Tuesday, July 02, 2024

Meet a Visiting Cartoonist: Gabriela Epstein (UPDATED!)

Self-portrait (all images from Gabriela's website)

 by Mike Rhode

Gabriela Epstein spoke recently about her 2023 graphic novel, Danny Phantom: A Glitch in Time at Fantom Comics. Unfortunately I missed the talk, which I'm told was great, but I did get there in time to buy signed books and ask about an interview. Gabriela obliged with both, and I think this fairly in-depth interview is a good introduction to her work, except for her animation career which I forgot to ask about (now corrected!). I thoroughly enjoyed her two most recent books, Invisible, and Danny Phantom and recommend them.

What type of comic work or cartooning do you do?

So far, I’ve done adaptation work, graphic novel illustration and now some writing. Running the full gamut!

How do you do it? Traditional pen and ink, computer or a combination?

I draw everything digitally. The first several books I drew for Scholastic were drawn with an old Wacom Tablet and my laptop, but now I draw exclusively on my iPad. It mimics the feel of using a Cintiq at my old job and is a bit more portable.

When (within a decade is fine) and where were you born?

I was born April, 1993, in Pennsylvania.  Spent time in central PA and Philly growing up.

What neighborhood or area do you live in?

I live in Austin, TX, now.

What is your training and/or education in cartooning?

Technically speaking, I don’t have much. Although I studied at two art schools (PAFA and RISD), I never managed to snag a single comics course. All my comic making is self-taught.

That said, comics is an amalgamation of different skills like figure drawing, color theory, perspective, etc. so for those things I’d credit my two years at PAFA for giving me my fundamentals in drawing. All the digital tools I use now I taught myself via online tutorials artists would post on Tumblr and Twitter.

So how did you get into animation? 

I wasn't sure what I wanted to do until my final semester of school. I cobbled together a 2D character design portfolio in my final class (thanks, MJ!) and submitted it to every studio until I got a call-back from Powerhouse Animation.

What did you work on there?

I worked as a character and prop designer on the Nickelodeon series The Adventures of Kid Danger.

Why did you leave for graphic novels?

I'd been getting recruited for lots of comic gigs while I was trying for a career in animation. I'd keep taking smaller ones just to create content, but as it turns out that just made more people think I was a cartoonist. I figured I should lean into that because the competition for jobs in animation is so tough there was no way I'd make it full time. At least, not without my body and soul intact.

Who are your influences?

My early comic influences were Todd Nauck (Young Justice, Teen Titans Go!) and Sean Galloway (Spider-man). Now I look a lot to Mitsuru Adachi (Cross Game) and Haruichi Furudate (Haikyuu!) for paneling and composition, and Satoru Noda (Golden Kamuy, Supinamarada!) for comedic drawing.

If you could, what in your career would you do-over or change?

I’d probably take a break before attending art school to get myself situated mental health-wise. I’ve learned the hard way that no matter where you go, you’re stuck with yourself. If you’re not happy foundationally, you’re not gonna get the full experience of whatever program or job you’ve got going on. I burnt myself out majorly, and that kind of work/life balance is simply unsustainable. I eventually did take a year off in 2015 and it was the best decision of my life. Helped me recenter and see what I actually wanted to do with my time rather than chase ghosts of what I could/should be.

What work are you best-known for?

Haha, probably my Baby-Sitters Club adaptations.

How did you get the job illustrating the Babysitter's Club graphic novels? 

I had been recruited for the book Invisible, which led to me signing on with my first agent back in 2018. In my talks with Scholastic, the opportunity to test for BSC came up and I gave it a shot. Considering that my predecessors were Raina and Gale, I didn’t think I had a good chance of getting the job, but I figured the testing would be valuable practice. I’ve learned so much from my experience working on that series—more than I can put into words.

How did it feel to follow Raina on that series?

