Artofluisgarcia
Artofluisgarcia
Artofluisgarcia
THE ART OF
DAVID ROACH
Chronicles Des Sin Nombres page 1, Pilote 724 1973
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INTRODUCTION
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CHAPTER ONE
Beginnings
L
uis Garcia Mozos was born in the small Spanish only enough for bread, garlic soup, porridge, crumbs, potatoes, and
village of Puertollano, a Mining town in the Central occasionally rabbit stew. For my first two years I was fed exclusively
Spain province of Cuidad Real, south of Madrid. on breast milk. In 1948 they moved my father to Santa Cruz de
Two years later his father, a railway worker, was Mudela. Renfe [the state-owned railway operator] gave its employees a
transferred to Santa Cruz de Mudela, another freight car for the transfer of furniture until they found a flat for rent.
agricultural town, also in Ciudad Real. Looking back There we lived: my parents, my sister and I, in a freight car parked on
many decades later, Luis considered the country he was born into: a dead-end road. Later, my father was promoted to a train waiter:
he had to travel in the last car of the train, watching the goods they
Peurtollano, a place in La Mancha, whose name I will always were transporting through southern Spain. We spent days without
remember, was a mining town where silicosis killed young people seeing him, and when he returned home, exhausted, he slept until he
who ripped coal from the earth for 10 or 12 hours a day, deep in was called back to work. That is, I saw little and almost never talked
the bowels of the mines. On the surface there was the exploitation to him. I remember, of course, the beatings that he gave me with his
of child labor; children who worked unloading coal from the cars belt, prompted by my mother’s complaints about my behavior.
that went inside and loading it into cars pulled by mules. The I studied in a primary school run by the Brothers de la Salle: much
mines where my father, at twelve, had already worked. Working Catechism, few Mathematics, much Sacred History, little Grammar,
conditions that never once troubled the consciences of the infamous and much History of Spain (the victors’ version of history, of course).
and greedy magnates of the French mining company SMMP Luckily they also taught us drawing, In that class Brother Manolo
(Société minière et métallurgique de Peñarroya), or that of the
monarchist, republican and Francoist politicians who ruled Spain
from the 19th century until the middle of the 20th century.
I was born on January 10, 1946 (the same year that an anti-
Franco guerrilla, “El Gafas”, robbed the bank of Puertollano taking
250,000 pesetas), in the steep alley of a working class neighborhood of
proletarian slaves. Calle de San Agustín, philosopher and Christian
theologian, writer of the Confessions and The City of God: ‘Know
yourself. Accept yourself. Get over it. And if you are to kill, do it for
the love of God.’ After growing for nine months fed and protected
in a comfortable temperature of about 37º, I emerged into the shack
where my mother gave birth to me, naked and without heating, the
outside temperature would have been about 3º below zero. It was
one o’clock in the morning and when I emerged into this world the
midwife greeted me with smacks on my buttocks to make me cry, to
show that I was alive and could begin to breathe with my little lungs.
The first perception of my new born psyche was that I was in a very cold,
aggressive and painful world. About 24 years later, on an acid trip in
London, I understood that being born into Franco’s society had made
me a possible psychopath; caused by a childhood abused by the priest
and his holy water, the teachers, the Brothers of La Salle, the doctor, the
Falangists, the authorities and my parents. As the poet Antoine de Saint
Exupery said, ‘Where do I come from? I come from my childhood.”
The only memory I have of my hometown is that of a pigsty where
the pigs ate wildly. At night I had a nightmare that I was being
devoured by those same pigs ... I woke up crying. My father was a loser
in the civil war, a ‘ defeated’ of “La Quinta del Biberón” (a brigade
of 17-year-olds enlisted by the government of the Republic to fight
against [Francisco] Franco), therefore he had to accept the work offered
by the ‘victors’: to hook up freight train cars. On the other hand, my
mother sewed and embroidered. Even with the two salaries it was Childhood photograph 1952
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On the Terrace of Creacciones Editoriales Bruguera 1960. Standing left to right; Guilermo Gesali, Francisco Puerta, Miguel Fuster, Jesus Redondo, Julio Fernandez,
Juan Antonio Parras, Gemma Sales, Luis Martinez Roca, Judith, Tomas Marco, Luis Casamitjana, Enrique Badia Romero. Sitting left to right; Antonio Piqueras, Jose
Maria Bellalta, Jorge Badia Romero, Luis, Juan Sole Puyal, J. Sebastian Tamarit.
feature of Spanish comics for decades, with artists constantly I was only a child she talked to me about her uncertainty over which
looking for better money and more creative opportunities. cartoonist she loved the most: Julio Fernandez or Rousado Pinto.
Enrique Montserrat, an Olympic gymnast in Beirut and champion of
In 1959, when I was 13 years old, I started drawing as an apprentice Catalonia in rings, recommended that I do physical exercise. Luis Roca
for Bruguera. And in 1960, I began my career in comics. For a child rarely came in (he gave me demonstrations of pen and brush techniques),
like me, seeing the original pages being created, was Nirvana. It and when he did, he spent a lot of time in the office with Mariemma,
was literally enchanting watching these professionals at work. The the secretary of the studio. In the end Gemma married Pinto and Roca
atmosphere was formal, but friendly and outgoing and nobody played married Mariemma. By contrast with Selleciones Illustradas, everyone
any cruel jokes. The other artists introduced me to the work of the great encouraged me at Bruguera and I felt loved by all of them. Along with
American masters of comics such as Alex Raymond, Stan Drake, Milton telling me that I was very quick to learn, some of them, like Romero
Caniff, and John Cullen Murphy. At Bruguera, I started drawing and Antonio Piqueras, even asked me to help them in their work. I
“Curiosities” (small illustrations for a section of the magazine dedicated remember my time at Bruguera with love. But what most of the artists
to curiosities about the animal world) for the magazines DDT and in the studio really believed was that being admitted into the Selecciones
Pulgarcito, and I also drew western illustrations for Marcial Lafuente Illustradas agency meant belonging to the elite of Spanish artists”.
Estefanía’s novels. Above all, I became friends with Luis Martínez
Roca and Miguel Fuster who I am still close to today. They were all At the age of 14, Luis arranged a meeting with Josep Toutain, the
very kind to me and the one who helped me the most with advice head of the Selleciones Illustradas agency (better known by its initials
was the head of the studio Paco Ortega (who had recently taken over S.I..) which was beginning to make great inroads into the British
from Jose Bielsa). Everyone treated me with great affection and they comics market. S.I.’s big attractions were not only its roster of brilliant
even nicknamed me “Crispin” after the child in Captain Trueno. young artists but also the opportunity to earn considerable money
Because of my technical ability with the brush, Jorge Badía Romero drawing for foreign clients across Europe, particularly in the UK.
asked me to do the inking on some of his romances, but imitating his Then as now British publishers were not widely regarded as generous
style. And, later, when I was already working for England, he asked employers (certainly not by the indigenous talent) but the difference
me to ink him on many occasions, minus the heads (I should add that in exchange rates between the Peseta and the pound meant that for
he always paid me well), This is one of the reasons why he was able to Spanish artists the pay was far better than anything they could find
draw so many romance comics for England. I don’t remember the exact at home. There was also something of a creative cache in working for
titles that we worked on at Bruguera, but I do remember that they Britain, a country that was entering a period of great creativity, in
were girls comics, possibly Claro de Luna. Jorge was also a good friend contrast to the oppressive environment in Spain under Franco. The
(he treated me like I was his son and liked to pick me up in his arms money they earned from comics enabled these young artists to buy the
as if he was lifting weights!), as was Gemma Sales, and even though latest fashions and be the first to hear the latest rock and roll records,
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I remember my first day at S.I. very well; I went to see Toutain, and
when he saw my charcoal drawings, In addition to some of the copies of
the comics, and the western illustrations for the novels I had drawn for
Bruguera, he welcomed me with open arms. When we left his office, he
exclaimed to the cartoonists who worked at S.I.: ‘Guys, I have found
another Pepe González!’ (Pepe had also made similar drawings to
mine before entering SI.). Already, on that first day, I saw a certain
jealousy in the eyes of the cartoonists because of that phrase: ‘Another
Pepe González’. Among the few cartoonists who behaved kindly to me
at S.I. were Florencio Clavé, Javier Puerto (the artist who introduced
Pepe Gonzalez’ work to Toutain), and Pepe himself, at first, along
with a few more whose names I can’t remember now. But most of the
cartoonists, thanks to Toutain’s announcement, had, already began to
hate me. Toutain told us that if we were going to draw romance comics
for the UK then we should imitate Pepe’s technique and style because
the English publishers liked it very much. So, when in a few months I
learned to draw like Pepe, something that most of them had not achieved
even after a long time of trying, their hatred grew. In addition, another
problem was that I was not Catalan and spoke with a Manchego accent
from Castilla-La Mancha, which meant that, for some radical Catalans Bruguera illustration 1960
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During his first few years at S.I. Luis worked for such Spanish titles
as Romantic (Published by Ibero), Confidencias and Serie Corazón
(Ferma), and Serenata Extra; Confidencias del Dúo Dinámico
(Ediciones Toray) which featured covers by Pepe. He also drew a
significant number of charcoal and pencil illustrations, but for the next
decade most of his work came from one country — Great Britain.
