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Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan: Burne Hogarth's Lord of the Jungle

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One of the most influential and revered illustrators ever adapts two of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ most beloved Tarzan novels! Burne Hogarth’s color Tarzan of the Apes and black-and-white Jungle Tales of Tarzan graphic novels are finally collected into one deluxe hardcover. After his inspirational run drawing Tarzan Sunday newspaper strips and before his landmark instructional art books changed the industry forever, Burne Hogarth (Dynamic Anatomy, Dynamic Figure Drawing, and others) dazzled the world with these remarkably lively, complex, and faithful adaptations of Burroughs’ legendary lord of the jungle!

264 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 29, 2014

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About the author

Burne Hogarth

97 books88 followers
Burne Hogarth started young. Born in 1911, he was enrolled in the Chicago Art Institute at the age of 12 and an assistant cartoonist at Associated Editors' Syndicate at 15. At the age of 26, he was chosen from a pool of a dozen applicants as Hal Foster's successor on the United Features Syndicate strip, "Tarzan". His first strip, very much in Foster's style, appeared May 9, 1937. It wasn't long before he abandoned the attempt to maintain the original look of the strip and brought his own dynamic style to the Sunday comics page.

In 1947, Hogarth co-founded (with Silas Rhodes) the School of Visual Arts which became his new direction in life. He was able to pass his unique methods on illustration to his students in the classroom and, in 1958, to the readers of his first book, Dynamic Anatomy.

Hogarth retired from the SVA in 1970 but continued to teach at The Parsons School of Design and, after a move to Los Angeles, The Otis School and Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. During his years teaching, Hogarth authored a number of anatomy and drawing books that have become standard references for artists of every sort, including computer animators. Dynamic Anatomy (1958) and Drawing the Human Head (1965) were followed by further investigations of the human form. Dynamic Figure Drawing (1970) and Drawing Dynamic Hands (1977) completed the figure cycle. Dynamic Light and Shade (1981) and Dynamic Wrinkles and Drapery (1995) explored other aspects relative to rendering the figure.

After more than 20 years away from strip work and being hailed in Europe as "the Michelangelo of the comic strip," Hogarth returned to sequential art in 1972 with his groundbreaking Tarzan of the Apes, a large format hardbound book published by Watson Guptill in 11 languages. It marks the beginning of the sober volume of integrated pictorial fiction, what is currently understood to be a graphic novel.

Burne Hogarth passed away in 1996 at the age of 84.

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3,385 reviews
September 15, 2021
The art's very nice (besides Tarzan always being amazingly clean), so four stars for a book that's primary value is to showcase the artist. The stories are ... I mean, lots of people eat this stuff up, so what do I know?, but I find the purple prose hyperbole a real drudge to get through.
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