I hadn’t read any of her work before signing on, so I went to the library and checked out all her books and read them all in one day. Her style is clear, concise, yet emotive. This is an extremely difficult skill to master, and something I greatly admire. She is a cartooning god, and I’m so humbled to learn and benefit from the creative decisions she made on the first four books of the series. 

Invisible, the book you illustrated with Christina Diaz Gonzalez, is the story of five Latin American school kids who are all from different Latino backgrounds. The story deals with racism, classicism, homelessness and the immigrant experience. How did you get this assignment?

Scholastic reached out to me and several other Latine artists to test for the project. Funny enough, I was originally going to decline because I am a white Latine and didn’t feel qualified to tell a legitimate Latine story. My mom (first gen Chilean immigrant) disabused me of that notion and encouraged me to at least test for the job.

For my test, I took a design pass at the core group of kids and illustrated several pages of comics based on a short test script I was given. Christina opted for my test, and we’ve stuck with my designs with little change.

Did you and Diaz Gonzalex work together, or was there an editor in between you?

Unfortunately, the project was a long game of telephone, haha. I would talk to my agent, who would talk to the editor, who would talk to Christina’s agent, who would talk to her. I think things would’ve moved much easier had we simply been allowed to do direct Zoom meetings. That said, Christina was very chill and graceful with all the changes I brought up to the story and potential designs for characters and locations, and for that I’m very grateful.

Was this just a job, or could you relate to the underlying story and issues?

Yes, I do connect with the characters’ struggles with identity and the unique experience of living with a parent/parents who are immigrants. There is a sense of otherness that is pervasive and isolating—one is not quite American, and yet I could never be thought of as Chilean, either. I think working on the story has made me more secure in my identity and much more aware of my own unique privileges within both worlds.

How was the book received? I was very impressed with it and enjoyed it.

The book has gotten many starred reviews and awards for which I’m grateful. However, those things don’t mean much to me in comparison to what it means for the kids who read it. As long as it helps kids feel like their experiences are validated, I consider the book to have been a worthwhile endeavor.

Additionally, I’m very happy with how the bilingual aspect of the lettering worked out and am hopeful this will be used for more ESL books in the future. [editor's note: When a character speaks in Spanish, it's shown first, and then in English in a second balloon. It works well. I don't know if it's colloquial to each character's country, but I would guess it is not.]

Danny Phantom wrap-around cover art

What work are you most proud of?

The Danny Phantom books. It was my first foray into writing, drawing and art directing all in one go, so they’re always gonna have a special place in my heart.

In your Fantom Comics talk, you spoke of your liking for the Danny Phantom animated series. Can you go into that a bit here?

I was a huge fan of the show since its premiere in 2004. I was just going through some old sketchbooks at my dad’s house and was blown away by the style change in my drawings before and after watching a season of Danny Phantom. I think a lot of the angularity of my style can be attributed to Stephen Silver’s designs on that show.

Danny Phantom was also my first foray into the fandom experience—lurking on forums, reading fanfiction and making fan art, so it would always be special to me in that sense. It’s been a comfort show I’ve rewatched many times and despite its extremely y2k humor, still holds up well!

How did you get this job? Did you pitch the publisher, or did they seek you out?

Abrams gave me a call to see if I’d be interested in illustrating a continuation of the series in comic form back in early 2020. I’d just published a charity Danny Phantom zine with some friends the year prior, so I think that may have had something to do with it, but I honestly don’t know. Looking back, a lot of my portfolio at the time was made up of Danny Phantom fan art, so that could’ve also been a factor.

Is this your first major writing assignment? How does that differ from illustrating someone else's script?

Yes! This was my first time being asked to write and draw a book for an existing IP. I was extremely nervous because I’d never written something that long before and hadn’t taken any formal classes in writing, either. To prepare, I read a few books on the subject and wrote some spec scripts for different shows to get the gist of writing out a full story.

