23 July 2021

Zippy by Bill Griffith (No. 66)

Zippy (1970-present)
by Bill Griffith 
(Photo by Caryn B. Davis)

REVIEW BY GENE KANNENBERG Jr:
(from The 100 Best Comics of the Century! in The Comics Journal #210, 1999)
From his early appearances in underground comics to his place in today's more discriminating newspapers, Zippy the Pinhead has scattered non sequiturs throughout Amrican culture like an addled Johnny Appleseed. Bill Griffith's range of work is wide, but Zippy is the Elmer's glue which holds it all together. Who would have guessed that this micro-encephalitic, muumuu-wearing enigma would one day supply an entry to Bartlett's Familiar Quotations? "Are we having fun yet?" indeed.

Griffith's artwork, very detailed at the start, has matured over time. The daily Zippy strip is one of the best drawn strips in syndication. No cookie-cutter profiles or Photoshop-composited environments here; each day's finely-lined instalment contains more careful detail than a week's worth of practically any other strip. A compulsive sketcher, Griffith uses his artistic skill to bring a healthy dose of realism to Zippy's rapid-fire free association.

Zippy's longevity has much to do with his accompanying cast of characters. Mr. (The) Toad, Shelf-Life, Claude Funston, Vizeen and more: their opinionated interactions provide both guffaws aplenty and food for thought. But most important is "Griffy", the cartoonist's alter-ego. An altogether credible mixture of elitist distain and acute self-awareness, Griffy is complicit in the very culture he criticises. For every strip bemoaning tacky fashion or vapid entertainment icons, there's another celebrating Jack Palance's distinctly chiseled features or including another cameo by Hello Kitty. Griffy's rants combine with Zippy's foolish inconsistency to produce comics which simultaneously critique and celebrate American culture. Griffy is the yin to Zippy's yang, the Abbott to his Costello, the taco sauce to his Ding Dongs. Are we in the Top 100 yet?


BILL GRIFFITH:
I'm not trying to do a comic for the masses. I'm not trying to appeal to every demographic slice. I'm not consciously trying to appeal to anybody but myself. Although I'm not trying to alienate people. This is not a domestic strip, a strip in which you can instantly recognize archetypes - like, for instance, For Better or For Worse. A strip in which you can say, Oh yeah - I've thought that, I have a relationship like that, I have a family, I have a cat, I have a dog. None of those things apply. You have to sort of tune into my wavelength and that might take a little while. My previous audience [for underground comics] was already convinced they liked it. But coming into daily newspapers, I was suddenly confronted with a whole range of readers who would read Garfield and who, two second later, would be reading Zippy - which never, in my wildest imagination, did I think would ever happen. So I have a whole new audience to either convince to get on my wave-length or to outrage and anger. And I get plenty of both.


FURTHER READING:



22 July 2021

Calvin & Hobbes by Bill Watterson (No. 36)

Calvin & Hobbes (1985-196)
by Bill Watterson

REVIEW BY GENE KANNENBERG:
(from The 100 Best Comics of the Century! in The Comics Journal #210, 1999)
"Funny kid" comic strips have been a mainstay in newspapers for over a century, and Calvin & Hobbes was one of the best. As Gary Trudeau wrote, "[Bill Watterson delineated] childhood as it actually is, with its constantly shifting frames of reference". Calvin the uncontrollable dreamer, Hobbes the romantic, occasionally pragmatic, predator-cum-stuffed tiger: Such was the stuff of dreams. Calvin's personality, like his vocabulary, benefited from an adult perspective which exaggerated ideas in order to explore them. Flights of fancy walked side by side with willful manipulation, brutal honesty, and manic energy.

The artwork, too, had energy, especially the physical characterisations; the words gave us punch lines, but the pictures sold the jokes. Calvin & Hobbes also easily brought its comic and narrative timing into longer, multi-week story arcs without endless repetition or plodding action. We admired Calvin's broad imagination, but it was Watterson's artwork which made that imagination real.

Watterson's temperament also marks his work as significant. His refusal to merchandise the strip was probably financially foolish but artistically admirable. After his first (gasp!) sabbatical, he successfully campaigned to alter drastically the format of the Sunday strips. Today, many cartoonists thank Watterson for having an open (if often small) canvas on which to produce comics which won't undergo editorial reformatting. Few, however, have used this space as productively or imaginatively as did Watterson himself. The final Sunday strip, a paean to the joys of childhood winter excursions, utilised chiaroscuro and abundant negative space to convey that it is, indeed, a magical world.

Intelligent, charming, uncompromising, and beautifully rendered, Calvin & Hobbes remains a benchmark by which humour strips should be judged.


REVIEW BY FRANK MILLER:
(from an interview in The Comics Journal #209, December 1998)
...this is going to sound simplistic, but I think it's one of the essentials of what makes comics work, and one of the reasons they translate so poorly into film, is the sheer joy of seeing good cartooning. A perfect example of that is Calvin & Hobbes, by Bill Watterson. I can't imagine that in any other form, because even more than the humanity or humor in the strip, the drawing is such a joy to behold. It charms my eye enough to make me slow down and really pay attention. I feel a stream of pleasure from looking at drawings like that...


FURTHER READING:

21 July 2021

From Hell by Alan Moore & Eddie Campbell (No. 41)

From Hell (1989-1998)
by Alan Moore & Eddie Campbell

REVIEW BY RAY MESCALLADO:
(from The 100 Best Comics of the Century! in The Comics Journal #210, 1999)
Never mind who Jack the Ripper really was, Alan Moore tells us: he's just a "super-position", a marker of possibilities. What Moore wants us to think about is this: how did the Whitechapel murders from a century ago define the course of the 20th Century? In From Hell, the fin-de-siecle that the Ripper terrorised extends to the fin-de-millenium we now inhabit. Revealing the McGuffin for what it is, Moore carefully chose the identity of his Ripper and the conspiracy that surrounds his actions. From there, the details of the actual murders are meticulously recreated and elaborated upon, illustrated in a compellingly researched and subtly dramatic style by Eddie Campbell.

From this fictionalised history blooms the dark historiography, as a Pynchonesque style of connectedness is drawn out from the murders to the major events and attitudes of the Twentieth Century. Specific sequences stand out for the potent narrative mastery of this vision. There's Chapter Four's tour of London, mapping a history of archetypal conflicts (patriarchy versus matriarchy, the Dionysian virus the Appollonian) on the monuments, cathedrals and obelisks of the city. Chapter Five's striking conception (literally) of Adolf Hitler, followed by a parallel narration of London life, high and low. Chapter Ten's hallucinatory dissection of both Marie Kelly and 20th Century anomie, followed by a similarly hypnotic hallucination marking the Ripper's death in Chapter Fourteen. These make plain that From Hell is a masterpiece because it's an audacious polemic, not despite it.

The text appendix accompanying each chapter established Moore's sources and intentions, often in as fascinating a manner as he does in the actual story. The second appendix, the comics-format Dance Of The Gull-Catchers, closed off the saga with a history of Ripperologists and Moore's own implication in a process which he claims "has never been about the murders, not the killer nor his victims. It's about us. About our minds and how they dance." Moore sums up his most accomplished, most ambitious work, in this confession. What he doesn't talk about - what's best left for readers to discover - is the passion and empathy he brings to his own dance, the elements that make From Hell his most accomplished work to date.


ALAN MOORE:
(from Correspondence From Hell with Dave Sim, 1997)
With From Hell, the seed idea was simply that of murder, any murder. It had occurred to me that murder is a human event at the absolute extreme of the human experience. It struck me that an in-depth exploration of the dynamics of a murder might therefore yield a more extreme and unprecedented kind of information. All that needed to be decided upon was which murder. Perhaps predictably, I never even considered the Whitechapel murders initially, simply because I figured they were worn out, drained of any real vitality or meaning by the century of investigation and publicity attached to them... It was only towards the end of 1988, with so much Ripper material surrounding me in the media on account of it being the centenary of the murders, that I began to understand that, firstly, there were still ways to approach the Whitechapel murders that might expose previously unexplored seams of meaning, and secondly that the Ripper story had all the elements that I was looking for. Set during fascinating and explosive times in a city rich with legend, history, and association, the case touched peripherally upon so many interesting people and institutions that it provided the precise kind of narrative landscape that I required. You see, to some extent the peripheries of murder, the myth, rumour, and folklore attached to a given case had always seemed more potentially fruitful and rewarding than a redundant study of the hard forensic facts at a murder's hub. This traditional approach to murder might tell us Whodunit (which is admittedly the most immediate of practical considerations), but it does not tell us what happened on any more than the most obvious and mechanical level. To find out anything truly significant, we must take the plunge into myth and meaning, and to me a case with the rich mythopoeic backwaters of the Whitechapel murders suddenly seemed like the perfect spot to go fishing...


FURTHER READING:


20 July 2021

The Fourth World Comics by Jack Kirby (No. 88)

The Fourth World Comics (1970-1974)
by Jack Kirby

REVIEW BY CHARLES HATFIELD:
(from The 100 Best Comics of the Century! in The Comics Journal #210, 1999)
The superhero comics peaks in Jack Kirby's Fourth World, a cycle comprised of four titles published by DC Comics: New Gods, Forever People, Mister Miracle, and Kirby's bizarre run on the Superman's Pal Jimmy Olsen. Conceived by cartoonist/editor Kirby as a self-contained epic, this cycle sought to impose stronger continuity, and philosophical impetus, on a genre often dismissed as juvenile and absurd.

Freed from the the ironic hedging of Stan Lee (his long time scripted/editor at Marvel Comics), Kirby pitched superheroics toward allegory, freighting the genre with grim purpose. He gave his costumed heroes a new raison d'ĂȘtre: to save humankind from totalitarianism on a cosmic scale, personified by Darkseid - a granite-faced tyrant who represented a sterile, suffocating order, in opposition to Kirby's ideal of freedom. This was to be the great conflict between Life and "Anti-Life".

On the side of Life were such characters as Darkseid's tortured son Orion, his foster son Scott Free (alias Mister Miracle), a band of hippies called the Forever People, and a buglike hive dweller named Forager; on the side of Anti-Life were such monsters as the brutish Kalibak, the sadistic aesthete Desaad, and the despotic harridan, Granny Goodness. It was a nightmarish vision, tempered somewhat by Kirby's native hopefulness and respect for youth.

Though scuppered by the cancellation of New Gods and Forever People, the Fourth World represents Kirby at his Zenith. Its stories are some of the most frenzied and eccentric in the superhero tradition; they are also some of the most personal and deeply felt. The work sizzles: there are electric bursts of violence, wrenching transformations, rude metaphors. There are also unexpected pauses and complexities. Above all, there is the spectacle of Kirby's style - looming, monolithic, raw - in search of a fitting subject.


REVIEW BY DAVE SIM:
(from 'The 2000 Virtual Kirby Tribute Panel' in The Jack Kirby Collector #27, February 2000)
Had he known that the direct market was only six or seven yeas away from coming into existence, he might have bided his time - or divided his time between his Marvel workload and his Fourth World epic, using the former to keep food on the table and getting the latter ready to sell to the comic book stores on a non-returnable basis. 20-20 hindsight. I knew enough not to trust any company to have Cerebus' or my best interests at heart when I decided to turn it into an epic 26-year story. Kirby didn't have that option. At the time he started the Fourth World epic he had to trust somebody and the only somebody besides the company he was working for was DC. He trusted that he would make enough money for them that they would see financing the whole epic from start to finish and then keeping it in print to be a smart idea. Of course what he didn't take into account was that a corporate motivation in hiring him away from Marvel had as much to do with hurting Marvel as it did with helping their own bottom line. From DC's standpoint, I think, Jack's departure didn't hurt Marvel enough to warrant seeing the Fourth World through - as Mark Evanier had pointed out and I believe him, the books were still profitable. It was a tragedy and it was very, very regrettable, but that is what corporations are like.


FURTHER READING:


19 July 2021

Pogo by Walt Kelly (No. 3)

Pogo (1949-1973)
by Walt Kelly 

REVIEW BY R.C. HARVEY:
(from The 100 Best Comics of the Century! in The Comics Journal #210, 1999)
When Walt Kelly (1913-1973) was good, he was the best there was. And he was often good. But the pinnacle of his achievement as a cartoonist was his attack on McCarthyism in the early 1950s. Kelly's career included both animation (1936-1941 at Disney Studios) and comic books (1942-1948) before embracing the newspaper comic strip form, and by the time he had finished with it, Kelly had elevated the form to high art in Pogo

The eponymous possum had first appeared as one of several anthropomorphic spear-carriers in the first issue of Animal Comics (December 1942 - January 1943). And when Kelly became art director of the short-lived by much mourned New York Star in 1948, he reincarnated his animal ensemble as a comic strip on October 8. After the Star's demise, Pogo went into national syndication, May 16, 1949.

Pogo transcended the "talking funny animal" tradition of its origins. At its core, the strip was a reincarnation of vaudeville, and its routines were often laced with humour that derived from pure slapstick. To that, Kelly added the remarkably fanciful and inventive language of his characters - a "southern fried" dialect that lent itself readily to his characters propensity to take things literally and permitted an unblinking delight in puns. The cast was perfectly content being animals, but sometimes for their own amusement they'd undertake the enterprises of people, adopting the right jargon and costumes but not quite understanding the purpose behind the human endeavours they mimicked. Adrift in misunderstood figures of speech, mistaken identities, and double entendres going off in all directions at once, Kelly's characters usually wandered further and further from what appeared to have been their original intentions. And this was the trick of Kelly's satire: readers couldn't help but glimpse themselves in this menage, looking just as silly as they often were. The animals - "natures screechers" - were blissfully unaware of their satirical function. They, after all, didn't take life as seriously as people did: "It ain't nohow permanent", as Porky the porcupine was won't to say.

Kelly added overt political commentary to his social satire in 1952 when some of Pogo's well meaning friends entered him in the Presidential race, and the strip was never quite the same again. The double meaning of the puns took on political as well as social implications, and the vaudeville routines frequently looked suspiciously like animals imitating officials high in government. Over the years, Kelly underscored his satirical  intent with caricature: his animals had plastic features that seemed to change before the reader's very eyes until they resembled those at whom the satire was directed. And the species suggested something about Kelly's opinions of his targets. Soviet boss Nikita Khrushchev showed up one time as a piratical pig; Cuba's Fidel Castro as a goat; the tenacious J. Edgar Hoover as a bulldog.

Kelly's first foray into the jungle of politics with caricature as his machete was in the spring of 1953, when he introduced an unprincipled and purely ruthless operative in his swamp, a wild cat named Simple J. Malarkey. As if the syllabic rhythm of his name weren't give away enough, Kelly made the wild cat look remarkably like Senator Joseph R. McCarthy, the country's self-proclaimed crusader against communist spies, a master of the smear and innuendo with a gift for the self-promotion and an utter disregard for the truth. To create a narrative metaphor for McCarthy's commie hunt, Kelly turned to the swamp's Bird Watcher's Club, and in power plays evocative of McCarthy's manoeuvres, Malarkey intimidates the members of the club into letting him take charge. With his guidance, the Club dedicates itself to ridding the swamp of all migratory birds, and when Malarkey is faced with a number of swamp creatures who claim they aren't birds (because, in fact, they aren't), he proposes to make them all birds with "a little judicious application" of tar and feathers. At one satiric stroke, Kelly equated McCarthyism with an appropriately belittling analogue, tar-and-feathering - a primitive method of ostracising, universally held in low repute. In a delicious finale, a member of the Club shoves Malarkey into the kettle of tar, demonstrating with an unforgettable flourish that those who seek to smear others are likely to be tarred with their own brush.

It was as neat a piece of satire as had ever been attempted on the comics page or anywhere. And the success of it depended upon Kelly's plumbing the potential of his medium to its utmost. Word and picture are perfectly, inseparably, wedded, the very emblem of excellence in the art of the comic strip: neither meant much when taken by itself, but when blended, the verbal and the visual achieved allegorical impact and powerful satiric thrust. High art indeed. At its best, Pogo was a masterpiece of comic strip art, an Aesopian tour de force - humour at each of two levels, one vaudeville, the other satirical - and it opened to a greater extent than ever the possibilities for political and social satire in the medium of the newspaper comic strip.


REVIEW BY NEIL GAIMAN:
In these uncertain times, Pogo feels necessary, feels relevant, feels ever-more-right.


REVIEW BY SERGIO ARAGONES:
Walt Kelly accompanied me from the first moment I saw his work and began to understand not about drawing but about cartooning. He filled me with a sense of what constituted excellence in my chosen field.


REVIEW BY BILL WATTERSON:
(from 'Some Thoughts On Pogo' in The Comics Journal, #140, February 1991)
Pogo celebrated conversation and dialogue for their own sake. The strip rarely had a punchline per se. I can't imagine people cutting out one day's strip and putting it on the refrigerator; it wasn't that kind of strip with a snappy saying in the last panel that makes Mom think of little Junior. Instead, it was a strip where characters talked and talked, inevitably misunderstood each other, and argued. It was a wonderful, rich parody of what passes for communication between human beings. The word balloons were filled with puns, obscure references, inside jokes, utter nonsense, and, once in a while, quiet wisdom. If the drawings in Pogo get better with each re-reading, so do the words.


FURTHER READING:



18 July 2021

Scott McCloud on 'A Contract With God' by Will Eisner

by Will Eisner

SCOTT McCLOUD:
(from the introduction to the 2017 edition of A Contract With God)
Not all books are created equal. Some we love, some we hate. Some make us laugh or cry or doze off. Some illuminate or aggravate or confuse us. A few become favorites, and of these, there are the ones we cherish, the ones that transform us, the ones that rescue us, and finally, the ones to which we accord that highest status in any personal library - the ones we read to pieces.