Inking samples 1960
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T
he sheer scale of the great Spanish artistic diaspora
is a phenomenon which is still being explored by
comic historians; a movement of talent stretching
from the 1950s to the present day. This creative
exodus saw the work of a vast number of comic
book artists and illustrators spread out across the
world, though invariably created back home in Spain. Countries
such as France, Germany, Sweden, Italy, the U.S, and particularly
Britain saw their indigenous book and comics industries profoundly
changed by the influx of Spanish painters and comic book artists,
much of it emanating from the hotbed of creativity that is Barcelona.
Altogether, almost 400 Spanish artists are known to have worked for
British publishers at some point, primarily for the publishing giants
IPC and DC Thomson, with some enjoying careers lasting for several
decades. After the Second World War, Britain had a young, literate
population desperate for entertainment and once paper rationing was
relaxed in the 1950s the industry exploded. The nation’s appetite for
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local artists, but they were soon supplanted by an influx of first Italian
and then Spanish artists whose work was imbued with a glamour and
sophistication which the British simply could not compete with. By the
mid-60s the romance comics were almost entirely drawn by Spanish
artists, one of whom was the young Luis Garcia who quickly became
one of the top romance artists in the industry, as well as the youngest.
Luis’ first published British comic strip appeared in Fleetway’s True
Life Picture Library 365 in 1963 and within a few months his work
could be found in Love Story Picture Library, Romeo, Boyfriend, and
Mirabelle. Between 1963 and 1965 he drew for a variety of British
romance titles, mixing lengthy 64-page stories in the digest-sized
monthly Picture Library comics with shorter strips for the larger
weeklies. His friendship with Pepe Gonzalez was reflected in these
earliest strips, though, in truth, he was only one of many S.I. artists in
thrall to Pepe’s style and gift for drawing beautiful women. Gonzalez
had only just established himself on the British comics scene a few
years earlier, working primarily for Valentine, but it was immediately
clear that he was an exceptional talent and certainly one appreciated by
the editors. Like Gonzalez, Luis could draw astonishingly well and at
times their work was almost indistinguishable from each other. “Miss
from Mersey” in Love Story Picture Library 487 which was published
in 1964 has often been mistaken for a Gonzalez art job but was in fact
drawn by the 18-year-old Luis, with only the occasionally uncertain ink
line suggesting it was anyone other than the great Pepe.
In this early stage of his career, Luis appeared only fitfully in
Boyfriend which was the glossiest of the early ‘60s comics. Boyfriend
was in many ways a template for the teen magazines to come with
its mixture of strips, pop features, and ever-increasing concentration
on fashion which it illustrated with stylish full color features. In
1963 it also began to run short romantic text stories accompanied
by illustrations similar to those in the leading women’s magazines,
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and from 1965 on, many of these were provided by Luis. In fact, style, which would come to dominate British romance comics for over
he had begun to create these highly realistic, subtly shaded pencil 20 years had various sources.
and charcoal drawings the year before for the Spanish market so
was already extremely accomplished by the time Boyfriend started I never had a specific model in the early days for my romances, but
commissioning him. Between 1964 and 1970, he drew around 150 I would look at photos from fashion magazines and change their
of these illustrations, typically two per month, for Boyfriend (re- expressions to suit the story. Eventually, after years of drawing these
christened as Trend in 1966), 19 Magazine, Jackie, and the Spanish girls I could recreate them from memory. We were all also inspired by
Market. While some of the later pictures were rendered in color the the American illustrators and like the other artists at S.I. I bought the
bulk of the illustrations were created in graphite and point the way annual Illustrators book which published the best illustrations of U.S.
to both his ground-breaking comics of the ‘80s and his subsequent artists each year.
gallery work. These illustrations were uniquely Luis’ own technique
and set him apart from the other S.I. artists. Pepe Gonzalez’ 1964 Typically, the Americans who made the most impact on the
pencil portrait of Luis here shows an early example of Luis’ mastery of S.I. artists would have been Coby Whitmore, Joe Bowler, Lynn
charcoal as he rendered in tone over Pepe’s initial pencils, creating a Buckham, Joe DeMers and particularly Bernie Fuchs, whose constant
unique collaboration. experimentation would have inspired his Spanish admirers to push
Beginning in 1966 much of Luis’ commissions came from Mirabelle boundaries themselves.
where he began to throw off the influence of Gonzalez and firmly Luis spent 1967 living and working in a commune with a number
establish his own style. Here he was given lengthy serials to illustrate of artists who became known as the Grupo de la Floresta, drawing for
often featuring moody loners wandering around the country the ground-breaking Cinco Por Infinito strip, posing for fotonovela’s
(invariably breaking a different heart each week), the longest running and turning out yet more romances (all of which is covered in the next
of which starred the enigmatic songwriter Simon Slade. Probably the chapter). After leaving the commune, the artist returned exclusively to
finest example of his mature romance style was “Strange Memory” British comics again. In fact, throughout 1967 and ‘68 British readers
which appeared in the July 21,1968 edition of Mirabelle. The strip could find at least one of his strips in Mirabelle or Valentine practically
combined the immaculate draftsmanship and idealized figures of his every week, with some issues featuring two or even three stories by him.
Gonzalez period with the expressively dynamic brush lines of Jordi These were attractive, dynamically rendered strips that were by this
Longaron. The style was effectively a synthesis of the two schools of point drawn resolutely in his own unique style. But having experienced
romance art at that time, and in many ways his work of this period is both new genres and new ways of thinking it was becoming harder to
the very epitome of The Spanish Romance style. The emergence of this feel satisfied with endless variations of the same old themes.
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XXX
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Illustration 1970
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T
hroughout his comics career, Luis’ life was smaller studios often resembled communes as well, reflecting the
characterized by a sense of constant searching, of radicals, free spirits and visionaries that made up the Spanish comics
moving from place to place and group to group. industry at that time. The quest for artistic freedom naturally seemed
The ‘60s and ‘70s was a period of immense cultural, to spill over into alternative life-styles as well, along with the search
political, and artistic evolution, and this was for new venues and self-ownership of their art. The now legendary
perfectly reflected in Luis’ art and life. Far more collection of artists known as the Grupo de la Floresta was one of the
than in most other countries the Spanish comic scene was made up of first manifestations of this yearning for freedom. But Luis’ association
organized or ad-hoc studios, either tied to publishers like Bruguera, with this particular group of artists went back to 1965, several years
agencies like S.I. or Bardon, or made up of like-minded artists. These before the studio came into being;
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when Rollan began adapting the immensely popular romance stories of Los Tarantos organized a photoshoot of her to help promote the
of Corin Tellado, whose astonishing output resulted in around 5000 studio. Subsequently her photographs were put up in the window of
books in her long 63-year writing career. Rollan’s fotonovelas were the club. One day she was stopped by a boy named Gerardo who had
large sized magazines, often 64 pages long, with each page filled with seen these photos and told her that a publishing house was looking
beautifully shot black and white photo’s cut up and arranged into a for models and that she would be perfect for their fotonovelas. Carol
comic strip format. The stars of the strips were usually actors or models was initially uninterested but Gerardo persisted day after day until
and featured some of the most glamorous women in Spain such as eventually she relented and went along to Rollan. Her unexpected
Conchita Cura, Encarnita Pacheco, and Sylvia Tortosa along with career as a model and muse had begun.
the striking Margit Kocsis who later posed for Enrich for many of his Altogether, Luis starred in around 25 fotonovelas, many with Carol;
Vampirella covers. When Editorial Rollan obtained the rights to adapt while Carol herself featured in many more, becoming one of the most
Tellado’s novels in the mid-60’s Manuel Medina was the first person popular stars of the genre. Along with the Corin Tellado title itself,
chosen to adapt them. Shortly afterwards the production was picked either separately or together the pair also starred in Sayonara, Desiree,
up by S.I. where Manel Dominguez and Luis Ribas, among others, Selene, Gotica, Fanny and Hit. The fotonovelas were often beautifully
began to produce the magazines which became far more creative and shot and proved to be the perfect reference for artists drawing romance
imaginatively shot. Numerous S.I. personnel were brought in to star in strips (and later on even Warren’s horror strips) and with their striking
the photoshoots, including Pepe Gonzalez, Jose Maria Bea, and Felix good looks Luis and Carol were the perfect artist’s models. Carol’s
Mas, while Fernando Fernandez adapted some of the novels. photo’s in particular were widely used by artists to such an extent
The Corin Tellado fotonovela series provided to be immensely that she came to embody the ideal of the Spanish comic star girl and
popular and spawned an ever-increasing number of companion titles has since become widely regarded as a comic icon. Artists such as
and rivals. With so many pages to fill the search for new and attractive Esteban Maroto, Isidiro Mones, Ramon Torrents, Jose Maria Miralles,
models was intense, which is how Carol de Haro was unexpectedly Petronius, Suso, Fernando Fernandez, and Enrique Montserrat have all
brought into this new publishing phenomena. Carol had been used her as a model for their strips and both Pepe Gonzalez and Enrich
fascinated by dance from a young age and was visiting a Flamenco based their visions of Vampirella on her.
venue called Los Tarantos in Barcelona to listen to a Jazz concert, but Spain in the late ‘60s was undergoing the same schisms and changes
discovered that at the same time Flamenco classes were taking place to society as the rest of the western world despite having long been
on the second floor. Each time she visited the place Carol would under the rule of General Franco’s Falangist dictatorship. In 1967 a
surreptitiously sneak upstairs to watch the dancers, until one day the number of S.I.’s youngest artists (Maroto, Torrents, Adolfo Usero,
owner saw her and suggested she should join in and become a dancer Carlos Gimenez and Suso, along with Karol Blazer) struck out on their
herself. Carol told him she could not afford to pay him but the owner own and formed what was effectively an artists’ commune in the village
assured her that she could study for free. Even as a teenager Carol was of La Floresta three miles outside of Barcelona. Soon after, Luis and
strikingly beautiful with exotic, darkly seductive features so the owner Carol were accepted into “El Groupo Del Floresta”;
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of the group’s activities and is the strip that best characterises their
collective spirit. Cinco Por Infinito was a beguiling mixture of science
fiction and fantasy which was to be owned by its creators with the
aim of syndicating it around the world, and was initially serialized in
Spain in Delta 99, published by Ibero in 1968 (the title strip itself was
drawn by Gimenez), running in 24-page instalments. Luis and Suso
left the strip after two chapters but the rest of the group carried on
together for another three, before Maroto continued the rest of the
series on his own. Altogether, the strip ran for 20 episodes and became
a substantial success around the world, syndicated by S.I. to Argentina,
Mexico, Brazil, Portugal, Italy, Sweden, Germany, and America (as the
Continuity Comics title Zero Patrol). The group also collaborated on
another series, Alex, Khan and Khamar which appeared in the German
Lasso and Roy Tiger comics, arranged through the Jose Ortega agency,
published by Bastei, and later reprinted as the Cobra de Rajasthan in
Trinca. The strip was another collaborative effort and featured Carol de
Haro as the Cobra herself; an alluring jungle queen in the best Sheena
tradition. Again, the artists each contributed their own specialities to
the strip, though this time the artistic line up featured Luis, Maroto,
Adolfo Usero, and Carlos Gimenez.
The photograph of Luis and Carol on the balcony in this chapter was
taken in 1968 after they left La Floresta:
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6A (EXTRA) LA COBRA DE
RAJASTHAN TRINCA 15 1971
(FULL PAGE)
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Carol De Haro as
depicted by, top row left
to right; Petronius, Enrique
Montserrat, Fernando
Fernandez, Middle row;
Esteban Maroto, bottom row
Pepe Gonzalez, Enrich
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Warren
CHAPTER FOUR
O
n his return to Barcelona, Luis resumed his Warren magazines were created by James Warren, a life-long comic fan
romance work, mostly for DC Thomson’s Jackie who first got into publishing with After Hours in 1957, one of many,
and Romeo comics, which by this point were less than successful Playboy clones. His next venture was far more
featuring some beautifully crafted artwork. popular; Famous Monsters of Filmland, a movie magazine devoted to
In addition to Luis, a typical issue from 1970 horror films, conceived with editor Forrest J. Ackerman, which hit
might feature work by Pepe Gonzalez, Felix the newsstands in 1958 to great acclaim. Famous Monsters of Filmland
Mas, Ramon Torrents, Jose Maria Bea, Esteban Maroto, and Adolfo was one of those phenomena which somehow encapsulates the mood
Usero. Barely a year later, this same group of artists could be found in of its era, and its mix of knowing humor and unabashed enthusiasm
the U.S. in almost every issue of the Warren comic magazines Creepy, connected with a generation of monster movie obsessives. It also
Eerie, and Vampirella. singlehandedly created a market for horror magazines which was soon
filled with a number of rival publishers. But Warren’s first love was
The first Spanish artist to work for Warren was Carlos Prunes, who comics and by 1964 he sensed the time was right for a horror comic in
contacted the company personally without any intermediary agencies. the magazine format which would circumvent the all-powerful Comics
After this Toutain travelled to the U.S. and got work from the company Code ban on horror. E.C.’s legendary comic line of the 1950s was
for all of us. After returning home, I talked to Toutain and told him widely regarded as a high-water mark in comics history. With Creepy,
I did not want to draw any more romances; instead, I asked him to Warren was determined to create a new comic that could rival that
give me work in the Warren magazines. Among the strips I drew, one company’s ground-breaking achievements.
of the most memorable was “The Men who called him Monster.” On When Creepy first emerged, it was devoured by an expectant
the one hand, I identified with the protagonist (a werewolf), who had audience, desperate for material that was challenging, shocking,
a compulsion to harm others and fled to avoid this (a guilt complex beautifully drawn, and daringly transgressive. Which is exactly what
that reminded me of the times when I had been taught by the Brothers they got. For his own second era of horror comics, Warren’s early
De La Salle); on the other, I began to enjoy the narrative possibilities editor Russ Jones and writer/editor Archie Goodwin assembled a
of the story; medium shots, dramatic lighting, and so on. I could now highly talented group of artists including many of E.C.’s leading stars
investigate the narrative, technical and formal aspects of the comic such as Al Williamson, Reed Crandall, Johnny Craig, Angelo Torres,
medium. The system of work was similar to the UK market: we had no Wally Wood, Joe Orlando, and Jack Davis, along with the likes of Alex
contract; the scripts were translated and then we drew the strips. The Toth, Gray Morrow, Gene Colan, and Steve Ditko. Under Goodwin’s
originals were kept by the company and the only differences were that direction, Creepy’s strips were sharp, punchy, and witty, reveling in
we could sign the pages and sometimes collect royalties from sales to twist endings and wry humor. Visually, the title was outstanding
other countries. with many of the creators working at the very peak of their abilities
and Frank Frazetta’s stunning oil painted covers have since become
legendary in fantasy art. Spurred on by Creepy’s immediate success,
Jim Warren launched two further comic titles; Blazing Combat in
October 1965 and Eerie in March the following year. Blazing Combat,
despite its brilliant material, was cancelled after only four issues. Eerie,
however, was another hit, sharing as it did the same genre and creative
personnel as Creepy. For the next few years, both titles thrived but by
late 1967 Warren was in serious trouble; its star artists began to drift
away, publication became less frequent and reprints began to appear
with ominous regularity. Following a downturn in sales and a drain in
resources after the company’s warehouse moved to New York, Warren
publishing faced an uncertain future. It was holding on largely in part
to both Famous Monsters’ continuing success plus his thriving mail
order business under the Captain Company name, supplying fans with
all manner of 8mm films, publications, and other genre-related material
that could not be easily found anywhere else.
