Wednesday, April 04, 2007
Comics: Walt Kelly's Pogo
This post is just the tip of the iceberg... see reason number 2 on our The Top Ten Reasons To Support The A-HAA for links to more great posts about comics.

Today, we have a guest blogger- Archive supporter Mike Fontanelli. I asked Mike to write about one of his personal heros. He's provided some wonderful artwork from his own collection to illustrate the article. Take it away, Mike-

Migrating to California to work on Donald Duck cartoons at Walt Disney Studios in 1935, he stayed until the strike in 1941, long enough to animate on Snow White, Fantasia, Dumbo and The Reluctant Dragon. As good as Kelly's animation was, (had he stayed on, we'd all doubtless be reading about Disney's TEN "Old Men") his greatest achievements still lay ahead.
After leaving Disney, Kelly worked for Dell Comics. Here is a story he did for a 1946 Raggedy Ann & Andy comic book (the cover is from a 1948 issue)...







During his stints at Dell and the New York Star, Kelly introduced his most memorable creation to the world- in the unassuming form of a philosophical, swamp-dwelling possum named Pogo. The true heir of Herriman's Krazy Kat and Uncle Remus, Pogo was an American comic strip masterpiece. A flawless blend of slapstick, parody, allegory, political commentary, intellectual whimsy, social satire and Irish poetry- Pogo can be read on several levels at once, and it set a new standard of excellence in newspaper humor strips that has never been equaled.
Kelly has been compared to everyone from James Joyce to Lewis Carroll to T.S. Sullivant. He was named "Cartoonist of the Year" in 1952, and was elected president of the National Cartoonists Society two years later. He was the first strip cartoonist to be invited to contribute originals to the Library of Congress, and published some three dozen books during his lifetime- classics, all.

It's impossible for Gen X-ers weaned on modern tripe like Dilbert and Drabble to imagine the incredible graphic brilliance within the panels of Pogo. I remember literally getting lost in a Kelly Sunday page as a child, staring at the inspirational artwork for hours on end.
More than any other influence, I owe my choice of profession to the master, Walt Kelly. Here's some cool stuff from my collection. Enjoy!
Mike Fontanelli
Los Angeles, 2007
Make sure you click on these... They're amazing!



Take a moment to visit the official Pogo homepage.
Art Fuentes has been taking the $100k Cartoon Drawing Course. He got so excited by this post, he made a Pogo run cycle pencil test. Check it out!
Thanks, Mike for allowing us to digitize your original Pogo Sunday pages. For those of you out there who still don't understand how our archive works, what you see here on this blog is just a small representation of what our archive contains. For instance, we scanned Mike's Pogo inks at 1200 dots per inch- much larger than you see here on the blog. Each one of the Sunday pages comes out at a filesize of 1.7 gigs. For a sample of how detailed our scans are, click on the image below and compare it to the last panel of the last Sunday page...

You can see the grain in the paper! We scan every image in our collection at this resolution.
If you enjoyed this post, see also... The Father of Cartooning: T. S. Sullivant, Cliff Sterrett's Polly & Her Pals, , Harrison Cady's Birds Eye Views, Rube Goldberg's Side Show, and Milton Caniff's Steve Canyon.
Thanks
Stephen Worth
Director
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
Labels: cartooning, comic strips, comics, pogo, walt kelly






























9 Comments:
Thanks, Mike, for sharing this rare and amazing stuff. No one handled a brush with the kind of subtlety like Kelly. It's a real treat to see this
Seeing those in real life just made it all seem even more amazing and inspiring! Thanks Mike!
"It's impossible for Gen X-ers weaned on modern tripe like Dilbert and Drabble to imagine the incredible graphic brilliance within the panels of Pogo."
Hey!! Don't throw us all in the bucket!
That wasn't a slap at Gen X-ers - it was a comment on the current state of comic strip art.
(John K. calls them "the saddies". I gotta agree.)
Wow. It's hard to believe there was once a comic that assumed its readers knew who Charlemagne was. Thanks for doing this, Mike!
AWESOME, AWESOME, stuff Mike!!! thanks for sharing. when i die, i wanna come back as a Walt Kelly-inked page. beautiful!
I feel very fortunate to have been there to see these in person. They. Are. Gorgeous.
I was also fortunate to have been introduced to Pogo at a fairly young age.
Looking back - I'm not sure EXACTLY what it was that drew me to Walt Kelly's work - at the time I obviously wasn't privy to most of the political references - but I liked it enough to hoof it down to the local used bookstore and seek out more of his stuff.
I don't think I recognized then how incredible his lettering was but I sure do now.
And I can appreciate a little more of the humor now :)
- Corbett
Thank-you, thank-you, thank-you, Mike and Steve! I loved Mike's essay about Kelly and was delighted to hear that the pictures were scanned in at high res to make study easier! I've gotta make a trip to ASIFA!
Kelly was always tweaking his readers' noses with little whimsical touches, easily missed unless you're paying close attention.
Take, for instance, the middle Sunday page - the one featuring the hound dog, Beauregard.
The graphic stripe pattern on his fez changes from panel to panel, and there are subtle changes in the setting itself. In the first panel, Beauregard is seated on an old log to the left of a tree. By panel 4, it seems to have morphed into a large root, and by panel 7 it's changed completely into what appears to be a small black rock! By the last panel, he's back to the log, but the tree is gone, replaced by some reeds.
Stuff like that fascinated me as a kid - there were always weird things going on in the background.
Irresistible, perfectly-realized characters speaking in bold, beautifully rendered typefaces - in front of incredibly lush, stylized backgrounds that were constantly in flux - that was POGO.
There was always more to Kelly than what met the eye.
Stuff like that fascinated me as a kid - there were always weird things going on in the background.
Ah! You may have just touched on one of the things that appealed to me as a kid. I loved comics with changing nuances in the background. Or incidental details. When I bought a new MAD I'd immediately turn to the Drucker splash page and pour through the background details.
I'm sure I did the same with Kelly.
I didn't discover Will Elder until I was a little older, but I instantly fell in love with his 'chicken fat' gags.
I love incorporating those gags into my own comics now. The first few self produced comics I made are terribly embarassing art-wise, but I was constantly getting comments on how funny they were - especially the incidental stuff.
People enjoy the extra effort, I guess.
- Corbett
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