That was the biggest hurdle for me. When I’m adapting books like the BSC, or illustrating for Invisible, I can make many edits and change the story for the better, but the bones of it are already in place. To start from scratch was more daunting, but the team at Abrams was very happy to walk me through everything. The nicest part was getting to draw it, too, so if I thought of better gags or more dramatic ways to stage a scene, I could just go ahead and do it without worrying if the writer would approve. That elasticity in the process made for a fun time!

 Is it the first of the series? Wikipedia says it is, but what is your plan / involvement?

Yes—right now I’m working on a sequel book that is due out in 2025. Future books would depend on how well it sells, but I would love to continue contributing to this franchise. I’ve got some story arcs in mind that would be nice to bring to fruition, so I have my fingers crossed. Even if that doesn’t come to pass, though, I’m so happy to have had this opportunity. It’s truly a dream come true!

What would you like to do or work on in the future?

I’ve wanted to make my own sports comic for years now, but for various reasons it has never felt like the right time. Hopefully that will change soon.  I want to make a hockey series! 

What do you do when you're in a rut or have writer's block?

I take a break. Often, consuming other media can spark ideas to solve your own story solutions. Like, “Man, I forgot how much I hated how x show handled this topic. I’d do it this way!” and all of a sudden you’re running for your notebook with bits of ideas that can totally restructure your story.

What do you think will be the future of your field?

Hard to say, considering how unstable the entertainment industry is right now. I think the market for graphic novels will continue as is, if not get larger. With comics now being used more and more in educational settings, I can’t imagine they’d lose popularity.

That said, I don’t know how this will translate to the creation of said comics. Publishers are already expressing interest in AI, and the labor force that creates comics is already woefully underpaid—both contractors and salaried editors and designers. This post-Covid cloud economy is a shambles. Could this lead to a breaking point in labor relations within the publishing industry? One can only hope. As it is, the contractor model for graphic novel creation in the US is abysmal and only affords those with baked-in financial stability the freedom to create. That’s a recipe for a lot of books that look and sound the same.

What cons do you attend? Any comments about attending them?

I don’t attend cons too much. I would love to go to NYCC again, though, and SDCC if they’ll have me for Danny Phantom 2!

What comic books do you read regularly or recommend? Do you have a local store?

The current series I’m following are Witch Hat Atelier and Dungeon Meshi. I’m mostly discovering old comics for myself now. My favorite local comic shops in Austin are Dragon’s Lair and Tribe!

Do you have a website or blog?

I have a portfolio site where I will post the occasional events that I do. www.gre-art.com


Check Please! postcard art



Ryan Holmberg, formerly of Silver Spring, has a new translated manga out

REVIEWS: SECOND HAND LOVE

Helen Chazan | July 2, 2024 | https://www.tcj.com/reviews/second-hand-love/

 

SECOND HAND LOVE

YAMADA MURASAKI, TRANSLATED BY RYAN HOLMBERG

Drawn & Quarterly

Comics Research Bibliography citations update, 7/1/2024

'REALLY I JUST WANT TO STAY HOME AND MAKE ART ABOUT MY DOG': AN INTERVIEW WITH SARA VARON

Gina Gagliano | July 1, 2024 

https://www.tcj.com/really-i-just-want-to-stay-home-and-make-art-about-my-dog-an-interview-with-sara-varon/

 

What, Me Worry? The Art and Humor of MAD Magazine exhibit explored by Bruce Guthrie

by Bruce Guthrie

July 01, 2024

https://comicsdc.blogspot.com/2024/07/what-me-worry-art-and-humor-of-mad.html

 

In memory of Howard Roy Beckerman, NY, December 25, 1930 - June 29, 2024

https://everloved.com/life-of/howard-beckerman/obituary/

 

Good Omens Graphic Novel Coloring Deep Dive: Swimming in Color.

COLLEEN DORAN

COLLEEN DORAN'S FUNNY BUSINESS JUL 1

2024 https://colleendoran.substack.com/p/good-omens-graphic-novel-coloring

 

Crunchyroll to Stream 'Kaiju No. 8' Season Two

Shortly after the hit show's first-season finale on Saturday, Crunchyroll revealed that storied Japanese anime studio Production I.G. has already begun production on a second season.