After several years in the doldrums, surviving on reprints and less
experienced, or less talented, cheaper artists, Warren decided that the
Luis, Alberto Breccia and Pepe Gonzalez best way to revive his fortunes was with a third title, one which would
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“Spellbound”, Creepy 46
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“The Men Who Called Him Monster”, Creepy 43 story by Don McGregor
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“Paranoia”, Vampirella 21
Story by Steve Skeates
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The Chronicles
CHAPTER FIVE
H
aving established himself as one of the leading the corner, the rest of us arranged around the edge of the " horseshoe".
artists at Warren after only a year, Luis was ready Behind him on the wall hung a rhinoceros head with the huge wings
to move on and it was a journey that began with of an eagle. "It is my guardian angel," he said. At night, in the garden
a chance meeting. of olive trees surrounding a pool shaped like male genitalia, he asked
me to pose for him: ""Luis shall be the model for my painting of Saint
In 1972 I met the painter Salvador Dalí. I was Sebastian. Unfortunately, Dali’s wife Gala replied, "San Sebastian has
introduced to him in a hotel suite in the Ritz Hotel in Barcelona, where to be stronger, more muscular." Actually, what happened between Gala
Dalí, surrounded by models, had organized a party to sell a painting and me is that there was no empathy. I felt revulsion at her shiny black
to an American collector. Then we all went to dinner at the restaurant eyes, as small as lentils, and their neurotic thin wrinkles and I guess I
Via Veneto and later went for a drink in Pub 240 which was owned by also felt a sense of rejection. Gala was responsible for my not being chosen
my friend Luis Sagnier. I had an exhibition of my drawings there at as the model for the painting. When Silke finished her job with Dali, we
the time; charcoal portraits of the characters and musicians who played decided to travel to Paris, I had Pilote magazine in mind and just in
there. When Dalí saw my drawings, he told me: "You draw well, but case I was able to arrange a meeting there I took my Warren magazines
if you went out less often with the girls at night and spent more hours with me to show them my work...
drawing you would draw better." And I followed his advice. Silke
Humel, Dalí’s favorite model at that time, completely captivated me. Once in Paris Luis arranged to show his artwork to the editor of Pilote
Dalí invited us both back for dinner in the hotel he had in front of his magazine: Rene Goscinny, better known of course as the writer of
house and workshop. The dining room, small in size, had a horseshoe- the world renowned Asterix the Gaul comic strip. From its inception
shaped table, the tablecloth was the Spanish flag. Dali would sit in in 1959, Pilote had been a showcase for some of the best French and
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Luis decided to stay in Premia de Mar and together with Carlos and
Adolfo joined forces to form a studio. They also gave themselves a
name; the Premia 3, and set to work on a number of collective and
individual comic strips. Luis and Victor Mora’s Pilote project was
christened Les Chronicles des Sin Nombres (The Chronicles of the
Nameless), conceived as a series of unconnected strips, each telling a
story from a different period and in different genres. The link was that
these were somehow all the same person, or at least each carried a sort
on continued essence throughout the ages. A universal
man, similar to Michael Moorcock’s Eternal Champion.
Not reincarnation exactly, but enough of a link that it
justified being part of a continued series. Pilote offered
Luis complete artistic freedom and it was here that he
established his own fully realized artistic personality.
The strips built on the realistic, textured approached of
his Warren work, but revealed an increasing assurance
in both storytelling and draftsmanship and are surely
amongst the most beautiful comic book pages ever
drawn. the originals were drawn quite large (around a
half imperial size) and rendered with extremely delicate,
fine ink lines. The artwork was never so tight however
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that the whole thing closed up into lifelessness, the pages always I talked with Victor Mora about each story, discussing which period I
retained a lively, vigorous quality. In fact, in some cases the line work wanted to draw: the middle ages, the old west, etc ... and then he wrote
is held together and given weight by the almost tactile tone which is them. Sometimes we discussed the script, especially with “Love Strip”,
layered on top of it. This tone was established through a combination because it was my “trauma” about eight years doing romance comics for
of sponged–on ink and finer areas dabbed on with a thumb or finger. England. Instead of drawing the artist’s strips with my own romance
Other, diffuse lines were achieved by putting down a pen line and then style, to give a wink to the readers and my friends, I asked Giménez, who
quickly smudging it across the page with a thumb creating soft, abstract was interpreting my character, to draw them himself. He protested that:
feathers of ink. These textured drawings were then finessed and “You want me to draw in a romance style, but I've never drawn romance
distressed by scratches and cuts from a razor blade. In fact, a closer look comics”, but I insisted and he drew them. I indicated to Giménez the
at some of the panels reveal figures that appear to be nothing more space where I wanted him to draw the romance panels, but, I drew with
than a mass of smears, daubs and scratches which somehow coalesce glossy paper (on that story) and he drew on matte paper (for his brush
into a thrillingly substantial whole. The pages manage the almost technique), so he drew on the paper he used, and then we pasted them
impossible achievement of being at once astonishingly bold and at the onto my originals. In 1974, I returned to Paris, where Goscinny received
same time breathtakingly delicate. me very happily and smiling, with the originals to “Love Strip” in his
Initially, Luis and Victor Mora produced five Chronicles strips hands, blurted out: "You're a genius, I shall have to pay you more per
for Pilote over a 2.5-year period, each stylistically and thematically page”. Rene was a marvellously kind and big-hearted man”
different to the other, with each featuring models and echoes from
Luis’ life and from the world of comics. The first Chronicles strip, The first four Pilote strips were soon re-sold by S.I. to Warren and
Edelweiss, was the closest to a typical Warren story, a gothic ghost were printed in Vampirella throughout 1975, which is where the
story of sorts built around a shot down First World War pilot, an English-speaking readership first discovered them, unaware that they
eerie German chateau, and a beautiful young girl. The story used Luis had first appeared in France. For the Warren printings each strip
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During this period Carlos, Adolfo and I had a small cottage in Premia
De Mar a coastal town about 20 kilometres from Barcelona, where
they lived with their women and children. The Premia 3 collaborated
on two comic albums: the 4 Amigos (4 Friends) and La Isla Tresoro
(Treasure Island) with each taking the role that suited us the best. I
had proposed that we should collaborate on some projects together and
it was the screenwriter Mariano Hispano who proposed the 4 Amigos
to the group. I was also the person who was traveling around Europe to
sell the publishing rights, except in Spain where it was Giménez who
found the publishers and all editions since 1980. I sold it in the Nordic
countries and the Netherlands (we made copies on Instaprint, which
was the material that I took with me abroad), and I paid the others
their share. In any case, they were “ bread and butter" jobs which, in my
opinion, do not have great artistic importance and do not transcend
my graphic biography. We did not try to do anything new, they only
existed so we could eat and pay the expenses of the studio. Regarding
the way of working when we formed the Grupo Premía 3, it was the
following: Giménez laid out the pages and drew some backgrounds,
Usero drew it in pencil, and I did the inking, except for the first head
shots of the characters which I drew as well. I participated in all the
groups and magazine projects that were made in Barcelona in the ‘70s
Grupo Premia 3 photo: Adolfo Usero, Luis, Carlos Gimenez; Grupo Premia 3 by Enrique
Ventura; La Isla del Tesoro cover art by Grupo Premia 3; 4 Amigos by Grupo Premia 3, 1973
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XXX
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XXX
XXX
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Winter of the Last Combat, Pilote 738/739 1973 story by Victor Mora,
translated by Jose Villarrubia, lettered by Jim Campbell
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XXX
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“Love Strip”, Pilote 2 1975 Story by Victor Mora, additional art by Carlos Gimenez,
translated by Ruth Bernardez, lettered by Jim Campbell
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XXX
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CHAPTER SIX
I
n 1974 I founded a new commune with Enrique Ventura main model and an Australian waitress from the hostel in Cadaques as
and Miguel Angel Nieto in the town of Cadaqués, near the the tempting siren. “Janis” was the first of several interruptions in the
home of Salvador Dalí on the coast, a few kilometers from the production of Pilote’s Chronicles series and was drawn simply because
French border. Ventura bought the food, I cooked, and Nieto the creator wanted to draw a strip about a hippie, partly because he
washed the dishes; others ate, drank, smoked, sang, and played was one himself ! The strip was drawn with the same realism and
guitar. We were often visited by other artists including Carlos tonal depth of the Chronicles series, and while it did not appear in
Gimenez, Adolfo Usero, Jose Canovas and Miguel Fuster (the latter France at that time it was printed in Vampirella #45, in the middle
two were regular contributors to British girls’ comics of the time) and of its Chronicles translations, every bit as heavily rewritten (by Budd
also participating in the festivities were many women: Spanish, French, Lewis) as they had been. A short while later he took a trip back to his
German, British, Australian... It was the sweet charm of the middle- childhood home and was so overwhelmed by the experience that he
class bourgeoisie with a soundtrack by the Beatles. Ventura and Nieto felt compelled to put it down on paper, which he did with the help of a
worked for the magazine El Papus and their salaries covered the expenses script from Felipe Hernandez Cava.
of the commune.
