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  • From its origins in the 1950s from the pages of books to software like MacDraw in the 1980s to CD Roms, and finally moving online in the 1990s, Clip Art’s evolution took place along with that of graphic design. Even though clip art was mostly created by unnamed designers and illustrators and sold in packages or libraries, there are many important figures we know of whose clip art contributed to the history of graphic design. Joan Shogren, an early computer art pioneer and clip art designer; Frank Fruznya, whose iconic clip art defined an era; and Sean Tejaratchi, whose cult hit zine series Crap Hound celebrates Clip Art and visually meditates on social issues. Ultimately, clip art is a misunderstood element of graphic design that holds an essential place in its history. Clip art in many ways paved the way for stock photo and stock illustration use that is common practice among designers today.

    TIMELINE

    1928 – Tom Tierney born in Beaumont, Texas
    1928– Dan X. Solo born
    1932 – Joan Shogren born
    1941 – Dover Publications founded
    1947 – Jean Larcher born in Rennes, France
    1949 – Tierney graduates from the University of Austin in Texas, majoring in painting and sculpture
    1950s – Clip Art began to be produced in books for commercial sale, such as The Volk Corporation
    1951 – Tierney serves in the US Military for 3 years
    1952 – Frank Fruznya, prolific Clip Art illustrator, born in Illinois
    1953 – Tierney movies to NYC to work as a fashion illustrator
    1954 – Art Chantry born
    1960s – Tom B. Sawyer created Clip Art for Harry Volk Jr’s Volk & Co’s “Clip Book of Line Art”series
    1963 – Shogren designs set of rules to make the first computer art with Jim Larsen and Dr. Ralph Fessenden’s assistance at San Jose Univeristy in California
    1963 – “Cybernation” exhibition of early computer art featuring Shogren took place at the San Jose State Partna Book Store
    1962 – Solotype founded
    1965 – Larcher graduates after studying typographic art at the Paris Chaamber of Commerce
    1969 – Artist and illustrator Mitch O’Connell starts to freelance Clip Art illustration for Dynamic Graphics
    1970s – Dover begins publishing Clip Art books
    1970 – Sean Tejartchi born
    1973 – Larcher begins freelance design work
    1974 – Fruznya started to work for H&R; then was recruited to work for Dynamic Graphics
    1976 – Tierney publishes his first paper doll book, “Thirty from the 30s” which attracted the attention of Dover
    1979 – Peter Roizen and Heidi Roizen, brother and sister, co-found T/Maker
    1981 – IBM introduces the first personal computer
    1983 – Heidi Roizen takes over as president at T/Maker
    1983 – ImageWriter printer released
    1983 – VCN ExecuVision published IBM’s first Clip Art library
    1984 – Shogren starts to work for T/Maker for ClickArt
    1984 – T/Maker releases ClickArt Publications digital Clip Art collection
    1984 – Brad Fregger creates Clip Art for Activision
    1984 – Nova Development founded
    1984 – MacPaint comes pre installed on Macintosh computers
    1985 – “The Year of the Computer” mass production of personal computers helps change the world
    1985 – LaserWriter printer is introduced
    1986 – Graphic Source published Clip Art Books
    1986 – Apple introduces the Macintosh Computer
    1986 – Mac Plus released
    1987 – MacPaint to longer pre installed on Macintosh computers
    1987 – T/Maker introduced first vector Clip Art made with Adobe Illustrator
    1988 – Adobe Systems released Adobe Illustrator
    1989 – Company 3G Graphics published “Images with Impact!”
    1994 – Crap Hound first published
    1994 – Deluxe Corp buys remaining software lines from T/Maker, including ClickArt
    1996 – Zedcor was the first company to offer Clip Art images as part of an online subscription service
    1996 – Microsoft began to include Clip Art in it’s built in libraries
    1996 – Animation Factory founded
    1998-2001 – T/Makers ClickArt library sold each year due to large mergers and acquisitions to companies like Mattel and The Learning Company
    1998 – Crap Hound ceases publishing
    1999 – Animation Factory sold
    2003 – Fruznya quits Dynamic Graphics after anonymously being the Clip Art world’s star illustrator in the 80s and 90s
    2005 – Jupitermedia purchased Creatas, now owning all of Dynamic Grapahic’s clip art library
    2005 – Tejaratchi begins to publish Crap Hound again
    2009 – Jupitermedia went out of business
    2009 – Fruzyna moves to Paradise, Michigan with his partner to paint
    2012 – Solo passes away
    2014 – Tierney passes away
    2014 – Microsoft discontinues it’s Clip Art library in favor of Bing Image Search
    2015 – Dat Boi, an Animation Factory asset, becomes an early internet meme
    2015 – Larcher passes away

    REFERENCES

    Arntson, Amy E. (1988). Graphic Design Basics. Saunders College Publishing.

    Borrell, J. (1988, January). Verbatim: An Interview With Heidi Roizen. MacWorld, 74–86.

    Boudrot, T. (1989, October). New Graphics Take the Rough Edges Off Clip Art. Electronic Learning, 9(2), 54–56.

    Brock, D. C. (2019, October 8). Slide logic: The emergence of presentation software and the Prehistory of PowerPoint. Computer History Museum. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://computerhistory.org/blog/slide-logic-the-emergence-of-presentation-software-and-the-prehistory-of-powerpoint/?key=slide-logic-the-emergence-of-presentation-software-and-the-prehistory-of-powerpoint

    Chantry, A., & Rochester Monica René. (2015). Art Chantry Speaks: A Heretic's history of 20th-century graphic design. Feral House.

    Clip Art Images: Definition, history, examples and sources. blog.icons8.com. (2020, September 7). Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://blog.icons8.com/articles/clip-art-images/

    Cretan, J. (2011). Macpaint.org: Clip Art Historical Gallery. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from http://www.macpaint.org/clipart.html

    Devroye, L. (n.d.). Dan X. Solo. Luc Devroye, School of Computer Science, McGill University. http://luc.devroye.org/solo.html

    Eskilson, S. (2019). Graphic design: A New History. Yale University Press.

    Fregger, B. (2018, November). Joan Shogren Computer Art Pioneer. http://fregger.com/Joan/index.html

    Garber, M. (2014, December 2). A Eulogy to Clip Art, in Clip Art. The Atlantic. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/12/a-eulogy-to-clipart-in-clipart/383322/

    Grant-Marsh, S. (Ed.). (1994, September). Editors' Choice: The Best Products Featured in MacWorld. MacWorld, 201–221.

    Heller, S. (2012, May 25). Dan X. Solo, Type Revivalist, Dies. PRINT Magazine. https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/dan-x-solo-type-revivalist-dies/

    Heller, S. (2022, June 6). The Daily Heller: Art Chantry Reconsidered in His Own Words. PRINT Magazine. https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/the-daily-heller-the-real-art-chantry-reconsidered/

    Heid­­, J. (1987, August). Getting Started with Macintosh Graphics. MacWorld, 193–202.

    Historic Zinesters Talking. (2009, October 24). Crap Hound Zine -- Sean Tejaratchi. Slide Share. https://www.slideshare.net/StaffDay/crap-hound-zine-sean-tejaratchi

    Leifpeng. (2008, June 19). Tom Sawyer and Harry Volk. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://todaysinspiration.blogspot.com/2008/06/tom-sawyer-and-harry-volk_19.html.

    Lopez, G. (2016, May 27). Dat boi, explained. Vox. https://www.vox.com/2016/5/27/11789968/dat-boi-o-shit-waddup

    Mak, A. (2022, March 29). A Reminder That GIFs Didn’t Always Move. Slate Magazine. https://slate.com/technology/2022/03/the-history-of-gifs.html

    Manely, D. (2016, December 2). History of clip art via Wikipedia. OldCuts. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://www.oldcuts.co/blogs/news/history-of-clip-art-via-wikipedia

    Middleton, C., & Herriot, L. (2007). Instant graphics: Source and remix images for professional design. RotoVision.

    Original Apple Macintosh 18 Page Brochure (Dec 1983). DigiBarn ads: Original Apple Macintosh 18 Page Brochure (Dec 1983). (1998). Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://www.digibarn.com/collections/ads/apple-mac/index.htm.

    Paper Doll Author Tom Tierney. (2022). Dover Publications. https://www.doverpublications.com/tomtierney/

    Pot, J. (2014, December 5). Clip Art is gone! here's how to find free images instead. MUO. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/clip-art-gone-heres-find-free-images-instead/

    Sandberg-Diment, E. (1985, November 26). Personal Computers; Desktop Publishing Comes of Age . New York Times, p. 4.

    Sanders, S., & Larchuk, T. (2014, December 3). Microsoft says goodbye to clip art. NPR. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://www.npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2014/12/02/368060012/microsoft-says-goodbye-to-clip-art

    Sawyer, T. B. (n.d.). Illustration Artwork. Thomas B. Sawyer. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from http://thomasbsawyer.com/illustrationartwork.html

    Solenthaler, B. (2021, November). The Bart&Co.. historic clip art collection. Flickr. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://www.flickr.com/photos/bartsol/sets/72157627595663028.

    Smith, E. (2018, August 30). The history of Clip Art: They sold it in books. Tedium. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://tedium.co/2018/08/30/clip-art-history/

    Sutton, B. (2014, December 4). In honor of the death of Clip Art, a brief illustrated history of Clip Art. Hyperallergic. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://hyperallergic.com/166533/in-honor-of-the-death-of-clip-art-a-brief-illustrated-history-of-clip-art/

    Tejaratchi, S. (2014). Crap Hound (Vol. 5). Show & Tell Press.

    The Microsoft 365 Marketing Team, & Thomas, D. (2014, December 14). CLIP art is now powered by Bing Images. Microsoft 365 Blog. Retrieved November 15, 2022, from https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/blog/2014/12/01/clip-art-now-powered-bing-images/

    Tom Tierney Studios. (n.d.). Tom Tierney Studios. Retrieved November 1, 2022, from https://www.tomtierneystudios.com/

    Vogt, P. J., & Goldman, A. (Hosts). (2016, April 14). Bbay King (No. 61) [Audio podcast episode]. In Reply all. Gimlet. https://gimletmedia.com/shows/reply-all/emhwx6/61-baby-king

    Zantal-Wiener, A. (2017, August 27). Clip art through the years: A nostalgic look back. HubSpot Blog. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/clip-art-history

  • Most books, not all, but most, follow conventions of book design that have been in place for literally hundreds of years. With very few exceptions, it wasn’t until the 1960s when authors began to play around with story structure that there were any books that also played with the structure of the book itself. And it was later still that graphic design started adding another layer to the storytelling in popular literature. The colors, the typography, the page layouts all came to be used in service of the story. In House of Leaves, when the story starts getting really weird, so does the page layout. In The Illuminae Files, the pages look like reports, transcriptions, and electronic messages and include diagrams and drawings. These books, and the others like them, ask something extra of the reader, but give back an experience that may delight some and infuriate others. However readers feel about this type of weird book design, these books push the boundaries of book design into new and exciting territory.

    FURTHER READING

    Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov
    theMystery.doc by Matthew McIntosh
    The Black Locomotive by Rian Hughes
    Only Revolutions by Mark Z. Danielewski
    Hopscotch by Julio Cortazar
    Bats of the Republic by Zachary Thomas
    The Raw Shark Texts by Steven Hall
    City of Saints and Madmen by Jeff Vandermeer
    Parabola by Lily Hoang
    Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer
    The People of Paper by Salvador Plascencia
    Maxwell’s Demon by Steven Hall

    REFERENCES

    Aarseth, E. (1997). Cybertext: Perspectives on Ergodic Literature. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

    Abrams, J.J. & Dorst, D. (2013). S. New York: Mulholland Books.

    CloudCuckooCountry. (2022, November 15). Ergodic Literature: The Weirdest Book Genre [Video]. YouTube. https://youtu.be/tKX90LbnYd4?si=GYwECYZ4FdOzF9SO

    Coe, J. (2011, October 28). Composition No. 1 by Marc Saporta - review. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/oct/28/composition-no-1-saporta-review

    Danielewski, M. Z. (2000). House of Leaves. New York: Pantheon Books.

    Digital Humanities Initiative. (2019, March 14). Mark Z. Danielewski at SDSU Library, Standard Video [Video} YouTube. https://youtu.be/wwCp8Y6k_BI?si=s7zFZZOpPDuIXBrm

    Forbidden Planet TV. (2021, July 29). Rian Hughes Stokes up the Black Locomotive [Video]. YouTube. https://youtu.be/emge3qLMatM?si=WNWzNZgXrHwNA-mz

    Hill. L. (2013, October 27). A Long Time Ago, in A Universe More Analog. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/28/books/j-j-abrams-and-doug-dorst-collaborate-on-a-book-s.html

    Hughes, R. (2020). XX. New York: The Overlook Press.

    Kaufman, A. & Kristof, J. (2015). Illuminae. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

    Kaufman, A. & Kristof, J. (2016). Gemina. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

    Kaufman, A. & Kristof, J. (2018). Obsidio. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.

    Little Book Owl. (2015, December 15). Q&A w/ Amie Kaufman & Jay Kristof [Video]. YouTube. https://youtu.be/jZ3_ulIEEe4?si=c6mXnEdBKTLaf5Ju

    Roth, G. [VMSpod]. (2023, July 12). Virtual Memories #546 - Rian Hughes [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=js0DYgMzKwQ

    Roth, G. [VMSpod]. (2020, November 24). Virtual Memories #409 - Rian Hughes [Video]. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Iw_kuUqxyjM?si=8J9cEIZa2P5ToJHq

    Star Sessions. (2014, May 18). J.J. Abrams & Doug Dorst Delve into S: A Multi-Layered Book Experience [Video]. YouTube. https://youtu.be/Adpb9Dn0PoM?si=lHXLynpj5Oj7fq07

    Tales of the Ravenous Reader. (2018, April 11). Interview w/ Amie Kaufman & Jay Kristof | The Illuminae Files [Video]. YouTube. https://youtu.be/gJl4eDRDM04?si=qetFYjnb9KIx6kOh

    Talks at Google. (2016, August 11). The Familiar|Mark Z. Danielewski|Talks at Google [Video]. YouTube. https://youtu.be/mw0bGiVDTMI?si=mn19emWU4ttp_CWh

    Tyer, B. (2014, February 20). Untangling S., Doug Dorst’s Novel Within a Novel. Texas Observer. https://www.texasobserver.org/untangling-s-doug-dorsts-novel-within-novel/

    Zambra, A. (2014). Multiple Choice. New York: Penguin Books.

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  • The History of Tarot decks intersects with symbology, or the study of symbols as well as their history, mass production of text and images, and popular culture, all of which are fields of study in the history of graphic design, and yet this subject has not been included in mainstream histories of design. Is this a reflection of the mystical, romanticized history of the cards, and one that implies a connection to divination or fortune telling? It is also a history that connects with the history of alchemy, and science, as well as with religious studies, esoterism, and occult, and yet the cards themselves emerged from secular roots. Tarot cards are not quite viewed as art and yet not celebrated as graphic design. The cards began as a simple game in Renaissance Italy, only gaining their association with esoterism in the 1700s when they were falsely connected with Hermeticism, and instilled with a completely fabricated Egyptian heritage. This history grew to include a connection to secret societies. Some of the most well-known decks of the 20th century and beyond were illustrated by women, including Moina Mathers, Lady Freida Harris, and Pamela Colman Smith and yet they are more associated with the men who dictated their design. Tarot cards have continued to evolve, transitioning away from being viewed as a tool for fortune telling and toward a new age tool for self-reflection, introspection, and self-help.

    TIMELINE

    1430s – Tarochi card game invented in Itlay
    1450 – Visconti-Sforza deck made by Bonifacio Bembo
    1491 – Sola-Busca deck made by Nicola di maestro Antonio
    1770 – Jean Baptiste Alliette publishes A Way to Entertain Oneself With Cards
    1776 – Antoine Court de Gebelin associates Tarot with esoterism and the occult
    1781 – Antoine Court de Gebelin publishes Le Monde Primitif or the Primeval World
    1855 – Éliphas Lévi piublishes Transcendental Magic
    1888 – Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn founded
    1906 – Jugendstil Tarot Deck designed by Ditha Moser
    1907 – Images of the Sola Busca deck donated to the British Museum
    1910 – Waite & Pamela Coleman Smith collaborate on the Waite Colman Smith Deck historically known as the Rider Waite deck
    1944 – Aleister Crowley writes The Book of Toth, cards and illustrations by Lady Frieda Harris
    1973 – The Tarot of Witches deck is created by Scottish artist and illustrator Fergus Hall for the film Live and Let Die
    1977 – The Waite Colman Smith Deck goes into mass production
    1978 – The Fantod Pack, a Parody deck designed by Edward Gorey is published
    1984 – Mary K. Greer writes Tarot for yourself
    1984 – Salvador Dali produces his Tarot deck
    1992 – HIV Tarot produced by artist Kim Abeles

    REFERENCES

    Archetype. (2016). In J. L. Longe (Ed.), Gale Virtual Reference Library: The Gale encyclopedia of psychology (3rd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galegp/archetype/0?institutionId=1845

    Auger, E. E. (2004). Tarot and Other Meditation Decks: History, Theory, Aesthetics, Typology. McFarland.

    Boley, M. (2023, April 10). Oracle Decks: What They Are and How To Use Them - Mental Musings - Medium. Medium. https://medium.com/musings-with-meg/oracle-decks-what-they-are-and-how-to-use-them-c037251a7a84

    Dummett, M. (2007). Six XV-Century Tarot Cards: Who Painted Them? Artibus et Historiae, 28(56), 15–26. http://www.jstor.org/stable/20067158

    Farley, H. (2009). A cultural history of tarot : From entertainment to esotericism. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.

    Farley. (2006). The evolution of the 'mother' in Tarot. Hecate, 32(2), 68–87.

    Gerstler, A. (1994). Kim Abeles. www.artforum.com. https://www.artforum.com/print/reviews/199401/kim-abeles-54441

    Grimoire. (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/grimoire/0?institutionId=1845

    Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/hermetic_order_of_the_golden_dawn/0?institutionId=1845

    Hundley, J., Fiebig, J., & Kroll, M. (2020). Tarot. Taschen.

    Maille, P. (2021). The Cards: The Evolution and Power of Tarot.

