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ROBERT CRUMB
(R. Crumb) (1943-) is the most
prominent member of the "underground comix" movement.
His comics are distinctive for their cross-hatched artistry,
idiosyncratic story-telling and uncompromising subject matter.
He has increasingly achieved recognition in the high-brow fine
art world, a status denied even famous fellow artists who labor
in the traditionally low-brow cartooning profession. His life
has been thoroughly documented, both by ample numbers of his
own no-holds-barred autobiographical comics and in several documentaries,
including the award-winning Crumb by Terry Zwigoff.
As a boy in Milford DE and Philadelphia
he spent countless hours creating home made comic books, initially
under considerable pressure from his domineering older cartoonist
brother Charles. At a certain point in his teens Robert
surpassed his brother's skill level, an event that permanently
scarred Charles' psyche. An avid and early comic book reader,
Robert was heavily influenced by the work of Harvey
Kurtzman (creator of MAD), particularly
Humbug, a short-lived experimental satire publication
(1957-58) that he pored over. Crumb has said that seeing the
Will Elder/Jack Davis cover of Humbug #2 "changed
his life."
By 1964 Crumb was good enough for Kurtzman's
latest satire magazine, Help!, contributing early
"Fritz the Cat" pages, and a stark documentary cartoon
view of the streets of Harlem. Impressed, Kurtzman sent the 21
year-old Robert and his new bride Dana on an unlikely honeymoon
assignment to Bulgaria, resulting in grim images of the backward
Soviet satellite. Crumb was in the process of moving to New York
to become Kurtzman's new Assistant Editor (replacing future Monty
Python member and film director Terry Gilliam) when Help!
folded in 1965.
Kurtzman helped Crumb land odd jobs drawing
trading cards and promotional material for Woody Gelman's
Nostalgia Press, but he had no further practical work for
Crumb, having committed to a a long run on "Little
Annie Fanny" for Playboy. Crumb settled in
at American Greeting Cards in Cleveland, cranking out cute illustrations
for the mass market. One day in 1966 he walked away from his
job and impulsively accepted a ride to San Francisco. There,
caught up in the burgeoning counter culture, he began using LSD.
His drawing style and subject matter were permanently affected
by the mind-altering drug. In 1967 he created Zap Comix,
personally selling copies out of a baby carriage in the Haight-Ashbury
district during the fabled "Summer of Love." The "underground"
comic book became a cult hit, leading to two solo Zap
sequels before Crumb characteristically began sharing the title's
content and royalties with other Bay area artists. Though he
did not regard himself to be a "hippie," he nonetheless
created such '60s and '70s icons such as Mr.
Natural, Flakey Foont, Fritz the
Cat, Mr.
Snoid and the ubiquitous big-foot image Keep-on-Truckin'.
Though Zap was successfully published
by Berkeley's Print Mint, Crumb was acutely aware of his
pre-eminence in the quickly mushrooming underground comix genre
and was determined to spread his influence around. He provided
titles like Big Ass, Motor City and Mr. Natural
#1-2 to San Francisco's new Rip-Off Press, one of whose
founders was Gilbert Shelton, another early
contributor to Kurtzman's Help! In 1970 Crumb visited
Denis
Kitchen in Milwaukee WI and gave him Home Grown
Funnies ---the all-time best-selling comic for his
Kitchen
Sink Press---and later XYZ Comics,
Snoid, Mr.
Natural No. 3 and others. Crumb also provided material
to Last Gasp, the final addition to the underground comic
book industry's "Big Four" of publishing houses.
Robert Crumb also created iconic posters
such as Tommy
Toilet, a fixture in student and hipster bathrooms everywhere;
the inspirational Mr. Natural Does the Dishes; and the
sublime A
Short History of America Poster, in which a single plot
of virgin American landscape steadily metamorphoses from a bucolic
crossroad to an ugly modern street corner.
His boxed card sets, notably Heroes
of the Blues, Jazz
Greats, Pioneers of Country Music and R.
Crumb Trading Cards have also achieved renown.
The music sets, containing loving portraits and mini-histories
of the leading pioneers in each music genre, helped Crumb cross
over from cartoon aficionados to music fans. Crumb is also an
accomplished musician in his own right and an inveterate collector
of vintage 78 rpm records. His first recorded tunes were in fact
released in the even-then long-obsolete 78 rpm format. Ordinary
Records, a division of Krupp Comic Works
(Kitchen Sink Press) issued R. Crumb & His Keep-on-Truckin'
Orchestra on a 78 rpm ten-inch jacketed disc in 1973.
Later, as the Cheap Suit Serenaders, Crumb and his band
(including cartoonist Robert Armstrong) issued
three standard speed record albums (now on CD) for Yazoo Records.
In recent years his work has been collected
in ongoing multiple volumes of The Complete Crumb (Fantagraphics).
Books about Crumb have been published, such as The Life
and Times of R. Crumb (KSP/St. Martin's Press)
and even his most obscure commercial and private work has been
collected in Odds & Ends (Oog & Blik/Bloomsbury).
A definitive career overview with chapter intros by the artist,
was co-published by Kitchen Sink Press
and Little, Brown in 1997. Recent works include Mystic
Funnies, a second volume of Waiting For Food
and Mr.Natural
Postcard Book. At this stage his career
transcends the comics world. Crumb's original drawings command
increasingly respectable prices in serious galleries, his art
has graced the cover of Art Forum and his work
is quietly being acquired by leading art museums (who probably
prefer not to advertise the fact at this point in time). Robert
Crumb lives with his wife Aline Kominsky-Crumb
in southern France.
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