I’m staring at a split and tattered copy of Will Eisner’s A Contract With God, signed by the author nearly four decades ago. Published as a modest paperback in 1978, the book has since been cracked open, laid flat, studied, and scanned so many times that its once-sturdy binding has surrendered in half a dozen places. It’s more a “stack” than a “book” after all these years; yet I keep reaching for it, despite more recent and structurally sound editions sitting nearby.

More than any other book in my collection, A Contract With God transports me to a very specific time in comics history: the late ’70s, when the art form of comics felt alive with possibilities to me but dead as a doornail to Americans in general - a musty, decaying relic of a bygone era. Eisner’s book connected with me as a sign of what comics could be. It wasn’t a product of its time, nor did it seem to rebel against its time. It existed in its own continuum, patiently waiting for the rest of its kind to quietly arrive - by the thousands as it turned out - on the shelves of North American bookstores. 

I turned eighteen in 1978; a high school grad from Massachusetts, starting as an art student at Syracuse University. I’d been obsessed with comics for four years at that point and determined to make them my career. My friend Kurt Busiek had gotten me hooked on superhero comics in middle school, spurring my decision to draw them professionally, but even then I knew there was more to comics than “the guys in tights.”

Thanks to a good library, a great comic store (the Million Year Picnic in Cambridge), and knowledgeable friends and mentors Richard Howell and Carol Kalish, Kurt and I were able to cast a wide net as we learned about the world of comics. We read golden age comic strips, innovative EC Comics from the ’50s, mainstream masters like Jack Kirby, underground comics from the ’60s and early ’70s, the earliest alternative and independent comics, and contemporary European comics through translations in Heavy Metal magazine. Among the most valuable of those discoveries to me were the reprints of Will’s Eisner’s The Spirit.

The Spirit was a proto–comic book published as a newspaper insert in the early '40s, concurrent with the beginnings of the American comic book industry and the first appearances of Superman, Batman, and their ilk. The stories featured a masked - though hardly superhuman - hero, fighting crime in settings both exotic and mundane. The stories were engaging, funny, and even profound at times, but most important, they made use of a dizzying array of inventive, graphically sophisticated, visual storytelling techniques unlike anything else in America at the time.

Even as a kid in high school nearly forty years after its original publication, I could tell how ridiculously far ahead of its time The Spirit had been. Parallel narratives, full-page compositions, noir shadow play, giant logos integrated into physical scenes, long pantomime sequences - the strip was a textbook demonstration of nearly everything comics could do, answering questions about the art form most cartoonists hadn’t even thought to ask yet. And the more I studied those pages, the more I came to understand that Eisner’s approach to comics storytelling had been the foundation upon which multiple generations of cartoonists had constructed their own dreams of adventure in the years and decades that followed.

I wondered - in those days before the Web and fast, easy answers - what Eisner had done with himself after The Spirit wrapped up its run in the early ’50s. It turns out that while Eisner still believed in comics' literary and artistic future, the industry faced setbacks, including McCarthy-era anti-comics campaigns in the '50s that put some of the most innovative titles, companies, and cartoonists out of business. Eisner found safe harbor making comics-style instructional manuals for the Army (innovative in their own way and significant for those of us who make nonfiction comics today), but his early dreams of comics as a literary form had to take a backseat for nearly three decades. When the creative explosion of underground comics arrived, he found renewed inspiration to finally create the kind of work he had imagined comics were capable of from his early years drawing them.

Eisner never lost his faith in comics as a literary and artistic form, but those many years between the end of his Spirit run and the creation of A Contract With God in 1978 had changed his artistic approach: from cinematic to theatrical, from escapist to personal, from restlessly inventive to patiently introspective. He was now a different kind of cartoonist. The Spirit had been an exuberant declaration of comics’ potential. A Contract With God gave the impression of an artist who quietly assumed that potential was common knowledge. At fifty-nine years old, retired from the Army, Eisner had seen the comics industry die and be reborn multiple times, but the art form wouldn’t quit and neither would he. Eisner was playing a long game.

Eisner didn’t invent the term "graphic novel" - it had been floating around for a few years beforehand - but everything clicked when he attached it to A Contract With God. So much of American comics culture was about regurgitating the superhero mainstream or rebelling against it, but here was something different: an earnest, personal, lovingly crafted collection of stories of ordinary people, rooted in the cultural history and personal experiences of its author. Every positive association that the word “novel” possessed seemed tailor-made for the book (even though it was actually an anthology of four interconnected short stories).

Eisner’s visual storytelling style in A Contract With God bore little resemblance to anything else on the shelf at the time. His line work, always a strength, had matured tremendously. It was rough-hewn but precise, harkening back to Heinrich Kley, and it had some of the flavor of the early twentieth-century woodcut novels of Lynd Ward and Frans Masereel that Eisner admired. The style was cartoony, the body language and facial expressions nearly operatic in their intensity, but there were odd narrative turns and moral ambiguity at play too. The cityscapes and interiors created a strong sense of place, with the authority of a sharp and vivid memory; yet somehow, whatever nostalgia they might’ve evoked, the human drama at the heart of it all felt fresh and new - at least to me, as an eighteen-year-old reader in 1978.

Eisner kept going, kept making new graphic novels for decades as others joined him. Mainstream companies cheapened the term with their own slapped-together reprint collections of popular superhero titles, but a growing roster of artists followed Eisner’s example and created their own original book-length efforts. Within the first few years, there were enough to fill a shelf, then a bookcase, then a row of bookcases, and today, graphic novel sections are a familiar fixture in nearly any major bookstore chain.

Much of that market growth can be attributed to the outsize achievements of artists like Art Spiegelman, Chris Ware, Marjane Satrapi, and Alison Bechdel, whose books have generated prestigious prizes, enumerable college courses, and even a hit Broadway play. And the manga craze and growth of popular all-ages comics didn’t hurt either. But through it all, Will Eisner’s drumbeat kept time for the American graphic novel movement.

