As Eric Stephenson mentioned in one of the letters column in Supreme, the plan had been to have Alex Ross paint a cover for a Supreme issue. Then came the financial crash and that idea went up in smoke. But Ross had painted two images for Supreme before then that are absolutely beautiful.
This one...
It was eventually produced as a poster in another issue of Wizard as Awesome never produced the Supreme trades.
And the other image was this one, which was released as a signed lithograph from Dynamic Forces (there's a rumor that this was intended as a fold-up cover to issue #64):
After Awesome's financial implosion, it was rumored that Ross wanted to do something to revive Supreme. Supposedly, he proposed a series or graphic novel called Supreme: World War Infinity. I assume that it would have taken place after Awesome finished publishing the remaining Alan Moore Supreme scripts, which end on a cliffhanger of (spoiler) all of the Daxes from Daxia (as we'll see in Supreme: The Return #2) about to attack Supreme's Citadel (end spoiler). Supposedly Alan Moore, who was working on his ABC line at this point, would have collaborated, but Ross would have been the primary creator. But I can't get anyone to confirm exactly what it was.
Here's Liefeld explaining the project's genesis:
"Alan and I are talking about a project that would team him with Alex Ross,"Liefeld says. "It originally stemmed from me calling Alex and Alan in Octoberand telling them that if I only had a limited amount of dollars left topublish comics in this business, I would give it to Alex and Alan and ask themto do a book together. They both thought that was funny, and said they'd thinkabout it. It turns out that Alex really took to it and has talked to Alanabout it. Through their discussions, Alan really got interested, so it'ssomething that's in the development stages at the moment. Can't say if it willhappen for sure, but the possibility of it coming together gets better witheach day."
Later it seemed that Ross's Earth X writer Jim Krueger came on as to help with the writing. Here's a bit more about the proposed series (from Greg Williams' wonderful Supreme site), from a webpost in 1999:
ROSS, KRUEGER ON SUPREMEby Rob AllstetterAwesome Comics' Rob Liefeld said that Earth X collaborators Jim Krueger andAlex Ross will be working on a Supreme mini-series to be released next year."I'm a huge fan of these two gentlemen's work and we're going to be doing ahuge project with them in the middle of 2000," Liefeld said. "Alex Ross andJim Krueger are doing a Supreme Prestige Format, three-issue mini-series."I can't tell you the title, but Alex called me months ago and said, 'I'vecreated a hundred new characters for this series.' I said, 'You did not.Don't tell me a hundred because I'll go repeat that.' He said, 'I'm tellingyou, it's a hundred new characters.'"It's a story I've never seen done in comics before. Alex will be doing thethird book. He's designing all the characters, painting all the promotionpieces, he's painting all the covers and he's doing the third book of theseries."Liefeld said he couldn't announce the other artists for the project's firsttwo issues because the deals haven't been signed yet."You're going to see a lot of build-up over the next year," Liefeld said. "Ithink of it as our Kingdom Come. I'm extremely flattered that someone as busyand talented as Alex and Jim have decided to do this for us."Alex has shown me some of the sketches and they will blow you away. Alexcontinues to cement himself as one of the most versatile creators in thefield and this stuff is going to take him to the next level."He said, 'Rob, this will be the most controversial thing I've ever done.'And I said, 'Well, if you're doing it with me, I can guarantee that will bethe case - whether you want it to or not.'"
Anyway, Ross did a number of sketches, most likely for the proposal, which showed new uniforms for Supreme, Suprema and Radar. In these sketches, Supreme appears much older and balder from Ross' previous paintings, which suggests to me that he planned for quite some time to have passed. But again, who knows.
Awesome published these sketches in something called Alan Moore's Awesome Universe Handbook in April 1999, just before launching Supreme: The Return. The sketches included quotes from Moore's various proposals and whatnot about Supreme and Suprema. Awesome also published the proposals for Glory and Youngblood, but I'll get to those later. Awesome supposedly planned another handbook with more of Moore's proposals, but for whatever reason, decided not to (I can't imagine it sold very well).
