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WILL
EISNER(1917-2005) is
recognized internationally as a legend in the field of sequential
art, a term he coined. His cartooning career spanned nearly seventy
years and eight decades.
EARLY CAREER...
Eisner contributed to Wow, What a Magazine short;y after
high school. While still a teenager,
in 1936, he co-founded the Eisner & Iger Studio, a
"packaging house" providing content to publishers at
the virtual onset of the comic book industry. That same year
he started his buccaneer saga Hawks of the Seas. Eisner's
early staff included such future luminaries as Jack Kurtzberg
(later Jack Kirby, co-creator of Spider-Man and
Fantastic Four), Lou Fine, Bob Kane (creator
of Batman) and Mort Meskin. Eisner created Sheena,
Queen of the Jungle, and soon afterward created Dollman
and Blackhawk. Eisner also famously turned down
a crude submission called Superman by equally young creators
Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. An autobiographical
account of those formative years can be found in Eisner's The
Dreamer.
THE SPIRIT...
In 1940, after selling his interest in the comic book packaging
company to Jerry Iger, Eisner created his most famous character,
The Spirit, a masked crime fighter. The Spirit
was the lead feature in an unprecedented format: a 16-page color
comic book that was inserted in Sunday newspapers, the first
of numerous Eisner innovations. At its height The Spirit
insert appeared in twenty major market newspapers with a combined
circulation of 5 million readers each Sunday, quintupling the
circulation of America's best-selling monthly comic book.
MILITARY CAREER and EDUCATIONAL COMICS... From 1942-45 Will Eisner served three years as
a Warrant Officer in the Pentagon in Washington, D.C.. There,
during World War II, he created motivational posters and pioneered
the use of cartoons for instructional purposes with the publication
Army Motors. His innovative approach, combining
hard information within cartoon plots proved so effective that
he privately contracted with the U.S. Army in 1951 to
produce P*S, The Preventive Maintenance Monthly
and continued to produce the magazine for many years afterward.
He formed American Visuals Corporation in 1948 to supply
similar educational comics to clients ranging from the U.S. Government's
Job Corps to General Motors. He also formed a separate
company which produced a wide array of cartoon-based educational
materials for schools across America.
UNENDING SPIRIT...
Following his army service, Eisner returned to The Spirit in late1945
and continued producing it till 1952. Though he "retired"
the character that year, it has rarely been out of print since.
The seven and eight page stories he wrote and drew each week
are regarded as classics of the form. The first comic book reprints
were issued by Quality Comics, from 1944-50; followed
by Fiction House, 1952-54; Harvey Comics 1966-67;
Kitchen Sink Press in 1973 (the "Underground"
Spirits); Warren Publications from 1974-76 (Spirit
magazine #1-16); and Kitchen Sink Press again, from 1977-1998
in periodicals (Spirit magazine #17-41, Spirit comic
book #1-87, Spirit: The Origin Years #1-10, 3-D Spirit,
Spirit: The New Adventures #1-8 and Will Eisner's Quarterly
#1-8) and in book formats. Since 2000 DC Comics has undertaken
an ambitious program to reprint all 645 stories in color hard
covers as The Spirit Archives and in 2006 launched
another new series of authorized Spirit stories.
GRAPHIC NOVELS...
More than a dozen years after he was already tabbed "a national
treasure" by former assistant Jules Feiffer in The
Great Comic Book Heroes in 1965, Eisner created the very
first successful graphic novel ---and popularizing the
term--- with the publication of his seminal A Contract
with God, (1978). The semi-autobiographical "graphic
novel" revolutionized the art form, inspiring countless
fellow professionals worldwide to follow. The graphic novel is
now America's fastest-growing literary genre. Following A
Contract with God, at an age when his contemporaries had
retired, Eisner created over twenty additional graphic
novels and instructional books, including such classics as A
Life Force, Dropsie Avenue, To the
Heart of the Storm, Family Matter and The
Name of the Game --- roughly a book per year till his
death.
Eisner taught comic art classes for years
at the School of Visual Arts in New York City, and authored
two definitive instructional books on the medium, Comics
and Sequential Art and Graphic Storytelling,
both perennial sellers with over twenty reprintings each. The
final book in Eisner's planned instructional trilogy, Expressive
Anatomy, was on his drawing board when he died. It will
be finished with the assistance of Peter Poplaski.
AWARDS...
Since 1988, one of the comics industry's most prestigious awards,
The Eisner Award, has been named after him and presented
annually before a packed ballroom at America's largest comics
convention in San Diego. Nominees are selected each year by blue
ribbon committees, with winners selected by a vote of comics
professionals. Will Eisner modestly accepted several Eisner
Awards over the years, as well as several Harvey Awards,
the other prestigious industry award named after his close friend,
the late Harvey Kurtzman. In 2001 Eisner no doubt broke
a record of some sort by winning separate Harvey Awards
for works he created sixty years apart: the 1940 Spirit
Archives won "Best Reprint" while his then-newest
graphic novel, Last Day in Vietnam, published in
2000, won for "Best Graphic Novel." Eisner has also
won numerous international awards.
