A Stellar Artist

Ralph McQuarrie, best known as the production artist on Star Wars, has died. McQuarrie’s work had a clean, open and subdued style, reflecting his background as a technical illustrator, and he greatly influenced the look of first three Star Wars movies. Star Wars, the first film, was unlike anything ever seen before, despite being a throwback to the Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers serials of the 1930’s. StarWars.com has a remembrance from George Lucas, with a gallery of McQuarrie’s work.

From The STAR WARS Portfolio, Ballantine Books, September, 1977

McQuarrie, born June 13, 1929, in Gary, Indiana, was influenced by his grandfather, who did watercolors, and his mother, who drew and painted. It wasn’t long before he settled on a career in art. He took an art major in high school, studied technical illustration, and then went to work for the Boeing Company. There he met people who had studied at and recommended the Art Center School in Los Angeles. After two years in Korea, he enrolled at Art Center as an illustration student.

The ease with which McQuarrie understood the highly technical visuals required for STAR WARS is particularly explained by his earlier work for CBS News Apollo coverage as well as for Boeing, Litton Industries, and Kaiser Graphuics. His work for CBS, doing artist’s renderings of the capsules’ travel through space — making visible what could not otherwise been seen — generated quite an interest in McQuarrie’s work. He was soon approached about doing animation background paintings and movie-poster art.

Some production paintings McQuarrie had done for Hal Barwood and Matthew Robbins brought him to the attention of director George Lucas in late 1975. Very soon after, they began discussing production paintings for STAR WARS. Lucas suggested that McQuarrie approach the work from the point of view of “ideal” portrayals rather than feel restricted by what could actually be achieved in filming the situations repesented in the art.

The first four or five paintings had been done when STAR WARS was still in the development stage through Twentieth Century-Fox. George Lucas felt that McQuarrie’s paintings wouuld not only be of interest to Twentieth, but, by helping them to visualize his ideas, would also dissolve any hesitation on their part to go ahead with making the film.

The production paintings were of incalculable value when it came to discussing STAR WARS’ production design and costuming. They reflect various changes in visual concepts as well as the evolving story line. The ideas of not only George Lucas and Ralph McQuarrie are concretized here, but also those of production designer John Barry and model designers Joe Johnston and Colin Cantwell.

McQuarrie’s paintings were done in a combination of opaque gouache and acrylic on illustration board mounted on hardboard.

CAROL WIKARSKA
DIRECTOR OF PUBLICATIONS
STAR WARS

Their Googly eyes upon us

You probably know from all of the pop-ups that Google threw at us in February that their privacy policy has changed. My take on this is that the consolidation of all of their services under a single policy is an excuse to get better marketing information on us as consumers, voters, etc.

Amazon and, to much lesser an extent, Facebook already have a marketing profile on me, and I accept that, but what Google is doing strikes as going against their claimed ethos of “don’t be evil.” So I’ve decided that I will delete my personal Google account, including YouTube. Most of the playlists I set up in there haven’t worked in a while anyway. My Gmail address is used only for Google Alerts, and I don’t count on them much anymore. I’ll continue to use Google’s search engine, but I won’t be signed in, and I won’t use the Chrome browser, because I’m going back to Firefox.

Death of a Monkee

[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/JAN07/royalflush.flv 400 300]

Davy Jones has died. That’s all I know at the moment. Follow-up: Heart attack.

[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/2009/JAN/Monkees.flv 400 300]

Mike Nesmith has released this remembrance:

All the lovely people. Where do they all come from?

So many lovely and heartfelt messages of condolence and sympathy, I don’t know what to say, except my sincere thank you to all. I share and appreciate your feelings.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves here.

While it is jarring, and sometimes seems unjust, or strange, this transition we call dying and death is a constant in the mortal experience that we know almost nothing about. I am of the mind that it is a transition and I carry with me a certainty of the continuity of existence. While I don’t exactly know what happens in these times, there is an ongoing sense of life that reaches in my mind out far beyond the near horizons of mortality and into the reaches of infinity.

That David has stepped beyond my view causes me the sadness that it does many of you. I will miss him, but I won’t abandon him to mortality. I will think of him as existing within the animating life that insures existence. I will think of him and his family with that gentle regard in spite of all the contrary appearances on the mortal plane.

David’s spirit and soul live well in my heart, among all the lovely people, who remember with me the good times, and the healing times, that were created for so many, including us.

I have fond memories. I wish him safe travels.

Good intentions, budget constraints

Tom Moroney of Bloomberg News tells this tragic, compelling story about one outcome of the current state of mental health services, in an age of reduced social services funding. Tom was on The Takeaway radio program Tuesday morning.

[audio:http://www.podtrac.com/pts/redirect.mp3/audio.wnyc.org/takeaway/takeaway022812h.mp3|titles=The Takeaway – Mental health service reductions]

A no-skip commercial

The first brand-new car I ever bought was a 1988 Mazda 323. It was okay for the first few years, but then it started having problems. I kept if for ten years, sold it with 125,000 miles on it, and I haven’t bought a Mazda since then. With gas prices headed back over four bucks per gallon, I don’t see performance as being a big selling point, but I sure do like Mazda’s new commercial with Bo Diddley doing Road Runner.

http://youtu.be/aAwnN8n2_-E

Here’s the complete original performance by Diddley. I don’t know where this was filmed, but I’d say it was in England or Europe.

http://youtu.be/WOOFx9c6qyA