BY PATRICK BRZESKI

JUNE 30, 2024 

HTTPS://WWW.HOLLYWOODREPORTER.COM/TV/TV-NEWS/CRUNCHYROLL-KAIJU-NO-8-SEASON-TWO-1235936214/

 

Crunchyroll to Release 'Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle' in Theaters as Film Trilogy

An earlier film in the 'Demon Slayer' franchise, 'Mugen Train,' is the top-grossing Japanese film of all time, having earned over $500 million at the global box office.

BY PATRICK BRZESKI

JUNE 30, 2024 HTTPS://WWW.HOLLYWOODREPORTER.COM/MOVIES/MOVIE-NEWS/CRUNCHYROLL-DEMON-SLAYER-THEATERS-FILM-TRILOGY-1235936072/

 

Box Office Milestone: 'Inside Out 2' Crosses $1 Billion Globally in Record Time
The Pixar sequel is the 11th animated film to achieve this feat and the first movie to do so since 'Barbie' almost a year ago.
BY PAMELA MCCLINTOCK
JUNE 30, 2024

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/inside-out-2-joins-billion-dollar-box-office-club-1235935762/

 

Ryan Coogler, Mattson Tomlin Team for 'A Vicious Circle' at Universal (Exclusive)
Tomlin will write the adaptation of the Boom! Studios comic he co-created with artist Lee Bermejo.
BY BORYS KIT
JUNE 28, 2024 

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/ryan-coogler-mattson-tomlina-vicious-circle-1235935106/

 

Hamptons home of iconic artist who created over 600 New Yorker drawings lists for $4.1M [Saul Steinberg ]

Mary K. Jacob 

June 28 2024

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/realestate/hamptons-home-of-iconic-artist-who-created-over-600-new-yorker-drawings-lists-for-4-1m/ar-BB1p5miE?item=flightsprg-tipsubsc-v1a/

 

Weekly Shonen Jump's Editor-in-Chief Hiroyuki Nakano steps down
The head of the magazine steps down after 7 years
By Matias De la Piedra -07/01/2024  
https://www.comicsbeat.com/weekly-shonen-jumps-editor-in-chief-hiroyuki-nakano-steps-down/

 

On Jim Lee, Charging Up To $35,000 For Private Commission Artwork; Back in April, Bleeding Cool looked at the commission rates of Jim Lee, Publisher and CCO of DC Comics, from his agent Albert Moy. 

30 Jun 2024   by Rich Johnston  

https://bleedingcool.com/comics/on-jim-lee-charging-up-to-35000-for-private-commission-artwork/

 

Gail Simone On Jim Lee, Batman And Wolverine

Gail Simone shared a reason to love the Jim Lee, currently DC Comics publisher and CCO, from San Diego Comic-Con in 2009.

30 Jun 2024   

by Rich Johnston  https://bleedingcool.com/comics/gail-simone-on-jim-lee-batman-and-wolverine/

 

Interview: Claudia Christian on her new project, DARK LEGACIES!
The actress is releasing a compendium edition of her universe through Zoop!
By Diego Higuera -07/01/2024
https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-claudia-christian-on-her-new-project-dark-legacies/

 

Copyright Vigilantes: Intellectual Property and the Hollywood Superhero

By Ezra Claverie

University Press of Mississippi  2024

https://www.upress.state.ms.us/Books/C/Copyright-Vigilantes

 

The Disney+ Kingdom: Essays on Nostalgia, Representation and Branding

Edited by David Whitt and John Perlich

McFarland 2024

https://mcfarlandbooks.com/product/the-disney-kingdom/

 

The Music of the How to Train Your Dragon Trilogy: A Guide to the Scores of John Powell

Erik Heine

McFarland 2024

https://mcfarlandbooks.com/product/the-music-of-the-how-to-train-your-dragon-trilogy/


Keefe, Jim. 2008.