In 1975 I returned to Santa Cruz de Mudela, to see the place where I
Life on the commune freed Luis from the usual economic imperatives had spent part of my childhood. I had not gone back there since I was 10
that govern the work of most artists and allowed him the chance to years old, before my family went to live in Catalonia. The experience of
retreat from the demands of constant comic strip work for the first rediscovering my childhood was, for me, Proustian. Both my memories
time in over a decade. The first work to come out of this new commune and the excitement of the day were very strong because I remembered
was “Janis”, a near-wordless daydream of a strip, which perhaps both the good and bad experiences of my childhood. For that reason, I
inevitably turns into a nightmare, for which Luis used Ventura as his felt a real need to draw Chicharras as an insight into my childhood, a
historical memory of the aftermath of the Spanish Civil War, from the
child's memory, my memory since childhood. And without meaning
to, I created the autobiographical cartoon for adults in Spain. Carlos
Giménez, saw me create and draw Chicharras and after lettering it
he declared that he too wanted to draw comics about his childhood
and months later he started to work on Paracuellos. Chicharras was
coincidentally the first time I signed my work Luis Garcia Mozos. I
changed the name of Santa Cruz de Mudela to Santa Cruz de Almagro
to avoid any potential problems....
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El Papus 200
printed two years later in the thirteenth issue of Antonio Martin’s drawing primarily for Valentine in the UK, but he was also a member
well-regarded comics fanzine Bang! and then finally reached a wider of the clandestine PCML group – The Marxist-Leninist Communist
audience in the Spanish Totem magazine (issue 22 in 1979). This way Party. Clavé brought some of the artists together to publish the
of working would then set the pattern for much of the rest of his career. experimental magazine Altamira and one night arranged for a showing
In what now looks like a revolutionary move, from this point on Luis of Sergei Eisenstein’s banned Soviet masterpiece Battleship Potemkin.
would create almost all of his work for himself, embracing a future as After the film had ended, he tried to encourage the group to discuss the
a serious artist. This extended to finding publications for his work as movie but one by one they drifted away, fearful of being associated with
well, where whenever possible he would sell his strips himself, often anything so politically inflammatory. Soon after this Clave’s British
physically travelling to each country and editor, but sometimes relying strips mysteriously dried up and it later emerged that under torture
on the old agencies to disseminate his work globally. one of his colleagues in the PCML had given his name to the Policia
Armada and the artist had been forced to flee to Paris. Like Luis, Clavé
Sometimes in my house I find magazines with my comics and found work in France with Pilote magazine but in the ‘70s he returned
illustrations in them that I did not remember being published. My to Spain and met up with him once more in Marika’s apartment.
comic strips were published in about 14 countries; for example, in such Clavé put a pistol on the table and ordered that: "It is time for armed
disparate places as Yugoslavia, Australia, and Turkey. But in many struggle, we must act against revisionism and capitalism. Do you want
cases, I do not have the publications because for those countries that I to be activists in the Marxist/Leninist Communist Party?” Perhaps not
could not travel to in person, I had to ask Rafael Martinez from Norma, surprisingly the pair declined.
or Toutain, to sell them and then pay me. Following the artistic breakthrough of Chicharras much of Luis’
work in the ‘70s concerned itself with issues that were either personal
From 1939 until his death in 1975, Spain was ruled by the military to him or political, often taking up the causes of suppressed minorities
dictatorship of General Francisco Franco and the country was not to or the working class. As with Chicharras, he would sometimes draw
experience full democracy until 1978. For the artists of Selecciones strips as the mood took him and then find a venue for them later
Ilustradas, growing up in Barcelona they would have experienced though the first of these issue-led strips was commissioned by a visitor
a society where dissent and free speech were crushed, where to the commune: Michel Choquette, who was gathering material for
concentration camps and forced labor were common punishments what became the Someday Funnies. This was a project that started
and where even their own language of Catalan was suppressed. In this life as an idea from Rolling Stone to get a few artists to muse on their
environment, free thinkers and dissidents were naturally attracted to memories about the ‘60s, and grew to become a sprawling monster of
the left, something that was highly dangerous under Franco’s stridently a book taking in 169 creators and which only saw print in 2011. One
anti-communist regime. One of Luis’ first introductions to leftist day in 1975, Luis and Carlos Gimenez were talking about the recently
politics came in 1964 from his fellow studio member Florencio Clavé. released Metal Hurlant magazine which featured the ground-breaking
At that time Clavé was one of Spain’s most prolific romance artists, work of French artists Moebius and Phillipe Druillet among others.
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Illustration for Enciclopedia Planeta de las Ciencias, Ocultas y Parasicologia, Planeta 1977
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ome projects are the results of careful, long thought out where a meeting with Fulvia Serra and Oreste del Buono of Editorial
planning, while others happen through osmosis or just Corno proved to be highly fruitful. The pair had seen Luis’ work
sheer coincidence. The 1979 strip collection Etnocidio in Pilote and bought all the work he had with him: four Chronicles
(Ethnocide) was one of the latter. The roots of the project episodes, “Janis”, and Tecumtha which were soon reprinted in issues
began when Luis drew an adaptation in 1975 of the of Linus, Alter Linus, and Eureka. In fact, Tecumtha’s first printing
Ambrose Bierce short story “An Occurrence at Owl anywhere was in Alter Linus #1 in 1976.
Creek Bridge” (retitled Tecumtha), which he subsequently asked After this first collaboration on Tecumtha, Cava would go on
Felipe Cava to dialogue (and which starred Carlos Gimenez as the lead to become Luis’ most important collaborator for the rest of the
character). He had first met Cava in 1972 after Luis had been awarded decade, working on numerous strips and magazines together. Felipe
the Warren prize for Best Strip of the Year. He had been invited onto Hernandez Cava was born in 1953 and grew up in Madrid going
a Spanish TV news program in Madrid to take part in a live interview on to become a prolific and creative writer and artist. Cava’s earliest
and Cava accompanied a comics critic to the studio where the two work appeared in Bang! and the El Cuco newspaper supplements,
were introduced to each other. Later Cava travelled to Barcelona and and he went on to work in comics as a writer, critic and as part of the
came to Premia de Mar to visit Luis in his studio. Cava was also a El Cubri artistic collective. Like Luis he was also extremely active in
regular visitor to the studio in Cadaques and travelled with Luis on the radical underground circles. Throughout the ‘70s, his work appeared
aforementioned road trip across Europe to raise funds for the Black in Comiclo, Butifarra, Cul de Sac, Por Favor, Cimoc, and Cairo. He was
Flag project. Ultimately, they met with little success except in Italy also one of the principal creators involved in Ikusager Edicions’ Images
from History series of graphic novels. As a frequent collaborator with
Luis, he appeared in most issues of Trocha/Troya, 14 issues of Rambla
(as El Cubri) and co- wrote the Argelia graphic novel for Ikusager. He
went on to become a key figure in experimental and alternative comics
throughout the next few decades, appearing in such ground breaking
titles as Madriz (where he was the artistic director) and Medios
Revueltos, along with writing numerous books, articles and curating
exhibitions. He was perhaps the collaborator whose humanist and
political views most closely echoed Luis’ own preoccupations.
Tecumtha was soon followed by a second western strip; Le Bataillon
de Saint Patrick (the Battalion of Saint Patrick,) which was conceived
and written by Cava and became their first conventional collaboration.
At around the same time, the French publisher Valliant, creator of the
bestselling Pif Gadget comic, visited Luis in Barcelona to invite him
to contribute to a new adult comic magazine they were planning. Luis
subsequently visited the publisher in Paris where he met with writer
Jean Oliviér who suggested that they worked together on a strip for
the magazine, which became yet another western: Cheval Fou (Crazy
Horse). Vaillant’s proposed magazine was to be called Bazar, the first
issue of which was to feature “Janis” alongside French strips such as
Barbarella, but after an initial test press run of only 150 copies in 1976,
the project was abandoned. Later that year, however, the publishers
(under the new imprint of Editorial De La Grille) tried again with
Scop magazine which finally did make it onto the newsstands. Luis
was present in four of its five issues with the Bataillon strip appearing
in issue #1, Cheval Fou in #2 (where it was also featured on the cover),
“Janis” finally saw print in France in issue #3 and El Grito/The Scream
was featured in issue #5 (several months before its Spanish debut in
Troya). Luis was well represented in French comics in the late ‘70s
as Bataillon was soon reprinted in Pilote #53, only two years after its
premiere in Scop and his lyrical adaptation of Jack London’s short story
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The last story I made about the North American Indians was the
adaptation of The Law of Life and although it could have been
Included in Etnocidio it was not possible because Jose Maria de
la Torre, the publisher of Papel Vivo, had no money and had
to wait for the sales of his previous book to publish the next one.
