I’ve been waiting to show work by Pinajian, because he figured in a big art story a couple of years ago. A decorated war veteran, he lived with his sister after the war. He painted landscapes and stored them in their house. He asked that they be disposed of in the county landfill after his death. A relative refused to let the paintings be hauled away, and had them examined by an art historian, Peter Hastings Falk. Falk pronounced Pinajian a brilliant abstract landscape artist, heretofore “undiscovered.” The story made some national news programs on television and in newspapers. At the time the story broke Pinajian, who died in 1999, had been dead for over a decade. As soon as I saw his name I knew that as a comics fan I felt I knew more of Art Pinajian’s early work than all of the art community who pronounced him an unknown, eccentric genius.
Although I knew some of his backstory from his days in comics, the story of his landscapes is one of those tales of some poor artist slaving away in obscurity, starving in a garret. Never recognized in life, suddenly revered in death.
***********
Some of Pinajian’s early comic book work, featuring Madam Fatal. I showed these stories in 2010. Click on the thumbnail:
There's a lot of Simon/Kirby in Pinajian's art, I'm wondering if he was told by editors to ape them? Or if he style developed by reading them? Simon/Kirby weren't that far into their career by 1942.
ReplyDeleteThis story has that looney comic logic of a lot of 40s superhero stories. Rocketman suspicions aren't raised by the sanitariums doctors being green, skull-faced monsters? That what, in Scooby-Doo, we'd call "a clue!"
Another possible connection, there were a lot of skull-faced villains, but there's a good bit of the red skull in those green guys.
Two interesting things about this story:
ReplyDelete(1) Although the girl sidekick gets captured by the villain, the main hero also gets captured afterward and she ends up rescuing her namesake.
(2) NOBODY in the story reflects on the fact that "Doc Watson" looks like he ought to have been named "Professor Skull," "Mister Macabre," or the like!