The Genius of Marshall Rogers, by KELLEY JONES

BATMAN WEEK: The enduring bond between an artist and inspiration…

It’s BATMAN WEEK! We’re celebrating Wednesday’s Detective Comics #1000 — and Saturday’s 80th anniversary of the Caped Crusader. For the complete index of features and tributes — many by some of the top creators in comics — click here.

For BATMAN WEEK, we asked 13 top artists — including Neal Adams, Dave Gibbons and Kevin Nowlan — to pick their favorite Detective Comics covers. (Click here to check it out. Great stuff.)

Actually, there was a 14th — Kelley Jones, no stranger to the Dark Knight himself. But why is he not in that round-up? Because, unbidden, he put together a complete column in tribute to his favorite Batman artist, Marshall Rogers.

It’s such an elegant piece, it deserved to stand on its own — a testament to art moving an artist.

Kelley’s discussed his admiration of Rogers here at 13th Dimension in the past. My favorite story is how Rogers directly inspired Kelley to become an artist, thanks to a fateful meeting between the two. Click here to check that out. (And click here for one of the great lessons Rogers taught him.)

Anyway, we’re running this now because Detective Comics #1000 is out today. As it happens, Kelley illustrated a short story by Geoff Johns in the landmark issue — and he snuck in a salute to the artist who has meant so much to him:

We also just revealed the #3 pick in our TOP 13 BATMAN COUNTDOWN — and it’s the Steve Englehart-Rogers run, making it the top-ranked Detective story on the list. (Click here.) Not only that, artist Sandy Jarrell did a whiz-bang job revamping some of Rogers’ covers with the classic Detective Comics logo. Check them out by clicking here.

But you have time for that in a bit.

Because here’s Kelley:

By KELLEY JONES

Whenever any questions are asked about the best this or that, I usually dismiss them. Time will tell on those questions, and it presupposes all the works in question have been seen and evaluated.

Who remembers Seabury Quinn for example? Considered the greatest writer of horror fiction in the first half of the 20th century? No one.

Or how about Victorien Sardou? The next Shakespeare he was called in the 19th century, wrote 70 plays, all smash hits. None of which are performed today. One of them is only known now, if at all, as the inspiration for Puccini’s opera Tosca.

So, it’s with that in mind that I can easily say the best cover ever for Detective Comics, or Batman, or anything with a cover, is Detective Comics #475 — drawn by the greatest Batman artist ever, Marshall Rogers.

Marshall’s on my all-time best comics artists list, as well. (OK, OK, I make lists without seeing everything, but Marshall would be in there even if Michelangelo drew a three-year run of Superman.)

Rogers’ cover, inked by Terry Austin, stops you — the first and most important thing it’s supposed to do. The art tells the viewer something weird, different and amazing is in that book. I can say that because that’s what happened to me when I first saw it. I just stared at it.

At the time, I wasn’t a DC fan in the sense I would follow a title. Sure, I bought Wrightson and Adams and Kaluta — you know the drill. But I didn’t really follow the characters.

Detective Comics #475 changed all that.

Why? What made it work so well? I didn’t really know at the time I saw it, rather I came to understand years later when trying to accomplish the same goals #475 did.

Marshall had Batman threatened by the Joker holding two bizarre fish with the same awful grin he had instead of real guns. It hit a tone of real menace, real insanity. And best of all it was done with sincerity, not overblown craziness, or out-of-place, over-the-top humor.

Nope, this cover — with the awesome clock face in the background, implying the moment of truth had arrived — took this teenager’s money as fast as I could get it out and pay the clerk. (Thankfully, said clerk pulled out the prior issues Marshall had done and said “You must read these first!”)

I gave the last of my fortune and bought them too – and they were graced with equally great Marshall Rogers covers! Great covers for the greatest run in that title’s history. It’s so rare that the cover matches the interior, but then Marshall was a genius, so maybe it’s not so surprising.

That afternoon, I became a Marshall Rogers fan, and DC fan, and a Batman fan.

All of which I still am — even more so today, with Batman celebrating 80 years.

All because of a great cover on a spinner rack.

A cover that is definitive, seductive and magic.

And that’s all it takes to be a favorite anything.

MORE

The Complete BATMAN WEEK Index of Features and Tributes. Click here.

The Complete 80th Anniversary TOP 13 BATMAN COUNTDOWN. Click here.

Author: Dan Greenfield

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1 Comment

  1. The wrap around covers that Marshall Rogers did for the “Shadow of the Batman” reprint were equally spectacular!

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