The book could only have 48 pages (a signature of 32 pages, plus
a half signature of 16 pages) and the Law of Life could not fit
in it. Another reason why that story in particular was omitted
was that De la Torre was a member of the Communist Party
and The Law of Life, for him, was the least revolutionary of my
westerns. However, I did put a panel from the story on the cover.”
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A
lthough the graphic novel format was only just John Wayne and Humphrey Bogart, with scripts by Felipe Cava,
beginning to emerge in America by the end of the and a pair of punk-inspired strips under the pseudonym of Johnny
1970s (with Will Eisner’s A Contract with God Weissmuller which were unrecognizable as his work. The project saw
in 1978 widely regarded as a significant starting print in 1980 under the Ikusager imprint, a publishing house owned
point for the artform), in Europe, the comic album by Ernesto Santolaya, who would go on to publish a string of critically
(effectively a long comic strip story published acclaimed and politically aware graphic novels throughout the ‘80s
as a square-bound, often hardbacked, book), was a long established and ‘90s.
format going back to the 1930s with Tintin. In Spain, Trinca magazine After completing his last couple of Chronicles strips for Pilote in
started issuing collected albums of its strips in 1971 and Spanish 1979, Luis began work on his first full length graphic novel Argelia
translations of Tintin and Asterix albums began appearing in the 1950s (the Spanish name for Algeria) whose inspiration came from a most
and ‘60s respectively. Soon after finishing his work on Troya, Luis unlikely source. An Algerian official by the name of Omar was looking
began to create artwork for his first graphic novel, joining the crew of for a comic artist to adapt a lengthy text of his which documented
Astronomia Pirata (Pirate Astronomy) an album project overseen by the history of Algeria under French colonial rule and its battle for
editor Carmelo Hernando. Luis contributed 11 pages to the book, six independence. This was intended as a sort of companion piece to Gillo
of which were his adaptation of "The Crystal Eye", a story by Curzio Pontecorvo’s 1966 film The Battle of Algiers, and it was felt that the
Malaparte (for which Hernando rewrote the texts from a Maoist comic book medium would be widely accessible for a mass, often rural,
perspective). His other contributions featured humorous strips about audience that might not have been able to see the film itself. Omar
knew Ramon Peinado, a childhood friend of Luis’, who was working in
Algeria which is how the initial contact with the artist was made. Luis
was subsequently invited to spend a week in Algeria to gather reference
and get a feel for the atmosphere and character of the country and its
people. Once back in Barcelona, Luis realized that the text was far too
long to be easily adapted into any sort of manageable story, so he let
it gestate in his mind, then laid it out into a 42-page storyline entirely
from memory.
The book was drawn directly for Algeria, shortly after the [1978] death
of the revolutionary president Houari Boumédiène. And since I only had
a few months to complete the book, and I also had to adapt Omar’s book
to write the script, I asked Adolfo Usero for help with the drawings. After
we had finished the book, Felipe Cava came to Barcelona and in my
house one night, we wrote the story together. I explained to Felipe, panel
by panel, what I wanted to say and he wrote the text. Felipe managed
to perfectly fill the spaces that Adolfo and I had left for the text and
then sometime later Ernesto Santolaya published it in Spain. A recent
French edition (reprinted under the title El Djazair) was published by
a communist married to an Algerian and with many Muslim friends,
but I don’t know what the reaction has been to the book because I haven't
heard from the editor at all (and he might still owe me some of the
royalties!). I don't know if it ever was published in Algeria, although I
gave my friend the original pages which he then delivered to the Algerian
government Ministry of Culture. Luckily, I had made copies beforehand
at Instaprint, a company which specialised in making reproductions from
the originals on paper, and these are the copies which were used for the
Ikusager and Ici Meme editions.”
The book was an artistic triumph with both artist’s styles merging
seamlessly into a totally coherent whole. The project was divided up
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There is a story in the Chronicles series, the last one, Stormy Weather,
in which I am the model. The lead character is a "Manchurian
Candidate" (people manipulated, psychically, to commit crimes). And
as I think Lennon was killed by another Manchurian Candidate, it felt
right to use myself in Nova 2 in a similar way. In the Nova 2 sequence,
Víctor Ramos (my alter ego) leaves his house and discovers the news
that John Lennon has been killed, and in the following pages, I am the
model for the character that sells him the revolver (the same model of the
weapon that killed Lennon).The character of the real Victor Ramos is not
the same as the fictional Victor Ramos in Nova 2 although both drew
romances for the UK. Today, the real Victor Ramos is still alive and in
good health. On page 15 the text mentions that Victor was an indirect
descendent of the Habsburg royal family which is something the real
Victor had told us when we were all working at S.I. I included it in the
story as a nod to the people who knew him and because it would make
the fictional Victor’s decline into a frustrating and miserable life all the
organically with each artist taking turns to pencil and ink sections more poignant.
with some panels finished by one artist entirely on their own, while I was influenced by the Beat Generation, as well as the cultural
others were pencilled by Adolfo and inked by Luis. In some cases, the phenomenon about which they wrote, particularly Jack Kerouac. I
entire page might be made up of different combinations from panel to quoted Allen Ginsberg’s poem “Howl” in the early section of the story
panel. However, on a few pages Luis found the time to create the entire as a tribute to that formative influence and to contrast our culture with
image on his own and of the two examples shown in this book, page the culture of the nomadic Arabs. The poem shocked me and changed my
31 is entirely his work, as is page 38, except for the policemen in its last life because it helped precipitate the hippie movement of which I was a
panel which were drawn by Adolfo. member. On the other hand, on returning to Barcelona from London, I
In December 1980, Luis embarked on what was to become his joined the Marxist movement. The words of John Lennon which I quote
masterpiece, Nova 2. The strip started life as a story with science in the book, “the dream is over," allude to my own experiences, because
fiction overtones set in the Sahara but as he was drawing its ninth page, the two movements, (as the Marxists would call them) had failed. The
Luis heard the news that John Lennon had been shot and the project character that I modelled for who sells the gun to Victor represents the
underwent a radical change of direction. The Sahara story abruptly end of my belief in Marxist revolution. These references to my own life
stops and our point of view pulls back to reveal that this continuity would have been difficult for the reader to understand. But in essence
had been part of a strip drawn by an aging Spanish comic artist by the when I quote that "the dream is over" in this case it is the Marxist dream
name of Victor Ramos. We then follow Victor as he wanders around and the gun that represents that movement turns out to be broken itself
Barcelona, buys a gun and then tries (unsuccessfully) to kill himself. when Victor attempts suicide.
The second half of the story, drawn in 1982 for the magazine Rambla,
tracks his life from the moment of conception, through a childhood
spent under the shadow of the Spanish Civil War, and finally his fate
at the hands of his psychoanalyst. Throughout, there are references
and quotes from such diverse figures as Allen Ginsberg, Velazquez,
The Beatles, Carl Jung, and Alex Raymond. Visually, it was a tour de
force bringing together all the various techniques and storytelling
innovations he had developed over the previous 20 years. After an
opening section of detailed pen and sponge work, the bulk of the book
is rendered in rich, delicate swathes of graphite making it one of the
most realistically drawn comics ever seen (and a pointer to a career
change yet to come).
But even in a strip as revolutionary and complex as Nova 2 (a story
which could quite rightly be called the worlds’ first existential comic
strip) there were meanings within meanings. The Victor Ramos of the
story was a fictional comic book artist driven to despair at the futility
of a life spent drawing British romance comics. As a model for this
artist, Luis chose an old colleague from S.I. who was coincidentally
named Victor Ramos and who had himself spent many years drawing
British romance comics for Jackie, Marilyn, Star Love Stories, Diana,
and numerous other titles. At one point, we see the fictional Victor
Ramos drawing a page of a British romance story entitled “Love Strip”
(in a knowing nod to Luis’ earlier Chronicles episode), though visually
this strip is drawn very much in Luis’ own classic romance style, rather
than the more cartoony style used by the real Victor. In some ways
Nova 2 could be seen as a continuation of the earlier “Love Strip”,
imagining what that story’s protagonist, Pablo, would be like a decade
further on in his life. But the subtexts and references went further
than that:
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Rambla magazine in the morning but in the afternoon, she went to the
university, to finish her psychology studies. So, in effect, in real life she
which was exactly the character she plays in the book. Her character has a
monologue in front of the mirror, looking at her childhood photos, and I
asked her to write, really, about her own childhood and her relationship
with her mother, which then became the text about the character's
childhood in my story. We follow Victor’s life from his inception, through
his mother’s pregnancy and the early years of his life during the Spanish
Civil War and here I was deeply influenced by an essay by Susan Sontag,
who explained the importance in the formation of a child's psyche of the
influences of society on the mother while she is pregnant.