Will Eisner was sixty-five years old when I met him in 1982. I had just graduated Syracuse with a degree in illustration and somehow - miraculously - landed a job in DC Comics’ production department in Rockefeller Center. I was only twenty-one years old and impatient to begin making comics of my own professionally. Eisner welcomed me into his home to look over my work, allowed me to sit in on some of his classes at New York City’s School of Visual Arts, and in the years to come, as my own career took hold, he welcomed my family into his ever-widening circle of friends. Despite being as grand a "grand old man" as anyone could hope for, Will never stood on ceremony. He eagerly participated in debates with artists young enough to be his grandchildren, and harangued his oldest peers to wake up to the possibilities of new trends. When he died at the age of eighty-seven, we all felt, quite sincerely, that the man had died long before his time.

For all his youthful curiosity and enthusiasm, though, his most enduring lesson to me was his patience. In those early years, when I first met Eisner, I couldn’t wait for cartoonists everywhere to wake up to the potential of our art form. Tomorrow! - today! - yesterday! Eisner made many of the same arguments and did what he could to affect positive change, but if it took a year, or a decade, or even a series of decades, well, so be it. Now, thanks to his example, I’m playing that long game too.

Will and I talked about everything under the sun through many encounters over the years, but we never talked about Alice, the daughter that Will and his wife, Ann, lost to leukemia at the age of sixteen. Will’s grief and rage following Alice’s death gave birth to the title story you’re about to read, but it only came through her father’s pen at the time - not through his voice. He and Ann didn’t talk about Alice publicly for many years, and many of us didn’t even know the truth beyond occasional whispered rumors until a new century began and the old man finally opened up.

I was impressed by how Eisner the artist could encounter one professional frustration after another and still keep drawing - still believing in the potential of an art form that might go for decades without proof of its worth. But I’m awestruck now, looking back as a father myself, at Eisner the man, and how Will and Ann together were able to stay the course and embrace life the way they did after walking through Hell. I’ve never met a more optimistic mind in many ways than Will Eisner, but he didn’t come by that optimism easily. It could have melted in the heat, but instead it was forged into something sharper, and no less durable.

I’m writing this in 2016, more than a decade after Will Eisner died. The potential of comics is being demonstrated daily in ways Eisner anticipated when he created A Contract With God nearly forty years ago, but also in ways he could’ve hardly imagined. And of course, inevitably, the book itself will suffer the fate of any first-of-its-kind pioneer. It’s been joined now by so many of its kind that it’s easy to lose it in the crowd. There are now graphic novels with ever more complex formal ambitions, with subtly written dialogue, up-to-date sensibilities, pitch-perfect irony, and politically urgent subject matter. Graphic novels proliferate and improve with every passing year. But they’re still branches on an immense family tree that was once just a sapling - planted in soil he always knew was fertile.

Scott McCloud is the author of Understanding Comics, ZOT! and many other fine comics.


17 July 2021

George Herriman's Secret by Chris Ware

George Herriman (circa 1940)

To Walk in Beauty
by Chris Ware

For one of the most prolific and highly-praised cartoonists who ever lived, George Herriman, the creator of Krazy Kat (1913-1944), didn’t like talking about himself. Recoiling from photographers and brushing off personal questions with elliptical answers and even occasional fabrications, George or “Garge” or “The Greek” always preferred the focus to be on the multivalent, multifarious, and multicultural characters who populated the inner world he made every day with the scratchings of his pen. A direct throughline of thought-to-gesture in black ink on white paper, George Herriman’s drawings come alive before the reader’s eye with a vital, persuasive complexity previously unknown in the history of art. Krazy Kat lived on the page - but he - or she - had a secret. And so did George Herriman.

Krazy Kat has been described as a parable of love, a metaphor for democracy, a “surrealistic” poem, unfolding over years and years. It is all of these, but so much more: it is a portrait of America, a self-portrait of Herriman, and, I believe, the first attempt to paint the full range of human consciousness in the language of the comic strip. Like the America it portrays, Herriman’s identity has been poised for a revision for many decades now. Michael Tisserand’s new biography Krazy does just that, clearing the shifting sands and shadows of Herriman’s ancestry, the discovery in the early 1970s of a birth certificate which described Herriman as “colored” sending up a flag among comics researchers and aficionados. Tisserand confirms what for years was hiding in plain sight in the tangled brush of Coconino County, Arizona, where Krazy Kat is supposedly set: Herriman, of mixed African-American ancestry, spent his entire adult life passing as white. He had been born in the African-American neighborhood of racially mixed, culturally polyglot 1880s New Orleans, but within a decade Herriman’s parents moved George and his three siblings to the small but growing town of Los Angeles to escape the increasing bigotry and racial animosity of postbellum Louisiana. The Herrimans melted into California life, and it was there that George, with brief professional spates in New York, would remain for the rest of his life.

But imagine knowing something about yourself that’s considered so damning, so dire, so disgusting, that you must, at all cost, never tell anyone. Imagine leaving behind a life to which you cannot claim allegiance or affection. Imagine suddenly gaining advantages and opportunity while you see others like you, who have not followed in the footsteps of your deception, suffering. Herriman, once he was considered white, didn’t even have a way of voicing this identity. Until he started drawing Krazy Kat.

I may be in the minority here, but I really think that most if not all readers of Krazy Kat during Herriman’s lifetime would have had a hard time thinking of Krazy as anything but African-American. Krazy’s patois, social status, stereotypical “happy-go-lucky despite it all” disposition all funnel into a rather pointed African-American identity. And Herriman, confoundingly, was not above using racial and even racist imagery himself, his early work especially filled with eye-popping stereotypes and blackface caricatures. At the turn of the century, when Herriman was just starting his career, the nineteenth-century cultural phenomenon of blackface minstrelsy, while admittedly in the early process of passing into nostalgia, was still prevalent. Large orchestral shows of dozens of performers like Haverly’s and Christy’s Minstrels, grotesquely metastasized from the already ghastly four-person troupes, filled vaudeville halls and theaters; blackface performances, in a cruel twist of cultural fairness, were the first places for African-American performers to find a foothold. (W. C. Fields called Bert Williams, probably still the best known African-American entertainer from this era, “the saddest man I ever knew.”)

