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Masters of American Comics

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Comic strips and comic books were among the most popular and influential forms of mass media in 20thcentury America. This fascinating book focuses on fifteen pioneering cartoonists—ranging from Winsor McCay to Chris Ware—who brought this genre to the highest level of artistic expression and who had the greatest impact on the development of the form.Organized chronologically, Masters of American Comics explores the rise of newspaper comic strips and comic books and considers their artistic development throughout the century. Presenting a wide selection of original drawings as well as progressive proofs, vintage printed Sunday pages, and comic books themselves, the authors also look at how the art of comics was transformed by artistic innovation as well as by changes in popular taste, economics, and printing conventions.First appearing in newspaper Sunday supplements, the comic strip became immediately successful and created the largest audience of any medium of its time. The comic book first began as a way to print existing newspaper comics, then subsequently established the mass popularity of superheroes in the 1940s and 1950s before it matured as a vehicle for independent personal expression in the underground comic books and graphic novels of the 1960s.Included in the book are insightful and entertaining essays on individual artists written by major figures in the fields of comics, narrative illustration, literature, popular culture, and art history. Masters of American Comics convincingly positions the genre of comics into the history of art and is destined to become a classic text for years to come.

328 pages, Hardcover

First published November 11, 2005

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John Carlin

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
53 reviews1 follower
October 9, 2011
Warning: this is a big heavy art book; it's not for reading in bed, or on the bus. You will need to make time to peruse it at a substantial, well-lighted table or desk, but it's worth the effort. The catalogue of a 2005 exhibit at MOCA, it spans both comic strips and comic books, and features an excellent selection of artists ranging chronologically from Winsor McCay to Chris Ware and stylistically from Charles Schultz to Gary Panter. The first half of the book is the best part, a long survey essay by John Carlin accompanying substantial excerpts from the comics themselves. Carlin does a great job of putting each artist in context both within the time period in which the work appeared and within the overall history of comics. And the comic reproductions are well chosen to spotlight the artwork while also demonstrating how it functions as part of the narrative whole. All of the work included is interesting and well presented but I found the sections on the early newspaper strips (McCay, Herriman, Feininger, E.C. Seegar and Frank King)particularly fascinating, maybe because it was less familiar. I'm a long-time Gasoline Alley fan but the strips from the 20s and 30s were a revalation; I had no idea it ever looked like that.

The short essays on individual artists in the second part of the book are uneven in quality and the reproductions lean heavily on out-of-context splash pages and cover art, making this section of the book generally less interesting. But overall this is a great introduction to a broad range of some of the best American comics and their creators.
Profile Image for Michael P..
Author 3 books74 followers
June 1, 2010
One way to state the intellectual quality of this book is to say it was published by Yale University Press, and they were not slumming. It is the first I have seen to evaluate comic art in the context of twentieth century fine art. By surveying only the best, they find several who are deemed to rank as fine modern artists. Not every ranks so highly, the writers admit, so E. C. Segar and Chester Gould, for example, are included for their influence of comic strips. Overall, very well done, though some of the individual essays are uneven. Matt Groening’s on Gary Panter is biographical and not insightful and Raymond Pettibon’s on Will Eisner is a mere exercise in Pettibon’s overwhelming ego. Most, such as that by Jules Feiffer on E. C. Segar and Karal Ann Marling on Frank King are very fine indeed, as is the half-book length introduction by John Carlin.
Profile Image for Tommy Grooms.
501 reviews8 followers
April 12, 2020
Masters of American Comics is a heavy, coffee-table style book, and its size lets the art contained within speak for itself. The contents are arranged chronologically with an emphasis on 15 masters who are representative and influential with accompanying essays of varying quality (of note, the essay on Will Eisner by Raymond Pettibon was disappointingly inscrutable). A larger essay by John Carlin chronicles the history and development of the comics medium in America, so the book serves as a crash course in American comics as well as a jumping off point for further exploration.
Profile Image for Goatllama.
455 reviews30 followers
February 20, 2025
Eh. So text heavy that it sucks some of the fun out of things. And these strips deserve the full fun factor, devoid of over-analysis. That's not to say that the essays and bios are bad, and do contain interesting information and thought-provokers, but... I'll always be recommending The Smithsonian Collection of Newspaper Comics instead.
Profile Image for Brian Clarke.
25 reviews
July 23, 2023
Fascinating detail and wonderful examples of newspaper and comic magazine artwork. Text is sometimes repetitive and there is a strong feeling of two books instead of a coherent whole.
Profile Image for Udinskiy Maxim.
35 reviews4 followers
September 20, 2024
Рідкісний по обєму і важкий фоліант, а не книжка. Чудова підбірка рідкісних прикладів старих американських коміксів (від періоду газетних стріпів 1910-х до комікс-андеграунду 1960-1980-х) і там доволі докладні розділи. Якщо ви займамєтеся коміксами або цікавитеся історією коміксів - то ця фундаметальна праця буде в нагоді. Єдиний недолік - обкладинка - вона взагалі невиразна і взагалі не дає зрозуміти що там всередині, а ось всеередині є на що подивитися.
Profile Image for Northpapers.
185 reviews22 followers
February 19, 2009
An informative, artfully assembled walk through the history of American comics. I was unaware of how rich the early history of newspaper funnies was, and when and why they evolved into what they are today. Writers like Jonathan Safran Foer and David Eggers compose lively reviews of the importance and impact of the comic artists they love.
Profile Image for Mike Horne.
662 reviews19 followers
November 26, 2011
This book is the catalogue of an exhibition with with Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. It does a great job of providing art work and articles (by important comic book artists) of everyone from Winsor McCay, George Herriman, Will Eisner, to Chris Ware.

A nice introduction to comics.
13 reviews1 follower
January 3, 2009
So glad I could be a part of this landmark exhibition.
Profile Image for Geoff Hayton.
11 reviews1 follower
June 3, 2012
This would have been the book that changed my life, if I hadn't quit on my life. Winsor McKay ought to be embraced as the father of modernism.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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