Jim Keefe: Sketches & Drawings No. 1 [sketchbook].

Keefe Studios

 

The art of Jack Davis, MAD cartoonist and one of the all-time greats

Ruben Bolling

Boing Boing Jun 26, 2024

https://boingboing.net/2024/06/26/the-art-of-jack-davis-mad-cartoonist-and-one-of-the-all-time-greats.html

 

BAXTER'S BREAKDOWNS

July 1, 2024 posted by Devon Baxter

Howard Beckerman (1930-2024)

https://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/howard-beckerman-1930-2024/

 

Renowned Animator, Historian and Educator Howard Beckerman Dies at 93

 Ramin Zahed

June 30, 2024

https://www.animationmagazine.net/2024/06/renowned-animator-historian-and-educator-howard-beckerman-dies-at-93/

 

Rebels Forever: 'Ed, Edd n Eddy' Creator Danny Antonucci Looks Back on His Much-Loved 25-Year-Old Show

By Ramin Zahed

June 28, 2024

https://www.animationmagazine.net/2024/06/rebels-forever-ed-edd-n-eddy-creator-danny-antonucci-looks-back-on-his-much-loved-25-year-old-show/

June-July '24 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 341).

 

Ready to Pivot and Adapt: How Top Animation Service Studios Are Facing Today's Industry Challenges

By Ryan Gaur

June 28, 2024

https://www.animationmagazine.net/2024/06/ready-to-pivot-and-adapt-how-top-animation-service-studios-are-facing-todays-industry-challenges/

This article was written for the

June-July '24 issue of Animation Magazine (No. 341).

 

Much-Loved Animation Industry Veteran Adina Pitt Leaves Warner Bros. Discovery

 Animation Magazine

June 28, 2024

 https://www.animationmagazine.net/2024/06/much-loved-animation-industry-veteran-adina-pitt-leaves-warner-bros-discovery/

 

July comics preview: an ode to EC Comics and a follow-up to an Eisner Award-winning DC Black Label miniseries

Epitaphs From The Abyss, The Nice House By The Sea, You And A Bike And A Road, and more comics you need to read this month

Oliver Sava

AV Club July 1 2024

https://www.avclub.com/july-2024-comic-books-new-releases-preview-1851567306

 

Inside Out 2 is officially one of the most successful animated films ever at the box office

The emotional Pixar sequel crossed the $1 billion threshold internationally this weekend

Emma Keates

AV Club July 1 2024

https://www.avclub.com/weekend-box-office-inside-out-2-quiet-place-day-one-1851569932

 

IDEAS DON'T BLEED episode ninety-four | Deniz Camp, part two

Jul 01, 2024

https://ashcanpress.substack.com/p/why-i-should-stick-my-neck-out-for

 

Antony Starr sees Homelander as much more than a Donald Trump parallel

The connections between the two power-hungry figures are undeniable, but The Boys wanted to "create something a bit more layered than that"

Emma Keates

AV Club July 1 2024

https://www.avclub.com/the-boys-anthony-starr-homlander-donald-trump-1851570964

 

Tiffany Hong       

 

          "'Love Persevering': Nostalgic Curation, MCU Futurity, and Interstitial Grief in WandaVision." Spoiler! Literature, Media, and the Spoiler, edited by Christine Lötscher, Simon Spiegel, and Natalie Borsy, Lever Press, forthcoming.

 

          Review of Comics and the Origins of Manga: A Revisionist History, by Eike Exner. INKS: The Journal of the Comics Studies Society, vol. 7, no. 2, 2023, pp. 204-206.

 

          Review of Representing Acts of Violence in Comics, edited by Nina Mickwitz, Ian Horton, and Ian Hague. Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics, vol. 14, no. 5, 2023, pp. 750-754.

