Well all this got me to thinking about my old comic book collection and Kamandi in particular (it was always one of my favorites). And, since all of my comics got loved to death a long time ago, I wondered if I could find any pics of the old Jack Kirby Kamandi art online.
Let's just say it this way: I hit the mother load!
Here's an image of issue one's cover.
If you go here, you will find an archive of every Kamandi issue ever published. You can download them and view them at will. You can even print them out if you feel that obsessive about it. All the Jack Kirby greatness that you could ask for.
I've been sitting here for the past hour or so, just basking in Kirby's style. You can tell a Kirby drawing at a glance. The dude packed a powerful visual punch, and could do more in an inch and a half panel than some modern pencillers can do with a two page spread. Just check out the sample below. Four panels from issue number one. Look at how this dude just propels you; it's like you're the one getting knocked around. Action in every panel! No talking heads here.
What really awes me though is that all of this was before the slick pages and photo-realism that marks so much of the comic art today. We've lost something folks. The old school artists; Kirby, Ditko, and Kubert, produced work that was visceral and powerful, even though the coloring was flat by necessity. There were no gradients, no color-holds, no translucent sparkles or flames that seemed to burn the page. The line art itself was what burned. The color did it's job, supporting the artwork, but it never compensated for poor artwork. (If Kirby had a favorite pencil it had to be named Mjöllnir!)
Look, I could geek out about this all night, but I guess I'm going to go get some sleep. If you follow the link, then scroll down the side. There are issues of Ka-zar if you go down far enough. Some old school Tarzan too folks. (Which I happen to be downloading this very moment.)
Awesome. Just freaking awesome.