At the same time, a reader alive in the early part of the twentieth century probably didn’t really have to think about these associations any more specifically than we think the “Minions” sound vaguely Latino, or why Felix the Cat or Mickey and his minstrel mouse gloves were so funny. Of course Krazy Kat was black. A funny black cat. Just the right amount of slippage and shift in Krazy’s animus, helped along by a tradition of children’s animal stories, was all that was necessary for him/her to be two things - and nothing - all at once.

Nevertheless, one detail in Herriman’s strip that would have absolutely cemented this identity in the minds of contemporary readers has since passed into obscurity: Krazy Kat’s banjo. Through received clichĂ©s and shifts of poverty and culture in America, the banjo has come to be thought of as an instrument of poor whites, but at the turn of the century, it was as emblematic as a watermelon as part of the African-American stereotype. In fact, the banjo has a solemn origin: descended from the West African akonting, xalam, and ngoni instruments, played as an accompaniment to storytelling by Wolof griots in Senegal or the Jola in Gambia, early instruments like what became the American banjo were recreated by American slaves from whatever plantation materials were at hand - gourds, turtle shells, coconuts, animal skins - to try to hold on to a memory of life and culture torn from their grasp.


To the modern reader, the banjo in Krazy Kat might seem a lighthearted accessory, but when Krazy picks it up to sing “There is a Heppy Land Fur, Fur Away”, the meaning, to thoughtful readers of the 1920s to the 1940s, would have been clear. Even more astonishingly, Krazy never plays a “proper” banjo, but plays the gourd or coconut banjo, the origins of which by the time of the strip’s appearance would indeed have been obscure. Herriman knew what he was doing, and it’s not insignificant that the very last strip he left unfinished on his drawing table showed Krazy playing a gourd banjo. The earliest representation known of such an instrument appears in the watercolor The Old Plantation, painted by South Carolina slaveholder John Rose in the late eighteenth century.

What do these racial and cultural connections mean for how we see Herriman’s work? From their dimming over the years compared with Krazy Kat’s increasing artistic incandescence, they are clearly not necessary to an appreciation of the strip. But put yourself in Herriman’s shoes, and then reread Krazy Kat with this knowledge rewoven into the tapestry of his work. Think of pink Ignatz, the mouse who is Krazy’s constant tormentor. Think of the brick. Think of what W.E.B. DuBois called the “dual consciousness” of African-Americans, think of the brick hitting Krazy, over and over and over again. (Tisserand shrewdly notes that a July 30, 1866, New Orleans race riot, which Herriman’s father may have witnessed, started when a white boy threatened to throw a brick at African-American soldiers parading through the town.) Think of what recasting that gesture of hate as one of love actually means to its recipient. Think of the lynchings of the 1910s, the race riots of the 1960s, the American police shootings of 2016, the iPhone videos that continually show the treatment of African-Americans as property. Think of Barack Obama, half Scotch-Irish, half African.

George Herriman saw the history of America and its future and wrote it in ink as a dream on paper, and it is a dream that is still coming true. In December, disparate Native-American tribes and activists who had gathered in North Dakota for months staved off an oil pipeline that would have cut through ancestral Sioux burial lands; Herriman began visiting the DinĂ© or Navajo nation and befriending its citizens before some western states were even twenty-five years old. Navajo rug patterns and the folklore of Monument Valley came to define the very cosmos of Krazy Kat. (A wonderful detail in Tisserand’s book recalls Herriman, who had Hollywood friends, setting up a private screening of older western movies with actual Navajo supporting actors for a Navajo audience, solely because the actors had said insulting things in their native language that only the Native audience could understand.)

And our most recent election involved debates about the equality of transgender teens, of those trapped inside a body by which they feel betrayed. Krazy Kat’s self-defining gender-switching - “I don’t know if I should take a husband or a wife,” Krazy once remarks - couldn’t be more timely, more oracular. Nor, sadly, could Ignatz’s seemingly implacable hatred. Even sadder, in that same American election, Ignatz won.

Everyone “passes” in some way or another; everyone has something they’d rather not discuss, something of their history they’re trying to downplay or hide, some story that doesn’t jibe with the vision and identity they’d prefer to have. This is the essence of fiction. Every one of us nightly, daily, hourly—every minute—reviews, sorts, discards, rewrites details that allow us to somehow get on with our lives, unrecorded acts of revision tantamount to what a writer commits professionally on a page. Do it well, and you’re mentally healthy. Do it badly, and you’re crazy. Fundamentally, we understand others only as refractions through the optic of ourselves, and fiction not only offers an alternative construct, but in its finest form allows the reader to inhabit, and most importantly, to empathize with another consciousness. (Or in Herriman’s case, with a cartoon cat.) So is kaleidoscopic Krazy really the crazy one, whom Ignatz can only understand through the reducing lens of his narrow, white mind?

Lately, I’ve been wondering if Herriman knew that one day his secret-in-plain-sight would be uncovered, that America would change, adapt and grow up enough as a people to understand Krazy Kat in all of its psychological and poetic depth. I’m not sure if we’ve yet reached that point, but what myself and other cartoonists already knew - that the strip was already the greatest ever drawn - is now magnified, multiplied and maximized. Krazy Kat is not just one of the greatest comic strips, it’s one of the strangest, most inventive, emotional, and personal works of art of the twentieth century. In their admiration for Herriman, Philip Guston, Willem de Kooning, and Jack Kerouac sensed something in his line and voice that was endemically American, deeply felt. Herriman should now take his rightful place as one of the most original African-American voices of the early twentieth century, contemporary with, if not predating, Richard Wright and Zora Neale Hurston as one of the first writers to understand the racial animus of America and to try to fix the essence of black consciousness on paper. That Herriman made it come alive, sing, dance and suffer in an art form barely fifty years old is all the more astonishing. For decades, we’ve all been reading and laughing and, most of all, feeling for Krazy Kat, who passed right under our eyes as a living drawing on a page. But what we were really feeling came straight from the heart. It was the very soul of George Herriman himself.