 

          Review of Women's Manga in Asia and Beyond: Uniting Different Cultures and Identities, edited by Fusami Ogi, Rebecca Suter, Kazumi Nagaike, and John A. Lent. Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics, vol. 14, no. 3, 2023, pp. 475-477. 

 

          Review of Authorizing Superhero Comics: On the Evolution of a Popular Serial Genre by Daniel Stein. Studies in Comics, vol. 13, no. 1/2, 2022, pp. 169-173.

 

          "'You Too Shall Be New': Synthezoid Phenomenology and Canonical Memory in The Vision." (excerpt and reprint) Superheroes and Excess: A Philosophical Adventure, edited by Jamie Brassett and Richard Reynolds, Routledge Advances in Comics Studies, 2021, pp. 102-120.

 

          "'You Too Shall Be New': Synthezoid Phenomenology and Canonical Memory in The Vision." ImageTexT, vol. 12, no. 1, 2021.

 

          "Academics on Avengers: Endgame, Part 2." Sequart Organization, edited by Nicholas Yanes, 2020, http://sequart.org/magazine/69827/academics-on-avengers-endgame-part-2/

 

          "Distortions of Superheroism, Radical Interiority, and Victimhood in Sam Kieth's The Maxx." The Dark Side: A Supervillain Reader, edited by Robert Peaslee and Robert Weiner, University of Mississippi Press, 2020, pp. 357-371.

 

          "'Of Course We Record It': Legacy, Textual Violence, and Fridging in Ales Kot's Zero." Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics, vol. 8, no. 3, 2017, pp. 277-294.

 

          "Transformed by Comics: The Murakamiverse, Palimpsestic Iconography, and Cumulative Meaning in the Fiction of Murakami Haruki." Image [&] Narrative, vol. 17, no. 3, 2016, pp. 57-67.

 

Monday, July 01, 2024

PR: CALL FOR ENTRIES: The 2024 Rex Babin Memorial Award

A PSA.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE



CALL FOR ENTRIES: The 2024 Rex Babin Memorial Award for Excellence in Local Cartooning



SACRAMENTO, CA — The Association of American Editorial Cartoonists has long championed those who work for small and local newspapers, and once again in 2024 the AAEC is looking for the best in political cartooning. The Rex Babin Memorial Award for Excellence in Local Cartooning (named after the late Sacramento cartoonist) focuses on state and local editorial cartoons, an issue of great importance to Babin during his lifetime.


While his work was syndicated nationally, Rex Babin was a strong believer in the power of editorial cartoons to have real influence at the local level. As the cartoonist for daily newspapers in two different state capitals, he saw how effective satire could sometimes be when directed at targets across the street. His unique drawing style stood out among the work of his peers, and his fellow cartoonists elected him President of the AAEC in 2009. 


"Rex Babin was one of the foremost practitioners of the local cartoon" said Jack Ohman, Babin's long-time friend and current AAEC President, "and the AAEC once again honors Rex and his work with this Award."


This year's judges includes previous recipients Matt Davies, Steve Stegelin and Joel Pett. This year's award will be presented during the AAEC joint convention with their Canadian counterparts in Montreal in October.


The deadline to enter is Friday, August 23, 2024.



+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + 


The Rex Babin Memorial Award for Excellence in Local Cartooning — Rules & Eligibility


• Any editorial cartoonist or graphic journalist who comments on or covers local, state or provincial events in the U.S., Canada or Mexico is eligible to enter; membership in the AAEC or ACC is not required. 


• Please submit ten cartoons and a 150 word statement from the artist about their work and its impact. 


• Cartoons must have been published between July 2023 and June 2024.   


• Cartoons should be in a 300dpi jpeg format, and emailed to rexbabinaward@gmail.com


• There is no entry fee.


• The judging criteria are: 

  1) Cartoons on a local or state subject that have a strong political or social impact; 

  2) Excellence in draftsmanship and ideas.


The deadline to enter is Friday, August 23, 2024.


