If Winsor McCay's Little Nemo in Slumberland (1905-1927) was the elegant flame that burned brightly (and relatively briefly) on early 20th century newspaper comics pages, George Herriman's Krazy Kat (1913-1944) was—what? The kerosene lantern knocked over in a barn? The St. Elmo's Fire dancing at the tip of a ship's mast? The analogies fall flat—but more than that, miss the mark. Krazy Kat created an alternate comics universe of surreal juxtaposition and hybridity and expressionistic Id-bombs, all wrapped in phonetic shenanigans so strange it's easy to shrug it all off as an artifact from Another Time, way back before WWII, when the U.S. was so radically different that its pop culture jittered and spun in an arrhythmic discontinuity we assume made some sort of sense back then—along with spats and green-door good times, children sent by mail, and hibernating bartenders—but it didn't, really—make sense, that is; instead, it created its own sense, and in the teens and '20s and '30s—times of catastrophe and new-newer-newest-ness followed by mass murder—Herriman's nose-thumbing chaos was a welcome relief. And perhaps best of all, it was drawn with such originality and spare exuberance that it still seems new—and that's because it got under the brainpan of every goof with a pen and an urge to send things flying whichaway, from Chuck Jones' abstracted Southwest (prime real estate for coyote trajectory) to Bill Watterson's Calvin and Hobbes and on to Dirty Duck, Pogo and all those underground cartoonists and manga-maniacs who stuck their head aboveground and hooted "Li'l anjil!" at the mundane laws of geometry, physics, linguistics, and sundry fiddlesticks. As Officer Pup once complained, "Unfair somnambulism." A good weird dream for once and all.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Identifying Marks
Search This Blog
In the Archives!
-
▼
2022
(4)
- ▼ November 2022 (2)
- ► October 2022 (1)
- ► March 2022 (1)
-
►
2021
(18)
- ► December 2021 (10)
- ► November 2021 (8)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Say What Now