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Mythology Of S. Clay Wilson #1

The Mythology of S. Clay Wilson - Volume 1: Pirates in the Heartland

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The is the definitive account of the boldest and most audacious of the legendary underground cartoonists: the taboo busting, eyeball blistering S. Clay Wilson. This first volume contains all of his underground comic stories from Zap Comix, Snatch, Gothic Blimp Works, Bogeyman, Felch, Insect Fear, Pork, Tales of Sex and Death, and Arcade magazine as well as the many adventures of the Checkered Demon, Star-Eyed Stella, and Captain Pissgums, and even his earliest collaborations with William Burroughs. Also: selections from his teenaged and college years, both in comics and painting form. First person accounts from his peers, as well as Wilson s own words, offer a revealing portrait of the artist who hid his shyness behind brash behavior and bluster. This first of a three-volume biography and retrospective gets to the heart and soul of an artist who lived his dreams and his nightmares."

224 pages, Hardcover

First published June 10, 2014

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About the author

S. Clay Wilson

79 books8 followers
S. Clay Wilson (Steve or Steven) was an American underground cartoonist and central figure in the underground comix movement. Wilson is known for aggressively violent and sexually explicit panoramas of "lowlife," often depicting the wild escapades of pirates and bikers.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Rick.
142 reviews2 followers
September 20, 2021
As far back as I can remember, I've been a fan of S. Clay Wilson. My head exploded when I first saw his work in ZAP Comix. Incredible panels of unbelievable density and depravity. Wilson is credited with busting the whole thing wide open as far as trampling over any form of censorship or restraint when it was just he and R. Crumb and a few others starting to do underground comix. This book is the first of three beautifully crafted volumes detailing the joyous and twisted life Wilson led. With nice large pages of his drawings so you can marvel at his madness. Good stuff!
Profile Image for Dominick.
Author 16 books31 followers
December 28, 2015
Hmm. Interesting combination biography (up to the early seventies, anyway) and retrospective/art book. Wilson's work is generously represented with sample strips, drawings, letters (Wilson hand-lettered and illustrated his epistles), and other rare artwork (e.g. several comic strips Wilson did when he was a kid--not as graphic as his adult work, but pretty clearly still possessed of a Wilsonian sensibility in their violence and weird humour). Some strips and images are reproduced too small to be easily read, sadly. The biographical sections are thorough and seem well-researched, notably via interviews with many of the folk who knew Wilson at the time. An insightful look at arguably the most extreme of the underground cartoonists. Looking at a bunch of his stuff at once, though, does suggest--as is confirmed by some of the comments in the biographical section--that at times Wilson was more interested in sheer shock value than in anything else. Several pieces seem to exist primarily to be are gross and offensive as possible--especially in terms of sexual violence directed at women. So, be warned.
Profile Image for Jonathan.
208 reviews71 followers
July 5, 2015
Pirates in the Heartland is both a biography of S. Clay Wilson and a collection of his comic material. S. Clay Wilson is an underground cartoonist who was one of the early contributors to Zap Comix in the late 1960s. His work is notoriously violent and sexually graphic even when compared with other underground cartoonists. His most famous character is The Checkered Demon although his comics are also populated by pirates, bikers, drug addicts, pirates, dykes, drug addicts, aliens, pirates, murderers, beer-swilling psycopaths and pirates, pirates and more pirates. At no point do any of his characters show any of the 'finer emotions' of humanity, indeed they are all violent, debauched psychopaths who just want to drink beer, kill and fuck. Yes, S. Clay Wilson is the underground cartoonist's version of de Sade...but, with one difference; Wilson's work is very funny...sick, yes, depraved, yes, but still funny; though I must admit it's sometimes difficult to know whether to laugh or retch when reading his work.

Funny? Well, you just have to read the titles that he gave to some of his 'tableaux' of fighting pirates, bikers etc., such as Ruby the Dyke and her Six Perverted Sisters Stomp the Fags, The Flyin' Fuckin' "A" Heads Stop for Lunch During their Cross-Country Run, Dwarf Snuffing Station #103, Deranged Doctors Perform Operational Experiments on Mutated Patients under the Antiseptic Incandescent Gaze of the Big Daddy Devil Doctor but the one that always makes me laugh when I read it is the strip called Captain Pissgums and his Pervert Pirates - the Cap'n gets his name from his own favourite perversion. In this story, originally from Zap Comix #3, the Cap'n and his gang have to break off from their debauched activities to fight Captain Fatima and her Dyke Pirates aboard the 'Quivering Thigh' - unusually for Wilson there is almost a happy ending, though not for Captains Pissgums and Fatima.

The book contains many reproductions of early material as well as his more well-known work. As I love his tableaux I was pleased to see the early collection of plates reproduced here from S. Clay Wilson Portfolio Comix which I had never seen in full; Wilson crams so much detail into each picture that you often find yourself straining your eyes just to see everything that's going on. These tableaux show Wilson's artistic skill brilliantly and it made me realise that he would have made a brilliant book illustrator if he'd decided on a more conventional career path. In fact, from the Wikipedia page, it looks like he did start to illustrate some editions of Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Anderson which look great.

So you may have realised by now that part of Wilson's 'thing' is to shock the reader and I guess it's down to the individual to decide whether that is a good 'thing' or not. For me, being shocked in this way by art is similar to the effect that people get when watching a horror film or a murder mystery. And, as with a crude joke, there's the thrill of seeing just how far they will go. This is more appealing to the young, but for some of us, this is still appealing when we probably should know better. Even the other underground artists at the time were shocked. Fellow Zap contributor Victor Moscoso said, when viewing one of Wilson's strips:
'Holy shit...Now I can imagine someone having this fantasy. I can even imagine someone drawing this fantasy. I could not imagine somebody publishing that fantasy. It was at that point I realized, not only I - all the other artists saw it too, that I had been censoring myself.
Now, I have appreciated Wilson's work for a long time now but even I was shocked with the strip, previously unknown to me, called The Felching Vampires meet the Holy Virgin Mary (originally published in Felch Cumics - if you don't know what Felch means then you may prefer not to know) which has to be one of the most disgustingly blasphemous and politically incorrect comic strips I have ever seen. It makes the strip called Pudocchio, a pornographic version of the Pinocchio story, seem quite quaint in comparison, and should probably not be read by any Christian.

The biographical detail in the book really becomes interesting once we get to the 'underground comix era'. He defends his work and his approach thus:
"Art is therapy", insisted Wilson. "And I don't care if they hate it. I don't care if they love it. Maybe I'm trying to culticize myself, but the whole impetus behind this is: draw anything you want. That's the whole idea behind underground comix. It's underground. Which means it's pornographic. Underground means, you know, underground. I like to make it gnarlier and gnarlier and gnarlier and more horrific and more horrific, but with humor at the same time."
One of the 'wow' moments of the book was when I came across the gruesome fight scene called The Psycopathic South Side Blade-freaks Confront Razor Annie and Her Cocaine Chorus of Cutters from the suitably titled Thrilling Murder Comics. It's in glorious black & white & red - all the blood, and there's a lot of blood, is in vivid red - there are hatchets digging into heads, knives gouging eyes out, entrails falling out, throats being slit...I mean it's amazing, it's a true work of art and I'd love to have a copy hanging on my wall. There's an amusing anecdote in the book where Wilson saw the comic being printed and the blood was a washed-out pink colour and the presses had to be stopped: 'It had to be a blood red' Wilson explained, and he was correct, it does.

Well, volume two, called Demons and Angels (Fantagraphics Books) is due out about now so I'm going to get another fix of S. Clay as soon as I can. It looks like there may also be a third volume as well.

On a sadder note, Wilson can no longer draw as he suffered a brain injury in 2008. It is not known whether it was from an assault or a fall. Further details of his wellbeing can be found on the S Clay Wilson Special Needs Trust website.
Profile Image for clinamen.
54 reviews45 followers
August 16, 2021
a degenerate’s degenerate and a stomper’s stomper
Profile Image for ComicNerdSam.
623 reviews52 followers
November 20, 2022
Wilson's comics are outrageous, kinky, dirty, slimy, disgusting, bloody, and a hell of a lot of fun. Definitely does not pack the same punch it did in the 60's, but it still gives quite a wallop.
Profile Image for PR.
79 reviews6 followers
July 10, 2015
It's interesting what transgressive looked like in the sixties and seventies. So much homophobia--not the right word, but stereotyping and then some--so much rape-y-ness. The Id, unbound. I did like watching Wilson's sketching develop over the years, but overall the themes he explored left me meh.
Profile Image for Xisix.
164 reviews2 followers
February 2, 2017
Sleazy extreme gorey hijinks from weirdo beatnik. Interesting tales of artist's growth and development at ending of the 1960's. Shock. Freedom in words and libido many years before Johnny Ryan.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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