When I was producing Nova 2 I had no prior, finished script, it was
always a work in progress. While I was drawing page nine, I heard
the news about Lennon's murder on the radio. And for me, it was a
catharsis which changed the course of the story, because it didn't feel
right to draw an adventure story when my generation’s future was over.
The script evolved as I was writing it, responding to what I had written
before and also reflecting my current readings, reflections, imaginations
and thoughts, running parallel to my own life. Moebius realized this
because when he talked about Nova 2 on Televisión Vasca (in the Basque
country), he said he had also worked the same way in some of his strips,
such as the Airtight Garage, working spontaneously without a script or
a plan for the whole story. I had intended to continue the story further,
but I took advantage of the editorial and personal disaster of Rambla’s
final days to start a new life from zero (“There is no harm that does not
come for good,” as my grandmother said, who always spoke with sayings).
Nova 2 was an experiment; it was intensely autobiographical and if
I hadn't dedicated myself to painting I don't know when I would have
finished it because it grew with me in parallel to my own life. I finally
The first part of Nova 2 was serialized in Nueva Frontera’s Totem gave it an ending because Joan Navarro, who was editing a reissue for
magazine and then sold across Europe, cementing Luis’ position as Glenat, asked me to finish it, but in reality, the end of Nova 2 is that I
one of the leading stars of world comics. On its completion, Luis and dedicated myself to painting. That is to say, that the act of painting is, for
Carlos Gimenez were invited by the Mexican government to visit the me, the continuation of Nova 2.
country to attend a seminar at Hacienda Cocoyoc to exhibit their
artwork. At the seminar they met politicians and a number of leading Luis made a decision in 1986 to turn away from comics and forge a
South American comic creators including Alberto Breccia, Sylvia new identity as a painter (a period of his life described in this book’s
Palacios, Jose Munoz, and Carlos Sampayo; and then travelled on last chapter), but there was still one final graphic novel to emerge.
to New York to visit Neal Adams and Al Williamson. The trip was This was Norte Sur (North South), published by Ikusager, a book
enormously successful with Luis selling Nova 2 to Heavy Metal editor exploring the inequalities and injustices between the rich and the
Julie Simmons Lynch and then gaining admission to the legendary poor and the weak and the powerful, which featured Luis as part of a
nightclub Studio 54. When published in 1982, it made an impact collective including Alberto and Enrique Breccia, Miguelanxo Prado,
including a lasting impression as noted when contemporary comics and Howard Chaykin. Ikusager’s Imagenes de la Historia series of
artist Dylan Horrocks tweeted in 2015: “Nova 2, by Luis García, had graphic novels had started off exploring historical episodes but quickly
a big impact on me when it was serialized in Heavy Metal magazine in developed a strong interest in social and political concerns. Altogether
the early 80s.” the series ran to 31 volumes and involved several group projects that
On his return to Barcelona, Luis immediately made plans to go dealt with the rights of children, The Declaration of Universal Human
back to America, but instead became involved in the formation of Rights, and the inequalities between the sexes, so it was a project that
Rambla, another comic magazine. This was conceived as an artist-lead was always going to appeal to Luis’ strong social conscience:
project that would provide its creators with the perfect venue to create
their best work. Luis decided to seize the chance to continue Nova 2, I created my contribution to Norte Sur when I was already in Madrid
looking back at the forces that governed Victor’s life and lead him to studying painting and some of the pages actually are paintings, one of
the state of mind we saw at the start of the story: which is now in the Museum of Valencia. The comic was commissioned
by Santolaya, who by then was an acquaintance and friend. It was his
In the first part of Nova 2, the story reveals the wanderings of a idea to bring together artists that he liked for the book. You could say
man beset by his loneliness and frustrations. Victor is guided by his that Alberto Breccia was a friend as well (although because of his age,
unconscious mind in both sections of the story and in the second part I think he looked on me as more like a son), and when we presented the
we see the explanation of why his character turned out like that. In the book at a signing in Logroño, he was surprised by my work. He said,
second part, I show that Victor was born same day as Francisco Franco “But you are doing painting, painting!" He meant that I was not like
started the Spanish Civil War (war makes a country schizophrenic; a lot of other artists who, according to Breccia, only made large-scale
Spaniard against Spaniard, even relatives on different sides, facing illustrations to sell, as if they were paintings, in art galleries”.
each other). That's the explanation I give to my character, a diagnosis of
Schizophrenia given by the young psychoanalyst at the end of the story. Painting has indeed occupied much of Luis’ time ever since and it was
Gemma García, the model for the psychoanalyst, was my secretary at to be another 17 years before he would draw another comic strip.
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Argelia page 31
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Argelia page 38
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Nova 2 page 16
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Nova 2 page 17
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Nova 2 page 19
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Nova 2 page 23
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Nova 2 page 24
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Nova 2 page 25
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Nova 2 page 26
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Nova 2 page 29
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Nova 2 page 37
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Nova 2 page 50
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I
n the wake of the first adult comic magazines Pilote and Linus, Spanish editions of Pilote and Metal Hurlant. The Nueva Frontera
and their successors Metal Hurlant, Alter Alter, L’echo Des magazines primarily reprinted older Spanish strips and the cream of
Savannes, and Charlie Mensuel, other European countries French and Italian talents, but occasionally featured newer Spanish
also began to create their own adult comic strip titles. In material and Luis in particular had become one of the stars of Totem.
Spain the comic magazine format had proved to be successful When Norma Editorial entered the field with Cimoc and Cairo in 1981
since the launch of Dossier Negro in 1968, particularly after it was clear the country was going through a publishing renaissance,
it started reprinting Warren material in 1971. This was followed by a and this period later became known as the Magazine Explosion. So,
series of further Warren reprints from Ibero and Garbo and the eclectic it was not entirely surprising when Jose Maria Bea, an old colleague
Trinca magazine which featured entirely new work by some of the from the early days of S.I., suggested to Luis that they should team up
best Spanish artists such as Victor De La Fuente, Antonio Hernandez to create their own magazine: Rambla (named after Las Ramblas, the
Palacios, Jose Bielsa and Esteban Maroto. When Garbo closed in 1978 main thoroughfare in central Barcelona).
Josep Toutain decided to start printing his own line of newsstand
magazines which mixed reprinted material from Warren with new After returning from New York to my house in Barcelona, a n apartment
strips by Spanish and international talents. The first Toutain title, 1984 of about 300 square meters, I thought about leaving all my things at my
(which appeared only a few months after Warren’s American 1984 parents' house and moving to NY. Because with the money I had made
magazine), proved to be a massive success and was quickly followed from selling Nova 2 to Heavy Metal, plus other stories and the royalties
by Creepy in 1979 and Comix Internacional in 1980. Similarly, across that I still received from the Chronicles (for sales in other countries and
the county in Madrid, Roberto Rocca’s Nueva Frontera was releasing books published by Pilote), I had enough money to be able to live there
its own line of comic magazines starting with Totem and Blue Jeans for two or three years. And while I was dreaming and getting excited
in 1977 and going on to include Bumerang, Vertigo, Caliber 38, and about returning to New York, Beá came to visit me at my house. He has
a great capacity for persuasion and suggested that I should
speak with Giménez, Usero, Font, Ventura, and Nieto about
creating a new magazine. This proposal revived my original
idea of making a magazine inspired by Metal Hurlant and
I was excited all over again about the project that, years
before, Antonio Martín had destroyed. I contacted each of
the artists and after a meeting we decided to start work on
the magazine. But we needed a partner to provide capital
for the project because they didn't want to risk their own
money. So, I travelled to Madrid and proposed the idea to
my editor at Totem, Roberto Rocca. It seemed like a good
idea to him and he came to Barcelona to sign a contract with
us (which is why the first six issues of Rambla were published
by Distrinovel, a publishing house owned by Rocca).
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Bea and I endured two years together, and I had one year
alone, but the market crisis and the saturation of similar
magazines that had occurred in Spanish comics meant that,
sooner or later, everyone had to close their publications. We
persisted with Rambla but the economic crisis deepened and
Beà left the magazine. I continued alone for a year as Rambla’s
publisher until number 35 but then for economic reasons, I
had to close the magazine and the publishing house in October
1985. Apart from the discussions we had as group members,
and the various subjective reasons they might suggest (I prefer
to omit my own subjective reasons), the fundamental reason
why they all left Rambla was economic: if the magazine had
made a lot of money no one would have left.