Adapted from an essay that appeared in the catalog of an exhibition on George Herriman at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina SofĂ­a, Madrid, Spain, in 2017.



16 July 2021

Tantrum by Jules Feiffer (No. 50)

Tantrum (1979)
by Jules Feiffer

REVIEW BY RAY MESCALLADO:
(from The 100 Best Comics of the Century! in The Comics Journal #210, 1999)
At 42, family man Leo Doug has had enough of responsibility, of maturity, of "No give. No give. No give." So one night, like Gregor Samsa with a Peter Pan complex, Leo makes himself two-years old again. What follows is a journey that would daunt any adult, never mind a child: Leo proceeds to abandon his family, tries to return to his parents, seeks help from his siblings, and even encounters an enclave of other two-year-old adults. As it turns out, Leo can't help acting like an adult, though that doesn't always mean he's behaving maturely when he does so. 

The most memorable sequence occurs when Leo seeks out his brother's estranged wife, Joyce. A whole other mind/body corruption is in evidence with Joyce: lost in body-image issues, desperately wishing, "If I could be all essence and no body..." The sick, sick, sick codependency is fleshed out between the two to excellent effect - and not without a touch of empathy for both characters.

Feiffer had previously explored the role of childhood in a supposedly mature world: 1959's Munro, his first extended comic story, was about a child accidentally drafted into the military. Published 20 years later, Tantrum is Feiffer at the height of his powers, and the graphic novel format allows him a scope and bravura that only amplifies the achievement of his weekly strip. Each panel takes up a whole page, allowing Feiffer to fill out the world around his characters (a luxury he often eschews in his strip) and create highly dramatic images. Leo is often drawn to emphasise his metamorphosis, but there are panels where the outsized emotions and ego of our anti-hero are reflected in the choice of angles. Feiffer's distinctive monologue rhythms remain very much in evidence, an incantatory exposure of modern non-communication. Even when facing each other, people rarely hold an actual dialogue in Feiffer's works: they compare their relative lots in life, they antagonise without hearing the other side, but rarely do they desire to connect. Consider Leo's brother upon meeting his de-aged sibling: "Leo! Good to see ya" Looking' good. Lost weight. Got hair piece. Fabulous! Miss Swallow, two Perriers."

Narcissism is just one flaw, and Feiffer delights in all the contradictions of human behaviour. The advice Leo gives a real child remains indisputable: Don't mature! Mature people do the shit work!" But where are the mature people in this story? At best, maturity is a fleeting moment of grace and not a consistent attitude. This lesson is writ large in the ending. Is it positive turn of events, is it a confirmation of our worst fears? It's left up to us to decide. After all, what matters most in Tantrum is the comedy of human passions. And as Feiffer so often reminds us, such passions are frequently misleading, rarely politically correct, and never as obvious as we think.


REVIEW BY NEIL GAIMAN:
...When the history of the Graphic Novel (or whatever they wind up calling long stories created in words and pictures for adults, in the time when the histories are appropriate) is written, there will be a whole chapter about Tantrum, one of the first and still one of the wisest and sharpest things created in this strange publishing category, and one of the books that, along with Will Eisner's A Contract With God, began the movement that brought us such works as Maus, as Love and Rockets, as From Hell -- the works that stretch the envelope of what words and pictures were capable of, and could not have been anything but what they were, pictures and words adding up to something that could not have been a film or a novel or a play: that were intrinsically comics, with all a comics' strengths. [Read the full essay here...]




15 July 2021

The Theatrical Caricatures of Al Hirschfeld (No. 34)

The Theatrical Caricatures of Al Hirschfeld (1928-2003)

REVIEW BY R.C. HARVEY:
(from The 100 Best Comics of the Century! in The Comics Journal #210, 1999)
For at least the last half of the century, one name has dominated the field of theatrical caricature in America. Although he stands virtually alone now, Al Hirschfeld is the last of a breed that proliferated in the earliest years of this century, prospered with the burgeoning of magazine journalism, and reached its apotheosis in the '20s and '30s, particularly in the pages of Vanity Fair, which gloried in full colour celebrity caricatures.

Hirschfeld emerged from the pack when he began concentrating on theatrical caricatures for New York newspapers in 1928; since 1943, exclusively for The New York Times. Some of his earliest efforts evoke the geometric patterning of Miguel Covarrubias (with whom the young Hirschfeld shared a studio in the 1920s), the lilting line of Al Frueh as well as a penchant for using the full figure to capture a likeness, and the embellishing complexities of Ralph Barton

But Hirschfeld soon developed his own distinctive style, and for pure, flowing, linear expression, no one has matched him. And in his cartoon tableaux of the cast and ambiance of a production, he achieves symphonic compositions of line, mass, texture, and shape, masterpieces in black-and-white, and in rendering action, particularly, in incomparable line achieves its ultimate expressiveness, where single lines coil and springing imitation of the performers' motion. 

Says the artist: "The problem of placing the right line in the right place has absorbed all of my interests across these many years... I am still enchanted when an unaccountable line describes and communicated the inexplicable."

OBITUARY BY PHILIP HAMBURGER:
(from The New Yorker, 2 June 2003)
Al Hirschfeld, the great caricaturist, was to have reached the magic age of one hundred on June 21st. Myriad celebrations were planned, the culmination to be the renaming of the Martin Beck Theatre the Al Hirschfeld Theatre. Death stepped in on January 20th, when Al died at home in his sleep. But, since Hirschfeld was Hirschfeld, only the centerpiece of the festivities will be gone. The Martin Beck will become the Hirschfeld on June 23rd. Since I can no longer talk to Al (we talked all the time), I have done the next best thing: I have had a chat with his wife, Louise Kerz Hirschfeld, a beautiful woman in her sixties. She came to see me the other day, and it was obvious that she has inherited one of Al’s most mysterious traits: regardless of traffic or municipal mayhem on the streets, Al always managed to park exactly where he wanted to park, right in front of where he was going. One might consider this some sort of extraterrestrial intervention, or just good luck, but whatever it was it always worked.

