Untitled - Fantagraphics
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Untitled - Fantagraphics
augurie s of bril l i a nce : The Kim Deitch Universe by bil l k a r ta l opoul os Kim Deitch’s body of work comprises an ever-expanding system of subjectively narrated intergenerational stories that refer to, elaborate on, qualify, and sometimes refute one another in a great metafictional tapestry spanning more than forty years of production. This may seem like a lot to lay on the present volume’s cockeyed yarn about a kiddie TV show host from the 1950s, little grey men, the frog murderer of France, and a talking cat named Waldo. But The Search for Smilin’ Ed is a story that takes as its premise the existence of a world where such things can coexist in one room and on one page as surely as they do within the mind of this extraordinary cartoonist. If “Kim Deitch” the character is frequently represented as desperately attempting to corral the fictive and fictional forces swirling around his drawing table, Kim Deitch the artist has created a visual-narrative landscape that contains the potentially infinite possibilities of an entire imaginative universe. Opposite: This 1969 Waldo page from the East Village Other blurs the distinction between Waldo’s on– and off–screen lives. Above: Kim Deitch, ca. 1964. 1 a he av en in a w il d f l ow er : im agining underground comi x If the Kim Deitch Universe had a Big Bang, it was, according to Deitch, in 1965. Kim Deitch, approximately 21 years of age, was working the night shift at a White Plains, New York mental institution. Deitch, creative since childhood, was, by then, a Pratt Institute dropout and an ex–Merchant Marine working a series of “straight” jobs in the New York City area. With plenty of time to kill in that charged environment, Deitch read heavily, and read poetry. He found his restless—but unfocused—creative impulse galvanized by a passage from William Blake’s “Auguries of Innocence”: The underground comics that emerged in the late 1960s were first widely disseminated in underground newspapers. The first major East Coast underground paper, the East Village Other, was founded in 1965, the same year as Deitch’s late-night epiphany. At that time, “underground comix” didn’t yet exist as a movement or a cultural reference point, let alone a (marginal) career goal. After several years of censorship limiting their content to child-age appropriate material, comic books were almost exclusively considered junk ephemera within American culture (although newspaper comic strips retained some cultural currency). Connoisseurship was almost entirely in the hands of artists, isolated amateurs, and fan communities, and any notion of the medium’s future potential was, at that point, largely speculative. Deitch’s own youthful passion for comics was re-stimulated by a chance encounter with a pair of Winsor McCay Little Nemo pages reprinted in an issue of Redbook. Shortly afterward, he visited a rare exhibit of McCay’s work at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He also reconnected with his estranged younger brother, Simon, who’d never abandoned his own interest in comic books. Observing the influence of cartooning on his own new paintings, the creatively reinvigorated Deitch embraced the possibilities of the medium and began creating comics. This act of faith in an undervalued art form prepared him to join the first generation of underground cartoonists, who were all independently To see a world in a grain of sand And a heaven in a wild flower, Hold infinity in the palm of your hand, And eternity in an hour. This stanza’s connection between the grandly infinite and the infinitely humble provides a key to understanding the particular shape of Kim Deitch’s life’s work. 2 3 strip, serialized comic books, and the graphic novel. Through changing conditions, Deitch has maintained his initial inspiration and his investment in the once modestly regarded comics form. arriving at similar conclusions and about to coalesce within the context of a burgeoning countercultural press. Many dozens of artists eventually participated in that first flowering of avantgarde comics. Today, Deitch is one of a relative handful—including Robert Crumb, Bill Griffith, and Art Spiegelman—who have continuously produced comics work since that milieu dissipated in the mid-1970s. He has doggedly amassed a body of comics that have occupied every available form and format: the anthology piece, the alternative weekly comic infinit y in the palm of your hand : a “ writer who dr aws ” Deitch’s other great leap of faith was in his own artistic ability. During his childhood, he enjoyed frequent contact with many animation professionals, including his father, the animator 4 with the synaptic electricity that animates Deitch’s weirdly eventful tall tales. a worl d in a gr a in of sa nd : mad , wa l do , a nd hum a nis t sat ire Deitch’s approach to fiction has something to do with his roots in popular American satire. Like