+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + 



For more information on the award, contact Matt Davies at Matthew.Davies@newsday.com. For more information on the AAEC, go to editorialcartoonists.com.


Create a Graphic Novel events at MoCo libraries this summer

Some are already full.

From July 8-12 at White Oak & July 29-August 5 at Wheaton Library, teens will write and illustrate their own graphic novel page. Art supplies will be provided to be used during the sessions. This class is facilitated by illustrator Leila Cabib, and is funded in part by an Arts in Education Grant from the Maryland State Arts Council. Register here.

What, Me Worry? The Art and Humor of MAD Magazine exhibit explored by Bruce Guthrie

by Bruce Guthrie


I did an overnight visit to Stockbridge, Massachusetts to visit the new "What, Me Worry?  The Art and Humor of MAD Magazine" exhibit at the Norman Rockwell Museum.  

Stockbridge is about 370 miles -- 6+ hours and many, many tolls -- from downtown DC. For those who are thinking that's a long way to drive for an exhibit, keep in mind that this area of Massachusetts has lots of other sites to justify the trip.  In the immediate area of the museum, you have Chesterwood (sculptor Daniel Chester French's house and studio), The Mount (Edith Wharton's mansion), Arrowhead (Herman Melville's house), Alice's Restaurant, and the Guthrie Center at Old Trinity Church ("but Alice doesn't live in the restaurant, she lives in the church nearby the restaurant, in the bell-tower, with her husband Ray and Fasha the dog").

On the drive up, you'll pass lots of places like Hyde Park where you can tour FDR's house, Eleanor Roosevelt's cabin (Val-Kill), and Frederick Vanderbilt's mansion.  (A ranger there once told me a fascinating story of why FDR, who hated the Vanderbilts, decided to have the NPS acquire it.) And you'll drive past Poughkeepsie which was about the only line from the "French Connection" movie that I can't forget ("Ever picked your feet in Poughkeepsie?").

Anyway, the exhibit...

It features 150-ish pieces of original artwork from MAD magazine.  These span the entire history of the magazine so there are pages going back to Superduperman (1953) and Woman Wonder (1954).  Artists shown include a who's who in cartooning -- Harvey Kurtzman, Don Martin, Dave Berg, Jack Davis, Frank Frazetta, Kelly Freas, Sergio Aragones, Norman Mingo, Angelo Torres, Wally Wood, Peter Kuper, Keith Knight, Tom Richmond, Sam Viviano, James Warhola...  Lots of original cover paintings (including the one done by the non-human ape, J. Fred Muggs) are exhibited, as well as inside pages.  The intricate detail on some of those early inside pages is amazing -- you need to examine the pages closely to appreciate them.

George C. Scott as General George Patton
There are special sections dedicated to Spy Vs Spy, Al Jaffee's fold-ins, and Mort Drucker gets an entire room.  (The latter features a surprising number of originals from NoVa's David Apatoff and Nell Minow -- David was one of the advisors for the exhibit.)  The fold-in section has an interactive kiosk where you can select a MAD cover, see the unfolded fold-in, and then watch it fold-in.  

There are a few exhibit cases including one which contains letters MAD wrote to Norman Rockwell in 1964 asking him to do a cover for the magazine.  (You have to appreciate the letter saying "we are enclosing some material on our little idiot boy.")  The magazine offered him $1,000 to do a charcoal sketch, but Rockwell declined.

Another case has antecedents of the Alfred E. Neuman character.  MAD, which started using the character in 1954, didn't create the character.  It was used in print advertising as far back as 1894.  Even the phrase "What, me worry?" was based on text appearing in previous ads.  In 1965, a copyright case made it to the Supreme Court.  The widow of Harry Spencer Stuff, who had copyrighted the image after using it in a 1914 cartoon, sued the magazine for the use of the image.  The court, which back then cared about precedent, said the image was in wide use before Stuff's copyright and his copyright was therefore invalid.  So the figure is apparently in the public domain.  ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_E._Neuman )


The exhibit briefly mentions the size of the magazine.  I had always heard that the only reason it shifted to magazine size was to avoid conflicts with the Comic Code Authority.  An exhibit sign says "Harvey Kurtzman was intent on recreating MAD as a magazine -- a shift that Bill Gaines supported to keep his editor from defecting to Pageant, a monthly journal, for higher pay."  

