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Benaroya
Hall, 7:30 p.m.
Monday,
March 5, 2007
Underwritten
by Stoel Rives LLP
Biography
Excerpt
Selected
Works
Links
Lecture
Preview
Biography
Art Spiegelman's career has arced from underground to groundbreaking.
His 1992 Holocaust tale Maus won the first Pulitzer Prize awarded
to a comic-book novel. While Spiegelman's Jewish mice and Nazi cats sprang
from the 1960s San Francisco cult of underground "comix," Maus
elevated irreverent cartooning to the level of serious literature. The
artist states, "It was a vision I had. I wanted a comic book that
needed a bookmark." Spiegelman nearly single-handedly brought an
alternative art form into the mainstream by publishing now-legendary underground
artists such as Robert Crumb in his vanguard comics journal RAW.
The success of Maus paved the way for the graphic novels thriving
today and led to Spiegelman's ten years on the staff of the New Yorker.
The post-September 11 cover remains his most memorable: a black-on-black
image of the Twin Towers as ghostly silhouettes. In the Shadow of No
Towers (2004) gathers his recent broadsheets of disenchantment with
the war on terror. Balancing the darker works are droll children's books,
including Open Me...I'm a Dog (1997) and the Little Lit anthologies
(2000-03), which boast: "ComicsThey're not just for grown-ups
anymore."
In 2005,
Time magazine named Spiegelman one of the 100 Most Influential
People, and he received the French Chevalier de l'Ordre des Arts et des
Lettres. He lives in SoHo.
"Art
SpiegelmanÉto the comics world is a Michelangelo and a Medici both, an
influential artist who is also an Éenabler of others."The
New York Times Magazine
Excerpt
From
The Complete Maus
[p.209]
View excerpt
Selected
Works
Maus:
A Survivor's Tale (1986-92)
Open Me...I'm a Dog (1997)
In the Shadow of No Towers (2004)
Web
Site Links
CNN
Profile
Washington
Post Interview
Maus
on
the Holocaust
Washington State Holocaust Education Resource Center
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