Logging on to the Roguetrix...
A reading rainbow...
![[Image: k5qedtX.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/k5qedtX.jpg)
In 'The Tome of Wonderland: A Digital Canvas of Fantastical Realms'
Oliver Frey, Swiss illustrator born in 1948, known since 1969 has produced hundreds of illustrations for comics, magazines, books, and computer games since 1984 to early 90s. They have ranged from war action, adventure, science-fiction, fantasy, history, romance and erotica.
More about him & his art work: About Oliver Frey | Artwork/prints
'Samara' art by Oliver Frey for Crash #55 Adventure pages. (August 1988):
![[Image: Dec8Wug.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/Dec8Wug.jpg)
For a clean text free cover image of the "The Great Giana Sisters" click here.
![[Image: 0klcJcA.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/0klcJcA.jpg)
14 day window closing, LOL.
![[Image: YkUZkba.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/YkUZkba.jpg)
Apple fans are starting to return their Vision Pros
"headaches and burst blood vessels" - We're getting close to Videodrome.
![[Image: 1eY5isU.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/1eY5isU.jpg)
Treasure hunt...
![[Image: PEzC7yl.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/PEzC7yl.jpg)
"This was the art for the Cover of Games Magazine, March 2005. Obviously a little Irish test as to how much Irish lore you know. I believe there are 48 items and then hidden in the painting are an equal number of shamrocks. When you've had enough you can find all the answers here."
Consortium for Hastening the Annihilation of Organised Society, or CHAOS.
![[Image: D8opHQB.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/D8opHQB.jpg)
James Bond and the exploding Archbishop: inside Anthony Burgess’s deranged Spy Who Loved Me script - on Yahoo! site or his personal site: Agent of Chaos
Sandy Salisbury – “Butter Me Over (With Cinnamon Sugar)”
A reading rainbow...
![[Image: k5qedtX.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/k5qedtX.jpg)
In 'The Tome of Wonderland: A Digital Canvas of Fantastical Realms'
Oliver Frey, Swiss illustrator born in 1948, known since 1969 has produced hundreds of illustrations for comics, magazines, books, and computer games since 1984 to early 90s. They have ranged from war action, adventure, science-fiction, fantasy, history, romance and erotica.
Quote:His artistic career started in 1956, when he was almost eight, and the Frey family (he has a younger sister, Lauretta, and brother, Franco) went to live in Britain. On the flight a steward handed the puzzled Oliver a Dan Dare badge. He had never heard of the Pilot of the Future but discovered tucked under the cushions of a sofa in the hotel the family stayed in for a week copies of Eagle comic, and the badge and the Dan Dare strip matched up.
When he started school in Wembley, young Oliver discovered that his classmates were comic-mad, especially for Eagle.
There had been no such comics in Switzerland, and he was immediately taken by the quality of the artwork, immersing himself in the deeds of Dan Dare and the dastardly Mekon. He began copying the drawings of Eagle’s artists, and their styles became seminal influences. The sensation of bodies in movement, often in violent action, captured his imagination—a quality that has never left his work.
Did he inherit his talent for drawing? ‘I wouldn’t say my family was particularly artistic,’ he recalls, ‘although my great-grandfather had been a painter of landscapes and portraits who’d made his way in the USA. I only ever saw a couple of his paintings. My family encouraged me to keep drawing, though.’
After a few years, the Frey family returned to Switzerland. An English friend mailed Oliver copies of Eagle, however, and a weekly dose of comic inspiration arrived in the post.
Oliver most admired the work of Eagle artists Hampson (Dan Dare’s creator), Humphries and most particularly Bellamy. ‘Frank Bellamy’s line and colour work was so dramatic and action-packed. He was one of Britain’s best comic-strip artists.’
Oliver sent several drawings to his favourite comics, especially Eagle, but while encouraging, the responses were all in the negative. He was, however, once rewarded with a reply from Look & Learn’s Don Lawrence, the man from whom he would one day take over the Trigan Empire strip.