    Parkinson, N. (2013). The Colour Reference Library, Royal College of Art, London. Journal of Design History. https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/ept004

    Richman-Abdou, K. (2020). The spellbinding history of tarot cards, from a mainstream card game to a magical ritual. My Modern Met. https://mymodernmet.com/history-of-tarot-cards/

    Roya, W. (2019). Debunking common myths about playing cards - Tarot & China. PlayingCardDecks.com. https://playingcarddecks.com/blogs/all-in/debunking-common-myths-about-playing-cards-tarot-cards

    Schechter. (2020). Tarot's Italian Roots: For Devotees Of This 600-Year-Old Esoteric Art, A Trip To Milan Is In The Cards. National Geographic, 237(2), 34.

    Schneider, M. (2015, February 24). Edward Gorey’s ‘anxious, irritable’ tarot card set is predictably perfect. DangerousMinds. https://dangerousminds.net/comments/edward\_goreys\_tarot\_card\_set

    tarot. (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/tarot/0?institutionId=1845

    Waite, A(rthur) E(dward) (1857–1942). (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/waite_a_rthur_e_dward_1857_1942/0?institutionId=1845

    Wintle, S. (2022, July 17). A Moorish Sheet of Playing Cards — The World of Playing Cards. The World of Playing Cards. https://www.wopc.co.uk/spain/moorish/a-moorish-sheet-of-playing-cards

    Wintle, S. (2023, July 19). Mamluk Playing Cards — The World of Playing Cards. The World of Playing Cards. https://www.wopc.co.uk/egypt/mamluk

  • The history of graphic design has traditionally skewed toward designers from white hegemony. Where white men (and some women) tend to fill the pages, webpages, and galleries that celebrate design. As humanity evolves, we must realize the value of making space for more diverse voices in the design world. This episode elevates Black designers who have successfully fought against the forces of white supremacy and oppression to take back control of representation. Starting with Abolitionist broadsides, this episode examines how mostly white creators of broadsides, used to support the antislavery movement, were hindered by what we now call the “White Savior Complex” and that the tone of abolitionist imagery and vocabulary was marked by the perceived superiority of the white Northern audience. Next, we look to the famous “I AM A MAN” protest signs of the Civil Rights marches. These protest signs have endured and evolved into modern iterations as a piece of living history highlighting the fight for racial equality which continues to be an inspiration for art and design practices today. The episode also takes a deep dive into the life and work of Archie Boston. Archie Boston is a graphic designer known for creating subversive, self-aware work in the advertising and design industry. The genius of his designs is that he often appropriates and retrofits racist imagery, similar to how Black vernacular has reclaimed certain racial slurs. Rounding out the discussion is a survey of current design collectives and groups of professional creatives such as the Design Justice Network. This episode discovers insightful parallels between Black representation in the Abolition era and today, clearly demonstrating that the best advocates for Black freedom and equality are Black people. Graphic design in the hands of Black activists becomes a powerful force for positive change and strengthening communities.

    TIMELINE - ARCHIE BOSTON

    1943 – b Clewiston, Florida
    1961 – started attending Chouinard Art Institute
    1964 – interned at Carson/Roberts
    1965 – worked at Hixson And Jorgensen Advertising
    1966 – became art director at Botsford Ketchum
    1967 – started Boston & Boston Design with his brother Bradford
    1969 – left Boston & Boston and rejoined Botsford Ketchum
    1973 – started Archie Boston Design
    1977 – received master’s degree from the University of Southern California
    1977 – started lecturing at California State University Long Beach (CSULB)
    2001 – published Fly in the Buttermilk: Memoirs of an African American in Advertising Design & Design Education
    2009 – published Lil' Colored Rascals in the Sunshine City

    TIMELINE - BLACK DESIGNERS FIGHTING AGAINST PREJUDICE AND SYSTEMIC OPPRESSION

    1830s – Abolitionist Broadsides, weaponized advocating to free slaves
    1900 – WEB Du Bois and Black Data, Infographic Activism
    1963 – March on Washington protest signs.
    1966 – Boston and Boston advertisements, “Ku Klux Klan”, “For Sale”
    1968 – I AM A MAN, Memphis Sanitation Strike
    1980s – Archie Boston Graphic Design, “I don’t want to marry your daughter”
    2016/2017 – Martin Typeface designed by Tré Seals inspired by I AM A MAN, Memphis Sanitation Strike posters
    2021 – Black lives matter protest posters

    REFERENCES

    Archie Boston Graphic Design files. (n.d.). Online Archive of California. https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8183dtf/

    Archie Boston papers, 1963-2018 and undated - Archives & Manuscripts at Duke University Libraries. (n.d.). David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. https://archives.lib.duke.edu/catalog/bostonarchie

    Barrett, L. (2014, February 12). “Am I not a man and a brother?” : The political power of the image. The Black Atlantic. https://sites.duke.edu/blackatlantic/2014/02/10/am-i-not-a-man-and-a-brother-the-political-power-of-the-image/

    Barry, N. (2022, January 4). Project 3, Phase 1: - Nouria Barry - Medium. Medium. https://medium.com/@nouriabarry/project-3-phase-1-e6fe0757b57b

    Black Disabled Lives Matter Riso Poster with Stickers Pack Bundle — jenwhitejohnson.com. (n.d.). https://jenwhitejohnson.com/Black-Disabled-Lives-Matter-Riso-Poster-with-Stickers-Pack-Bundle

    Boston, A. (2001). Fly in the buttermilk: Memoirs of an African American in Advertising, Design & Design Education.

    Boston, A. (2009). Lil’ colored rascals in the Sunshine city.

    Daniel, J. (2015, February 18). Four Corners – an interview with Archie Boston. Design Week. https://www.designweek.co.uk/issues/september-2013/four-corners-an-interview-with-archie-boston/

    Epplett, A. (2022). Abolitionist Broadsides and Anti-Slavery Imagery — Coalition of Master’s Scholars on Material Culture. Coalition of Master’s Scholars on Material Culture. https://cmsmc.org/publications/abolitionist-and-anti-slavery-imagery

    Frederick Douglass Project: In the Classroom: the Abolitionist Movement Packet | RBSCP. (n.d.). https://rbscp.lib.rochester.edu/2890

    Gaiter, C. (n.d.). Strikethrough: Typography Messages of Protest for Civil Rights. https://archive.bipocdesignhistory.com/. https://archive.bipocdesignhistory.com/ST-General

    Hayes, J. (2021). Africobra: Messages to the people.

    Hoffmitz Milken Center for Typography (HMCT). (2020, October 21). Archie Boston lecture [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oe5EVDoySwc

    Jan. 6, 1832: New England Anti-Slavery Society founded - Zinn Education Project. (2023, January 18). Zinn Education Project. https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/anti-slavery-society/

    McDonald, A. (2019, September 12). New Exhibit: “No One Can Suppress Archie Boston” - The Devil’s Tale. Duke University Libraries. https://blogs.library.duke.edu/rubenstein/2019/09/12/new-exhibit-no-one-can-suppress-archie-boston/

    Munro, S. (2021, July 27) Zoom Interview Archie Boston and the Author.

    Rapp, A. (September 1, 2008). "Archie Boston's Design Journey". AIGA. Retrieved 2022-01-28.

    Reckdahl, K., & Rabut, A. (2020, March 12). This New Orleans artist challenges the way people see things. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/09/arts/bmike-artist-new-orleans.html

    Toppins, A. (2020, August 18). Beyond the Bauhaus: I AM A MAN. AIGA Design Educators Community. https://educators.aiga.org/beyond-the-bauhaus-i-am-a-man/

  • George Herriman was a cartoonist, illustrator, and pioneer of the cartoon comics genre, and is perhaps most known for his long-running and wildly popular comic strip Krazy Kat. Woodrow Wilson, the 28th President of the United States, and John Jacob Astor, a wealthy business tycoon, were some of the famous fans of Herriman’s comics. Astor went so far as to name his dog Ignatz for the mouse that was Krazy Kat’s constant companion. Herriman’s work was not only popular but also influential and was said to have inspired cartoonists Patrick McDonnell, the creator of the strip Mutts, and Bill Watterson, creator of Calvin and Hobbes. There are even rumors that Walt Disney was inspired by Krazy Kat in his creation of Mickey Mouse, and visual similarities between the two characters are striking. Krazy Kat wasn’t just a goofy comic strip as it also provided social commentary containing themes of spirituality, surrealism, philosophy, literary allegories, the study of phrenology, as well as veiled commentary on racism. Although subtle, his allegories about racism reflect his opinion on the absurdity of social, economic, and political discrimination based on skin color. Many of the storylines in Krazy Kat were in fact hidden reflections of the artist’s own struggles, as a Creole man of mixed-race heritage, passing for white even at the time of his death. Herriman knew the consequences that would ensue if anyone found out about his racial ancestry, he intended his secret to die with him and not even his own daughters knew.

    TIMELINE

    1880 – b New Orleans, Louisiana
    1890 – Herriman and family moved from Louisiana to LA; likely begins passing as white
    1892 – Attended St. Vincent's Collegiate course
    1896 – 16, Herriman joined the St. Vincent Lyceum; Excelled at Honors English, penmanship, geography, languages
    1897 – Herriman worked at the first newspaper The Los Angeles Herald at 17 years old; Made first illustrations there.
    1901 – Herriman first meets William Randolph Hearst & works for Evening Journal New York American.
    1902 – Herriman married Mabel Lillian Bridge
    1901-1922 – Herriman moved across the country working for multiple printing agencies
    1911 – Krazy Kat & Ignatz's 1st official appearance under The Dingbat Family comics.
    1913 – Krazy Kat finally is a stand-alone comic strip for The Evening Journal. ● 1922- Permanent residence in LA under different papers for William Randolph Hearst from 1922 to his death.
    1944 – died in his sleep at the age of 64
    1971 – Herriman’s racial identity is discovered by Arthur Berger

    REFERENCES

    Bellot, G. (2017, January 19). The gender fluidity of Krazy Kat. The New Yorker. https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-gender-fluidity-of-krazy-kat

    Fikes, R. (2021, January 19). George Joseph Herriman (1880-1944) https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/herriman-george-joseph-1880-1944/

    Tisserand, M. (2016). Krazy: George Herriman, A life black and white. HarperCollinsPublishers

    Walker, T. (2020, February 20). Influential comic artist George Herriman. The Dream Foundry. https://dreamfoundry.org/2020/02/14/influential-comic-artist-george-herriman/

  • An indigenous cowboy-artist from small-town Oklahoma, Tommy Wayne Cannon was born to Caddo and Kiowa parents in the Fall of 1946. Growing up he attended school in Gracemont and took an interest in the arts. As an adolescent, Cannon was self-taught in the arts and entered his works in regional art competitions through the Southern Plains Indian Museum. His success in these competitions, as well as his proficiency in multiple mediums, won him a scholarship to the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico. It was here that Cannon’s passion for art was met with an environment of tools and people that allowed for further exploration and refinement of his skills. In school, Cannon adopted his moniker “T. C.” Cannon, which is how he would be known professionally once his career began. The IAIA was not accredited as a College at the time, so Cannon enrolled at the San Francisco Art Institute but was disappointed in the lack of community he had grown accustomed to at the IAIA. He dropped out of school and enlisted in the Army, serving in combat in the late-stage offensives of the Vietnam War. Upon returning he attended Central State University (now UCO) in Edmond, Oklahoma where he met his wife, Barbara. Upon graduation, he produced work for a showcase alongside one of his IAIA mentors that toured the US and Europe. In preparation for his next showcase, solo at the Arbach Gallery in NYC, Cannon spent six years in his studio creating a large body of work. Tragically, just a few months prior to his showcase in May of 1978, Cannon was killed in a car accident in Santa Fe. He was only 31 years old.

    TIMELINE

    1946 — Born in Lawton Oklahoma
    1961 — Age of 15, sold his first works to the Southern Plains Indian Museum
    1964 — Enrolled in the Institute of American Indian Arts
    1965 — The Voting Rights Act assured Native Americans right to vote
    1967 — Begins tour of Vietnam under the 101st Airborne; While away, Rosemary Ellison included him in a traveling exhibition
    1968 — Returns from war
    1972 — Finishes his degree at Central State University in Edmond, Oklahoma, graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts
    1972 — Included in, and toured with, a Smithsonian exhibit. Over the next six years he would go on to produce a large body of work in anticipation of his solo showcase.
    1975 — Became Artist-in-Residence at Dartmouth.
    1978 — Died in a car crash in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Aged 31 years old.
    1978 — His showcase is posthumously opened at the Arbach Gallery in New York
    1988 — Inducted into the National Hall of Fame for Famous American Indians

    REFERENCES


    101st Airborne Division - Army Unit Directory. (n.d.). Together We Served. https://army.togetherweserved.com/army/servlet/tws.webapp.WebApp?cmd=PublicUnit&type=Unit&ID=231#membersinthisunit

    101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) :: FORT CAMPBELL. (n.d.). US Army. https://home.army.mil/campbell/index.php/101st

    Action Painting & Gestural Painting | IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined. (n.d.). IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined. https://abstraction.iaia.edu/exhibition/action-gestural/?page=3

    Color Field Painting movement Overview. (n.d.). The Art Story. https://www.theartstory.org/movement/color-field-painting/

    Fauntleroy, G. (2018, July 16). Perspective: T.C. Cannon [1946–1978]. Western Art & Architecture. https://westernartandarchitecture.com/august-september-2018/perspective-t-c-cannon-1946-1978

    Fritz Scholder | Biography. (n.d.). Fritz Scholder official Website. http://www.fritzscholder.com/biography.php

    Kapplow, H., & Kapplow, H. (2018). The Bold Yet Too-Brief Art Career of T.C. Cannon. Hyperallergic. https://hyperallergic.com/446024/tc-cannon-peabody-essex-museum/

    Krutak, L. (2018, January 23). Treasures Of The Iacb: T.C. Cannon, Who Shot The Arrow, Who Killed The Sparrow (1970). U.S. Department of The Interior. https://www.doi.gov/iacb/treasures-iacb-tc-cannon-who-shot-arrow-who-killed-sparrow-1970

    Levy, M. (n.d.). TC Cannon. Medic in the Green Time. http://medicinthegreentime.com/tc-cannon/

    Making History: Celebrating 60 years of IAIA and 50 years of MOCNA. (2022). Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA). https://iaia.edu/making-history-celebrating-60-years-of-iaia-and-50-years-of-mocna/

    New Mexico Red : T. C. Cannon : Color Field Paintings | IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined. (n.d.). IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined. https://abstraction.iaia.edu/exhibition/color-field/detail.php?artwork=t-c-cannon--new-mexico-red-1967

    On Drinking Beer In Vietnam in 1967 , Edition 6-100 | Cannon, T. C. (Caddo/Kiowa). (n.d.). New Mexico Digital Collections. https://nmdigital.unm.edu/digital/collection/mcna/id/1154/

    Pallant, C. (2015, March 4). The Essence of Forever. This Land Press - Made by You and Me. https://thislandpress.com/2015/03/04/the-essence-of-forever/

    Purvis, R. (n.d.). SFAI and IAIA. ORBITS. https://matrix277.org/Object-61

    Schjeldahl, P. (2019, April 8). T. C. Cannon’s Blazing Promise. The New Yorker. https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/04/15/t-c-cannons-blazing-promise-peter-schjeldahl

    T.C. Cannon. (n.d.). Pierson Gallery, American Fine Art & Antiques – Tulsa, OK. https://piersongallery.com/t-c-cannon.html

    TC Cannon. (n.d.). Windsor Betts. https://windsorbetts.com/artist/tc-cannon

    T.C Cannon: At The Edge of America | PEM Native American Art. (n.d.). PEM | Peabody Essex Musuem. https://www.pem.org/exhibitions/t-c-cannon-at-the-edge-of-america

    Watson, M. J. (n.d.). Cannon, Tommy Wayne. Oklahoma Historical Society | OHS. https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry?entry=CA044

    Waiting for the Bus (Anadarko Princess) by T.C. Cannon.

    (n.d.). Oklahoma Arts Council.

    https://www.arts.ok.gov/art_at_the_capitol/State_Art_Collection.php?c=sac&awid=177

  • Women have long been a part of bookmaking, design, and publishing, dating as far back as handmade illuminated manuscripts, created before the printing press. In the 18th and 19th centuries, women were known to run some very successful book binderies, including Jane Steel, Katherine Waghorn, Jane Aitken, and Lorina Watkins. Most often women took over when their husbands or fathers died. Other women supported their husbands' work by setting type, such as Bertha Goudy, wife of noted book and type designer Frederic Goudy. Women also became very successful book designers following the era of book reform known as the Arts & Crafts period which resulted in the Private Press Movement. The Private Press movement was concerned with making high-quality books that were beautiful expressions of book design and a departure from the low-quality mass-produced books emerging from the industrial age and the Victorian era. Women were gaining entry into the design world as part of the Arts & Crafts movement, schools associated with the movement were cropping up all over Europe and in the United States as well, and women were enrolling in these schools in numbers not seen before. Historians note the high number of women who matriculated from the Glasgow Arts & Crafts school surpassed the number of men. As such it makes sense that we would find women designers in the history of the Private Press movement. Designers such as Margaret Armstrong and Amy Sacker designed book covers and interior pages during the era. Primarily ignored in many histories of art and design is the history of bookbinding. However, this history is also tied to the Arts & Crafts and the Private Press movement, bookbinding was another avenue of paid labor for women.

    TIMELINE

    10th Century – Ende, Spanish Illuminator of Manuscripts signs her work
    18th Century – women begin owning and operating bookbinderies; women and girls were also employed in large numbers folding and stitching pages
    1839 – Jane Burden (Morris), born
    1859 – Jane Burden (Morris), marries William Morris
    1863 – Alice Cordelia Morse, born
    1867 – Margaret Armstrong, born
    1867 – Amy Sacker, born
    1879 – Alice Cordelia Morse attends the Cooper Union (segregated school for girls)
    1880-1890 – Designing book covers becomes a professional practice
    1885-1889 – Alice Cordelia Morse works for Tiffany & Co. designing stained glass; in 1889 she leaves Tiffany to begin a freelance career designing book covers
    1889 – Jane Burden (Morris) designed the cover for Wilfrid Scawen Blunt’s In Vinculis
    1890 – Armstrong’s first book cover design was for Sweet William by Marguerite Bouvet
    1890-1940 – Margaret Armstrong's career as a book designer, produced some 270 book designs
    1891 – Kelmscott Press founded by William Morris and Emery Walker
    1901 – Amy Sacker received awarded a medal for designs at the Pan-American exposition
    1893 – Morse chaired the Sub-Committee on Book-Covers, Wood Engraving, and Illustration of the Board of Women Managers for the Woman’s Building at the World’s Columbian Exposition
    1897 – Society of Arts & Crafts in Boston founded, active members included Amy Sacker, Sarah Wyman Whitman, Julia DeWolf Addison, and Mary Crease Sears
    1910 – Women begin to dominate the modern decorative movement
    1914 – Jane Burden (Morris), dies
    1918 – Le Corbusier and Amédée Ozenfant, announce a hierarchy of art and craft with women and craft at the bottom
    1923 – Alice Cordelia Morse donates her book cover designs to the Metropolitan Museum Library
    1937 – Bookmaking on the Distaff Side, a book published by women printers
    1944 – Margaret Armstrong, dies
    1961 – Alice Cordelia Morse, dies
    1965 – Amy Sacker, dies

    WOMEN IN BOOK DESIGN & BOOKBINDING HISTORY

    This should not be considered a complete list of women in book design & bookbinding history, this is just a list of names uncovered for the research of this episode and intended to show that there is a wealth of names that could be included in histories of graphic design. This list focuses on women from the past, there is also a wealth of women designers who have worked more recently in book design, this too could become a future episode.

    Sarah Wyman Whitman (1842-1904)Helena de Kay (1848-1916)Katherine Adams (1862-1952)Alice Cordelia Morse (1863 – 1961)Margaret Armstrong (1867–1944)Elizabeth Corbet Yeats (1868-1940)Bertha Goudy (1869-1935)Bertha Stuart (1869-1953)Anna Simons (1871-1951)Amy Sacker (1872-1965)Annie French (1872-1965)Emma Redington Lee Thayer (1874-1973)Jessie Marion King (1875-1949)Anna Sipkena (1877-1933)Vanessa Bell (1879-1961)Magdalena Koll (1879-1962?)Wilhelmina Drupsteen (1880-1966)Marion Louise Peabody (1881-1937)Olga Rosanowa (1886-1918)Rie Cramer (1887-1977)Alice Greinwald-Clarus (1887-1925)Ljubow Popowa (1889-1924)Jo Daemen (1891-1944)Galina Tschitschagowa/Chichagowa (1891-1967)Olga Tschitschagowa/Chichagowa (1892-1956)Antonia Sofronowa (1892-1966)Nina Brodinsky (1892-1978)Olga Brodinsky (unknown, sister to Nina Brodinsky)Freda Lingstrom (1893-1989)Lou Loeber (1894-1983)Vavara Stepanova (1894-1958)Amy Richards (1896 - 1918)Eva Aschoff (1899-1969)Erika Giovanna Klien (1900-1957)Margarete Leins (1900-1995)Fré (Frederika Cohen (1903-1943)Grete Stern (1904-1999)Louise E. Jefferson (1908-2002)Jane Bissell Grabhorn (1911-1973)Muriel Cooper (1925 -1994)Elaine Lustig Cohen (1927-2016)Bea Feitler (1938-1982)REFERENCES

    Battershill, C. (2022). Women and Letterpress Printing 1920-2020: Gendered Impressions. Cambridge University Press.

    Breuer, G., & Meer, J. (2012). Women in Graphic Design 1890-2012. Jovis Verlag.

    Dubansky, M., Frelinghuysen, A. C., & Dunn, J. M. (2008). The Proper Decoration of Book Covers: The Life and Work of Alice C. Morse.

    Dubansky, M. (2009, May). Alice Cordelia Morse (1863–1961). The Met’s Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/mors/hd_mors.htm

    Edna Beilenson, 71, graphic arts expert and book publisher. (1981, Mar 04). New York Times (1923-) Retrieved from https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/historical-newspapers/edna-beilenson-71-graphic-arts-expert-book/docview/121888575/se-2

    Ethel Reed, Artist. (1896). Bradley, His Book, 1(3), 74–76. http://www.jstor.org/stable/20443160

    Fanni, Fanni, Maryam, Flodmark, Matilda, Kaaman, Sara, Walkup, Kathy, Börjel, Ida, Baines, Jess, Wikander, Ulla, Humlesjö, Inger, Waaranperä, Ingegärd, Cartmail, Gail, Dobney, Megan, & Josefsson, Kira. (2020). Natural enemies of books.

    Garrett, M., & Thomas, Z. (2019). Suffrage and the Arts: Visual Culture, Politics and Enterprise. Bloomsbury Publishing.

    Goudy, F. (1939). Bertha M. Goudy: Recollections by one who knew her best. The Village Press.

    Harlan, R. D. (1975). Review Article: Oral Histories of San Francisco Printing [Review of Book Printing with the Handpress; Brother Antoninus: Poet, Printer, and Religious; Artist and Printer; Comments on Some Bay Area Fine Printers; Recollections of the Grabhorn Press; The Colt Press; Fine Printing and the Grabhorn Press; The Grabhorn Press and the Grace Hoper Press; Fine Printers of the San Francisco Bay Area; Two San Francisco Bookmen; Recollections of San Francisco Printers; A Life in Printing; Literary San Francisco; Bookselling and Creating Books; Photoengraving, 1910-1969; The Schmidt Lithography Company; San Francisco Printers, 1925-1965; A Printed Word Has Its Own Measure; Untitled Interview; Printing and Book Design, by L. Allan, Dorothy Allan, Brother Antoninus (William Everson), Malette Dean, F. P. Farquhar, Edwin Grabhorn, Jane Grabhorn, Robert Grabhorn, Katherine Grover, Sherwood Grover, J. D. Hart, Warren R. Howell, Haywood Hunt, Lawton Kennedy, O. Lewis, D. Magee, Walter Mann, Max Schmidt, Jr., Herman Diedrichs, … A. Wilson]. The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy, 45(2), 202–205. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4306509

    In Full Bloom: Margaret Armstrong’s Decorated Publishers’ Bindings Revisited. (n.d.). metmuseum.org. Retrieved January 5, 2023, from https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2022/in-full-bloom

    Jaudon, & Kozloff, J. (1977). Art Hysterical Nations of Progress and Culture. Heresies, 4, 38.

    Kirkham, P. (2002). Women Designers in the USA, 1900-2000: Diversity and Difference (2d Printing). Yale University Press.

    Pankow, D. (n.d.). Fields of Gold | American Decorated Trade Bindings and Their Designers, 1890–1915 | Cary Graphic Arts Collection. RIT. https://www.rit.edu/carycollection/fields-gold

    Tidcombe, M. (1996). Women Bookbinders, 1880-1920. Amsterdam University Press.

    Women’s work. (n.d.). Brooklyn Museum. https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/dinner_party/womens_work

    Zonis, K. (2021, November 16). The Book-Cover Designs of Alice C. Morse | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2014/03/26/the-book-cover-designs-of-alice-c-morse/

  • If it seems like the underground comix scene was a raucous and raunchy boys club, that’s fairly accurate. However, there were plenty of women artists who reacted against the sexist depictions of women in comix, of which there was plenty. Their complaints about how women were being portrayed was seen to be just more censorship heaped on the male comix artists. Rather than just be quiet and go away, women like Trina Robbins, Willy Mendes, Linda Barry, Mary Fleener, and many others started drawing, bringing their own voices into the underground comix scene. Their experience in comix wasn’t all smooth sailing either. The women creating comix also insisted on absolute artistic freedom and the space to explore difficult topics, but it came at a price just like it did for the male comix artists. Undercover police, raids, and lawsuits while not necessarily the norm, seemed to be always looming. While some comix titles managed to run longer than others, the heyday of comix was all but over by the mid 1970s. However, the influence of underground comix is evident in the comics and graphic novels being published today that are willing to have serious discussions about equally serious topics.

    TIMELINE

    1880s – Comics began publication in American newspapers
    1895 – The Yellow Kid by Richard Outcault first published
    1914 – Krazy Kat by Geroge Herriman first published
    1920s – Tijuana Bibles began to be published
    1930s – Comic book began in America
    1931 – Alice Schenker (born Alice Olsen) born in Racine, WI
    1933 – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created Superman
    1936-1939 – The comic magazine format became popular
    1936 – Victor Moscoso born in Spain
    1937 – Frank Stack born in Houston, TX
    1938 – Gary Arlington born in San Jose, CA
    1938 – Trina Robbins born in Brooklyn, NY
    1939 – “She Saw The World’s Fair” published by Wesley Morse
    1939 – Harvey Pekar born in Cleveland, OH
    1939 – Richard “Grass” Green born in Fort Wayne, IN
    1940-1950s – Comic burnings became common in America
    1940 – Gilbert Shelton born in Houston, TX
    1940 – Manuel “Spain” Reodriguez born in Buffalo, NY
    1941 – Vaughn Bodé born in Utica, NY
    1941 – S. Clay Wilson (Steven Clay Wilson) born in Lincoln, Nebraska
    1941 – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson born in Texas
    1942 – Rand Holmes born in Nova Scotia
    1942 – Dan O’Neil born
    1943 – Joel Beck born in Ross, CA
    1943 – Robert Williaams born in Los Angeles, CA
    1944 – George Herriman dies
    1944 – Howard Cruse is born in Birmingham, AL
    1943 – Robert Crumb born in Philadelphia, PA
    1944 – Rick Griffin born in California
    1944 – Bill Griffith born
    1944 – Kim Deitch born in Los Angeles, CA
    1944 – Max Gaines establishes Educational Comics
    1944 – Mervyn “Skip” Williamson born in San Antonio, TX
    1945 – Lee Mars born
    1947 – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster sued in NY Supreme Court to regain their rights to Superman; they lose the case and their jobs at DC Comics
    1947 – Jay Lynch born in Orange, NJ
    1947 – Max Gaines dies in a boat crash; son William Gaines takes over EC Comics
    1948 – Art Spiegelman born in Stockholm, Sweden
    1948 – Barbara “Willy” Mendes born
    1948 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb born in Long Beach, NY
    1949 – Marry Wings born Mary Geller in Chicago, IL
    1950s – Student Press Movement starts
    1950 – Educational Comics becomes Entertaining Comics under William Gaines
    1950 – Gary Panter born in Durant, OK
    1951 – Mary Fleener born
    1952-1956 – Harvey Kurtzman is the editor of MAD Magazine
    1953 – Roberta Gregory born in Los Angeles, CA
    1954 – “Seduction of the Innocent” by psychiatrist Frederick Werthan published
    1954 – Comics Code Authority established
    1954 – Victor Moscoso starts at Cooper Union Art School in Manhattan
    1955 – William Gaines starts humor magazine, MAD Magazine
    1955 – Charles Burns born
    1956 – After being cited by the CCA, EC comics diverts resources to new title MAD Magazine
    1956 – Ralph Bakshi starts animating at Terrytoons
    1956 – Alice and Don Schenker marry
    1956 – Lynda Barry born in Richland Center, WI
    1957 – Harvey Kurtzmaan’s Trump magazine published
    1957 – Peter Baagge born in New York
    1957-1960 – Spain Rodriguez studies at Silvermine Guild School of Art in New Canaan, CT
    1958 – Moe Moskowitz moves to Bay Are and opens bookstore
    1958 – Robert Crumb and his brother Charles publish satire magazine “Foo”
    1958-1962 – Frank Stack and Gilbert Shelton edit University of Texas at Austin’s newspaper, The Texas Ranger
    1959 – Victor Moscoso moves to San Francisco, CA
    1960s – Underground comix movement started
    1960 – MAD Magazine had circulation of 1.4 million
    1960 – Rick Griffin met filmmaker John Severson at screening of Surf Fever movie
    1960 – Harvey Kurtzman starts Help! Magazine
    1960 – Phoebe Gloeckner born in Philadelphia, PA
    1960 – Alison Bechdel born in Beech Creek, PA
    1961 – Skip Williamson sells first comic to Help! Magazine
    1961 – Daniel Clowes born in Chicaago, IL
    1963 – In mainstream comics, Dell, DC and Marvel were the major publishers
    1963 – Rick Griffin starts working at Surfer Magazine as a cartoonist, debuting “Murphy”
    1963 – Rick Griffin is seriously injured as a passenger in a drunk driving accident
    1963 – Spain Rodriguez starts work at the Western Electric Company Plant
    1963 – Jay Lynch moves to Chicago to become a cartoonist
    1956 – America gets involved in the Vietnam War
    1963 – March On Washington
    1963 – President John F. Kennedy assassinated
    1963 – Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique” is published
    1964 – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “God Nose”
    1964 – After being promoted to director of cartoons at Terrytown, Ralph Bakshi left to run animation at Paramount Pictures
    1962 – Frank Stack publishes “The Adventures of Jesus”
    1962 – Harvey Pekar and Robert Crumb meet in Cleveland, OH and become friends and collaborators
    1965 – Birth of the Underground Press
    1965 – Rick Griffin picks up “Murphy” comics in Surfer after a pause
    1965 – Schenkers launch Print Mint inside of Moskowitz’s bookstore
    1965 – Spain Rodriguez spends summer in NYC creating cartoons for The Militant paper and joined anarchist group Resurgence Youth Movement
    1965 – Robert Williams starts working as Art Director for Ed “Big Daddy” Roth
    1965 – Robert Crumb starts taking LSD
    1965 – Julie Doucet born in Saint-Lambert Quebec, Canada
    1965-1966 – Mario Savia’s Free Speech Movement impacts Berkely’s campus
    1966 – After graduating from San Francisco Art Institute, Victor Moscoso joins faculty
    1966 – Art Spiegelman is Topps Bubblegum’s star artist
    1966 – Spain Rodriguez has his first cover in paper East Village Other
    1966 – Trina Robbins moved back to NYC from LA and worked for East Village Other as advisor and illustrator
    1966 – Rick Griffin joins Jook Savages and designs posters for their art shows in San Francisco
    1966 – Kim Deitch moves to NYC and gets “Sunshine Girl” published in The East Village Other
    1966 – Joel Beck publishes “Lenny of Laredo”, “Marching Marvin” and “The Profit”
    1966 – Print Mint publishes their first comix, a reprint of Beck’s “Lenny of Laredo”
    1966 – NOW, of the National Organization for Women, was formed
    1966 – Underground Press Syndicate established by East Village Other editor Walter Bowart
    1966 – Weekly & monthly underground papers regularly publish Underground Comix
    1967 – Robert Crumb leaves Cleveland, OH, his job at Americana Greetings, and wife Dana to move to San Francisco, CA
    1967 – Gilbert Shelton’s “Wonder Wart Hog” published by Pete Millar
    1967 – Victor Moscoso and RIck Griffin begin to collaborate on posters and Zap Comics covers
    1967 – Rick Griffin commissioned for “Pow-Wow, a Gathering of the Tribes for a Human Be-In” held in Golden Gate Park’s polo grounds
    1967 – Art Spiegelman comes up with the idea for Wacky Packs working for Topps Bubblegum
    1967 – “Summer of Love” takes place in San Francisco for 9 months
    1967 – Bijou Funnies, initially The Chicago Mirror, founded by Skip WIlliamson and Jay Lynch in Chigaco, IL
    1967 – Art Spiegelman moves to San Francisco, CA
    1967 – “Cavalier” Magazine serializes Robert Crumb’s “Fritz the Cat”
    1967 – First drawings of Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers appear on a flier for short student film “The Texas Hippies March on the Capitol”
    1967-1973 – Jay Lynch’s “‘Nard ‘n’ Pat” comic publication years
    1968 – Rand Holmes moves to Vancouver, Canada and works for Georgia Straight a weekly underground tabloid and starts “The Adventures of Harold Hedd”
    1968 – S. Clay Wilson moves to San Francisco and becomes friends with Robert Crumb, starts to contribute to Zap Comics
    1968 – First issue of Zap Comix by Robert Crumb released
    1968 – “Keep on Truckin’” one page comix published in Zap Comix by Robert Crumb
    1968 – Robert Crumb sends for his wife Dana to join him in San Francisco
    1968 – Robert Crumb first sees S. Clay Wilson’s comix work
    1968 – Gary Arlington opens his comic book store in the Mission District in San Francisco, CA
    1968 – Spain Rodriguez’s cover for Feb 2nd issue of East Village Other creates legal issues over depiction of a sexual act
    1968 – Robert Crumb publishes “Zap”
    1968 – Skip Williamson’s “Snappy Sammy Smoot (1968-1996) makes its debut in Bijou Funnies
    1968 – Robert William’s controversial painting “Appetite for Destruction” is used as album art for the Guns ‘N’ Roses album of the same name
    1968 – “Yellow Dog” comix anthology started by Joel Beck and John Thompson
    1968-1973 – Skip Williamson’s Sammy Smoot character is played by Carl Reiner on the comedy TV show “Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In”
    1968-1975 – Considered the boom years of Underground Comix
    1968 – Apex Novelties ran by Don Donaahue starts publishing comix
    1968 – US Government outlaws LSD
    1968 – Robert Crumb starts “Snatch Comix” published by Apex Novelties
    1969 – Neil Armstrong lands on the moon
    1969-1970 – “Odd Bodkins” by Dan O’Neil is published in the San Francisco Oracle
    1969 – Whitney Museum Exhibition “Human Concern/Personal Torment: The Grotesque in American Art” showed some of Robert Crumb’s work
    1969 – Roger Brand at the first comic convention panel for Underground Comix artists, declined to invite Trina Robbins
    1969 – Rip Off Press founded by Gilbert Shelton, Jack “Jaxon” Jackson, Dave Moriarty and Fred Todd
    1969 – Kim Deitch and Trinaa Robbins start dating
    1969 – Bill Griffith and Jay Kinney meet and start idea for “Young Lust”
    1969 – Vaughn Bode briefly edits “Gothic Blimp Works”; Kim Deitch begins to edit “Gothic Blimp Works”
    1969 – Print Mint is raided by police over “Zap Comix” fourth issue (featured “Joe Blow” incest comic by Robert Crumb)
    1969 – Schenkers arrested over violation of California Penal Code Section 311.2 (illegal distribution of pornography) due to publishing “Zap Comics” fourth issue
    1969 – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Jiz Comics” under pseudonym Howard Crankwood
    1970s – Graphic Novel format began
    1970s –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates historical narrative comix like “Comanche Moon”, “Los Tejanos”
    1970 – Ed “Big Daddy” Roth’s shop closes and Robert Williams ends his tenure as Art Director
    1970 – Chris Kirkpatrick, owner of New Yorker Book Store that sold Zap Comix, convicted
    1970 – Bill Griffith moves to San Francisco, CA
    1970 – Trina Robbins and Kim Deitch’s daughter Casey born
    1970 – “It Ain’t Me Babe” the first women’s liberation newspaper, was published in Berkley
    1970 – Kitchen Sink Press ran by Denis Kitchen founded
    1970 – “Skull” published by Rip Off Press
    1970 – Many Underground Comix artists met and created The Cartoon Workers Union
    1970 – Robert William released collected “Coochy Cooty Men’s Comics” published by Print Mint
    1970 – Last Gasp Eco Funnies ran by Ron Turner founded
    1970 – “Young Lust” by Bill Griffith and Jaay Kinney published by Company & Sons
    1970 – Robert Crumb meets with Ralph Bakshi and Steve Kraantz about making a movie out of his popular character Fritz the Cat
    1970 – “Abortion Eve” comic produced by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely
    1970 – Spain Rodriguez releases “Zodiac Mindwarp” (East Village Other) and “Subert” (Rip Off Press)
    1970 – Kim Deitch and Trina Robbins end their relationship
    1971 – Gilbert Shelton’s Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers first released
    1971 – Roberta Gregory attend CSU Long Beach and contributes “Feminist Funnies” to their newspaper
    1971 – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Bent” (Print Mint)
    1971 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb grates with degree in fine art from University of Arizona
    1971 – “Ms Magazine” founded by Gloria Steinem and art directed by Bea Feitler
    1971 – Bill Griffith’s “Zippy the Pinhead” debuts in Real Pulp Comics #1 by Print Mint
    1971 – Dan O’Neil and the Air Pirates (Bobby London, Shary Flenniken, Gary Hallgren, and Ted Richards) create “Air Pirate Funnies” published by Last Gasp
    1971 – Lee Marr’s “Pudge” & “Girl Blimp” published
    1971 – Roberta Gregory sells her first comic to “Wimmen’s Comix”
    1971 – Disney filed suit in Northern District of California against the comic artists from the “Air Pirate Funnies”
    1971 – Rip Off Press moves from Mowry’s Opera House to 17th Street
    1971 – After moving back to NYC, Art Spiegelman once again returns to San Francisco, CA
    1972 – “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” released in first collected volume, the second volume out the following year
    1972 – “Tits ‘n’ Clits” All women comix anthology by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely published first issue (Nanny Goat Productions)
    1972 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb has comix debut in “Wimmen’s Comix” #1 with “Goldie a Neurotic Woman”
    1972 – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb meet at a San Francisco party
    1972 – “Fritz the Cat” movie directed by Ralph Bakshi released
    1972 – 2 all women’s comix anthologies started “Wimmen’s Comix” (Trina Robbins, Last Gasp) and “Tit’s & Clits” (Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevelyl, Nanny Goat Productions)
    1972 – Disney granted it’s injunction against Dan O’Neil and the other comic artists from “Air Pirate Funnies”; found guilty of copyright infringement and trade disparagement
    1972 – “Bizzare Sex” started published by Denis Kitchen of Kitchen Sink Press
    1972 – Print Mint hits 1 million issues of “Zap Comix” sold
    1973 – Rand Holmes travels to San Francisco, CA to get the second volume of “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” published by Last Gasp
    1973 – Bill Griffith’s “A Sour Look at the Comix Scene, or Out of the Inkwell and Into the Toilet” runs in The San Francisco Phoenix
    1973 – Undercover cop buys first issue of “Tits ‘n’ Clits” at San Francisco Bookstore Fahrenheit 451; owners charged with selling pornography and Farmer and Cheverly are forced to hide from law enforcement for 2 years
    1973 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves onto Robert Crumb’s farm property as his girlfriend
    1973 – “Come Out Comix” by Mary Wings self-published
    1973 – Year of the Crash of Comix
    1973 – Rick Griffin is a born again Christian
    1973 – Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brother’s comics had sold 400,000 copies; eventually selling 45 million copies to date in 16 different languages
    1972 – Haavery Pekar’s first story “Brilliant American Maniacs Series No. 1 Crazy Ed” published in “People’s Comics” with art by Robert Crumb
    1972 – Justin Green publishes “Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary”
    1972 – Art Spiegelman publishes first 3 pages of Maus
    1973 –Supreme Court’s Miller v. California decision rules that vendors can be jailed and retroactively fined for selling obscene materials, cannot plead ignorance to contents
    1974 – Jay Lynch has a one week tenure as editor at Hustler Magazine
    1974 – Lynda Barry attends Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA
    1974 – Art Spiegelman self publishes “Ace Hole” and “Midget Detective”
    1974 – Marvel releases “Comix Book”
    1974 – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Pork” (Co-Op Press)
    1974 – “The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat” directed by Ralph Bakshi released
    1975 – The Schenkers working partnership with Bob and Peggy Rita dissolves and Print Mint slows down production and distribution
    1975 – “Felch Comics” by Keith Green
    1975 – Vietnam War ends, American troops withdraw from Saigon
    1975 – Victor Moscoso starts attending Yale
    1975 – Bill Griffith and Art Spiegelman create “Arcade” comix anthology
    1975 – Vaughn Bodé dies at age 33
    1976 – Harvey Pekar self publishes “How I Quit Collecting Records and Put Out a Comic Book with the Money I Saved” with art by Robert Crumb
    1976 – “Wet Satin” erotic satirical all-women’s comics anthology published by Kitchen Sink Press
    1976 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves off of the Crumb farm commune
    1976 – Mary Wing’s “Dyke Shorts” is self-published
    1976 – Roberta Gregory creates “Dynamite Damsels” (Self-published)
    1976 – Copyright Act becomes law
    1976 – Lee Marrs “The Further Fattening Adventures of Pudge, Girl Blimp” featured the first openly bisexual character in comics
    1967 – Larry Fuller creates “Gay Heartthrobs”
    1976 – Harvey Pekar’s “American Splendor #1” published
    1976 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb and Diane Noomin start “Twisted Sisters”
    1976-1077 – Punk scene emerges
    1971 – Howard Cruse’s “Barefootz” first published
    1977 – Kitchen Sink Press reprints Joel Becks comics under title “Joel Beck’s Comics & Stories”
    1977 – Gary Panter moves to Los Angeles, CA
    1977 – S. Clay Wilson releases comix with his most popular character “The Checkered Demon” (Last Gasp)
    1977 – Gilbert Shelton’s character Fat Freddy’s cat from “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” gets its own spin off comic
    1977 – Robert Crumb divorces Dana
    1978 – Gilbert Shelton moves to San Francisco, CA from Austin, TX
    1978 – First graphic novel “A Contract With God” by Will Eisner is published by Baronet Press
    1978 – Dan O’Neils appeal in the case of Dismney and the Air Pirates does not rule in O’Neil’s favor
    1978 – Gilbert Shelton makes “Shakedown Street” album cover for The Grateful Dead
    1978 – Paul Mavrides starts to collaborate on “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers”
    1979 – Gilbert Shelton and wife/agent Lora move to Europe
    1979 – The Supreme Court declines to take Dan O’Neil’s appeal case against Disney
    1979 – Robert William publishes “The Lowbrow Art of Robt. Williams”
    1979 – Mary Wings creates drug awareness book “Are Your Highs Getting You Down?” with a California Arts Council Grant
    1979 – Denis Kitchen approaches Howaard Cruse about making “Gay Comix”
    1979 – Rip Off Press ends
    1979 – Art Spiegelman starts to teach at the School of Visual Arts in NY
    1980 – First issue of “Gay Comix” (Kitchen SInk Press) released, edited by Howard Cruse
    1980 – “Raw” comics anthology created by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly
    1980-1991 – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman serialized
    1981 – “Wimmen’s Comix” takes a 6 year hiatus
    1981 – Daniel Clowes and his friends create “Psycho Comics”
    1981 – Robert Crumb starts comix magazine “Weirdo” published by Last Gasp
    1981 – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb’s daughter Sophie is born; they move to Southern France
    1982 – Last issue of “Bizzare Sex” released
    1982 – Gilbert and Jamie Hernandez create “Love and Rockets” published by Fantagraphics
    1983 – “Dykes to Watch Out For” by Alison Bechdel first published
    1984 – Mary Fleener self publishes her first comic “Hoodoo”
    1984 – Robert Crumb passes editorship of “Weirdo” to Peter Bagge
    1985 – Print Mint, since renamed Reprint Mint, is sold by the Schenkers
    1985 – Mary Wings “She Came Too Late” lesbian detective novel published
    1985 – Topps Bubbglegum starts Garbage Pail Kids cards
    1986 – Doubleday publishes the first of it’s two collected volumes of Harvye Pekar’s “American Splendor” with the next coming out the following year
    1986 – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “Illustrated History of Ranching in Texas”
    1986 – Peter Bagge resigns as editor at “Weirdo”; Aline Kominsky-Crumb takes over
    1987 – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb marry
    1988 – “Dirty Plotte” by Julie Doucet was first self-published
    1988 – Roberta Gregory self publishes “Winging It” and “Sheila and the Unicorn”
    1989 – Jack “Jaxon” Jackon publishes “Rip Off Pres: The Golden Era #21”
    1989 – Daniel Clowes first issue of “Eightball”
    1989 – Roberta Gregory moves to Seattle and begins to work at Fantagraphics Books
    1990 – Art Spiegelman receives a Guggenheim Fellowship to work on Maus’ second volume
    1990 – Peter Bagge first publishes “Hate” (Fantagraaphics)
    1991 – American Splendor’s once a year regular release stops with issue fifteen
    1991 – Rick Griffin dies after motorcycle accident
    1991 – Roberta Gregory’s “Naughty Bits” issue one self published
    1991 – “Dirty Plotte” published by Drawn & Quarterly
    1991 – Julie Doucet moves to NYC for one year and makes “My New York Diary”
    1992 – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman wins a Pulitzer Prize
    1992 – “Wimmen’s Comix” publishes it’s last issue
    1993 – Don Schenkers dies
    1994 – Robert Williams first published “Juxtapoz Arts & Culture” Magazine
    1995 – “Stuck Rubber Baby” by Howard Cruse published
    1995 – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns first published by Fantagraphics
    1995 – “Crumb” documentary about Robert Crumb by Terry Zwigoff is released
    1996 – Mary Fleener’s “Life of the Party” released
    1998 – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates “Lost Cause”
    1999 – Joel Beck dies
    2001-2003 – Roberta Gregory’s popular character Bitchy Bitch from “Naughty Bits” starred in the animated cartoon “Life’s a Bitch” on Comedy Network (Canada) and Oxygen Network (US)
    2001 – Daniel Clowes “Eightball” story “Ghost World” is made into a movie of the same name
    2002 – Rand Holmes dies
    2002 – Phoebe Gloeckner’s “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” published by Frog Books
    2003 – “American Splendor” the award winning movie about Harvey Pekar’s life starring Paul Giamatti is released
    2005 – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns released as graphic novel by Fantagraphics
    2006 –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson dies
    2006 – “Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic” by Alison Bechdel published
    2010 – Harvey Pekar dies
    2015 – “Fun Home” the Broadway Musical wins a Tony for best musical
    2015 – “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” by Phoebe Glockner made into a movie with the same name
    2017 – Skip Williamson and Jay Lynch die within a week and a half of each other
    2019 – Howard Cruse dies
    2020 – Alice Schnker dies
    2021 – Streaming channel Tubi releases 8 episode show “The Freak Brothers” based on Gilbert Shelton’s “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers”
    2021 – Spain Rodriguez dies
    2021 – S. Clay Wilson dies
    2022 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb dies

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  • Comix, spelled with an x at the end instead of c, is a uniquely American movement and brings to mind eccentric, explicit, and subversive comics aimed at an adult audience. Having roots in the explicit Tijuana Bibles of the 1920, the lurid horror comics produced by EC, and the later wackiness of MAD Magazine, Comix creators defied censorship laws and American moral standards to create their unique artistic visions and thrived as a part of the Counterculture movement of the 1960s. In some respects, comix were a reaction against what the artists saw as the over-sanitized mainstream comics that did nothing innovative or interesting. While comix creators came from all over the US, the hotbed for comix innovation happened in San Francisco. Many cite the first issue of Robert Crumb’s anthology “Zap” as the birth of underground comix as a movement and the number of comix grew rapidly after that. The complete artistic freedom comix artists insisted on came at a price as they pushed up against censorship with their themes of sexism, racism, violence, and questionable morality. Comix artists, publishers and the shops selling comix titles faced police raids and lawsuits, some of which lasted for years. Pushing up against censorship (and good taste) comix proved that comics could be more than just superheroes saving the day.