Mrs. H. was eager to talk about Al. Hiding her sorrow, she seemed calm and collected. “He felt so tired that Sunday that I suggested he stay in bed. This was not easy for Al. He lived for his work, and the notion of not climbing to the fourth floor of our lovely house on East Ninety-fifth Street, and sitting back in his old barber chair, and beginning to draw seemed strange to him. But he followed my advice. He was propped up against the pillows and making strange circular motions with one empty hand - circles and lines and dots and faces. He was drawing something: we will never know what."

"Al always said that he had been down every street in the city of New York, with a special, odd affection for the borough of Queens," she went on. "He always had special ways of getting out of the city - weird shortcuts from the Harlem River Drive, through a crowded commercial district, and onto the New York State Thruway. He loved to point out a cliff he used to climb as a boy on what is now the Harlem Drive. In the old days, his closest friends were Brooks Atkinson, drama critic of the Times, Alexander King, the writer, and Paul Osborn, whose plays he loved. But his favorite writer of all was Thoreau, and we printed a Thoreau passage on the funeral program that read, in part, 'There was an artist... who was disposed to strive after perfection... As he made no compromise with Time, Time kept out of his way and only sighed at a distance because he could not overcome him."

"Al never talked about death - he made no plans, none of that. He lived for every day. He once did a great drawing of Houdini - all bound and chained - and I often felt that Al was like Houdini, bound and chained to his work, from which he would miraculously emerge. Theatre totally fascinated and consumed him. His favorite plays were Long Day’s Journey Into Night and Death of a Salesman. Of course, he knew O’Neill - the two of them would haunt the jazz spots on Fifty-Second Street. The fact that a theatre was to be named in his honor almost overwhelmed him. Arthur Gelb, the Times eminence, and I went and told him the news. ‘It’s a great honor, but I won’t speak,’ he said. ‘Just take a bow.’ To see Al at a theatre was an uplifting experience. He became like a boy. The look of expectancy on his face before the curtain rose simply cannot be described."

"He didn’t ever want to be bored. Hence, he was always trying for something new. If you asked him what was his favorite drawing, he would always say, ‘The last one that I did.'"


FURTHER READING:



14 July 2021

Plastic Man by Jack Cole (No. 32)

Plastic Man (1941-1950)
by Jack Cole

REVIEW BY R. C. HARVEY:
(from The 100 Best Comics of the Century! in The Comics Journal #210, 1999)
In Plastic Man (starting in Police Comics No.1, August 1941) Jack Cole (1918-1958) demonstrated spectacularly how to combine superhero adventures with slapstick comedy to the detriment of neither. It was to prove a unique achievement: no one has successfully revived the feature. 

Written and drawn by Cole, Plastic Man could stretch himself into any shape or to any extremity at will. Extending his legs, he could stride across town in a few steps; he could infiltrate the criminal's lair by contorting into any form. Part of the fun for the reader lay in discovering which of the accoutrements in the crook's hideout was Plas in disguise, lying in wait for his prey. His rubber costume was a dead giveaway, of course: bright red long-sleeved tank suit with a wide yellow-and-black-striped belt. So all you had to do was to find the carpet or door or Oriental vase or easy chair that was red with yellow and black stripes, and, sure enough, the bad guy would get stuck in the carpet or couldn't open the door or flee or be grabbed by the vase or enveloped by the chair while sitting in it, and then Plastic Man would then resume his normal shape and arrest the culprit. 

Cole's device's were both ingenious and humorous, but the chief hilarity of the stories lay in the profusion of sight gags with which Cole infected virtually every page. To add to the fun, the underworld itself seemed populated entirely by fugitives from animated cartoons, but - and this was Cole's great secret - Plastic Man was never a figure of fun or a comedian. Surrounded by burlesque comedy and accompanied by a fat comic sidekick named Woozy Winks, Plas nonetheless took his crime-fighting seriously, and the combination gave the series its distinctive ambiance.


REVIEW BY ART SPIEGELMAN:
(from an article in The New Yorker, 19 April 1999)
If the going rate for pictures is still only a thousand words per, most Plastic Man panels are worth at least two or three pictures. Each panel seems to swallow several separate instants of time whole, as if the page were made up of small screens with different, though related, films whizzing by at forty-eight frames a second. Cole’s is an amphetamine-riddled art: Tex Avery on speed! And it’s not just Plastic Man who bounces and twists; any one of Cole’s incidental figures would seem as kinetic as Plastic Man if it were transplanted into someone else’s comic book. Each page is intuitively visualized to form a coherent whole, even though the individual panels form a narrative flood of run-on sentences that breathlessly jump from one page to the next. The art ricochets like a racquetball slammed full force in a closet. Your eye, however, is guided as if it were a skillfully controlled pinball, often by Plastic Man himself acting as a compositional device. His distended body is an arrow pointing out the sights as it hurtles through time. In just a single panel, our hero chases along a footpath in a park, trailing a mugger. Running from the rear of the picture, Plastic Man’s S-curved body echoes the path itself as he loops around one pedestrian in the distance and extends between two lovers about to kiss - lipstick traces are on his elongated neck as he passes them - to swoop up between an old man’s legs like an enormous penis wearing sunglasses and stare into his startled face. Plastic Man had all the crackling intensity of the life force transferred to paper. Pulpier than James Cameron’s Terminator, more frantic than Jim Carrey in The Mask, and less self-conscious than Woody Allen’s ZeligPlastic Man literally embodied the comic-book form: its exuberant energy, its flexibility, its boyishness, and its only partially sublimated sexuality. Cole’s infinitely malleable hero, Clinton-like in his ability to change shape and squeeze through tiny loopholes, just oozed sex. It was never made explicit - the idea of a hard-core version of Plastic Man boggles the mind - but there was a polymorphously perverse quality to a character who personified Georges Bataille’s notion of the body on the brink of dissolving its borders. Cole let it all hang out as Plastic Man slithered from panel to panel - sometimes shifting from male to female, and freely mutating from erect and hardboiled to soft as a Dali clock. [Read the full article here...]


FURTHER READING: