The Imported Ticky-Two (Part 3)
Hey, you're back! I wasn't expecting you folks so soon.
Since you're here, make yourselves at home. Open a cold beer and grab a slice of pizza while we take another look at Al's magnum opus of teeny-tiny little imported automobile cartoons!
Below: The inside of the front cover (Al marked out the old address after he moved).

Below: Page 23

Below: Page 25

Yeah, it's pretty much just more of the same this time. Very nicely drawn, though. About all I've got to say about this third installment is... um... well, I got nothin' to say.
Maybe I should dig out the Al Wiseman black-light posters. That would blow your minds...
Next week on the Al Wiseman blog: More on Al Wiseman!
The Imported Ticky-Two:
Part 1/Part 2/Part 3/Part 4/Part 5/Part 6/Part 7
Since you're here, make yourselves at home. Open a cold beer and grab a slice of pizza while we take another look at Al's magnum opus of teeny-tiny little imported automobile cartoons!
Below: The inside of the front cover (Al marked out the old address after he moved).

Below: Page 23

Below: Page 25

Yeah, it's pretty much just more of the same this time. Very nicely drawn, though. About all I've got to say about this third installment is... um... well, I got nothin' to say.
Maybe I should dig out the Al Wiseman black-light posters. That would blow your minds...
Next week on the Al Wiseman blog: More on Al Wiseman!
The Imported Ticky-Two:
Part 1/Part 2/Part 3/Part 4/Part 5/Part 6/Part 7

2 Comments:
Al was also an architect and created many beautiful homes between Watsonville Calif. and Carmel Calif. This was before DTM
He also did the Wizard of Ohhs and Ahhs for a Milk company in Santa Cruz Calif. He did a line of Match covers. He did several cartoons for several magazines in New York which is where he met Hank Ketcham who was also a cartoonist at that time. Vadis, his wife often shared a cab with Hank and another artis taking the cartoons around to sell them at the magazine offices.
His daughter, Jan Pisciotta is an artist in her own right. He often wished he could express himself the way she does, but he was such a perfectionist that he stuck to what he did best. His son was considered for the part of Dennis the Menace in the movie.
Thanks for the info, Poney Tail!
I hope to post something this upcoming week about the matchbook covers Al did for the Monarch Match Company. Also coming up in a few weeks: Al's work on Golden State Milk's "Wizard of Ohhs and Ahhs".
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