The usual summary of comic book artist Will Eisner’s career follows the formula that he drew the Spirit all through the 1940s except for the war years and a bunch of ‘graphic novels’ from 1978 till the end of his life in 2005. There’s a long missing period between 1951 and 1978 during which he packaged and adapted cartoon art to commercial purposes, which has not been readily available for our scrutiny or pleasure. It is sometimes summarily dismissed as being of little interest. - Artist
Eddie Campbell reappraises
Will Eisner's missing years.
posted by Artw
on Aug 31, 2009 -
13 comments
If you think about it, the book is a pretty wierd (but efficient) way of storing information. Instead of being laid out in a continuous linear fashion, information is broken into roughly equal sized chunks. Then 50-70 of these chunks are printed onto these moveable flaps which all pile on top of one another. Xeric grant winner
Jason Shiga makes amazing, hilarious comics. You can get them in print or read many of them
online.
posted by sonofsamiam
on Apr 26, 2003 -
2 comments