Eagle Vol. 12:34 (26 August 1961) |
The Bellamy drawing is captioned "Rhino crushing his way through the undergrowth and Wellington creating blue murder behind him" - a B&W illustration showing a rhinoceros. What was interesting to me was that Bellamy had just finished "Fraser of Africa" (12 August 1961) and it wasn't until 18 November 1961 that we see his work again in Eagle with a third of the front cover - "Men of Action No.5: Sir Edmund Hillary".
Then after that we get - one of my favourites - "Montgomery of Alamein" by Clifford Makins, Bellamy's first double-page spread in the middle of the comic, running from 10 March 1962 - 7 July 1962.
But what was Bellamy doing during the summer/autumn of 1961? There are two things I can think of.
Firstly, creating the new "King Solomon's Mine" spreads (all unpublished). Secondly I can tell you that the 1961 catalogue of the Society of Graphic Artists shows that the 34th exhibition of the S.G.A took place at the Royal Institute Galleries, Piccadilly from the 10th to 29th of July at which Bellamy showed four pieces:
- Tiger (Carbon pencil & wash)
- Studies for life (Crayon)
- Ngoma (Pastel)
- Masai (Pen & ink)
But other than the above I have no clue what work he did between the bulk of August 1961 through to March 1962 - except for Wide World just once and that Swift cover. That doesn't prove he didn't have work but if he did, it's not yet been clearly identified.
1 comment:
Hi Norman,
Maybe he was in a self imposed form of 'lockdown' himself. He probably did something very creative and we just don't know what. Or just re-charging his batteries perhaps?
Intriguing.
Keep up the fine work!
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