Is it a silly toy, a scary toyor something else entirelyWith a limited vocabulary and unlimited imagination, Art Spiegelman applies his out-of-the-box thinking to a book that has all the surprise and bounce of a jack-in-the-box. Click through to check out a few images from Spiegelman’s enormous body of work, and if you can’t make it to Paris, have no fear - the exhibition will hit Cologne, Vancouver, and New York in the coming months. Each time the box pops open, there's a new and bigger surprise. We’ve been fans of the cartoonist since we were kids, so we decided to take the opportunity to do our own totally incomplete, biased mini-retrospective of some of the artist’s illustrations and projects. Though Spiegelman is perhaps best known for Maus, his Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic memoir, he’s also created countless covers for The New Yorker, where he worked for ten years, founded the famous underground comics magazine RAW with his wife Françoise Mouly, and had his hand in hundreds of other projects. the panels within which Jack and his box are embedded are themselves sorts of boxes. The exhibition, entitled Art Spiegelman: Co-Mix, spans the artist’s 45-year career and contains over 400 original cartoons, sketches, book and magazine covers, and other Spiegelman ephemera (check out a few early photos of the exhibit at Angoulême, where it originated, here). The Comics of Art Spiegelman Georgiana Banita, Lee Konstantinou. We’ve been thinking a lot about Art Spiegelman lately, in part because the comic artist’s first major Paris retrospective recently opened at Centre Pompidou, the city’s biggest modern art museum.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |