CSBG Archive
Name that artist!
- by Greg Burgas
- in General
- 25 Comments
Yes, the game that’s sweeping the nation is back for another round!*Â Just go below the fold and try to … name that artist!
Everyone knows the rules, right? Check out the panels below, and simply tell me who done drew ‘em! It’s easy! It’s fun! It has nothing to do with Grant Morrison!
As a bonus, name the comic! It’s fun for the whole family!
* Note: this is the first time I’ve done this. Indulge me in my hyperbole, please!**






25 Comments
Christopher Inoa
June 12, 2007 at 3:55 pm
Im gonna go out on a limb here and say J.G Jones book no idea
Udo Von DuYu
June 12, 2007 at 3:55 pm
It’s Jim Lee, from one of those Vertigo anthols! Starnge Adventures, maybe? Flinch?
Jamescush
June 12, 2007 at 4:01 pm
Errr…Pete Woods?
Jog
June 12, 2007 at 4:06 pm
Jim Lee, Flinch #1. Just to ride Udo’s coattails.
Tim Callahan
June 12, 2007 at 4:07 pm
Jim Lee, definitely. From Flinch #1?
Ian Astheimer
June 12, 2007 at 4:40 pm
That’s Jim Lee? Damn, that’s the best Jim Lee art I’ve ever seen. I thought it was, like, Jorge Lucas or Ariel Olivetti or somebody.
Da Fug
June 12, 2007 at 5:09 pm
As a person who hasn’t read a Jim Lee comic in a year or more (and as someone who doesn’t have much of an eye for art), I would say the only thing that really gives this away as Jim Lee is the young cop in the last panel of the bottom sequence.
David Wynne
June 12, 2007 at 6:13 pm
..okay, I’m gonna go with the people who appear to have actually read the comic in question (I haven’t), and are saying that it’s Jim Lee (I wouldn’t have guessed that on my own, I was stumped till I read the comments).
But I’m going to up the ante by saying that I think he’s inking his own work here (which is why it isn’t INSTANTLY recognisable as him, since most of the surface elements we generally associate with his work are actually down to his usual inker Scott Williams).
Am I right? Wrong?
Rory
June 12, 2007 at 8:00 pm
Looks like Scott Kolins to me, but what do I know?
Greg Burgas
June 12, 2007 at 8:06 pm
I’ll end what little suspense there is: it’s Jim Lee, from Flinch #1 (1999). And yes, he is inking his own work here. The reason I posted this is because I don’t get why Lee doesn’t do more interesting stuff like this. He did it in the flashback scenes in “Hush,” but it’s few and far between. I get that he wants to draw the big-time stuff and get the big-time money, and that’s cool, but he obviously knows what he’s doing and could experiment a bit. Just a bit! It’s a shame, because I like Lee’s art in general, but I really love it here, and it shows that he could be a great artist if he wanted to be.
Thanks for playing, everyone!
Tom Fitzpatrick
June 12, 2007 at 8:45 pm
Jim Lee. For sure. I remember the story, so dammit, it’s Lee!!!
David Wynne
June 12, 2007 at 9:15 pm
Well, Lee’s work generally improves drastically whenever he inks himself… I’m guessing it just takes him a long time, or perhaps he just feels too self-concious about the results? It could just be that he knows there’s an inbuilt audience for his established style, and he doesn’t want to rock the boat too much and risk losing that audience.
Mr. Burgas, have you ever read the Batman story he did with Warren Ellis that was in the second “Black and White” collection? That was some really nice artwork, in my opinion. A bit like his old “DeathBlow” stuff, but with less of an obvious Miller fixation…
The fact that Jim Lee is actually a really good artist is probably one of the least acknowledged facts in comics criticism.
Ditko Hands
June 13, 2007 at 3:42 am
Without having read the book in question, I could tell it was Jim Lee immediately – the drawing of the hand reaching out in the second picture gives it away. I remember X-Men #1 (first JL comic I ever read) having a similar gloved-hand-with-piping drawing on the splash page. Now, the question is, why the heck can I remember that and not things that are, you know, important?
Chris Hill
June 13, 2007 at 4:36 am
“Looks like Scott Kolins to me, but what do I know?”
At least I wasn’t the only one.
Olokin
June 13, 2007 at 7:47 am
Lookslike Scott Kolins
I am MODOK
June 13, 2007 at 10:10 am
Jim Lee I believe.
T.
June 13, 2007 at 1:28 pm
I think what hurts Jim Lee the most is that his biggest, most mainstream stuff always seems to be inked by Scott Williams. Not saying Williams is bad, but it’s hard to separate the two, and it always makes Lee look like he hasn’t changed at all since his 90s days, since Williams was his inker back then too. It’s hard to know what part of the artwork is Lee’s and what part is Williams.
On another note, does Williams do anything outside of wait for Jim Lee to pencil something? What does he do when not pencilling Jim Lee? It seems like he’s only dragged out to ink when Jim Lee decides to take on a high profile project.
SanctumSanctorumComix
June 13, 2007 at 3:36 pm
First thing I thought of looking at it is a really DAMN GOOD Scott Collins.
Like, the BEST he’s EVER done (IF it’s him).
Then, I’m reading all these “jim Lee” guesses, and I’m not buyin’ it.
Finally some other Collins votes were listed, so I don’t feel so alone out here.
No idea what comic it’s from, however.
~P~
P-TOR
David Wynne
June 13, 2007 at 4:04 pm
Sanctumsanctorum… did you see where the guy who set the question gave out the answer, and listed the comic it’s from?
(clue: Count 8 comments up from yours)
(why yes, I HAVE been called an arsehole before, why do you ask?)
Greg Burgas
June 13, 2007 at 6:19 pm
Be nice, David! And no, I haven’t read the Batman Black and White story. I own the first collection but not the second. In short stories, apparently, he’s willing to do some interesting stuff.
David Wynne
June 13, 2007 at 7:21 pm
Sorry! I’m a bad tempered old man… and I’m 28. Wait till you see the blog comments I make when I’m 50!
And that’s a good point about it being the short stories where Lee experiments. Which makes me lean even more towards the idea that it’s about the time it takes him to ink his own work.
DanCJ
June 14, 2007 at 4:50 am
Interesting. When I read that Batman B+W story it just looked to me like he was impersonating Frank Miller (around about Daredevil-DKR era) but falling a bit short. That said it was still some of the best Jim Lee art I’ve seen.
I do think Jim Lee is a capable artist, but he rarely draws in a style I like
David Wynne
June 14, 2007 at 2:56 pm
DanCJ- well yeah, I only said LESS obvious… have you seen his Deathblow stuff? It was extremely heavily influenced by the then very recent first Sin City book. I remember reading at the time that he actually wrote to Miller to ask his permission to draw that way! So, in comparison, the Batman stuff isn’t AS Miller fixated… but yeah, the influence is still apparent.
I’m an unashamed Lee fan. When I first reached the age were I started looking at the credits of the comics I was reading, those comics were Punisher and Punisher War Journal… as a result I also have a lingering softspot for Wilce Portacio, although I wouldn’t spend as much time discussing the merits of his art
.
DanCJ
June 18, 2007 at 4:04 am
I have got the Deathblow book sitting in my unread pile (and TBH I might never get around to it) and yes it is a blatant copy of the Sin City style. In fact Tim Sale has stated that when he drew Deathblow he was told to make it look like Sin City.
David Wynne
July 24, 2007 at 8:30 pm
Just wandered by here, six weeks later…
DanCJ, I’m not talking about Tim Sale’s Deathblow art, I’m talking about Jim Lee’s Deathblow art, from the original Deathblow series.