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Instrumental in the formation of the underground comics scene in
San Francisco during the 1960s and 1970s, Crumb has ruptured and
expanded the boundaries of the graphic arts, redefining comics and
cartoons as countercultural art forms. Presenting a slice of
Crumb's unique universe, this book features a wide array of printed
matter culled from the artist's five-decade career-tear sheets of
drawings and comics taken directly from the publications where the
works first appeared, magazine and album covers, broadsides from
the 1960s and 1970s, tabloids from San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury,
Oakland, Manhattan's Lower East Side, and other counterculture
enclaves, as well as exhibition ephemera. Complementing this volume
are historical works from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries
that have inspired Crumb and pages from his rarely seen sketchbooks
from the 1970s and 1980s that reveal his exemplary skill as a
draftsman. Documenting the critically acclaimed exhibition Drawing
for Print: Mind Fucks, Kultur Klashes, Pulp Fiction & Pulp Fact
by the Illustrious R. Crumb at David Zwirner, New York, in 2019,
curated by Robert Storr, this publication offers an opportunity to
immerse oneself in Crumb's singular mind. In the accompanying text,
Storr explores the challenging nature of some of Crumb's work and
the importance of artists who take on the status quo.
Envisioning the first book of the bible like no one before him, R.
Crumb, the legendary illustrator, reveals here the story of Genesis
in a profoundly honest and deeply moving way. Originally thinking
that we would do a take off of Adam and Eve, Crumb became so
fascinated by the Bible's language, "a text so great and so strange
that it lends itself readily to graphic depictions," that he
decided instead to do a literal interpretation using the text word
for word in a version primarily assembled from the translations of
Robert Alter and the King James bible. Now, readers of every
persuasion-Crumb fans, comic book lovers, and believers-can gain
astonishing new insights from these harrowing, tragic, and even
juicy stories. Crumb's Book of Genesis reintroduces us to the
bountiful tree lined garden of Adam and Eve, the massive ark of
Noah with beasts of every kind, the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah
destroyed by brimstone and fire that rained from the heavens, and
the Egypt of the Pharaoh, where Joseph's embalmed body is carried
in a coffin, in a scene as elegiac as any in Genesis. Using clues
from the text and peeling away the theological and scholarly
interpretation that have often obscured the Bible's most dramatic
stories, Crumb fleshes out a parade of Biblical originals: from the
serpent in Eden, the humanoid reptile appearing like an alien out
of a science fiction movie, to Jacob, a "kind've depressed guy who
doesn't strike you as physically courageous," and his bother, Esau,
"a rough and kick ass guy," to Abraham's wife Sarah, more fetching
than most woman at 90, to God himself, "a standard Charlton
Heston-like figure with long white hair and a flowing beard." As
Crumb writes in his introduction, "the stories of these people, the
Hebrews, were something more than just stories. They were the
foundation, the source, in writing of religious and political
power, handed down by God himself." Crumb's Book of Genesis, the
culmination of 5 years of painstaking work, is a tapestry of
masterly detail and storytelling which celebrates the astonishing
diversity of the one of our greatest artistic geniuses. Nominated
for three 2010 Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards: Best Adaptation
from Another Work, Best Graphic Album, Best Writer/Artist.
In this account of the joys and challenges of a legendary marriage,
this celebrated cartooning couple recall their success at shocking
America with 'Weirdo' magazine, the life-altering birth of their
precocious daughter Sophie, and their astonishing move to the safe
haven of France.
Robert Crumb first began drawing record covers in 1968 when Janis
Joplin, a fellow Haight Ashbury denizen, asked him to provide a
cover for her album Cheap Thrills. It was an invitation the budding
artist couldn't resist, especially since he had been fascinated
with record covers-particularly for the legendary jazz, country,
and old-time blues music of the 1920s and 1930s-since he was a
teen. This early collaboration proved so successful that Crumb went
on to draw hundreds of record covers for both new artists and
largely forgotten masters. So remarkable were Crumb's artistic
interpretations of these old 78 rpm singles that the art itself
proved influential in their rediscovery in the 1960s and 1970s.
Including such classics as Truckin' My Blues Away, Harmonica Blues,
and Please Warm My Weiner, Crumb's opus also features more recent
covers done for CDs. R. Crumb: The Complete Record Cover Collection
is a must-have for any lover of graphics and old-time music.
Sophie Crumb's startlingly expressive drawings track her
development as an artist from age two to twenty-eight. Sifting
through dozens of their daughter's remarkable sketchbooks, our
generation's most celebrated graphic artists have, with their only
child, Sophie, now selected more than three hundred paintings and
drawings that depict her artistic and psychological maturation.
Revealing how an original artistic sensibility is both innate and
nurtured, the book features six separate developmental stages,
including Sophie's earliest drawings, the elaborate fantasy world
of her childhood, her late adolescent rebellion, and her coming of
age in the milieu of the Paris circus world and New York's "seventh
circle of hell." The drawings from her early twenties of tattoo
artists, dangerous men reflect a personal anguish that finally ends
with her becoming a mother and creating a family of her own.
Illuminating and intimate, this book is a dramatic yet subtle
statement on the evolution of personality as seen through art."
I feel that my work is but a feeble expression of something that
in itself is vague and doubtful Sometimes when I probe myself I
find that my intentions in art aren't as sincere as they should be
I realize that I m fairly good at drawing, but you see that s only
because I've done so much of it, and it seems sometimes that the
only reason I have stuck at it so diligently is because I have to
sort of get even with society for not accepting me Subconsciously I
want to make myself immortal among men, leave my mark on the earth
to compensate for social inadequacy So I draw. R. Crumb,
9/29/61
Spanning the most formative era of his life, from the painful
years of adolescence to the fame and fortune of early adulthood,
this collection of personal correspondences with two near-lifelong
friends sheds light on the artistic development, bitter struggle,
and ultimate triumph of the world s greatest living
cartoonist.Crumb writes about many key events in his life: the
dissolution of his first marriage, the pain of being separated from
his first child, his troubles with the IRS, and his obsessions with
comics, music and women, most notably his earliest experiences with
Aline Kominsky-Crumb, now his wife of over 30 years. An
entertaining and revealing look into the mind of a great artist and
thinker; this is Crumb s sketchbook of words, featuring scores of
rare art, including entire letters drawn in cartoon form."
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