Still at school, Oliver’s attention was drawn to an advert for an American correspondence course, operating in Europe from Amsterdam, called The Famous Artists. The course comprised 36 lessons, written by a team of professional illustrators and contained in three huge volumes. He has praised the quality of The Famous Artists ever since. Sadly, for today’s aspiring illustrator, it no longer exists in its original form (there is an online version in the US). From its invaluable lessons, the young illustrator learned composition, use of materials, drawing, shading, colouring and the structure and articulation of the human body.
Like all Swiss males aged 18–60, Oliver had to do his stint in the Swiss Army, in the Signals Division, stationed in the high Alps.
But in 1969 he returned to Britain and attend the London Film School to fulfil his early ambition of directing action films.
As a teenager, with his sister and brother, he had made two James Bond-style action-adventures in Super-8 starring himself as both villains and the Swiss super-spy Apple-Apple 7 James Tell, which in spite of budget and equipment were remarkably sophisticated.
Living in London wasn’t cheap so to support himself he sought work as a professional illustrator.
He approached Fleetway and met the editor of the War Picture Library comics, E.J. Bensberg. ‘A true hero of the back room,’ Oliver later recalled of the man who, more than anyone, put him on the path to his future career.
‘I persuaded Bensberg to let me illustrate a story to show him what I could do. I was given a script and told to go away and draw the first five pages. He liked the result and I was commissioned to do the whole book.
The comics were small-format, 64-page, 150-frame, black and white picture-strips based on fictitious tales from World War II. For two months, working in my Battersea bedsit during the evenings, between mouthfuls of Heinz West End Grill heated on the single gas ring, I pencilled and inked, and my first full-length story was accepted.’
So began an association with the War Picture Library which resulted in dozens of covers and illustrated stories before he stopped doing them in the mid-1970s. Thanks to Bensberg keeping him busy, Oliver earned the then astronomical sum of £4,000 a year.
....
The way that Oliver Frey produces his artwork has changed over the years, from chunky acrylics to inks and airbrush, from brushes to Apple Mac.
There was a time when he asserted that he would never abandon traditional methods for computer-generated art, but the illustrations for the Emperors book were all finished on computer. The advent of Photoshop (Adobe gave a beta copy to Newsfield to test in 1990) began the change, and since then he has produced literally hundreds of illustrations on the Mac.
But at last Oliver has again taken to his inks, acrylics and brushes to begin painting in the ‘old-fashioned’ way, as may be seen in the recent spate of retrogaming books published by Fusion Retro.
More about him & his art work: About Oliver Frey | Artwork/prints
'Samara' art by Oliver Frey for Crash #55 Adventure pages. (August 1988):
![[Image: Dec8Wug.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/Dec8Wug.jpg)
For a clean text free cover image of the "The Great Giana Sisters" click here.
![[Image: 0klcJcA.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/0klcJcA.jpg)
14 day window closing, LOL.
![[Image: YkUZkba.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/YkUZkba.jpg)
Apple fans are starting to return their Vision Pros
"headaches and burst blood vessels" - We're getting close to Videodrome.
![[Image: 1eY5isU.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/1eY5isU.jpg)
Treasure hunt...
![[Image: PEzC7yl.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/PEzC7yl.jpg)
"This was the art for the Cover of Games Magazine, March 2005. Obviously a little Irish test as to how much Irish lore you know. I believe there are 48 items and then hidden in the painting are an equal number of shamrocks. When you've had enough you can find all the answers here."
Consortium for Hastening the Annihilation of Organised Society, or CHAOS.
![[Image: D8opHQB.jpg]](https://i.imgur.com/D8opHQB.jpg)
James Bond and the exploding Archbishop: inside Anthony Burgess’s deranged Spy Who Loved Me script - on Yahoo! site or his personal site: Agent of Chaos
Sandy Salisbury – “Butter Me Over (With Cinnamon Sugar)”
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell