I wasn't trying to make a list of favorites, Bob, I was trying to make a case for Kirby as one of the most important and influential comic book artists in history. I have, quite literally, hundreds of favorites (of whom Charles Voight is one), but my liking them doesn't place them into the top ten category of people who had the most influence on the medium.
Jim,
I agree that Kirby was one of the most prolific and influential comic artists in history.
Also he was one helluva storyteller.
If Marvel was "the House of Ideas", then Kirby was its Fount of Ideas.
Moreover I agreed with your assessment of Curt Swan:
Likewise, Curt Swan was the consummate professional and a wonderful artist, but IMHO his layouts and storytelling were rather pedestrian - totally competent and way above average, but not exceptional.
IMO, Wayne Boring was a much more imaginative artist than Curt Swan.
Re "important", I am loath to claim any artist unimportant or important (but probably do use that subjective term sometimes.) I'm a Myers-Briggs Promethean - Introversive iNtuitive Thinking Perceiving. That Perceiving (vs Judging) trait manifests in my wavering perceptions and reluctance to make final judgements / stick with judgements. I prefer to keep open / uncommitted as much as I can.
I even preferred John Forte to Curt Swan on Legion of Super-Heroes. (No accounting for taste.)
Eisner, then the "K" guys: Kirby, Kurtzman, Krigstein, Kelly, then Barks, Wood, Infantino, Toth and Stanley. These are the guys who defined and created the comic BOOK medium. They all added new ideas, tools and approaches to comics that others drew from and used to codify the art of comic book storytelling.
I'd put Kirby first.
And as much as I like Kurtzman's EC war comics and Mad, I wouldn't put him in my Top 10.
Krigstein did interesting panel breakdowns in what, maybe a dozen or so stories?
I put Marsh up there with the other Dell artists you mention: Kelly, Barks, and Stanley.
Barks is a hero to me because he did such great work, working mostly anonymously.
Too bad Kelly quit doing kid's comics when he took Pogo to the newspapers - his stuff is beautiful.
I'm not sure how much Little Lulu and Tubby art Stanley did and how much Irving Tripp did, but Little Lulu is my #1 favorite humorous ADULT (and children) comic.
IMO, Marsh is a more influentual and interesting comic book artist than many of those on your list.
Again, please take a look at the first FC John Carter of Mars!
Toth's most BOLD art reminds me of the way one of my uncles watched TV back in the B&W 1950s -- with contrast WAY too high.
With contrast so high that much detail is lost. Granted I do (partially) agree with C.C. Beck re good comic art eliminates extraneous detail to better tell the story.
Also, I admit that I love much of Toth's Dell art and have his Dell Zorro in hardback. Still, some of even his Dell Zorro art looks rushed to me.
Toth's 1960s art is IMPACTFUL but IMO maybe too stylized. Really like his GA Green Lantern....
I LOVE Wally Wood art, especially from the 1950s. I subscribed to Witzend. I've got some Woody girlie art from a 1950s girlie mag that I need to scan and share.
Still I don't think Woody's art for DC and Marvel is very special.
I'm surprise that you put Infantino on your Top 10 list. I loved his Flash and Adam Strange, but don't consider him all-time Top 10.
My all-time favorite Infantino Flash story is "The Day the Flash Weighed 1,000 Pounds" in Flash #115. the one where he becomes super-fat and sits in a dehydrating building (among potatoes) untill he loses his excess weight. <grin> Or maybe I will consider Infantino Top 10 -- see, I'm indecisive.
I don't believe these rankings are subjective. Yes, you can suggest others. Like, what about Ditko, or Wolverton, or Kane, or Fine, or ? And, yes, all of these guys (and hundreds of others) were (and are) excellent and unique practitioners of that art. But the list above is historically pretty accurate in that the contributions TO THE MEDIUM of each can be clearly stated.
My ranking would be / are subjective and I believe yours are too.
Ditko is DEFINITELY on my Top 10 list. I discovered Ditko back in the CDC (Charton) days and still LOVE his weird Charlton and Marvel stories. I still have a Charton comic with Ditko cover showing a man trapped in a lightbulb with moth attracted to the lightbulb. I bought Space Adventures with Captain Atom from the beginning and the story with the kid riding a space bird in his dreams / in reality remains one of my all-time favorite stories. Moreover Ditko DEFINED that 60s phenomena Spider Man. I still prefer Dikto's nerdy Spider Man to Lee's post-Dikto remaking of Spider Man as more cool dude. And Ditko's Dr. Strange is my all-time favorite magical hero series. I'll forgive Ditko his Ayn Rand objectivist comic book propaganda. I'm sorry that he didn't continue to develop his new Blue Beetle -- I liked that one a lot too.
Maybe Wolverton for his Powerhouse Pepper but there is just too little of that for all-time Top 10.
Kane, nope. Loved his Green Lantern and prefer his art inked by Joe Giella or Murphy Anderson.
Fine did incredible early-GA art but didn't remain in comic books long term. I used to have a couple of his Fox Flame comics....
Two more top greats you neglect to mention are Sheldon Mayer and Joe Kubert.
Wasn't Mayer editor of Gaines' DC / All American comics, including All-Star Comics, Flash Comics, and All-American Comics?
Plus Scribbly is in some of the earliest comics, and everybody seems to love Sugar and Spike.
(Also didn't Mayer create Black Orchid?)
Joe Kubert was one of my early favorites. Among my all-time favorite comic books are the 2 issues of Showcase Rip Hunter Kubert did -- the one with dinosaurs in Medieval Europe and the next issue with aliens in Ancient Egypt. The latter one was before Chariots of the Gods if mem. serves. Kubert did beautiful impactful art, the 1950s - mid-1960s IMO being his best years. He also did GA DC heroes including Hawkman. Much of his St. John art is great! IMO he overused blacks starting sometime in the 1960s, probably to cut drawing time. And amazingly Kubert remains an active graphic novel creator and comic art teacher.
If you want my reasoning for Kirby, Kurtzman, Krigstein, Kelly, Barks, Wood and Toth, you can read my biographies of them at http://www.bpib.com/illustra.htm. There I make the case more precisely and at greater length and depth.
Thanks, Jim. Eventually I'll check your site out. Probably soon rather than later.
Yes, you can make an argument that Marsh was an influence on Toth, and he was the first to admit it. But dozens of artists didn't suddenly start drawing like Jesse Marsh in 1950. Toth's maturing style in that year and the next changed the face of comic books. It wasn't just the spotting of the blacks, it was the whole approach to storytelling and the simplification he learned at the feet of Shelly Mayer - who indirectly influenced comics a heck of a lot.
I'm not sure that Toth didn't assist Marsh on some of the John Carter of Mars.
Caniff influenced lotsa comic book artists including Toth, Lee Elias, Ray Bailey, etc.
Talking about "favorites" is a subjective thing and great fun, but the guys who created and honed the comic book format can be fairly objectively pinned down. If you want to argue the list above, I hope you'll be prepared to state objectively HOW they changed the medium.
I don't much want to argue but I still think your list is subjective.
Peace, Jim (|:{>
Don't worry, be happy!
Bob