I created the Rampa Rambla title to be able to publish the
avalanche of new artists that came to the publishing house.
Rambla 24 original cover art And, since it didn't sell well, I lost a lot of money. However,
I was excited, remembering the opportunity they had given
me at Bruguera, knowing that these artists were happy to see their strips
published, which for some of them was the first time in their lives. And
yes, I am proud to have discovered and released new comic artists, from
the generation after mine.
At Rambla my job was Editor in Chief and I had to deal with the
artists, the printers, paper suppliers, banks, and so on. I was on the
phone, in the printing presses, receiving draftsmen, correcting the
printer’s proofs, arguing with the engravers (those who made me the
photoliths for printing), and even making maquetes for the publications.
It was terrible. I think the chronic fatigue syndrome I have since suffered
from is because of all the jobs I did at Rambla. I combined the editorial
chores with drawing magazine illustrations and the strip Nova 2. If you
take into account that in addition to Rambla I was also editing Rampa
Rambla, Rambla Quincenal (bi-weekly), Rambla Rock (a magazine
specializing in pop and rock), Rambla Comics USA, and collections of
black and white and color books, I was producing four to six publications
every month. For all that work, I just had a secretary, Marika, who
helped me to screen unsolicited comic strips, along with her husband who
did the accounts. I slept for only two to four hours a day. In the Rambla
project, I lost everything, even the money I had saved to go to New
York. The others lost nothing. Remembering that time can sometimes
make me feel deeply upset. However, I also feel proud and sometimes
an experience is worth more than financial success. Because what I like
most in life is to learn and with Rambla I learned to be an editor (and
not to trust everyone who claims to be my friends). When I had to close
the company I was so stressed I rested for two months at Carol de Haro’s
house in Granada. And finally, in January 1986, having just turned 40
years old, I started to paint, an art form which I have dedicated myself
exclusively to ever since.
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Rambla covers
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Rambla 14 illustration
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he fallout from the collapse of Rambla led Luis to In addition, I drew storyboards for advertising agencies, but only on
re-evaluate both his life and his entire approach to weekends. During the week I studied painting by copying Velázquez in
art, a process which began with his first drawing as a the Prado Museum (which I later sold in order to have some money to
“free man”, away from comics. live on) and I also painted flowers in the botanical garden next to the
Prado. In the afternoons, I painted life models, such as Maria, at life
The self-portrait in Gorafe, was drawn in the town size in the Circulo de Bellas Artes de Madrid, and at night I studied
where Carol de Haro lives in Granada, I did it while I was recovering the history and theory of painting. For a month, I also attended one
from the stress of having closed down the publishing house and the of the workshops held by Antonio Lopez Garcia. I had the conviction
bankruptcy. I spent a few weeks with Carol and then returned to that if every day I worked twice as hard a young student, then my 10
Barcelona to spend the Christmas holidays with my family, after which years of studying painting would be the equivalent of twenty, as if I had
I went to Madrid to start a new life from scratch. Initially I drew begun to paint ten years earlier. It was a misleading equation I made
illustrations for advertising and children’s books which I did for a living every morning to cheer myself up because I was aware that I had started
and to be able to pay for the small studio where I lived and painted. painting too late.
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Luis painting the When the newspaper El Pais asked me to write something for their
portrait of the Fenoll
children, 1987; Luis and Sunday supplement explaining why I had left comics and was now
his son Luis Alberto; painting, I wrote an essay called "La Luz" (The Light). The supplement
Brochure for Luis’ first
group show at the devoted 16 pages to my work which included reproductions of pages from
Ensanche Gallery 1988 the Chronicles and Nova 2, accompanied by a wonderful text by the
critic Javier Coma. The owner of Galeria Ensanche in Valencia saw the
article which included a photo of my first commission, a group portrait
of Carlos Fenoll’s children, and offered me representation with his art
gallery. I accepted and with what he paid me for the exclusive contract,
I found that I had enough money to live on, so I stopped working on
children's books and advertising, and devoted all of my efforts to learning
how to paint.
In my first exhibition with Galeria Ensanche, a collective dedicated
to the drawing of human figure, many excellent Spanish painters were
involved, but nevertheless the gallerist put my artwork on the invitation
card. One of the paintings from my first exhibition, a 1989 life study
from the Circulo de Bellas Artes (The Beautiful Menegilda) was bought
by a prestigious Valencian collector and when he died, he gave it to
the Museo de Valencia where it still is, together with a drawing of my
parents from the Nort Sur album. The same gallery also organized an
exhibition of the originals of Nova 2, but the pages weren’t for sale, so to
earn money the gallery owner produced a portfolio of four serigraphs of
Nova 2 originals, printed at the same size and on the same paper as the
originals. There were 100 folders signed and numbered. Unfortunately,
shortly after this, the three backers closed the gallery because of a dispute
between them. Then I was introduced to an American art dealer (Croker
International) who sold paintings by myself and several other artists in
California, until he disappeared with all of our work. To this day we
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into their narratives. One of the major challenges facing those who
we might broadly term “realistic” painters today is how to remain
relevant in a post-representational art world, how to create artwork
that has a resonance beyond the merely illustrative. It is something that
Lucian Freud and Jenny Saville, both favorites of Luis, have managed
to achieve and I think Luis has as well. In a painting like Ingrid on
Rothko’s Sofa, which is one of a series of portraits of a favorite model
I think there is the same intensity and exploration of the figure
that you find in Freud and Saville’s work. The use of soft swathes of
color flowing across the page is clearly an allusion to the work of
Mark Rothko, another pointer to Luis’ interest in the properties of
paint as a feature in itself. What is fascinating is that while they are
unquestionably pictures of the highest quality nonetheless there is still
a sense of continuity with his earlier comic strips. The many pencil
drawings of Ingrid clearly mark a continuation of his work on Nova
2, though here he has taken his use of graphite to another level of
realism. In some respects, they feel more contemporary now, with the
popularity of artists such as Saville and Casey Baugh who use graphite
and charcoal in a fine art context, than they did 20 years earlier when
they were first drawn.
In another parallel with his constant experimentation as a strip
artist, Luis’ fine art work similarly reveals an artist continually playing
with different media, subjects and problems. After returning from
Mallorca Luis created art work for two distinct shows; Breaking News,
a highly political, often brutal examination of politics, world affairs
and our contemporary consumerist society, and Fame and Sex on
the Internet which examined our growing fascination with celebrity
and pornography. Both series of pictures were shown together at
the Centro Municipal de Arte Y Exposiciones (CMAE) in Aviles in
what must have been an extraordinarily visceral experience. Breaking
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audience the more contentious material has been left out. However,
for interested readers the Pompa y Circunstacia collection stands as a
powerfully comprehensive record of those shows.
A series of lengthy illnesses curtailed this particular period in Luis’
artist career and when he returned to an active artistic life in the 2010s,
he embarked on a long series of portraits of friends and cultural heroes,
again in a variety of wonderfully expressive styles.
Esther
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Elisa 1990
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Berta 1992
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Still Life
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Ingrid, Torso
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Ingrid, Hands
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Ingrid smiling, 2001; Ingrid On Rothko’s Sofa, 2000; King Juan Carlos
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Velazquez studies
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The portrait series; Icons, Walt Whitman 2013; Edgar Allan Poe 2019; Bob Dylan; Vincent Van Gogh 2018
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The Portrait series; Artists, Frank Auerbach; John Singer Sargent; Lucien Freud 2019; Egon Schiele
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The Portrait Series; Artists, Moebius/Gir; Miguel Fuster; Alberto Breccia 2012; Jana Brike
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The Portrait series; Acting and Jazz, Al Pacino; Chet Baker 2018;
Jean Louis Trintignant; Battleship Potempkin 2013
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Portrait Series; monochrome, The Seventh Seal 2013; Jose Luis 2013;
Juan Antonio; Jaume Vaquer 2011
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The portrait series; las niñas, Emily 2013; Chinese Fashion 2013; Miss Banbury Cross 2013; Belle 2013
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Luis Garcia
THE ART OF
Follow his artistic growth from romance artist to romance model, from
storyteller to existential explorer, from publisher to portrait painter.
For the first time ever, Garcia’s astounding work is explored, often in the artist’s
own words, in this career-spanning work. Three of his strips have been translated
into English for the first time giving you fresh insights into one of the most
atmospheric, dynamic artists of the 20th Century.