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by Robert Crumb
From his Introduction to The
Sketchbook Adventures of Peter Poplaski (forthcoming
from Denis Kitchen Publishing)
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I've known Pete Poplaski for a long time
--since the mid 1970s. When I first met him he was
working for Denis Kitchen's little comic book company, "Krupp
Comic Works," in Princeton, Wisconsin. He was never officially
on the payroll. Denis would give him cash as he needed it --a
very informal arrangement. He struck me right away as a vivid,
highly individual character, with a boyish enthusiasm and energy
that was infectious. He was already in his mid-twenties, an accomplished
artist, producing drawings and paintings of exceptional quality.
Even way back then I urged Kitchen to publish some of his sketchbook
material (he didn't). I could see immediately that he was burning
with fervent idealism and dedication to his art, to the life
of the artist, to the history of art (as of this writing he has
visited more art museums than any other human being on the planet,
I feel certain), to comics, movies, television.
He had then, and still has, among his heroes
Douglas Fairbanks and Buster Keaton, and emulated their way of
leaping about and blithely taking pratfalls. He had a gear fondness
for the comic book superiors, and sincerely believed in their
old heroic ideals which they stood for. I would say he hasn't
changed much over the decades I've known him, except that his
knowledge in various fields of interest is more refined, more
extensive. The boyish enthusiasm has survived intact; the idealism
and dedication to art is still the central theme of his life.
He is still unmarried at age fifty, owns no real estate, lives
quite spontaneously. To his family he has been rather a disappointment.
They would very much like to see him in a secure, comfortable
position in the world, with a nice wife and some nice kids. Pete
may suffer from some anxiety over these expectations of his parents
and relatives, but my observation has been that he will always
jump free of any "adult"-type commitment that presents
itself, whether it be a steady job or a woman who would like
to set up housekeeping with him.
"I'm a cowboy," says Pete. He'd
just as soon eat out of a can and go to bed in his funky old
sleeping bag. I've never known him to officially own a car or
have a functioning telephone. Money burns a hole in his pocket.
His family, the Poplaskis back in Green Bay, are solid Midwesterners,
and they don't see the point. "Pete, what are you doing
with your life," they ask during his visits home. He has
no ready answer for them. How does one explain such a way of
life? He feels bad about it --it haunts him because he still
has strong ties to them and knows that they'll never understand
the life he's chosen. Sure, they admire his artistic skills,
but when is he going to settle down? Where's that wife he should've
had by now? Where are those grandchildren they've been waiting
and hoping to see? Where's the nice house, the car, the recreational
vehicle??
There's no way to explain to these good
people what it takes to be a sincere, dedicated artist in this
world. A lot of things have to go by the wayside. The ideal is
to concentrate on the work. The more focused energy you can put
into the art, the better the art will be. Energy is a finite
thing and if it's not used wisely we get nowhere. It's a battle
every day. You gotta be a warrior, as Pete says. Better that
Pete has steered clear of all those "normal" responsibilities
than if he had taken them on and then behaved irresponsibly.
He has made the choice for art and had the clarity of purpose
to stick to it. That is unusual and commendable.
Pete first arrived at this village here
in France about ten years ago, about a year after I moved here
with my wife and daughter. He came with Denis Kitchen to attend
the annual comics festival in the city of Angouleme, and afterward
they came down here to visit me. He liked it here, liked the
way everything looked, the old stone houses, the dramatic rocky
terrain, "like a movie set," he exclaimed. He came
back and stayed longer each time. The loose, casual "laissez
faire" atmosphere suited him. He found that he could live
here on almost nothing. He would do some commercial work for
American comic publishers occasionally, or sell an oil painting
now and then, and make enough money to get by. He spent the larger
part of his meager earnings collecting old Zorro Movie
posters. Aline and I bought some of his paintings, and Aline
pitched them to her prosperous German friends, and now they own
two or three Poplaskis. We considered them bargains. We were
getting on the ground floor, us, and a few others, before the
rest of the world caught on. Yes, we are supremely confident
of our discerning taste in all aesthetic matters. Pete has produced
many gorgeous town and landscapes, still-lifes and portraits
in oil, charcoal, water color and pen-and-ink since he's been
living here. His work habits are idiosyncratic to say the least,
but when you see the results, the striking pictures he turns
out, there's nothing more to say about it. That's the mysterious
miracle of the human creative process.
Pete is one of these artists who always
totes a sketchbook. He's been piling up sketchbooks for decades.
These books are a visual diary of his life, same as mine are
for me. If you are the type of person who gets enjoyment from
looking at fine drawing, then you are in for hours of pleasure
with this book, for herein are are nearly 200 pages densely packed
with drawings of human faces and figures, buildings, rocks and
trees, all rendered in a manner both pleasing to the eye and
penetrating of the subject. Everything is drawn with character,
essence and vitality. All the faces are of real, live human beings,
individual and unique. The lines tell a story, a narrative taken
directly from the real world. The artist is firmly convinced
that drawing from life produces the strongest, most authentic
art. Every single drawing in this book was made from life. The
people were drawn in cafés, restaurants, waiting rooms
of train stations, bus depots, airports --any public place where
humans are found sitting around.
The artist has to work fast, and try not
to be too obvious. It's best if the subjects are unaware that
they're being "captured." I have been with Pete in
places such as these and watched him surreptitiously drawing
people. He's good at not being noticed. His sketchbook is small,
and he doesn't look like an artist. Not at all. He looks like
the man who reads meters for the utility company. Later, at his
leisure, he will often tighten up and refine these candid portraits,
give them more solidity. There's a drawing of me in here, one
of hundreds of heads. He did it sitting next to me in the back
seat of a moving car. There are several of Aline, and many other
personal friends mixed in with total strangers, Most of the outdoor
scenes, old stone buildings, ruins, and rock landscapes are from
this village and its surroundings. This book is compiled of drawings
from several sketchbooks filled up since the artist has been
living here in the south of France with periodic sojourns back
in the U.S.A.
The cumulative effect, on me, of looking
at Poplaski's sketchbooks is an optimistic feeling, an affirmation
of life, of people. This is good for me --a tonic for a curmudgeon
such as myself, who tends toward a bleak, despairing outlook.
All the people in this book appear heroic, each in their own
personal way, in their own struggle for survival, because Pete's
spirit is essentially positive, buoyant, resilient, and this
shines through in all his drawings and paintings. It is this
positive spirit that gives his artistic skill its real reason
and purpose for being.
---R. CRUMB
Sauve, France
February 2002
See gallery of
Pete art and photos here
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