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Hardcover Masters of American Comics Book

ISBN: 030011317X

ISBN13: 9780300113174

Masters of American Comics

Comic strips and comic books were among the most popular and influential forms of mass media in 20thcentury America. This fascinating book focuses on fifteen pioneering cartoonists--ranging from... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Hardcover

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Comics at their best

The newspaper comic strip has been around for a little over a century and the earliest comic books are around eighty years old themselves. That's a reasonably long time, and there have been a lot of people who've worked in the field. Many have been pretty mediocre, a small group have been good, and there are an elite few who've been truly great. Although you may not agree with the complete list (I don't), Masters of American Comics does a pretty good job selecting the artists who belong in this elite group. This coffee table book is divided into two parts. In the first section, we get a history of the comics in general, with a particular focus on the contributions of the elite artists. The second section is a collection of essays by various writers both inside and outside the comic industry; each essay deals with one of the fifteen featured artists. Who are these artists (who also often wrote their material)? The first (both chronologically and within the book) is Windsor McCay whose Little Nemo in Slumberland remains one of the most wildly imaginative comic strips ever. McCay, incidentally, was also one of the very earliest animators. Lyonel Feininger's career was pretty brief, but his Kinder-Kids strips offer some more mind-bending art. George Herriman was the creator of arguably the greatest comic strip ever, Krazy Kat. E.C. Segar brought Popeye to the world in a comic strip that was far more clever than any of the cartoons. Frank King's Gasoline Alley dealt with more of the mundane aspects of life, but did so brilliantly; it is the longest active comic, though King's successors have made it a pale shadow of its former self. Chester Gould's Dick Tracy brought hard-boiled crime to the comics, and Milton Caniff raised adventure to a new level with Terry and the Pirates (and later Steve Canyon). More modern artists include Charles Schulz, whose Peanuts is probably the most popular strip ever. Will Eisner brought a new respectability to the medium with The Spirit. Jack Kirby, the first real comic book artist in the bunch, is well-worth mention for his part in creating most of the great Marvel superheroes (and a few DC characters too). Harvey Kurtzmann does not have a single famous character, but his role in the EC comics of the 1950s and the early Mad Magazine was considerable. R. Crumb was a major figure in the early underground comics movement. Art Spiegelman, Gary Panter and Chris Ware are all still active and further extending the boundaries of what comics can be. Spiegelman would also win a Pulitzer for his Holocaust epic, Maus, demonstrating that the medium was more than just kids' fare. There is a heap of art in Masters of American comics, much of it in color, making this quite a treat, and an excellent companion piece to the museum exhibition which inspired it. It also shows that quality and popularity are two almost separate fields: the big strips of today - Garfield, Dennis the Menace, Cathy, Marmaduke, et a

Masters all

I recently purchased The Monster of Frankenstein, Dick Briefer's Horror Comic Epic" and was so enthralled by this golden age comic that I had to have more. "Masters of Comic Art", a reexamination of pop culture comics morphed in to fine art, is a useful overview of a "who's who" in the comic world. Beautifully reproduced in full color and loaded with great art and interesting information about the creators makes this book a must have.

Comic retrospective

This book works well with the museum exhibit, if you get the chance to see it. If you don't, the book itself is a good overview of comic history, and the pictures are great.

THE COMICS AS "ART" ... IT'S ABOUT TIME THEY'RE ACCLAIMED!

I grew up with "Sunday funnies," as we called them way back then. It was a form of pleasure for the whole family to pass the comics back and forth, with Dad getting first reading, of course. At times I grow nostalgic for the "good old days," but I noticed it more when my kids were growing up. After church, when I sat down to read the "funnies," they were already out the door--to soccer, football, and other sporting events--either as participants or observers. And now, when I try to get my grandkids interested in "reading" the comics, they're too busy "watching" them on DVD or playing their hand-held video games. My, how the times have changed! But, all in all, most of the changes are good. Now, with this book about the creators of American Comics, and the proliferation of movies and books based on comic strip heroes--such as Superman, Batman, Spiderman, etc.--the public curiosity about the history of comics will be partially satisfied. Oops--mustn't forget Wonder Woman, Wonder Girl, Bionic Woman and all the other strong, beautiful heroines who came to the rescue in countless other movies; they nurtured the American women's spirit of independence, and encouraged our imaginations to run wild with possibilities. All I can say is: Thanks to all the talented creators of these amazing characters, awesome stories. Since some well-known art curators are praising the book, then the comics have definitely arrived! They're finally being recognized as a form of "art" that has made valuable contributions to mankind, as a comprehensive depiction of life--inarguably, a "different" format, but an honorable one. It's about time! As an author of a very unique book about COMPUTER cartoon characters, I truly appreciate this book and what it will do for the comic industry. And it's a lovely book, too. - Betty Dravis, Nov. 9

Cartoons, An Art Form Museum Bound

If 'art' can be defined as a view of the world or reaction or politicizing or representational through the many guises of that term as perceived by one who paints, sculpts, photographs, or draws, then the premise that 'comics' or 'cartoons' deserve the stature of an art form is certainly a viable decision. This large and generously illustrated volume, produced to accompany a museum exhibition, is probably as fine a treatise as is currently available, and if the book is representative of the exhibition to soon follow at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, then expectations can be justifiably high. Editors/curators John Carlin, Paul Karasik, and Brian Walker have complied a group of 15 comic artists, those whose works have been significantly before the public since the 1940's. By limiting the number of cartoonists presented, the writing contributors of this large volume have concentrated more on issues as defined by comics, the effect of comics on the reading American public, the viability of comics as a forum for public statement and parody, and as a means of entertainment. While many of the artists' names will not be familiar (Chris Ware, Winsor McCay, Lyonel Feininger, EC Segar, Chester Gould, Charles Schultz, Will Eisner, Harvey Kurtzman, Ari Spiegelman, Gary Painter, George Herriman, Jack Kirby and R. Crumb) certainly their comic strips, comic books, and individual drawings will strike chords of acknowledgement with the public. And the proliferation of comic book character driven films has already paved the way for the public's interest in a comics survey. The many contributed essays are variable, from entertaining to illuminating, and are from a well-chosen and curious band of writers: Jonathan Safran Foer, Raymond Pettibon , Tom De Haven, Pete Hamill, Cynthia Burlingham, Jules Feiffer, Glen David Gold, Matt Groening, Staley Crouch, Karla An Manning, Robert Storr, and Dave Eggers. If at times the essays become dry and didactic, veering from the content of the form, each still adds important information about the various artists and the history of comics. Though some artists, such as Raymond Pettibon and Mike Kelley, have always made art in the form of comic strips thereby setting a precedent for the museum presentation of this medium, it still remains to be seen how the size inherent in comic strips will look on the walls of a vast museum. Some fear the space will not add to the power of the works, that they are better viewed in the context of this book. But given the creativity of MASTERS OF AMERICAN COMICS it is probable that Curator John Carlin and his associates have overcome this potential visual presentational boredom. But even if the exhibition is not wholly successful in format, this book/catalogue certainly is! Grady Harp, November 05
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