    TIMELINE

    1880s – Comics began publication in American newspapers
    1895 – The Yellow Kid by Richard Outcault first published
    1914 – Krazy Kat by Geroge Herriman first published
    1920s – Tijuana Bibles began to be published
    1930s – Comic book began in America
    1931 – Alice Schenker (born Alice Olsen) born in Racine, WI
    1933 – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created Superman
    1936-1939 – The comic magazine format became popular
    1936 – Victor Moscoso born in Spain
    1937 – Frank Stack born in Houston, TX
    1938 – Gary Arlington born in San Jose, CA
    1938 – Trina Robbins born in Brooklyn, NY
    1939 – “She Saw The World’s Fair” published by Wesley Morse
    1939 – Harvey Pekar born in Cleveland, OH
    1939 – Richard “Grass” Green born in Fort Wayne, IN
    1940-1950s – Comic burnings became common in America
    1940 – Gilbert Shelton born in Houston, TX
    1940 – Manuel “Spain” Reodriguez born in Buffalo, NY
    1941 – Vaughn Bodé born in Utica, NY
    1941 – S. Clay Wilson (Steven Clay Wilson) born in Lincoln, Nebraska
    1941 – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson born in Texas
    1942 – Rand Holmes born in Nova Scotia
    1942 – Dan O’Neil born
    1943 – Joel Beck born in Ross, CA
    1943 – Robert Williaams born in Los Angeles, CA
    1944 – George Herriman dies
    1944 – Howard Cruse is born in Birmingham, AL
    1943 – Robert Crumb born in Philadelphia, PA
    1944 – Rick Griffin born in California
    1944 – Bill Griffith born
    1944 – Kim Deitch born in Los Angeles, CA
    1944 – Max Gaines establishes Educational Comics
    1944 – Mervyn “Skip” Williamson born in San Antonio, TX
    1945 – Lee Mars born
    1947 – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster sued in NY Supreme Court to regain their rights to Superman; they lose the case and their jobs at DC Comics
    1947 – Jay Lynch born in Orange, NJ
    1947 – Max Gaines dies in a boat crash; son William Gaines takes over EC Comics
    1948 – Art Spiegelman born in Stockholm, Sweden
    1948 – Barbara “Willy” Mendes born
    1948 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb born in Long Beach, NY
    1949 – Marry Wings born Mary Geller in Chicago, IL
    1950s – Student Press Movement starts
    1950 – Educational Comics becomes Entertaining Comics under William Gaines
    1950 – Gary Panter born in Durant, OK
    1951 – Mary Fleener born
    1952-1956 – Harvey Kurtzman is the editor of MAD Magazine
    1953 – Roberta Gregory born in Los Angeles, CA
    1954 – “Seduction of the Innocent” by psychiatrist Frederick Werthan published
    1954 – Comics Code Authority established
    1954 – Victor Moscoso starts at Cooper Union Art School in Manhattan
    1955 – William Gaines starts humor magazine, MAD Magazine
    1955 – Charles Burns born
    1956 – After being cited by the CCA, EC comics diverts resources to new title MAD Magazine
    1956 – Ralph Bakshi starts animating at Terrytoons
    1956 – Alice and Don Schenker marry
    1956 – Lynda Barry born in Richland Center, WI
    1957 – Harvey Kurtzmaan’s Trump magazine published
    1957 – Peter Baagge born in New York
    1957-1960 – Spain Rodriguez studies at Silvermine Guild School of Art in New Canaan, CT
    1958 – Moe Moskowitz moves to Bay Are and opens bookstore
    1958 – Robert Crumb and his brother Charles publish satire magazine “Foo”
    1958-1962 – Frank Stack and Gilbert Shelton edit University of Texas at Austin’s newspaper, The Texas Ranger
    1959 – Victor Moscoso moves to San Francisco, CA
    1960s – Underground comix movement started
    1960 – MAD Magazine had circulation of 1.4 million
    1960 – Rick Griffin met filmmaker John Severson at screening of Surf Fever movie
    1960 – Harvey Kurtzman starts Help! Magazine
    1960 – Phoebe Gloeckner born in Philadelphia, PA
    1960 – Alison Bechdel born in Beech Creek, PA
    1961 – Skip Williamson sells first comic to Help! Magazine
    1961 – Daniel Clowes born in Chicaago, IL
    1963 – In mainstream comics, Dell, DC and Marvel were the major publishers
    1963 – Rick Griffin starts working at Surfer Magazine as a cartoonist, debuting “Murphy”
    1963 – Rick Griffin is seriously injured as a passenger in a drunk driving accident
    1963 – Spain Rodriguez starts work at the Western Electric Company Plant
    1963 – Jay Lynch moves to Chicago to become a cartoonist
    1956 – America gets involved in the Vietnam War
    1963 – March On Washington
    1963 – President John F. Kennedy assassinated
    1963 – Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique” is published
    1964 – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “God Nose”
    1964 – After being promoted to director of cartoons at Terrytown, Ralph Bakshi left to run animation at Paramount Pictures
    1962 – Frank Stack publishes “The Adventures of Jesus”
    1962 – Harvey Pekar and Robert Crumb meet in Cleveland, OH and become friends and collaborators
    1965 – Birth of the Underground Press
    1965 – Rick Griffin picks up “Murphy” comics in Surfer after a pause
    1965 – Schenkers launch Print Mint inside of Moskowitz’s bookstore
    1965 – Spain Rodriguez spends summer in NYC creating cartoons for The Militant paper and joined anarchist group Resurgence Youth Movement
    1965 – Robert Williams starts working as Art Director for Ed “Big Daddy” Roth
    1965 – Robert Crumb starts taking LSD
    1965 – Julie Doucet born in Saint-Lambert Quebec, Canada
    1965-1966 – Mario Savia’s Free Speech Movement impacts Berkely’s campus
    1966 – After graduating from San Francisco Art Institute, Victor Moscoso joins faculty
    1966 – Art Spiegelman is Topps Bubblegum’s star artist
    1966 – Spain Rodriguez has his first cover in paper East Village Other
    1966 – Trina Robbins moved back to NYC from LA and worked for East Village Other as advisor and illustrator
    1966 – Rick Griffin joins Jook Savages and designs posters for their art shows in San Francisco
    1966 – Kim Deitch moves to NYC and gets “Sunshine Girl” published in The East Village Other
    1966 – Joel Beck publishes “Lenny of Laredo”, “Marching Marvin” and “The Profit”
    1966 – Print Mint publishes their first comix, a reprint of Beck’s “Lenny of Laredo”
    1966 – NOW, of the National Organization for Women, was formed
    1966 – Underground Press Syndicate established by East Village Other editor Walter Bowart
    1966 – Weekly & monthly underground papers regularly publish Underground Comix
    1967 – Robert Crumb leaves Cleveland, OH, his job at Americana Greetings, and wife Dana to move to San Francisco, CA
    1967 – Gilbert Shelton’s “Wonder Wart Hog” published by Pete Millar
    1967 – Victor Moscoso and RIck Griffin begin to collaborate on posters and Zap Comics covers
    1967 – Rick Griffin commissioned for “Pow-Wow, a Gathering of the Tribes for a Human Be-In” held in Golden Gate Park’s polo grounds
    1967 – Art Spiegelman comes up with the idea for Wacky Packs working for Topps Bubblegum
    1967 – “Summer of Love” takes place in San Francisco for 9 months
    1967 – Bijou Funnies, initially The Chicago Mirror, founded by Skip WIlliamson and Jay Lynch in Chigaco, IL
    1967 – Art Spiegelman moves to San Francisco, CA
    1967 – “Cavalier” Magazine serializes Robert Crumb’s “Fritz the Cat”
    1967 – First drawings of Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers appear on a flier for short student film “The Texas Hippies March on the Capitol”
    1967-1973 – Jay Lynch’s “‘Nard ‘n’ Pat” comic publication years
    1968 – Rand Holmes moves to Vancouver, Canada and works for Georgia Straight a weekly underground tabloid and starts “The Adventures of Harold Hedd”
    1968 – S. Clay Wilson moves to San Francisco and becomes friends with Robert Crumb, starts to contribute to Zap Comics
    1968 – First issue of Zap Comix by Robert Crumb released
    1968 – “Keep on Truckin’” one page comix published in Zap Comix by Robert Crumb
    1968 – Robert Crumb sends for his wife Dana to join him in San Francisco
    1968 – Robert Crumb first sees S. Clay Wilson’s comix work
    1968 – Gary Arlington opens his comic book store in the Mission District in San Francisco, CA
    1968 – Spain Rodriguez’s cover for Feb 2nd issue of East Village Other creates legal issues over depiction of a sexual act
    1968 – Robert Crumb publishes “Zap”
    1968 – Skip Williamson’s “Snappy Sammy Smoot (1968-1996) makes its debut in Bijou Funnies
    1968 – Robert William’s controversial painting “Appetite for Destruction” is used as album art for the Guns ‘N’ Roses album of the same name
    1968 – “Yellow Dog” comix anthology started by Joel Beck and John Thompson
    1968-1973 – Skip Williamson’s Sammy Smoot character is played by Carl Reiner on the comedy TV show “Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In”
    1968-1975 – Considered the boom years of Underground Comix
    1968 – Apex Novelties ran by Don Donaahue starts publishing comix
    1968 – US Government outlaws LSD
    1968 – Robert Crumb starts “Snatch Comix” published by Apex Novelties
    1969 – Neil Armstrong lands on the moon
    1969-1970 – “Odd Bodkins” by Dan O’Neil is published in the San Francisco Oracle
    1969 – Whitney Museum Exhibition “Human Concern/Personal Torment: The Grotesque in American Art” showed some of Robert Crumb’s work
    1969 – Roger Brand at the first comic convention panel for Underground Comix artists, declined to invite Trina Robbins
    1969 – Rip Off Press founded by Gilbert Shelton, Jack “Jaxon” Jackson, Dave Moriarty and Fred Todd
    1969 – Kim Deitch and Trinaa Robbins start dating
    1969 – Bill Griffith and Jay Kinney meet and start idea for “Young Lust”
    1969 – Vaughn Bode briefly edits “Gothic Blimp Works”; Kim Deitch begins to edit “Gothic Blimp Works”
    1969 – Print Mint is raided by police over “Zap Comix” fourth issue (featured “Joe Blow” incest comic by Robert Crumb)
    1969 – Schenkers arrested over violation of California Penal Code Section 311.2 (illegal distribution of pornography) due to publishing “Zap Comics” fourth issue
    1969 – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Jiz Comics” under pseudonym Howard Crankwood
    1970s – Graphic Novel format began
    1970s –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates historical narrative comix like “Comanche Moon”, “Los Tejanos”
    1970 – Ed “Big Daddy” Roth’s shop closes and Robert Williams ends his tenure as Art Director
    1970 – Chris Kirkpatrick, owner of New Yorker Book Store that sold Zap Comix, convicted
    1970 – Bill Griffith moves to San Francisco, CA
    1970 – Trina Robbins and Kim Deitch’s daughter Casey born
    1970 – “It Ain’t Me Babe” the first women’s liberation newspaper, was published in Berkley
    1970 – Kitchen Sink Press ran by Denis Kitchen founded
    1970 – “Skull” published by Rip Off Press
    1970 – Many Underground Comix artists met and created The Cartoon Workers Union
    1970 – Robert William released collected “Coochy Cooty Men’s Comics” published by Print Mint
    1970 – Last Gasp Eco Funnies ran by Ron Turner founded
    1970 – “Young Lust” by Bill Griffith and Jaay Kinney published by Company & Sons
    1970 – Robert Crumb meets with Ralph Bakshi and Steve Kraantz about making a movie out of his popular character Fritz the Cat
    1970 – “Abortion Eve” comic produced by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely
    1970 – Spain Rodriguez releases “Zodiac Mindwarp” (East Village Other) and “Subert” (Rip Off Press)
    1970 – Kim Deitch and Trina Robbins end their relationship
    1971 – Gilbert Shelton’s Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers first released
    1971 – Roberta Gregory attend CSU Long Beach and contributes “Feminist Funnies” to their newspaper
    1971 – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Bent” (Print Mint)
    1971 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb grates with degree in fine art from University of Arizona
    1971 – “Ms Magazine” founded by Gloria Steinem and art directed by Bea Feitler
    1971 – Bill Griffith’s “Zippy the Pinhead” debuts in Real Pulp Comics #1 by Print Mint
    1971 – Dan O’Neil and the Air Pirates (Bobby London, Shary Flenniken, Gary Hallgren, and Ted Richards) create “Air Pirate Funnies” published by Last Gasp
    1971 – Lee Marr’s “Pudge” & “Girl Blimp” published
    1971 – Roberta Gregory sells her first comic to “Wimmen’s Comix”
    1971 – Disney filed suit in Northern District of California against the comic artists from the “Air Pirate Funnies”
    1971 – Rip Off Press moves from Mowry’s Opera House to 17th Street
    1971 – After moving back to NYC, Art Spiegelman once again returns to San Francisco, CA
    1972 – “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” released in first collected volume, the second volume out the following year
    1972 – “Tits ‘n’ Clits” All women comix anthology by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely published first issue (Nanny Goat Productions)
    1972 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb has comix debut in “Wimmen’s Comix” #1 with “Goldie a Neurotic Woman”
    1972 – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb meet at a San Francisco party
    1972 – “Fritz the Cat” movie directed by Ralph Bakshi released
    1972 – 2 all women’s comix anthologies started “Wimmen’s Comix” (Trina Robbins, Last Gasp) and “Tit’s & Clits” (Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevelyl, Nanny Goat Productions)
    1972 – Disney granted it’s injunction against Dan O’Neil and the other comic artists from “Air Pirate Funnies”; found guilty of copyright infringement and trade disparagement
    1972 – “Bizzare Sex” started published by Denis Kitchen of Kitchen Sink Press
    1972 – Print Mint hits 1 million issues of “Zap Comix” sold
    1973 – Rand Holmes travels to San Francisco, CA to get the second volume of “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” published by Last Gasp
    1973 – Bill Griffith’s “A Sour Look at the Comix Scene, or Out of the Inkwell and Into the Toilet” runs in The San Francisco Phoenix
    1973 – Undercover cop buys first issue of “Tits ‘n’ Clits” at San Francisco Bookstore Fahrenheit 451; owners charged with selling pornography and Farmer and Cheverly are forced to hide from law enforcement for 2 years
    1973 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves onto Robert Crumb’s farm property as his girlfriend
    1973 – “Come Out Comix” by Mary Wings self-published
    1973 – Year of the Crash of Comix
    1973 – Rick Griffin is a born again Christian
    1973 – Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brother’s comics had sold 400,000 copies; eventually selling 45 million copies to date in 16 different languages
    1972 – Haavery Pekar’s first story “Brilliant American Maniacs Series No. 1 Crazy Ed” published in “People’s Comics” with art by Robert Crumb
    1972 – Justin Green publishes “Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary”
    1972 – Art Spiegelman publishes first 3 pages of Maus
    1973 –Supreme Court’s Miller v. California decision rules that vendors can be jailed and retroactively fined for selling obscene materials, cannot plead ignorance to contents
    1974 – Jay Lynch has a one week tenure as editor at Hustler Magazine
    1974 – Lynda Barry attends Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA
    1974 – Art Spiegelman self publishes “Ace Hole” and “Midget Detective”
    1974 – Marvel releases “Comix Book”
    1974 – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Pork” (Co-Op Press)
    1974 – “The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat” directed by Ralph Bakshi released
    1975 – The Schenkers working partnership with Bob and Peggy Rita dissolves and Print Mint slows down production and distribution
    1975 – “Felch Comics” by Keith Green
    1975 – Vietnam War ends, American troops withdraw from Saigon
    1975 – Victor Moscoso starts attending Yale
    1975 – Bill Griffith and Art Spiegelman create “Arcade” comix anthology
    1975 – Vaughn Bodé dies at age 33
    1976 – Harvey Pekar self publishes “How I Quit Collecting Records and Put Out a Comic Book with the Money I Saved” with art by Robert Crumb
    1976 – “Wet Satin” erotic satirical all-women’s comics anthology published by Kitchen Sink Press
    1976 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves off of the Crumb farm commune
    1976 – Mary Wing’s “Dyke Shorts” is self-published
    1976 – Roberta Gregory creates “Dynamite Damsels” (Self-published)
    1976 – Copyright Act becomes law
    1976 – Lee Marrs “The Further Fattening Adventures of Pudge, Girl Blimp” featured the first openly bisexual character in comics
    1967 – Larry Fuller creates “Gay Heartthrobs”
    1976 – Harvey Pekar’s “American Splendor #1” published
    1976 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb and Diane Noomin start “Twisted Sisters”
    1976-1077 – Punk scene emerges
    1971 – Howard Cruse’s “Barefootz” first published
    1977 – Kitchen Sink Press reprints Joel Becks comics under title “Joel Beck’s Comics & Stories”
    1977 – Gary Panter moves to Los Angeles, CA
    1977 – S. Clay Wilson releases comix with his most popular character “The Checkered Demon” (Last Gasp)
    1977 – Gilbert Shelton’s character Fat Freddy’s cat from “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” gets its own spin off comic
    1977 – Robert Crumb divorces Dana
    1978 – Gilbert Shelton moves to San Francisco, CA from Austin, TX
    1978 – First graphic novel “A Contract With God” by Will Eisner is published by Baronet Press
    1978 – Dan O’Neils appeal in the case of Dismney and the Air Pirates does not rule in O’Neil’s favor
    1978 – Gilbert Shelton makes “Shakedown Street” album cover for The Grateful Dead
    1978 – Paul Mavrides starts to collaborate on “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers”
    1979 – Gilbert Shelton and wife/agent Lora move to Europe
    1979 – The Supreme Court declines to take Dan O’Neil’s appeal case against Disney
    1979 – Robert William publishes “The Lowbrow Art of Robt. Williams”
    1979 – Mary Wings creates drug awareness book “Are Your Highs Getting You Down?” with a California Arts Council Grant
    1979 – Denis Kitchen approaches Howaard Cruse about making “Gay Comix”
    1979 – Rip Off Press ends
    1979 – Art Spiegelman starts to teach at the School of Visual Arts in NY
    1980 – First issue of “Gay Comix” (Kitchen SInk Press) released, edited by Howard Cruse
    1980 – “Raw” comics anthology created by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly
    1980-1991 – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman serialized
    1981 – “Wimmen’s Comix” takes a 6 year hiatus
    1981 – Daniel Clowes and his friends create “Psycho Comics”
    1981 – Robert Crumb starts comix magazine “Weirdo” published by Last Gasp
    1981 – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb’s daughter Sophie is born; they move to Southern France
    1982 – Last issue of “Bizzare Sex” released
    1982 – Gilbert and Jamie Hernandez create “Love and Rockets” published by Fantagraphics
    1983 – “Dykes to Watch Out For” by Alison Bechdel first published
    1984 – Mary Fleener self publishes her first comic “Hoodoo”
    1984 – Robert Crumb passes editorship of “Weirdo” to Peter Bagge
    1985 – Print Mint, since renamed Reprint Mint, is sold by the Schenkers
    1985 – Mary Wings “She Came Too Late” lesbian detective novel published
    1985 – Topps Bubbglegum starts Garbage Pail Kids cards
    1986 – Doubleday publishes the first of it’s two collected volumes of Harvye Pekar’s “American Splendor” with the next coming out the following year
    1986 – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “Illustrated History of Ranching in Texas”
    1986 – Peter Bagge resigns as editor at “Weirdo”; Aline Kominsky-Crumb takes over
    1987 – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb marry
    1988 – “Dirty Plotte” by Julie Doucet was first self-published
    1988 – Roberta Gregory self publishes “Winging It” and “Sheila and the Unicorn”
    1989 – Jack “Jaxon” Jackon publishes “Rip Off Pres: The Golden Era #21”
    1989 – Daniel Clowes first issue of “Eightball”
    1989 – Roberta Gregory moves to Seattle and begins to work at Fantagraphics Books
    1990 – Art Spiegelman receives a Guggenheim Fellowship to work on Maus’ second volume
    1990 – Peter Bagge first publishes “Hate” (Fantagraaphics)
    1991 – American Splendor’s once a year regular release stops with issue fifteen
    1991 – Rick Griffin dies after motorcycle accident
    1991 – Roberta Gregory’s “Naughty Bits” issue one self published
    1991 – “Dirty Plotte” published by Drawn & Quarterly
    1991 – Julie Doucet moves to NYC for one year and makes “My New York Diary”
    1992 – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman wins a Pulitzer Prize
    1992 – “Wimmen’s Comix” publishes it’s last issue
    1993 – Don Schenkers dies
    1994 – Robert Williams first published “Juxtapoz Arts & Culture” Magazine
    1995 – “Stuck Rubber Baby” by Howard Cruse published
    1995 – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns first published by Fantagraphics
    1995 – “Crumb” documentary about Robert Crumb by Terry Zwigoff is released
    1996 – Mary Fleener’s “Life of the Party” released
    1998 – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates “Lost Cause”
    1999 – Joel Beck dies
    2001-2003 – Roberta Gregory’s popular character Bitchy Bitch from “Naughty Bits” starred in the animated cartoon “Life’s a Bitch” on Comedy Network (Canada) and Oxygen Network (US)
    2001 – Daniel Clowes “Eightball” story “Ghost World” is made into a movie of the same name
    2002 – Rand Holmes dies
    2002 – Phoebe Gloeckner’s “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” published by Frog Books
    2003 – “American Splendor” the award winning movie about Harvey Pekar’s life starring Paul Giamatti is released
    2005 – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns released as graphic novel by Fantagraphics
    2006 –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson dies
    2006 – “Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic” by Alison Bechdel published
    2010 – Harvey Pekar dies
    2015 – “Fun Home” the Broadway Musical wins a Tony for best musical
    2015 – “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” by Phoebe Glockner made into a movie with the same name
    2017 – Skip Williamson and Jay Lynch die within a week and a half of each other
    2019 – Howard Cruse dies
    2020 – Alice Schnker dies
    2021 – Streaming channel Tubi releases 8 episode show “The Freak Brothers” based on Gilbert Shelton’s “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers”
    2021 – Spain Rodriguez dies
    2021 – S. Clay Wilson dies
    2022 – Aline Kominsky-Crumb dies

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    Wiggins, R. (2010, March 3). Me and Gilbert Shelton: A Memoir [web log]. Retrieved December 14, 2022, from http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/ramsey-wiggins-me-and-gilbert-shelton.html.

    Williams, P. (2020, January 17). Dreaming the Graphic Novel: The Novelization of Comics (None). Rutgers University Press.

  • During the 1960s, the Chicano Movement or "El Movimiento" gave way for Chicano artists, designers, and printmakers to emerge. The Chicano Movement united Chicanos, Americans of Mexican heritage who chose that label, in a new shared identity to fight for social and political empowerment. One of the creatives that made their mark in support of this movement was Yolanda Margarita López, a feminist painter, printmaker, educator, and film producer. She was best known for her works focusing on the experiences of Mexican-American and Chicana women, often challenging the harmful ethnic stereotypes associated with them. López is most known for the Guadalupe series, where she reimagines Our Lady of Guadalupe in the image of the everyday Chicana woman. López was essential to the case of Los Siete de La Raza, or The Seven of the Hispanic Community. In this case, seven Latino youths were falsely accused of killing police officer Joseph Brodnick in San Francisco on May 1st, 1969. The political art and design work she produced in support of the seven falsely accused helped rally the San Francisco community together in support and led to the acquitting of the seven youths. López, through her activism, challenged stereotypes of Chicana women and advocated for the Latino community as well as other marginalized communities over the course of her creative career.

    TIMELINE

    1942 – Born on November 1 in San Diego, CA
    1968 – Third World Liberation Strikes
    1969 – Los Siete de La Raza
    1971 – Enrolled at San Diego State University
    1975 – Graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in painting and drawing
    1977 – ¿A Donde Vas, Chicana?
    1978 – Start of Guadalupe Series
    1979 – University of California, San Diego, receiving a Master of Fine Arts
    2021 – Yolanda dies of complications from Liver Cancer

    REFERENCES

    Daly, C.-S. (2021) Yolanda López, artist who painted the iconic Virgen de Guadalupe series, dies at 79, Mission Local. Available at: https://missionlocal.org/2021/09/yolanda-lopez-artist-who-painted-the-iconic-virgen-de-guadalupe-series-dies-at-79/ (Accessed: November 27, 2022).