In May 2002 Wizard magazine
named Eisner "the most influential comic artist of all time."
Michael Chabon's Pulitzer-prize winning novel Kavalier
and Clay is based in good part on Eisner. In 2002 Eisner
received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National
Federation for Jewish Culture at the Plaza Hotel ballroom
in New York City ---only the second such honor in the organization's
history--- presented by Pulitzer-prize winning cartoonist Art
Spiegelman.
DOCUMENTARIES:
A new film documentary, Will Eisner: The Spirit of an Artistic
Pioneer is underway from Montilla Pictures (Andrew
and Jon Cooke). An earlier 3-part documentary, Will
Eisner: Profession Cartoonist, was produced by Brazilian
director Marisa Furtado (see link at bottom). It won awards
and has been televised and distributed worldwide. Discussions
are underway for an American release in DVD format. Eisner was
also featured in other films, such as Ron Mann's cult hit Comic
Book Confidential.
NEW/RECENT WILL EISNER BOOKS... Fagin
the Jew, Eisner's reinterpretation
of the villain in Charles Dickens' classic Oliver Twist,
was published by Doubleday in 2003. The last major work
he completed before his death, The Plot: The
Secret Story of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion,
was published by W. W. Norton in 2005. Umberto Eco
wrote the introduction. The Plot unravels one of
the most pernicious hoaxes of the twentieth century, a notorious
piece of anti-Semitic propoganda created and disseminated by
Russia's secret police 100 years ago, purporting to be a blueprint
written by Jewish leaders for taking over the world. The
Plot has been published in eight languages, and arrangements
for an Arabic translation is under serious consideration by the
United Nations.
Fourteen graphic novels comprising the
essential "Will Eisner Library" will be steadily
re-issued by W. W. Norton, beginning with The
Contract with God Trilogy (2005) a hardcover combining
three titles which focus on a single mythical block in the Bronx
(A Contract with God, Dropsie Avenue and A Life
Force), with new art and commentary by Eisner. Will
Eisner's New York will be published in hardcover in 2006,
combining The Building, New York: The Big City, City People
Notebook and Invisible People, with never-seen
Eisner art, plus new Eisner/Poplaski art and an introduction
by Neil Gaiman.
DC Comics
released The Will Eisner Companion in 2004, a career
overview by Prof. Christopher Couch and librarian Steven
Weiner). DC continues to publish The Spirit Archives
in hardcover (over twenty volumes are planned) and is producing
new editions of The Spirit, beginning in 2006 with
a Batman/Spirit cross-over (Jeph Loeb/Darwyn
Cooke) and a monthly Spirit series by Cooke
solo.
Dark Horse Comics
in 2005 published Eisner/Miller: One on One, a
wide-ranging dialogue between Eisner and Frank Miller
(Dark Knight, Sin City) and its M Press imprint published
Will Eisner: A Spirited Life, a biography by journalist
Bob Andelman, also in 2005.
IDW Published John Law: Dead Man
Walking in 2003, combining Will Eisner's original 1948
John Law stories with a new authorized Gary Chaloner
incarnation of the character. All-new John Law adventures
are following in 2006 from Chaloner and IDW.
ART EXHIBITS... A
career-spanning art exhibit, "The Will Eisner Retrospective"
opened at MOCCA (Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art)
in New York City in May 2005, and travelled to galleries at Utah
Valley State College (Orem, UT) and The University of
Massachusetts in Amherst (2/06). An extended European tour
is under consideration.
Eisner is also prominently represented
in "Masters of American Comics," a watershed
exhibition devoted to comic art, which opened at the Museum
of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles (11/05) and will travel
to art museums in Milwaukee, Newark and New York City
Will Eisner died January 3, 2005, following
complications from open heart surgery.
WEB SITES
The official Will Eisner
web site, overseen by Jamie Riehle is at www.willeisner.com
Denis Kitchen Art Agency exclusively represents the Eisner
estate for the sale of original artwork...
http://www.deniskitchen.com/Merchant2/merchant.mvc?Screen=CTGY&Category_Code=A_WE
Kitchen and Hansen Agency,
LLC represents
the literary rights to Eisner's large body of work.
http://www.kitchenandhansen.com
Three-minute clips (Mac
or PC) of Marisa Furtado's documentary, Will Eisner:
Profession Cartoonist, are available at:
http://marisafo.sites.uol.com.br/willeisner.html
Will Eisner's John
Law, as updated
by Gary Chaloner, can be viewed at:
http://www.moderntales.com/series.php?name=johnlaw
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All Text © Denis
Kitchen
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