than 3-to-1.
At the time, I
really didn’t think much of the series - probably a residual impact resulting
from the unattractive motivation in doing them in the first place - so I was
surprised to find how much the ensuing two decades or so had brightened them up
in my eyes. They are, quite distinctly,
in Ger's and my mid-eighties style which is something I obviously just couldn't
see in the mid-eighties as anything but the style I was looking at every day on
the wall as we produced the monthly book. It was one thing to do over-sized ambitious works like Cerebus’ Six Deadly Sins when it was my
own time I was occupying, quite another thing to shoot for something that
ambitious with someone who was still getting used to a monthly schedule (Ger, I
mean, who already had his hands full with the trial-by-ordeal of producing 30
hand-coloured editions of the set). Looking
at them now, I can see that I was gradually losing my late-seventies early-eighties
over-rendered brush style - where I was using a lot of brush (as I've already
mentioned, rather ineptly) and attempting to imitate brush effects (equally
ineptly) - and was, instead, coming to accept that I was a Hunt 102 pen-and-ink
guy through-and-through and that I was, by 1985, learning to deal with the pen
nib on its own terms as its own instrument and not as a brush substitute or a
means of imitating a brush line. And
Gerhard - just about a year into his work on the book - was quickly losing his
choppiness and uneven densities which were better suited to the illustration
schools of the previous century and was starting to understand how sharply
defined the parameters of a picture needed to be in the comic-book field. The combination of our styles was still coming into and going out of focus...
(critically speaking: on plates 2, 3, 5 and 6,
I’m going too far into the simplified and stylized Sienkiewicz pen line that I
didn’t have the artistic knowledge to carry off but which was, at least,
permanently weaning me off my brush and Gerhard is still oscillating between a
balanced series of textured pen lines on plate 1 and 3 and an overuse of
"pebbly" letratone on plates 4, 5 and 6 which he could probably have done more
pleasingly with pen lines in the space of time it took him to cut out all the
individual rain tracks and leaves)
...but it was more
often in-focus than out of focus by 1985.
Anyway, it was
with genuine gratitude to the art-buying Cerebus
readership (many of whom are still with us and still bidding on Cerebus pieces today as they come onto
the market) that The First Fifth "worked"
in the way it very much needed to if Ger and I were to have a fighting chance
of making it to the mythically-distant issue 300. We sold out virtually all of the black-and-white series and the
colour edition in a little over a month and were able to pay off a sufficient number
of debts to ensure that all we had to focus on was keeping the book as good as
possible and on schedule.
The First Fifth: Plates #4-6 (1985) Art by Dave Sim & Gerhard (Click Image To Enlarge) |
3 comments:
They still look great !
I could pretty much read the art breakdowns of these two gentlemen all day every day.
Good piece.
CerebusTV is in possession of these prints, signed and numbered, by both Dave and Gerhard - so we expect that at some point, they will be made available through the show and the site.
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