    Davalos, K.M. (2008) Yolanda M. López. Los Angeles, CA: UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center Press.

    Duke Human Rights Center at the Franklin Humanities Institute (no date) Chavez, the UFW and the "wetback" problem, News RSS. Available at: https://humanrights.fhi.duke.edu/chavez-ufw-and-wetback-problem/ (Accessed: November 27, 2022).

    Genial generating engagement and new initiatives for ... - exploratorium (no date). Available at: https://www.exploratorium.edu/sites/default/files/Genial\_2017\_Terms\_of\_Usage.pdf (Accessed: November 28, 2022).

    Seth Combs Oct. 10, 2021 5:15 A.M.P.T.F.T.S.more sharing optionsS.C.extra sharing options F.T.L.I.E.C.L.U.R.L.C.P. (2021) The art and activism of Yolanda López, Tribune. Available at: https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/entertainment/story/2021-10-10/the-art-and-activism-of-yolanda-lopez (Accessed: November 27, 2022).

    ¡Printing the revolution!: The rise and impact of Chicano graphics, 1965 to now (no date) ¡Printing the Revolution!: The Rise and Impact of Chicano Graphics, 1965 to Now | Amon Carter Museum of American Art. Available at: https://www.cartermuseum.org/exhibitions/printing-revolution-rise-and-impact-chicano-graphics-1965-now (Accessed: November 27, 2022).

  • There is a rich history of Black films and filmmaking in the United States that stems from the history of segregation, which created a need for separate films for separate audiences. Since mainstream Hollywood ignored Black audiences, Black filmmakers took the lead in making all Black or “colored” cast films for their audiences. These films have become known as race films. The goal was to shoot films for and about Black folks that were positive and uplifting, to counteract the stereotyped portrayals of mainstream movies. The era of race films dates from roughly 1912-1950 when following World War II movie theaters began to desegregate, Black culture began to be subsumed by white culture, and Black music, dancing, and other performances began to be seen as profitable by Hollywood studios. Much like mainstream white movies, Black films were advertised and marketed to Black audiences through film posters. In many cases where the original films were not well preserved, all that remains as evidence of these films are posters.

    TIMELINE

    1912-1950 – Race films were made by Black filmmakers and producers with “All colored cast”
    1915 – Deeply racist film, The Birth of a Nation is screened, protests of which leads to the formation of the NAACP
    1919 – The Homesteader, first film written by Black Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux
    1923 – The Bull-dogger is filmed in Oklahoma by the Norman Manufacturing Company staring Black rodeo performer Bill Pickett
    1943 – Some of the first mainstream Hollywood films for Black audiences include Stormy Weather and Cabin in the Sky
    1948 – The Betrayal, last film written by Black Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux
    1953 – Movie theaters desegregated, resulting from a U.S. Supreme court ruling to desegregate restaurants, though many southern states would hold out for at least another decade.
    1971 – Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song, the first Blaxploitation film premieres, written and directed by Black filmmaker Melvin Van Peebles
    1984 – Art Sims designs film poster for Steven Speilberg’s The Color Purple
    1992 – John Duke Kisch published a book on his collection of Black film posters called A Separate Cinema
    1995 – Art Sims designs controversial film poster for Spike Lee’s Clockers
    1995 – Edward Mapp donates a substantial collection of Black film posters to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences collection in the Margaret Herrick Library
    2000 – Art Sims designs a controversial film poster for Spike Lee’s Bamboozled, depicting racist stereotypes, which audiences pushed back on, until they realized that designer and filmmaker were Black and the stereotypes were intentionally satirical.
    2000-2011 – The Mapp Collection, donated to Indiana University by Dr. Edward Mapp of New York City, consists of two series: Film Publicity, 1930-2002 and Films, 1934-2004.
    2005 – Portions of Mapp's collection of Black-cast film posters toured the country with the Smithsonian’s Traveling Exhibition Service as Close Up in Black: African American Film Posters.
    2020 – John Kisch’s Collection was purchased by The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art

    REFERENCES

    Art Sims visionary designer of spike lee's movie posters gets NY honor at the AIGA national design center May 19th. (2010, May 17). PR Newswire https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/wire-feeds/art-sims-visionary-designer-spike-lees-movie/docview/288129084/se-2

    Caro, M. (1995, Sep 13). `CLOCKERS' AD CAMPAIGN GETTING A NEW LOOK: [NORTH SPORTS FINAL, CN EDITION]. Chicago Tribune (Pre-1997 Fulltext) Retrieved from https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/clockers-ad-campaign-getting-new-look/docview/283992830/se-2

    Collins, S. (1996, Feb 08). Leaving a paper trail; african americans spent many years at the periphery of hollywood in films with all-black casts. some posters the academy recently acquired are the only surviving chronicle of much of this history.: [home edition]. Los Angeles Times (Pre-1997 Fulltext) Retrieved from https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/leaving-paper-trail-african-americans-spent-many/docview/293272302/se-2

    Cripps, M. T. &. (2022, October 19). Close-Up in Black: African-American Films Posters from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Apparent First Edition). Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.

    Edward Mapp Collection, 1937-2011 - Archives online at Indiana University. (n.d.). https://archives.iu.edu/catalog/VAC1069

    Kisch, J., Nourmand, T., Lee, S., Gates, H. L., & Doggett, P. (2014, September 18). Separate Cinema: The First 100 Years of Black Poster Art (First Edition). Reel Art Press.

    Laski, B. (1995, September 18). U switches ‘Clockers’ art after ‘Anatomy’ lesson. Variety. https://variety.com/1995/scene/markets-festivals/u-switches-clockers-art-after-anatomy-lesson-99130142/

    McCluskey, A. T. (2003). Director’s Notes: Imaging Blackness, 1915-2002: Exhibit Documents Black Hollywood through Film Posters. Black Camera, 18(2), 1–2. http://www.jstor.org/stable/27761620

    Machemer, T. (2020, January 16). George Lucas' New Museum Acquires Major Archive of African American Film History. Smithsonian Magazine. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/george-lucas-museum-acquires-huge-archive-african-american-cinema-180973999/

    Mapp, E., & McCluskey, A. T. (2003). An Interview with Dr. Edward Mapp: A Passion for Collecting Black Film. Black Camera, 18(2), 1–10. http://www.jstor.org/stable/27761621

    Martin, M.. (2018). GALLERY: Poster Art as Cultural Labor in the Cinematic Archive of Claire Denis. Black Camera, 10(1), 144–155. https://doi.org/10.2979/blackcamera.10.1.08

    Octane, & Octane. (2021). Celebrating America’s Pioneer Black Graphic Designers: Art Sims (1954 – Present) | Octane Design Studios. Octane Design Studios | #MoreThanGraphics. https://lexoctane.com/?p=15067

    Pearce-Doughlin, S., Goldsmith, A., & Hamilton, D. (2013). Colorism. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), Encyclopedia of race and racism (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/colorism/0?institutionId=1845

    PrintMag. (2013, December 11). Spike Lee’s Other Poster Design Bamboozle: Saul Bass. PRINT Magazine. https://www.printmag.com/graphic-design/spike-lee-s-other-poster-design-bamboozle-saul-bass/

    Reid, M. A. (2005, March 17). Black Lenses, Black Voices: African American Film Now (Genre and Beyond: A Film Studies Series) (Edition Unstated). Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.

    Richburg, C. (2016, March 27). Art Sims Talks Creating Iconic ‘New Jack City’ Movie Poster, Film’s 25th Anniversary. EURweb. https://eurweb.com/2016/03/27/art-sims-talks-creating-new-jack-city-movie-poster/

    Schaefer, S. (1995, September 8). Poster Imposter. EW.com. https://ew.com/article/1995/09/08/poster-imposter/

    Shivers, K. (2000, Mar 22). Sims shows how a picture is worth a box office hit. Los Angeles Sentinel. Retrieved from https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/sims-shows-how-picture-is-worth-box-office-hit/docview/369327904/se-2

    Smith, I. H. (2018, October 3). Selling the Movie: The Art of the Film Poster. University of Texas Press.

    Stevens, I_._ (2020, June 3) I turn my back on you: black movie poster art | The pictures | Sight & Sound. British Film Institute. https://www2.bfi.org.uk/explore-film-tv/sight-sound-magazine/sight-sound-articles/features/pictures/i-turn-my-back-you-black

    Type Directors Club. (2020, December 2). Kelly Walters - Ain’t dat a shame [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8sLYAFnCdE

    Web Editor. (2022, February 2). The Activists who Desegregated Arlington’s Movie Theaters. https://library.arlingtonva.us/2022/02/02/the-activists-who-desegregated-arlingtons-movie-theaters/#:~:text=Finally%2C%20in%201953%2C%20a%20U.S.,to%20local%20theaters%20as%20well.

    Wilson, M., & Benson, O. (2014). Colorism. In S. Thompson (Ed.), Encyclopedia of diversity and social justice. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Credo Reference: https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/rowmandasj/colorism/0?institutionId=1845

  • Edward Gorey was probably best known as an author and illustrator of more than 100 books in his lifetime. Collector's items today, his books have become icons in and of themselves, darkly humorous and humorously dark. The books defied genres and publishers sometimes had a hard time determining how to market them. They were illustrated yes, but the dark and sometimes gruesome tales certainly weren’t children's books. This contribution was undoubtedly significant, but this was not the limit of his career, which included designing book covers, sets, and costumes for theater and ballet (including the Tony award-winning designs for Dracula in 1977), and the illustrations for animations for the PBS Mystery! series, a shortened version of which can still be seen today. Gorey’s book cover designs are often identifiable by his hand-lettered titles, which he claims he did because he didn’t know much about type. Additionally, Gorey was an icon of fashion in the New York scene, he and his extensive collection of fur coats were the subjects of multiple articles on the New York Fashion scene. Yet despite his numerous contributions, he is not mentioned in design or illustration history books, is his absence from the design history canon a result of gatekeeping? Was it because he mostly designed book covers for inexpensive paperback books rather than glamorous hardcovers? Or Possibly because his own work was described by critics as “macabre”, “gothic”, or even “campy”. Or was it because of his association with the LGBT community? Many have speculated about his sexual orientation, even though Gorey was not “out” and he preferred ambiguity only going so far as to admit to an interviewer that he supposed he was gay, but didn’t “identify with it much”.

    TIMELINE

    1925 – b Chicago, Illinois, as Edward St. John Gorey
    1942 – was accepted to Harvard
    1942 – Drafted into the Army, served stateside during WWII at the Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah, deferred college entrance
    1946 – Begins at Harvard, education is paid for by the G.I. Bill, majoring in French Literature
    1953– Hired at Anchor /Doubleday as a book cover designer, moves to NYC
    1953 – Publishes first book of his own, The Unstrung Harp
    1962 – Founds the Fantod Press to publish his own books
    1962-63 – Hired as an art director at Bobbs-Merrill, publisher
    1963 – Begins working as a Freelance book designer and illustrator, begins living part-time at the cape
    1963 – Publishes abecedary, The Gashlycrumb Tinies, along with The Insect God and The West Wing
    1977 – Designs sets and costumes for Broadway revival of Dracula, wins a Tony award for both
    1980 – Creates illustrations for animated introduction to PBS Mystery!
    1983 – Resolves to leave the city (NYC), moves permanently and full-time to the Cape
    2000 – d Gorey dies at age 75
    2002 – Edward Gorey’s home at the cape becomes a museum, The Edward Gorey House

    REFERENCES

    Borrelli-Persson, L. (2021, October 30). Celebrating Edward Gorey, Style Icon. Vogue. https://www.vogue.com/article/celebrating-edward-gorey-style-icon

    Brottman, M. (2005) High theory/low culture. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

    Curwen, T. (2004, Jul 18). ART; light from a dark star; before the current rise of graphic novels, there was Edward Gorey, whose tales and drawings still baffle -- and attract -- new fans.: [HOME EDITION]. Los Angeles Times Retrieved from https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/art-light-dark-star-before-current-rise-graphic/docview/422042911/se-2?accountid=14516

    Dery, M. (2018). Born to Be Posthumous: The Eccentric Life and Mysterious Genius of Edward Gorey (Illustrated ed.). Little, Brown and Company.

    Dery, M. (2020, January-February). Edward Gorey's Gothic Nonsense. The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide, 27(1), 18+. https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A616752005/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=f73cab8e

    Devers, A. N. (2011, January 5). The Coats of Edward Gorey. The Paris Review. https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2011/01/04/the-coats-of-edward-gorey/

    Dubner, S. (2022, May 20). The University of Impossible-to-Get-Into. Freakonomics. https://freakonomics.com/podcast/the-university-of-impossible-to-get-into/

    Gottlieb, R. (2018, December 31). Superb Oddities: Robert Gottlieb Reviews a Biography of Edward Gorey. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/31/books/review/edward-gorey-mark-dery-born-to-be-posthumous.html

    Green, J. (2020, April 1). The Gay History of America’s Classic Children’s Books. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/07/t-magazine/gay-children-book-authors.html

    Gussow, M. (2000, April 17). Edward Gorey, Artist and Author Who Turned the Macabre Into a Career, Dies at 75. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2000/04/17/arts/edward-gorey-artist-and-author-who-turned-the-macabre-into-a-career-dies-at-75.html

    Heller. (1999). “Book Covers, Edward Gorey”. Design Literacy (continued) : understanding graphic design.

    Heller, S. (1999, Jan 06). Edward Gorey's cover story: [toronto edition]. National Post Retrieved from https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/edward-goreys-cover-story/docview/329355783/se-2?accountid=14516

    Kurutz, S. (2018, November 1). The Granddaddy of Goth. New York Times, D1(L). https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A560663228/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=4e2ba0c0

    Myers, Q. (2020, March 30). Why Did We Grow Up Thinking a Piercing in the Right Ear Was Gay? MEL Magazine. https://melmagazine.com/en-us/story/gay-piercing-right-ear-left-ear-history

    Nadel, A. (2019). The Lavender Scare. The Journal of American History (Bloomington, Ind.), 106(3), 845–847. https://doi.org/10.1093/jahist/jaz663

    Petermann, E. (2018). The child's death as punishment or nonsense? Edward Gorey's "The Gashlycrumb Tinies" (1963) and the cautionary verse tradition. Bookbird, 56(4), 22. doi:https://doi.org/10.1353/bkb.2018.0062

    Schneider, R. (2020). Start of a Decade: "Camp Leaders" The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide, 27(1), 4–4.

    Seufert, C. [Christopher Seufert]. (2020, May 8). Dick Cavett Interviews Edward Gorey, Nov. 30, 1977 [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cng3K8FGj28

    Sontag, S. (2018). Notes on Camp. Penguin Classics.

    Sontag, S. (2018). One Culture and The New Sensibility. In Notes On Camp (pp. 34–55). Penguin Classics.

    Spark Admissions. (2021, June 8). Exploring Ivy League Acceptance Rates. https://www.sparkadmissions.com/blog/ivy-league-acceptance-rates-just-how-hard-is-it-to-get-in/

    Stonewall UK. (2022, July 19). Convictions and cautions for gross indecency. Stonewall.

    https://www.stonewall.org.uk/help-advice/information-and-resources/criminal-law/convictions-and-cautions-gross-indecency#:%7E:text=The%20Criminal%20Justice%20and%20Public,were%20deleted%20from%20the%20statutes

  • The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense was founded in 1966 in Oakland, California by Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale. The Black Panther Party was founded during the turbulent times of the sixties that saw many changes in America. Newton at first led the party with an ideology called their Ten Point Program, and with the idea that arming Black communities was essential for their protection and survival. Through community assistance programs and armed community patrols to prevent police brutality, the Black Panther Party sought to protect and uplift their communities, stepping in where the government had failed them. In order to promote their party’s ideals, generate revenue, and recruit new members, the Party began publishing the Black Panther newspaper. It grew from 4 pages to 32, adding color and better design under the direction of Emory Douglas who was the Black Panthers’ Minister of Culture and the paper’s editor. Douglas’s skills as a graphic designer and illustrator produced the imagery that would define not only the Black Panther Party but the entire Black Power movement. The success of the paper grew, had distribution across the United States, and later reached other countries as well. Internal strife among leadership and members, as well as extensive government interference, led to the crumbling of the Black Panther Party. With it went their iconic newspaper that for over a decade was a visual record of the Black Panther Party, the Black Power movement, and the struggle for civil rights.

    TIMELINE

    1827 – Freedom’s Journal first published
    1936 – Robert George Seale was born in Liberty, Texas
    1942 – Huey Percy Newton is born in Monroe, Louisiana
    1943 – Emory Douglas was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan
    1960 – Emory Douglas started studying Graphic Design at City College of San Francisco
    1963 – Martin Luther King Jr delivers “I Have A Dream” speech
    1965 – Lowndes County Freedom Organization was founded by Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Alabama
    1966 – Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale met in Oakland, CA, and founded The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense
    1966 – BPP developed survival programs
    1967 – California Governor Ronald Regan signed Mulford Act
    1967 – Sale and Newton established the BPP first headquarters in Oakland, CA
    1967 – Black Panther Intercommunal News Service
    1967 – Newton was shot and jailed after a standoff with a police officer
    1967 – Emory Douglas met Newton and Seale and joins the BPP
    1967 – David Hilliard, BPP chief of staff, first arrested for selling the Newspaper
    1968 – Kerner Commission publishes findings on potential race war; faults white institutions
    1968 – Martin Luther King Jr assassinated, race riots erupt across USA
    1968 – Newton was convicted of manslaughter for killing a police officer
    1970 – FBI memo says circulation for BPP Newspaper was 139,000 a week
    1970 – Newton was released due to his conviction being overturned on appeal
    1971 – Newton shifts BPP focus to community programs, leadership is challenged by other part members
    1971 – Newton expels 21 members, the “panther 21” over rumors of kidnapping and fratricide; also expels Eldridge Cleaver over suspicions of assassination through letters
    1971 – Cleaver’s followers tied up Sam Napier in NY distribution office for the BPP newspaper and shot him, set fire to office
    1974 – Netwon fled to Cuba on accusations of murdering a prostitute, Elaine Brown takes over as leader of BPP
    1974 – End of BPP
    1977 – Newton returns to California to stand trial for the murder of a prostitute
    1978 – Jonina Abron takes over as editor of BPP Newspaper
    1980 – Last year BPP Newspaper is published

    REFERENCES

    Alkebulan, P. (2012). Survival pending revolution: The history of the Black Panther Party. The University of Alabama Press.