Anyway, here are the images from the handbook (and the two variant covers, one of which was digitally painted):
Some of the sketches are great (who doesn't love Radar?) and some aren't to my taste, but they certainly point to interesting directions the series could have gone.
The images of Supreme and Radar were so popular that Ross did a real painting, which he released as a lithograph with a statue of the pair:
It's funny, I have one of these busts, but it's really hard to explain to people that the only collectible produced for your favorite series is one with a costume that never was explained and came from an unpublished story that nobody really has any grasp of what it was supposed to be about.
Two years after the Awesome Universe Handbook came out, in 2001, just before Awesome went belly-up for good, Awesome licensed a small reprinting (limited to 50 copies) of Supreme #41 in a "Museum Edition" by the Jay Company. They used the same sketch and digitally painted sketch for the covers.
Museum Edition Comics are produced by Jay Company comics in the US & are limited edition comic books with new variant artwork covers. Each Museum Edition is crafted on archival museum stock paper & individually hand numbered.
Here's the only information I've been able to find on the edition (thanks for the tip, Brandon), from an auction site:
Supreme Vol. 2 #41 Museum Edition, 1 of 50 (Image, 1996) Condition: NM. Here we have a supremely rare comic. Only 50 of these Museum Editions were produced, and this is number one of the 50! This comic also has the distinction of being scripted by Alan Moore, with his revision of the Supreme mythos. And it's got gorgeous front and back covers by Alex Ross. Museum Editions are not just rare, their extremely high-quality presentation have proved to make them highly sought after collectibles.
I always enjoy seeing Alex Ross art and I think that first image was new to me, so thanks!
ReplyDelete"World War Infinity" eh? That sounds like it could be interesting. Ross and Moore collaborating on Supreme would almost definitely have been huge!
Yeah, I love both that first image and the second one of the Supremacy (obviously).
DeleteFrom what I've gathered about WWInfinity, it would have been one of those "co-plotted" by Alan Moore things, so his involvement would have been very limited. And I think Liefeld either didn't have the money or just didn't want to pay Ross to make it happen. But it burns me up a little to have no real idea what the plot was supposed to be.
Huh... fascinating. I know these sketches primarily from the Handbook, and there was also a blurb that appears in the Alex Ross Special that Wizard put out in 1999, in a section called "Works in Progress." Interestingly, the piece makes it sound like Liefeld hired Ross to redesign Supreme and Suprema, with no mention of World War Infinity (or Awesome's financial troubles, for that matter). Here's what they said:
ReplyDeleteHot off Ross' drawing board is his overhaul of Awesome Entertainment's white-haired champion, Supreme. He did it not only because he was asked to by the character's creator, Rob Liefeld, but also because, admits Ross, "I liked what (writer) Alan Moore was doing with the character."
Ross has contributed many illustrations to the project, redesigning not only Supreme, but also his sister Suprema and their dog, Radar, the hound supreme. "It's visually a new direction for the characters," enthuses the artist, who has always been a big Supreme fan. The paintings will debut in the Awesome Universe Handbook (shipping in March), which likely will restart Moore's acclaimed Supreme series.
In the redesign, Ross spiced up Supreme's jumpsuit, but he also has him losing his hair. He says it's the little touches like that that give his characters depth. "Someone said I always make characters look older," says Ross, "but there's more drama in the face that way." As for Suprema, Ross admits to making her more "physically attractive." And his retooling on Radar--which includes costume and collar tweaking--was an unexpected bonus for the folks at Awesome Entertainment.
That’s really interesting and certainly a good possibility. Liefeld had a habit of wanting to do comics that jumped forward to the future, so he may have mentioned it as an idea without having the WWInfinity idea yet.
DeleteThe line about “contributed many illustrations to the project” could be telling, too. What project?
Anyway, it’s a bizarre thing to see images in the backpages of some of the Awesome books of the Awesome bunch with Liefeld at some convention or other, and Alex Ross is with them. So it’s tough to say the timeline of the sketches and the proposed WWInfinity idea. I’ve tried bugging Ross, but I never could get a response about it.