many of his fellow underground cartoonists, Deitch grew up reading (and re-reading) issues of Harvey Kurtzman’s Mad in its original incarnation as a four-color comic book that satirized the ascending mass media culture of the 1950s. Deitch’s own early characters—like many other underground characters—began as countercultural subversions of mainstream media icons and stereotypes. Thus, Waldo is, in Deitch’s terms, “ungelded,” and exhibits and cartoonist Gene Deitch. Deitch developed a critical self-assessment that his drawing skills lacked the consistency and fluidity required by professional animation. Today, he still considers himself a “writer who draws” rather than a naturally gifted artist. Making a strength out of a perceived weakness, Deitch invented, for his proto-underground comic strips, a character he knew he could draw consistently well: a devilish cat named Waldo, inspired by the anthropomorphized cartoon animals that populated the sometimes crude but often lively early black-and-white animation he’d absorbed as a child. Deitch has determinedly developed his art in the decades since. He now stands as a master of the form, and is certainly among its most distinctive stylists. Deitch is well known among his peers for his unrelenting work ethic and diligent schedule. He executes multiple developmental versions of each page until he arrives at a compact but fluid narrative composition. His elaborate page designs ricochet like a tricky pinball maneuver, and his dense crosshatching style creates a vibrational equivalency between light and dark—between positive and negative space—that resonates Opposite: Deitch’s first published comic strip featuring Waldo as a character. This strip was drawn in 1966 and published in the East Village Other in 1968. This page: By 1970, Deitch had developed Waldo’s essential character design and personality. 5 work exists in a direct tradition stretching at least as far back as 1930s Tijuana Bibles, eightpage pornographic booklets starring popular comic strip characters and other celebrities. Beyond providing titillating laughs, such work is inherently subversive because it dares to ask behavior unsuitable for Saturday morning television audiences—or Comics Codeapproved publications. The initial charge of this kind of parody comes from seeing culturally sanctioned cartoon types transgressing cultural norms, and this 6 detective Miles Microft—appeared in his early underground comix of the 1960s and 1970s. As Deitch accumulated a body of work, his Blakean strategy—his drive to discover endless potential in the materials at hand—impelled him to re-invest in the content of his previous work. With each new piece, Deitch pursues implications barely hinted at in his pre-existing stories, develops richer backgrounds for his established characters, and imagines their surprising, far-flung futures. By successively re-shading his already subverted media icons, Deitch has compounded the humanistic element of his initial satires to develop durable, dimensional characters. Another kind of satire peeks out from behind the controlled façade of media production. Frequently this functions as ironic critique, pointing out, for example, that the smiling faces on television are not as friendly as they appear, and that manufacturers of “wholesome” media can be cynically motivated. Deitch himself frequently imagines the backstage history of American popular entertainment, from the early film and animation industries back to carnivals and medicine shows. His artists, entertainers and impresarios are all deeply, sometimes pathologically, flawed. But where critical satirists would identify hypocrisy, Deitch finds what these characters do beyond the panel borders designated for public viewing. Even more broadly, this kind of parody is implicitly humanistic. Satire shadows and shades controlled representations of human character, and relocates them within the greater spectrum of life’s expressive possibilities. Several of Deitch’s frequently recurring characters—including Waldo and the psychic Opposite and top: Sketches for “Hell to Pay,” a 1986 Waldo story published in RAW #8, imagining the long-lived character’s possible future. Above: Evangelist Billy Graham metamorphoses into Froggy in this comic strip from a 1969 issue of the East Village Other. 