    Berry, A. H., Collie, K., Laker, P. A., Noel, L.-A., Rittner, J., & Walters, K. (2022). The black experience in design: Identity, Expression & Reflection. Allworth Press.

    bperki8. (n.d.). R/communism - A complete archive of the Black Panther Party's newspapers from beginning to end. reddit ; r/communism. Retrieved June 2, 2016, from https://www.reddit.com/r/communism/comments/4m7axa/a\_complete\_archive\_of\_the\_black\_panther\_partys/

    Carroll, F. (2017). Race News: Black journalists and the fight for racial justice in the Twentieth Century. University of Illinois Press.

    Carroll, F. J. (2011). Race News: How black reporters and readers shaped the fight for racial justice, 1877-1978 (thesis). Fred Carroll, Ann Arbor, MI.

    Duncan, M. (2016). Emory Douglas and the art of the black panther party. Spectrum: A Journal on Black Men, 5(1), 117–135. https://doi.org/10.2979/spectrum.5.1.06

    Fagan, B. (2018). The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation. The University of Georgia Press.

    FEARNLEY, A. M. (2018). The Black Panther Party's publishing strategies and the financial underpinnings of activism, 1968–1975. The Historical Journal, 62(1), 195–217. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x18000201

    Freedom Archives (n.d.). Black Panther Party Community News Service. Freedom Archives Search Engine. Retrieved April 7, 2022, from https://search.freedomarchives.org/search.php?view\_collection=90&page=1

    G., L. B. H. (1974). Perspectives of the Black Press, 1974. Mercer House Press.

    Harris, J. C. (2000). Revolutionary black nationalism: The Black Panther Party. The Journal of Negro History , 85(3), 162–174.

    Hilliard, D. (2008). The Black Panther Party: Service to the people programs. University of New Mexico Press.

    Hilliard, D. (2007). The black panther: Intercommunal News Service. Atria Books.

    Hilliard, D. (2002). This side of glory: The autobiography of David Hilliard and the story of the Black Panther Party. Chicago Review Press.

    Jackson, T. (2016). Pioneering cartoonists of color. University Press of Mississippi.

    Jeffries, J. L. (2011). On the ground. Univ. Press of Mississippi.

    Jennings, B. X. (2019, May 22). Remembering the Black Panther Party newspaper, April 25, 1967- September 1980. San Francisco Bay View. Retrieved April 7, 2022, from http://sfbayview.com/2015/05/remembering-the-black-panther-party-newspaper-april-25-1967-september-1980/

    Kifner, J. (1998, May 2). Eldridge Cleaver, Black Panther Who Became G.O.P. Conservative, Is Dead at 62. New York Times, pp. 8–8.

    Michaeli, E. (2018). The defender how the legendary Black Newspaper Changed America: From the age of the pullman porters to the age of obama. Mariner Books/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

    Morgan, J.-A. (2020). The Black Arts Movement and the Black Panther Party in American Visual culture. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.

    Ng, D. (2007, October 18). Art; So you want a revolution? Check out Emory Douglas' art for the Black Panthers. LA Times.

    Ongiri, A. A. (2010). Spectacular blackness the cultural politics of the Black Power movement and the search for a black aesthetic. University of Virginia Press.

    Psaltis, A.-A. (2018). ARTPOLITICAL environment: Richard Bell and Emory Douglas’s Burnett Lane mural. Electronic Melbourne Art Journal, (10). https://doi.org/10.38030/emaj.2018.10.1

    Scott, V. H. F. (2021). Art, global maoism and the Chinese Cultural Revolution. (J. Galimberti & N. De Haro Garcia, Eds.). MANCHESTER UNIV PRESS.

    Shames, S., & Seale, B. (2016). Power to the people: The world of the black panthers. Abrams.

    Smethurst, J. E. (2006). The Black Arts Movement: Literary nationalism in the 1960s and 1970s. The University of North Carolina Press.

    Suggs, H. L. (1983). The Black Press in the South, 1865-1979. Greenwood Press.

    Thornton, B., & Cassidy, W. P. (2008). Black newspapers in 1968 offer Panthers Little Support. Newspaper Research Journal, 29(1), 6–20. https://doi.org/10.1177/073953290802900102

    Waters, E. P. (1987). American Diary: A personal history of the Black Press. Path Press.

  • In 1922 William Harmon, a white real estate mogul from Ohio, started the Harmon foundation which, among other things, supported Black artists. His hope for the foundation was that it would help these artists gain recognition and help them to sell their work, regardless of their skin color. The foundation organized exhibitions and awards for Black artists, all with the explicit intent to stimulate their success. Despite its good intentions, the foundation met with criticism from the Black community. The work the foundation did was seen as patriarchal and fulfilling a “white savior” complex rather than effecting real change and achieving equity. While it can be argued that the Harmon Foundation did a lot to support Black artists, one of the main criticisms is its role in maintaining the segregation of Black artists. Harmon Foundation exhibits featured Black artists alongside other Black artists, instead of integrating with white artists. The foundation's awards were also juried by white judges who selected winners based on a white ideal of excellence rather than understanding the work and its value or role in Black culture. While the Harmon Foundation’s efforts weren’t always welcome, it still spent 45 years promoting Black artists, helping them gain well-deserved attention and recognition.

    TIMELINE

    1862 – b Ohio, William E. Harmon
    1887 – Founds Harmon National Real Estate Company
    1922 – Harmon Foundation is founded
    1925 – Harmon Foundation begins issuing cash awards for distinguished achievement in a number of fields, including fine arts
    1925 – Harmon Foundation supports the Religious Motion Picture foundation
    1928 – William Harmon dies
    1928-33 – Harmon Foundation recognized as first to give national recognition to achievements of African Americans
    1933-36 – Harmon Foundation supports films: “The Negro and Art” and “We Are All Artists”
    1935 – Artist Romare Beardon accused the foundation of “coddling artists and lowering artistic standards”
    1935 – The Harlem Artists Guild founded, to support artists and to pressure the Federal Arts Project to accept more African-American participants
    1935 – Harmon National Real Estate Company becomes one of the largest real estate companies in the world
    1936 – Harmon Foundation sponsors films: “What Africa Is”, “How Africa Lives”, and “From Fetishes to Faith”.
    1938-41 – Harmon Foundation supports film series: “The African Motion Picture Project”
    1969 – ‘Harlem on My Mind, 1900-1968’ exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, opens to criticism for absence of Black curators or consulting the Harlem community
    1967 – Harmon Foundation ceases operations

    REFERENCES

    Baum, K., Robles, M., & Yount, S. (2021, February 17). “Harlem on Whose Mind?”: The Met and Civil Rights. The Met. Retrieved June 23, 2022, from https://www.metmuseum.org/blogs/now-at-the-met/2021/harlem-on-my-mind

    Brown, A. C., III. (2015, January 20). James A. Porter: The Father of African American Art History. The Baltimore Renaissance. Retrieved June 23, 2022, from https://thelyfe.wordpress.com/2015/01/20/james-a-porter-the-father-of-african-american-art-history/#:%7E:text=Porter%3A%20The%20Father%20of%20African%20American%20Art%20History,-Professor%20James%20A&text=James%20Amos%20Porter%20was%20born,of%20Science%20degree%20in%20art.

    Harmon Foundation, I. Harmon Foundation, inc., records. [Manuscript/Mixed Material] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, https://lccn.loc.gov/mm78051615.

    Malan, N. E. (1973). Photographs in the Harmon Foundation Collection. African Arts, 6(2), 33–32. https://doi.org/10.2307/3334777

    Williams, G. (2013, February 22). African American art and the Harmon Foundation. Smithsonian Libraries / Unbound. https://blog.library.si.edu/blog/2013/02/22/african-american-art-and-the-harmon-foundation/#.YfQ3AljMJ4G

  • Posters as political tools are nothing new. In the Middle East, two revolutionary movements led to some of the most potent and vibrant posters in design history. The Iranian Revolution and the expulsion of Palestinians due to civil war and the continued fight to reclaim Palestinian homelands from Israel. These posters effectively gave voice to the struggles of ordinary people resisting the influence and meddling of various Western powers. For Iran, that meant keeping the dream of an Islamic state free and independent from Western countries that had been trying for decades to install a democratic government. And once so much of Palestine had been taken over by Israel, the Palestinian resistance fought back with ideas as well as guns. Using powerful graphic imagery common to each of their respective cultures, like calligraphy, Islamic iconography, and the colors red, black, white, and green, resistance posters of both movements kept the fire of resistance burning brightly. The Iranian Revolution effectively concluded once the Shah of Iran was overthrown and power consolidated under the rule of Ayatollah Khomeini in 1979. Palestine wasn’t so lucky. While their resistance began much earlier than Iran’s, their fight still isn’t over and their resistance posters have continued, spilling over into the digital domain in a continued effort to reclaim their native homeland.

    TIMELINE

    1908 – Prince Yusuf Kamal founded the School of Fine Arts in Cairo, Egypt
    1917 – Britain made Balfour Declaration to establish Palestine as a place for Jewish people
    1921 – Hashemite Kingdom of Iraq declared independence from Britain
    1922 – Egypt declared independence from Britain
    1934 – University of Tehran Founded in Iran
    1941 – Syria declared independence from France
    1943 – Lebanon declared independence from France
    1945 – End of WW II; Britain hands matter of Palestine to the USA
    1948 – 750,000 Palestinians were forced to leave their homes due to Israeli takeover
    1947 – United Nations Partition of Palestine, followed by Civil War in Palestine (Arab-Israeli War)
    1948 – British completely withdrew from Palestine, and Israeli statehood declared
    1949 – Syria's president Husni al-Za’im overthrown by a military coup
    1950-54 – Designer & Artist Ismail Shammout attends the University of Cairo
    1950s – Saqqakhana Group formed
    1951 – Libya declared independence from France
    1952 – Egyptian Monarchy overthrown by Free Officers Coup
    1953 – USA and UK leaders helped to install Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi (overthrew Democratically elected Prime Minister Mossadegh)
    1956 – Sudan declares independence from France, Israel attacked Egypt (Six Days War)
    1958 – Iraq Monarchy overthrown, Shammout studies in a private graphic design workshop in Berlin, Egypt and Syria form the United Arab Republic
    1959 – Yasser Arafat founded The Palestinian National Liberation Movement
    1963 – Algeria declares independence from France
    1965 – The Peoples Mojahedin Iranian organization was founded at the University of Tehran
    1967 – Palestine National Liberation Movement joins the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO)
    1977- Iranian Revolution begins; Mostafa Khomeini, eldest son of Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini, dies of an unknown cause at age 47; Protest & violent, repressive response cycles begin in dozens of Iranian cities.
    1978 – Cinema Rex Fire in Tehran; 477 Iranians killed in fire.
    1978 – Black Friday, where government tanks and helicopters opened fire on 1,000+ protestos in Tehran
    1979 – On Jan. 16, Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi fled Iran ; On Feb. 1st, Ayatollah Khomeini started The Islamic Republic of Iran as its leader.
    1982 – PLO expelled from Lebanon, Israeli invasion of Lebanon
    1988 – Palestinian Declaration of Independence

    REFERENCES

    Abedini, R., & Wolbers, H. (2006). New Visual Culture Of Modern Iran. BIS Publishers.

    Adamova, A. T., & Bayani, M. (2015). Persian Painting: The Arts Of The Book And Portraiture . Thames & Hudson.

    Bloom, J. M., & Blair, S. S. (2019). Islamic art: Past, present, future. Yale University Press.

    Charles River Editors. (2014). The Iranian Revolution: The islamic revolution that reshaped the Middle East. CreateSpace.

    Chelkowski, P. (2002, December 15). GRAPHIC ARTS. Encyclopedia Iranica . Retrieved February 3, 2022, from https://iranicaonline.org/articles/graphic-arts

    Eigner, S. (2015). Art of the Middle East: Modern and contemporary art of the Arab world and Iran. Merrell.

    Fotouhi, S. (2015). The literature of the Iranian diaspora: Meaning and identity since the Islamic Revolution. I.B. Tauris.

    The genius of Iranian graphic design. Graphéine - Agence de communication Paris Lyon. (2022, February 1). Retrieved February 3, 2022, from https://www.grapheine.com/en/graphic-design-en/graphic-design-in-iran-persian-heritage-and-modernity

    Guity, N. (2012, January 7). Modern Communication Design in Iran. The History of Graphic Design in Iran. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from http://gdiran.blogspot.com/2012/01/this-being-human-is-guest-house.html?view=snapshot

    Gumpert, L., & Balaghi, S. (2003). Picturing Iran: Art, society and revolution. I.B. Tauris.

    Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center. (n.d.). Guide to the Middle Eastern Posters Collection 1970s-1990s. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.MEPOSTERS&q=iranian+posters

    Louis, W. R. (2012). The 1967 arab-israeli war: Origins and consequences. Cambridge University Press.

    Nazar Research and Cultural Institute. (2007). Iranian typography: 50 years of calligraphy and typography in iranian graphic design.

    Osborn, J. R. (2017). Letters of light: Arabic script in calligraphy, print, and Digital Design. Harvard University Press.

    Pappe, I. L. A. N. (2022). History of modern palestine. Cambridge University Press.

    Parsons, A. (1984). The pride and the fall: Iran, 1974-1979. J. Cape.

    Pearlman, W. (2014). Violence, nonviolence, and the Palestinian National Movement. Cambridge University Press.

    Qumsiyeh, M. B. (2011). Popular resistance in Palestine a history of hope and empowerment. Pluto Press.

    Rauh, E. (2013, November 26). “Posters and history of the Iranian Revolution”. Graphic Art News. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from https://www.graphicart-news.com/posters-and-history-of-the-iranian-revolution-in-history/

    ROUTLEDGE. (2019). Rethinking place in South Asian and Islamic art, 1500-present.

    Saikal, A. (2021). Rise and fall of the shah. Princeton University Press.

    Shehab, B., & Nawar, H. (2020). A history of Arab graphic design. The American University in Cairo Press.

    Sheikh Zadegan, A., & Meier, A. (2017). Beyond the islamic revolution perceptions of modernity and tradition in Iran before and after 1979. De Gruyter.

    The University of Chicago Library: The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center. (2011, October 15). The Graphics of Revolution and War: Iranian Poster Arts . The Graphics of Revolution and War - The University of Chicago Library. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/collex/exhibits/graphics-revolution-and-war-iranian-poster-arts/

  • Sylvia Harris has been described as a public designer, her own words, and a citizen designer, but whatever you want to call it, Harris was dedicated to designing for the good of the people. She was committed to creating designs that helped people to navigate their world. Harris grew up in Richmond, Virginia where she experienced the desegregation of her school, which likely had a significant impact on her entire life. As a Black designer who was educated and entrenched in modernist design practices, created by western and European “elite” designers, she sought to discover what the Black aesthetic in America was for herself, and she shared her findings with the world. Her work ranges from the redesign of the US Census in 2000, which succeeded in creating a design that resulted in a larger number of responses that were more complete and accurate, to the design for the ACLU’s initial brand design. Sylvia Harris is a designer who can teach us a lot about what it is to be a Black designer in America, where to possibly look for Black designers in graphic design history, as well as what it means to create design for good.

    TIMELINE

    1953 – b Richmond, Virginia
    1959 – State of Virginia is officially desegregated, the state continued to fight desegregation and was not fully desegregated until 1970
    1971 - Entered Design school
    1975 - Graduates from Virginia Commonwealth University where she was a student of Philip Meggs
    1975 - Works for WGBH design department in Boston alongside, Chris Pullman, an AIGA Medalist
    1980 - Graduates from Yale with MFA in design
    1980 - Founds 212 Associates with David Gibson & Juanita Dugale
    1993 - Hired to redesign the Census (design released in 2000)
    1994-1997 - Serves on AIGA board of directors
    1994 - Leaves 212 to found her own company Sylvia Harris, LLC
    1996 - Publishes What is it? Searching for the Black Aesthetic in American graphic design
    2000 - Design census released
    2011 - Rebrands her company to focus on “Citizen Research & Design”
    2011 - Untimely death, complications due to heart failure she was 57
    2014 - posthumously awarded AIGA Medal

    REFERENCES

    AIGA. (n.d.). 2014 AIGA Medalist: Sylvia Harris. AIGA. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://www.aiga.org/inspiration/talks/sylvia-harris-2014-aiga-medalist-sylvia-harris

    Allbrittin, D. (2021, December 14). Richmond Schools today: RPS still fighting to improve segregation, 51 years after busing. ABC 8 News. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://www.wric.com/news/local-news/richmond/richmond-schools-today-rps-still-fighting-to-improve-segregation-51-years-after-busing/

    Daugherity, B. J. (n.d.). Desegregation in Public Schools – Encyclopedia Virginia. Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/desegregation-in-public-schools/#:%7E:text=Desegregation%20began%20in%20Virginia%20on,in%20the%20spring%20of%201956

    Citizen Research & Design. (n.d.). About The Company | Citizen Research & Design. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://web.archive.org/web/20110806102912/http://citizenrd.com/about

    Citizen Research & Design. (n.d.-b). U.S. Census 2000 | Citizen Research & Design. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://web.archive.org/web/20111007192600/http://citizenrd.com/projects/us-census-2000

    Gibson, D. (n.d.). Sylvia Harris | SEGD. SEGD. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://segd.org/sylvia-harris

    Harris, S. (1996). What It Is? Searching for a Black Aesthetic in American Graphic Design. The International Review of African American Art, 13(1), 38–38.

