NEW NEW BLOG!
November 27, 2011
Check out my new art blog http://lukefallonart.wordpress.com/
My eyes were bigger than my stomache when I started this blog here and it was meant to have a much larger scope, but I’m too lazy a man to do my original idea justice. The new blog is exactly what it says on the tin: Art. When I’ve done some, I’ll post some. Simple as.
I’ll be posting more of my non-cartoonist art on the new blog as well.
Cheers,
Luke
Like a rasher with glasses, I am.
June 3, 2011
Captain Coolbeard’s Passport Photo
June 3, 2011
Mindfield Fighting Words Comic Workshop
April 21, 2011
Fighting Words Comic Book Workshop. Places limited to twenty so get going if you’re going. I’ll be there,talking my usual blend of guff and piss-brained idiocy.
Sketchbook nonsense
April 14, 2011
I doodle a lot. Out of the dozens and dozens of throw-away doodles I do every day, only a few are actually done in a sketchbook, and the rest tend to be done in schoolbooks. Since I found the idea of scanning schoolbooks too depressing here’s some of the sketchbook ones.
Click on these suckas to embiggen them.
- Bollocks,indeed.
- Sketch
- “Less is more”-Lazy cartoonist
- Tis groovy, so tis
- The day I bought the sketchbook, I was walking through town and saw this. I couldn’t not draw it.
- Fluther Good, a character in Sean O’Casey’s The Plough and the Stars
Tá Daidí na Nollag ag teacht anois….
December 23, 2010
I love Tintin too much…but not enough to actually draw a proper likeness of Captain Haddock, so this will have to do.
I also had a version with Captain Haddock and Brian Cowen drunkenly belting out “Ber Cowen TD” but I’m not uploading it because I’m a nice man…..for now. I might upload it in a bit because I’m also a bit of a prick.
Above video: a pile of dopey tits
Bits and Bobs
December 14, 2010
Holy Moses. November just flew right by me. To make up for the lack of stuff, here’s a few bits and bobs to tide you over for the next little while.
I’ve been chipping away as usual at the longer books but in the past month I’ve been working on a tonne of one pagers. The reason for this is that there’s a certain little comic magazine that I’ve been meaning to do something for for ages now and when the editor got in touch a while back about doing a one-pager, I wanted to really give it socks so I have about ten half finished or roughed out strips done so far for that.
On top of that there’s the usual fecking about which gets in the way, so there hasn’t been much time for the poor aul blog. After Christmas I’ll start posting stuff in a less ramshackle way…..hopefully. I’ve plenty of bookcovers still to put up, as well as a bit of music and an interesting little article or two like the Frans Masereel piece from a few months back, so there’s plenty still to come.
Oh, and be sure to check out Richard from the FPI Blog’s review of the October Anthology, especially the very very very kind words about this mysterious Luke F fella….It’s a very well written and honest review and I am really grateful for the nice words. More of this please, reviewers!
- An early-Ralph Steadman inspired design for WDAR 96fm’s Race Night
- A wee snippet from a finished little story which I’ll be posting on the blog soon
- Page from Mary Flynn and Mr.Fly, featured in the lovely review here: http://forbiddenplanet.co.uk/blog/2010/october-anthology/
- A very very very very unfinished page.
- A page from Mary Flynn and Mr.Fly, featured in the lovely review here: http://forbiddenplanet.co.uk/blog/2010/october-anthology/
Vintage Irish Book Covers
October 27, 2010
I’m a vintage book cover fiend.
I have stacks of books brought home from car boot sales,charity shops,second hand shops and markets which I’ve bought mainly for the cover.It’s not as expensive as you might think.I’ve very rarely spent more than €6 on a book and the average cost of a book is much lower than that,about €3-4 if you haggle or go to the right places.Considering that 98% of the books I buy are books I’ll read anyway it doesn’t work out too bad.
And then there’s my father’s collection.Dozens of books dealing with 20th century Irish history fill the shelves in the living room.Ernie O’Malley,Tom Barry and Dan Breen were all names I learned early on in my life,by flicking through these books and studying their covers.The pulp inspired painted covers of 50s and 60s Anvil Press publications like Guerilla Days in Ireland by Tom Barry were a regular sight when I was a younger lad and looking back,it may well have been my father’s collection of vintage paperbacks that lit the spark in my little noggin and made me want to draw.
