For most of us (well, some of us) comics were our first introduction to narrative art (well, at least
my first). So when the late 1960s rolled around and I was given a healthy diet of underground comics--notably R. Crumb, Kim Deitch,
Yossarian, Spain Rodriguez and others--I was happy as could be.
Undergrounds took what had become a tamed medium and released it from the prison of puritanical hypocrisy. My reawakening came when the
East Village Other published
Gothic Blimp Works (below, bottom), a precursor to the underground comic book. But even after such a feast of anti-establishment fodder I became hungry for more "intellectual" fare. Enter Art Spiegelman. He'd been around, but he had not reached his stride until the publication of
Arcade: The Comics Revue (below, top). It was about the time that the bridge between hippie and post-hippie comics was built when I became art director of the
New York Times Op-Ed page. I asked Spieg to produce the page's first two-part comic (sans words), and also ran some Crumb images that came from
Arcade. I also helped organize
Print's first comics issue with Spiegelman as guest editor (cover, top).
This week
Print has been running
an online interview with Spiegelman on the occasion of the new publication of his first autobiographical book,
Breakdowns. (If you have more time, check out my review at
Design Observer.)
The interview is well worth reading. Want to weigh in on the Spiegelman interview? Leave a
comment here!