When the museum does temporary exhibits like these, it usually does a side exhibit showcasing some of Rockwell's pieces that fit into the theme.  The connected exhibit this time is "Norman Rockwell: Illustrating Humor" which features about 20 of his original paintings or studies (which are usually done full size, so they're amazing on their own).  
 
In the separate "The Art of Norman Rockwell: Highlights from the Permanent Collection" exhibit, the museum includes a number of paintings which are critical to our current appreciation of Rockwell including the original "Four Freedoms" paintings, "The Problem We All Live With" (Ruby Bridges integrating the New Orleans school), and "Murder in Mississippi" (the painting he did after Michael Schwerner, James Chaney, and Andrew Goodman were murdered in Mississippi -- the 50th anniversary of that lynching was this June 21). 

The 64-page catalog for the exhibit is done to look like an issue of the magazine.  Priced ("Our Price Cheap! (-ish)") at $19.52 (the year the magazine started), it features lots of essays by folks like Steve Brodner (exhibition co-curator), Dick DeBartolo, David Apatoff, Peter Kuper, and Sam Viviano (lead advisor).  Like the magazine, it includes marginal drawings by Sergio Aragones and a new MAD Fold-In by Johnny Sampson plus some of Al Jaffee's classic ones.  It has some pieces that are not in the exhibit.  In other cases, the catalog shows the final printed page with word balloons which aren't always on the original pieces shown in the exhibit.  It's a great supplement, not a substitute, to the exhibit.   You can order it online at https://store.nrm.org/books-and-video/exhibition-catalogues/mad-exhibition-magazine.html



Random observations about the audience...  The loudest laughs were from a large crowd watching a video of "Airplane" that was playing in one of the galleries.  I didn't see any non-white attendees when I was there. One woman complained to her companion about how few original Norman Rockwell paintings were in the Norman Rockwell Museum, saying they had to come back when there wasn't a traveling exhibit there. (The museum ALWAYS has traveling exhibits.)  Given the magazine having been around for 70+ years, I saw folks rediscovering the art they grew up on and studying the newer pieces that they had missed.  Younger folks seemed a little out of place but they probably don't know who Norman Rockwell is either.  
 
The exhibit runs until October 27.  The website includes an offer to other museums to "Host this Exhibition!" so maybe it will be appearing at other venues in the future.

Web sources:

Norman Rockwell Museum pages:

What, Me Worry? The Art and Humor of MAD Magazine


Norman Rockwell: Illustrating Humor

The Art of Norman Rockwell: Highlights from the Permanent Collection

I did my own obsessive thing of course, photographing pieces and signs.  Most photos turned out.  In some cases, I had trouble figuring out which wall text corresponded to which piece so there is a problem with duplication.  I had to divide the main exhibit into three separate pages but I'll combine them later after I resolve the wall text.  Plus there's another one for the "Norman Rockwell: Illustrating Humor" component.  For now, these are my pages:

What, Me Worry? The Art and Humor of MAD Magazine

Norman Rockwell: Illustrating Humor


Or, if you have the patience to see all 910 (!) images shown on the same page, try:
http://www.bguthriephotos.com/graphlib.nsf/(Merge)?OpenAgent&merge=MA_Rockwell_2024_MAD&opt=event

 


Former local cartoonist David Hagen, who designed ComicsDC's logo











Frank Frazetta artwork


Peter Kuper artwork


Al Jaffee artwork

Al Jaffee caricature

Mort Drucker artwork for Saturday Night Fever