Being surrounded by vintage Irish book covers for many years before I even knew what a vintage Irish book cover was,I was delighted to see the fantastic Vintage Irish Book Cover blog run by Niall McCormack.I’ve learned a massive amount from reading this blog.I’ve even learned some things about books in my own collection!It’s important to have people like Niall who know what they’re on about to enlighten us about that often forgotten,but vital,component of Irish publishing history:the cover.Needless to say it should also be of great interest to all my illustrating peeps as well.
So inspired by Niall’s work,and feeling more than a little guilty about keeping some of these gems to myself,I’ve decided to post up a few vintage book covers(this first batch will be completely Irish interest,but I’ve plenty of foreign goodies as well which I’ll post up soon).I’m no expert on this stuff in terms of identifying individual designers so any information would be welcomed.
- Guerilla Days in Ireland by Tom Barry,Anvil Books (Anvil Books edition late 1950s) (Designer:Uncredited)
- Guerilla Days in Ireland by Tom Barry,Anvil Books late-50s (back cover)
- Rós Fiáin Lios an Daill le Caitlín Bean Uí Thallamhain,Clódhanna Teoranta 1967 (Designer:Seán Ó Brádaigh)
- Irish Songs of Resistance by Various,unknown publisher,undated (most likely 70′s-80′s) (Designer:uncredited)
- Reminiscences of a Maynooth Professor by Walter McDonald,Mercier Press 1967 (Designer:John Skelton)
- The Insurrection in Dublin by James Stephens,Sceptor Books 1966 (Designer:Ronald Watson)
- Halo on The Sword by Mary Purcell, M.H Gill and Son Ltd of O’Connell Street,1951 (Designer:uncredited)
- Field and Fair by Padraic Ó Conaire,Mercier Press 1966 (Designer:signed “CK”)
- Field and Fair by Padraig Ó Conaire,Mercier Press 1966 (back cover)
- Dúil le Liam Ó Flaitheartha,Sáirséal agus Dill 1969 (Designer: Anne Yeats)
PUNT
October 16, 2010
AY-YI-YI…I’m a happy little man.
If you’re in town anytime soon,swing by The Winding Stair or any of these other fine places and pick up the October issue of Punt Magazine.For €2 you get a deaaaaaadly cover by Steve McCarthy, loads of well written pieces, a fishtful of good illustratin’ by people like Pablo Meyer and Eoin Ryan…and a sappy cartoon by Luke Fallon (a handsome young devil,by all accounts).Liam Geraghty of the Comic Cast did all the Comics editing so buy it and let the man know he did a good job…
Sure what else would you be doing with €2?Well,you could be a nice person and give it to charity…
…But if you’ve bought it already and you’re walking around with a fantastic issue of Punt under your arms and you feel guilty about NOT giving the two quid to charity,why not head on over to Smithfield and lend some support to Maser and Damien Dempsey’s excellent They Are Us exhibtion?All the proceeds go to the Simon Community.It ends this Sunday so hurry up
So you can buy Punt and THEN give money to charity in exchange for a nifty Maser/Damo print.
Win/win.
Oscar
August 24, 2010
It’s been all quiet on the bloggin front recently,but I’ve been working like a dog.Honest!
Plenty of good old fashioned pen and ink doodles for my two longer projects along with a fair few shorter bits and bobs as well.For instance I’ve been slaving away over a one pager recently with my magic digital drawing machine(it’s the nineties!Get with it!).Well,it should have been a one pager but I ended up drawing eight or so pages.In the end I whittled it down to a sort of sappy page about my main man Oscar Wilde visiting modern day Dublin.I was a bit worried about whether or not it was too much of a risk to assume the reader will just accept that Oscar is walking around in 2010,so I went to philosopher Bobby Byrne for advice and he typed back some sound words of advice: Comics don’t have rules.
True dat.
Anyway,here’s a sneak peek at the Oscar strip…
- Pen and ink doodle(well,tracing,because I’m a hack) of Oscar’s statue.Scanned in for use in the one pager.
- Opening panel of Oscar strip



