7 possibility: Is Waldo the cat “real”? Elsewhere, Deitch firmly answers in the affirmative. In the key comic strip serial A Shroud for Waldo, he exposes his walking, talking cat as a low-grade demon—with a shocking Biblical lineage—who only appears to those individuals “beyond the pale” of everyday experience and perception. Deitch’s audacious conceit embraces and connects all of his previous work, reinforces his core themes, and extends his fictional world through space, time, and mysterious cosmology. a sympathetic relationship between the ways in which we fail and the things we would like to imagine. Deitch presents the history of popular entertainment—our humble “low culture”—as both the site of fascinating, vain, desperate, creative ambition and as humanity’s saving grace. In narrative terms, the roots of the Kim Deitch Universe may lie in Deitch’s unique marriage of his cartoon cat’s offscreen life and his popular entertainers’ backstage foibles. By 1975, Deitch had repositioned his vulgar Waldo as the possibly hallucinatory companion of an alcoholic named Ted Mishkin, pictured briefly in the story at hand. Mishkin would take center stage in Deitch’s graphic novel The Boulevard of Broken Dreams as a dysfunctional animator who, inspired by his imaginary companion, creates a series of successful “Waldo” cartoons for a fictional 1920s animation studio. Boulevard supports one potential reading of Waldo as a mere psychosis, the hallucination of a demented individual, made accessible to the reader through the devices of visual fiction. But the book suggests another tantalizing infinit y in an hour : me tafic tion , serialit y, and vic torian postmodernism In addition to revisiting his previous narratives, Deitch’s stories acknowledge the existence of his previous comics as authored, published, material objects. Which is to say, Kim Deitch's fictional world includes Kim Deitch's actual comic books. Each text makes its own mockevidential claims to truth, and each text may later be challenged as the work of a potentially unreliable artist who appears, increasingly, as an unsettled character within his own stories. The very presence of a signature at the end of each piece has become an opportunity for Deitch to further expand his master narrative. In a work like Smilin’ Ed, which was originally serialized, each chapter exists both as a narrative component and as a questionable artistic production. The constant possibility that something has been left out, misunderstood, fabricated, or distorted by the artist (or his sources) permits infinite alternate interpretations, even as Deitch draws his narrative strands ever more tightly together. By keeping truth in flux, Deitch has brilliantly turned the stutter8 9 epigram: “I don’t know if this story is true, but it’s true that this story is told.” Deitch’s narrative strategy prizes storytelling itself. His characters collect stories, especially lost stories. His body of work presents itself as a collection of stories about stories, and his stories dramatize their own invention. More than any of his other books, The Search for Smilin’ Ed takes place within the literal narrative tunnels—the passages— that Deitch has built to join his stories together. In this book’s new epilogue, a cadre of Francophone rodents forges a physical path towards Deitch's current work in progress… while dropping references to his first underground comic book story. Clearly, Kim Deitch is having fun. The Search for Smilin’ Ed, like so many of his stories, is propelled by Deitch's own quest for lost media. Deitch’s recollection of the very real Smilin’ Ed McConnell, the vanished host of a very strange 1950s television program, inspires this wild and wooly journey to the heart of his fictional world. Deitch's long-time readers will delight in seeing wellknown characters like Miles Microft and Doc Ledicker brought together for the first time in pursuit of Deitch's object. Others less familiar with this work should trust the man behind the curtain and enjoy this book's carnival-ride tour of the Kim Deitch Universe. You are holding a world between your hands. The book is both a guide and the destination. If you’re lucky, you’ll become so familiar with the terrain that you'll get lost here, too. start rhythms of serialized storytelling into a metafictional premise. The narrative space between his episodes becomes a self-consciously semiotic space that accommodates the real life experiences of the author and his readers. This may seem to be an explicitly postmodern maneuver. But just as likely, Deitch has found inspiration in the Victorian-era novels he devours, which often made their own false claims of evidence and truth (and which were also frequently serialized). It should, perhaps, be no great surprise that Deitch, intent on spinning art from historically “low” subjects and forms, would seize upon the complex narrative gestures shared by antique pulp and contemporary experimental fiction. Bill Kartalopoulos teaches classes about comics and illustrations as Parsons, the New School for Design. He regularly writes about comics for Print Magazine, where he is a contributing editor, and reviews comics for Publishers Weekly. He is a frequent public speaker and is the programming coordinator for SPX: The Small Press Expo and the Brooklyn Comics and Graphics Festival. In 2008 he curated Kim Deitch: A Retrospective at the Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art in New York, NY. He lives in Brooklyn. the se arch for smilin ’ ed : narr ative passages , lost and found Deitch once shared a fascinating bit of cinematic lore with me, prefacing his tale with this near10