    Helfand, J. (11–07-25). Remembering Sylvia Harris. Design Observer. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://designobserver.com/feature/remembering-sylvia-harris/29118

    House, L. (n.d.). Sylvia Harris Biography. AIGA. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://web.archive.org/web/20111004035114/http://www.aiga.org/design-journeys-sylvia-harris/

    Two Twelve. (2014, May 14). Sylvia Harris Receives 2014 AIGA Medal - Voice - Two Twelve. Two Twelve Voice. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from http://www.twotwelve.com/voice/sylvia-harris-receives-2014-aiga-medal.html

  • There is a long history of racism behind famous brands, characters, and design that often goes unnoticed. Blatantly racist caricatures began with minstrel shows and the use of blackface, where white actors would use black makeup and overdrawn lips to depict Black people. These drove stereotypes that would be used in film, television, and branding. White actors depicted other minorities in an ill manner. From Mickey Rooney playing a Japanese man, Mr. Yunioshi, to Claudia Cardinale playing Indian Princess Dala, actors continued to manipulate their physical features to display the American audience’s ideas of these different ethnicities. Cartoons like Disney’s Peter Pan used Indigenous stereotypes for its character Tiger Lily and her tribe of Piccaninny, along with the song “What Makes the Red Man Red?” Big production companies such as Disney and Warner Bros. are guilty of distributing offensive caricatures that poorly reflect Black, Asian, Indigenous, and other ethnic groups. Brand mascots like Aunt Jemima were created to uphold the mammy stereotype, a Black woman who is subservient to white people and their children. She was meant to contain white anxieties about increasing the mobility of Black people within spaces of mass production and consumption post-emancipation. At this time other brand mascots like Rastus for Cream of Wheat and Uncle Ben’s Rice similarly demeaned Black men. Ethnic mascots are also very popular in sports, primarily mascots of Indigenous American men who are shown as savages. It’s only been since 2020 that brands have started to shift away from these racist images but the damage of BIPOC caricatures lingers.

    TIMELINE

    1833 – One of the first examples of blackface, in Bowery Theatre, New York, Thomas Darmouth Rice played the caricature Jim Crow
    1889 – Aunt Jemima brand was first introduced and featured mascot/character as a stereotype of a mammy
    1893 – Cream of Wheat launched using a mascot named Rastus, a term used for Black men who were depicted as simple-minded
    1904 – first US stage production of Peter Pan features white actress, Margaret Gordon as Tiger Lily
    1927 – posters of advertising performances of Joesphine Baker by Paul Colin: ‘La Revue Negre, feature racist stereotypes: Black figures with large red lips and overly sexualized depictions of Baker
    1928 – Land O’Lakes butter premieres with a sexualized mascot/character of a Indegnous women called Mia
    1935-36 – Shirley Temple appears in blackface and clothing which depict the ‘mammy’ caricature in The Littlest Rebel’ and dances on a stage with two men in blackface in ‘Dimples’
    1940 – Tom and Jerry cartoon introduces a character named Mammy Two Shoes, a heavyset Black woman who was responsible for taking care of the house
    1947 – Florida State adopted the name Seminoles
    1953 – Disney version of Peter Pan , the tribe of Piccaninny are designed to play the exotic and savage trope and performs the song, “What Makes the Red Man Red?”
    1961 – white actor Mickey Rooney plays a Japanese man, Mr. Yunioshi, in Breakfast at Tiffany’s
    1978 – FSU Seminoles began a new tradition: At home football games a Seminole warrior would ride a horse onto the field, known as Chief Osceola and Renegade
    2013– Daniel Synder, owner of the football team The Washington Redskins, vowed to never alter the name or imagery
    2019 – the Cleveland Indians and MLB made the decision to remove native caricature Chief Wahoo from their brand
    2020 – Aunt Jemima is retires and the company rebrands to become Pearl Milling Company
    2020 – B&G Foods announced they were removing the Rastus character from Cream of Wheat
    2020 – during a rebrand Mia is removed from Land O’Lakes packaging
    2020 – Washington Redskins announced name change and logo retirement

    REFERENCES

    Walters, K. (n.d.). Blackface and Minstrelsy Tradition. BIPOC Design History. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://bipocdesignhistory.com/V1-overview

    Carter, K. (2019). Confronting racial stereotypes in graphic design history. In J. Kaufmann-Butler,
    V. Pass, & C. Wilson (Eds.), Design history beyond the canon. Bloomsbury.

    Smith, C. J. (2013). The creolization of American culture : William Sidney Mount and the roots of blackface minstrelsy. University of Illinois Press.

    Razack. (2016). Sexualized Violence and Colonialism: Reflections on the Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. Canadian Journal of Women and the Law, 28(2), i–iv. https://doi.org/10.3138/cjwl.28.2.i

    Luske, H., Geronimi, C. & Jackson, W. (Directors). (1953). Peter Pan [Film]. Walt Disney.

    Elias-De Jesus, A. (2017, June 30). Jay Z’s New Music Video Uses America’s Long History of Racist Cartoons to Deliver a Haunting Message. Slate Magazine. https://slate.com/culture/2017/06/jay-zs-the-story-of-o-j-music-video-takes-on-racist-cartoons.html#:%7E:text=Jay%20Z’s%20New%20Music%20Video,to%20Deliver%20a%20Haunting%20Message&text=The%20video%20for%20%E2%80%9CThe%20Story,.%2C%20Disney%2C%20and%20others.

    Jay-Z & Romanek, M. (Directors). (2017). The Story of OJ [Film]. Carter Enterprises. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RM7lw0Ovzq0&t=252s

    Reappropriate. (2014, February 12). Remembering Shirley Temple requires us to remember her legacy of Blackface cinema. http://reappropriate.co/2014/02/remembering-shirley-temple-requires-us-to-remember-her-perpetuation-of-blackface-cinema/

    Biography.com Editors. (2021, October 27). Bill “Bojangles” Robinson. Biography. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://www.biography.com/performer/bill-bojangles-robinson

    MARRAKECH RIAD. (2017, December 4). Josephine Baker and La Revue Nègre | Marrakech Riad. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://www.marrakech-riad.co.uk/2017/12/josephine-baker-and-la-revue-negre/

    Jolley, L. (2021, April 13). Josephine Baker. SHSMO Historic Missourians. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://historicmissourians.shsmo.org/josephine-baker

    Jones, C. (2020, July 12). For faces behind Aunt Jemima, Uncle Ben’s and Cream of Wheat, life transcended stereotype. USA TODAY. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://eu.usatoday.com/story/money/2020/07/10/real-people-behind-aunt-jemima-uncle-ben-cream-of-wheat/3285054001/

    Pearl Milling Co. (n.d.). Brand origins. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://www.pearlmillingcompany.com/our-history

    Wu, K. J. (2020, April 28). Land O'Lakes Drops the Iconic Logo of an Indigenous Woman From Its Branding. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/mia-land-olakes-iconic-indigenous-woman-departs-packaging-mixed-reactions-180974760/

    Shapira, I. (2016, May 19). A brief history of the word ‘redskin’ and how it became a source of controversy. Washington Post. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/a-brief-history-of-the-word-redskin-and-how-it-became-a-source-of-controversy/2016/05/19/062cd618-187f-11e6-9e16-2e5a123aac62_story.html

    Laskow, S. (2014, December 2). The Racist History of Peter Pan's Indian Tribe. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/racist-history-peter-pan-indian-tribe-180953500/

    UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LIBRARY. (n.d.). Great Native American Chiefs | Osceola · Online Exhibits. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from https://apps.lib.umich.edu/online-exhibits/exhibits/show/great-native-american-chiefs/group-of-native-american-chief/osceola

  • The birth of the Black newspaper in America took place in the form of abolitionist newspapers that spoke out against enslavement. These papers were an essential part of the Abolitionist movement in America, and many of them gave the Black community an important voice on issues that directly affected them and their communities. These newspapers spread Enlightenment-era ideas of equality and the rights of Black Americans and fought back against the negative and disparaging news that was regularly published about Black Americans in white-owned newspapers. Freedom’s Journal, The Liberator, The Colored American, and The North Star were all either operated and published by African American men or were supported by monetary contributions and printed regular articles from them. All of these newspapers built the momentum of the Abolitionist Movement and paved the way for the Civil Rights Movement to come. They were a vitally important way for Black people to speak out, circulate news and assistance to their communities, and change the way Black Americans were viewed.

    TIMELINE

    1688 – the first known recorded anti-slavery incident, Quakers protested the act of slaveholding

    1713-1773 – America annually imports roughly 15,000 enslaved people

    1714 – 59,000 enslaved persons in America

    1758 – Abolitionist movement begins in America

    1780-1789 – Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and New York outlaw slavery

    1804 – every northern state had some form of emancipation in their legislation

    1808 – the import of enslaved persons were abolished in all states except South Carolina

    1816 – American Colonization Society (ACS )founded

    1827 – Freedom’s Journal founded, the first African American owned and operated newspaper in the USA

    1831 – The Liberator founded by William Lloyd Garrison

    1833 – the militant abolitionist group called the American Anti-Slavery Society is formed

    1837 – Phillip A. Bell published the first issue of his weekly newspaper called “Weekly Advocate”, later renamed “The Colored American”

    1842 – James Forten, financial backer and contributor to The Liberator, dies at age 75

    1847-1851 – The North Star runs, founded by Fredrick Douglass

    1850 – Fugitive Slave Act, made it possible to reclaim runaway formerly enslaved persons

    1865 – The Liberator ceases publication, ending with the ratification of the 13th amendment

    REFERENCES

    Abruzzo, M. (2011). Polemic Pain: Slavery, Cruelty, and the Rise of Humanitarianism. Johns Hopkins University Press.

    African American Newspapers Collection: Parts I-XIV. (n.d.). Retrieved January 4, 2022, from https://www.accessible-archives.com/.

    Bacon, J. (2007). Freedom's journal: The First African-American newspaper. Rowman & Littlefield.

    Barshad, A. (2019, Jan 21). Shaun King on relaunching the North Star newspaper. New York, Retrieved from https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/magazines/shaun-king-on-relaunching-north-star-newspaper/docview/2187591605/se-2?accountid=14516

    BLUMBERG, B. (2004). Tammany Hall_._ In R. S. McElvaine (Ed.), Encyclopedia of the Great Depression (Vol. 2, pp. 962-963). Macmillan Reference USA.

    https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3404500506/GVRL?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=717af3c5

    Burrowes, C. P. (2011). “Caught in the crosswinds of the Atlantic”. Journalism History, 37(3), 130-141. Retrieved from https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/caught-crosswinds-atlantic/docview/904647711/se-2?accountid=1451

    Douglass, F. (1968). My Bondage and My Freedom. Arno Press & The New York Times.

    Douglass, F.. (1993). Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass: An American Slave. Bedford Books.

    Drescher, S. (2009). A_bolition a history of slavery and antislavery_. Cambridge University Press.

    Du Bois, W. E. B. (2007). The Supression of the African Slave-Trade. Oxford University Press.

    Fagan, B. (2011). "Americans as They Really Are": The "Colored American" and the Illustration of National Identity. American Periodicals, 21(2), 97–119.

    Fagan, B. (2014). “The North Star and the Atlantic 1848”. African American Review, 47(1), 51+. https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A675538942/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=1170fb7f

    Iaccarino, A. A. (2013). Garrison, William Lloyd 1805--1879. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), Encyclopedia of race and racism (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/garrison_william_lloyd_1805_1879/0?institutionId=1845

    Jackson, M. (2013). Abolition movement. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), Encyclopedia of race and racism (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/abolition_movement/0?institutionId=1845

    Klein, M. A. (2014). Historical Dictionary of Slavery and Abolition. Rowman & Littlefield.

    Magness, P. W., & Page, S. N. (2018). Colonization after emancipation: Lincoln and the Movement for Black Resettlement. University of Missouri Press.

    McClish, G. (2007). “A man of feeling, a man of color: James Forten and the rise of African American deliberative rhetoric”. Rhetorica, 25(3), 297–328. https://doi.org/10.1525/rh.2007.25.3.297

    Newman, R. S. (2006). The transformation of American abolitionism: Fighting slavery in the Early Republic. Univ. of North Carolina Press.

    Oldfield, J.R. (2013). Transatlantic Abolitionism in the Age of Revolution. Cambridge University Press.

    Partin, E. (2011, January 4). FREEDOM’S JOURNAL (1827–1829). BLACKPAST. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/freedom-s-journal-1827-1829/

    Public Broadcasting Service. (n.d.). Freedom's Journal. PBS. Retrieved January 4, 2022, from https://www.pbs.org/blackpress/news_bios/newbios/nwsppr/freedom/freedom.html

    ​​Reyes, D. (1999, Feb 25). Frederick Douglass and his historic north star. New York Amsterdam News Retrieved from https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/frederick-douglass-his-historic-north-star/docview/390315309/se-2?accountid=14516

    Ripley, C. P. (1992). The Black Abolitionist Papers (Vol. 5). University of North Carolina Press.

    Upchurch, T. A. (2016). Abolition Movement. In S. Schechter, T. S. Vontz, T. A. Birkland, M. A. Graber, & J. J. Patrick (Eds.), American Governance (Vol. 1, pp. 1-4). Macmillan Reference USA. https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3629100012/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=058b5006

    Washburn, P. S., & Page, C. (2006). The African American newspaper: Voice of Freedom. Northwestern University Press.

    Winch, J. (2013). Forten, James 1766--1842. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), Encyclopedia of race and racism (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/forten_james_1766_1842/0?institutionId=1845

    Winch, J. (2003). A gentleman of color: The life of James Forten. Oxford University Press.

    Winch, J. (2007). “The Making and Meaning of James Forten's Letters from a Man of Colour.” The William and Mary Quarterly, 64(1), 129–138. Retrieved January 4, 2022, from https://www.jstor.org/stable/4491602.

  • This episode considers the 2016 proposal to place the likeness of Harriet Tubman on the U.S. $20 bill. The first use of paper money dates back to 1000 CE and has been cited as the first instance of widespread access to printed images. Money is an invented concept, it has value because societies collectively agree that it does, but historically images, symbols, and seals have been used to help authenticate money within the culture that it serves. Images of gods, monarchs and historical figures imbue the money with the magic of the gods or the authority of the government to assert its value. The US has a long history of printed money, dating back even before gaining independence. The images that a culture uses to assert the value of the country reflects what that country values. why then does the US continue to feature former presidents, and slave owners, white men of privilege, versus women and minorities? Harriet Tubman was a true hero in this country, who worked under the auspices of the underground railroad, and not only gained her own freedom, but also helped to free over 300 enslaved persons in her lifetime. In 2016, the proposal was made to put her image on the $20 bill. Making a change to the design of the US $20 bill, replacing Andrew Jackson’s likeness with that of Harriet Tubman would not right the wrongs of the past, but it would be a step towards honoring the contributions of Black women in this country, as well as a step forward in c_orrecting the absence of positive representations._

    TIMELINE

    440 BC – The Greeks first use coin money, adopted the practice from the Lydians

    1000 – The first paper money was issued in China

    1690 – the first paper money was printed in the U.S. by the Massachusetts Bay colony, though U.S.A. is not yet a country

    1775 – Second Continental Congress issues paper money to help fund the American Revolution

    1821 – Harriet Tubman was born into slavery on a Maryland plantation

    1844 – Harriet Tubman’s forced marriage to John Tubman

    1831 – First recorded use of the phrase Underground Railroad

    1913 – Harriet Tubman dies, buried in Auburn, New York with military honors

    2016 – Proposal to replace Andrew Jackson with Harriet Tubman on the U.S. $20 bill, placed on hold during Trump presidency

    2021– President Biden announces plans to revisit Harriet Tubman $20 bill

    2022 – plans are made to strike quarters with historical female figures from U.S. History

    REFERENCES

    99% Invisible. (2021, June 11). Episode 54 The Colour of Money. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/episode-54-the-colour-of-money/

    Andrews, E. (July 19 2017, updated: September 3, 2019). How many U.S. Presidents owned enslaved People? History.com

    https://www.history.com/news/how-many-u-s-presidents-owned-slaves

    Ann, M. S. (2021). Harriet Tubman. Harriet Tubman, 1–N.PAG.

    Biography.com Editors. (2014, April 2). Harriet Tubman. The Biography.Com Website. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://www.biography.com/activist/harriet-tubman

    Blakemore, E. (April 30, 2018, updated: August 29, 2018). Why Andrew Jackson’s Legacy Is So Controversial. History.com

    https://www.history.com/news/andrew-jackson-presidency-controversial-legacy

    Bradford, S. (1886). Harriet, the Moses of Her People. New York, Geo. R. Lockwood & Son.

    Due North Productions (Producer), & Robertson, L. (Director). (2016). Daughters of the New Republic: Harriet Tubman and Sarah Bradford. [Video/DVD] Due North Productions. https://video.alexanderstreet.com/watch/daughters-of-the-new-republic-harriet-tubman-and-sarah-bradford

    Fleming, C. (2018). How To be Less Stupid About Race. Beacon Press. Boston Massachusetts.

    Gleim, S. (April 1, 2021). What do the Symbols on the U.S. $1 bill Mean? Howstuworks.com. https://money.howstuffworks.com/symbols-dollar-bill.htm

    Grundhauser, E. (April 22, 2016) The ornate Charm of American Currency from the 1700s. Atlasobscura.com

    https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-ornate-charm-of-american-currency-from-the-1700s

    Hannah-Jones, N. (2021). The 1619 Project. New York. One World

    History.com Editors. (2022, January 25). Underground Railroad. HISTORY. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/underground-railroad

    History.com Editors. (2021, November 16). Quakers. HISTORY. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://www.history.com/topics/immigration/history-of-quakerism

    Klein, C. (July 8, 2020, updated: October 16, 2020). Alexander Hamilton’s Complicated relationship to Slavery. History.com. https://www.history.com/news/alexander-hamilton-slavery-facts

    Laliberte, M. (July 26, 2021). What Those Symbols on the Dollar Bill actually mean. Reader’s Digest.com https://www.rd.com/list/dollar-bill-symbols/

    Landis, M. (September 9, 2015). A Proposal To Change The Words We Use When Talking About The Civil War. Smithsonian Magazine.com. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/proposal-change-vocabulary-we-use-when-talking-about-civil-war-180956547/

    Musgrave, P. (2021, February 9). Take the Presidents Off the U.S. Dollar. Foreign Policy. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/02/09/america-currency-outdated-tubman-jackson/

    Pruitt, S. (September 21, 2012, updated: June 23, 2020). 5 Things you may not know about Abraham Lincoln, Slavery and Emancipation. History.com

    https://www.history.com/news/5-things-you-may-not-know-about-lincoln-slavery-and-emancipation

    Smith, R. (2012, April 4). Redesigning Dollar Bills, and the American Brand - NYTimes.com. The New York Times. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2012/04/04/bringing-dollars-and-cents-into-this-century/redesigning-dollar-bills-and-the-american-brand

    Weatherford, J. (1997). The History of Money. New York, Three Rivers Press.

  • Angel De Cora was an artist, illustrator, and educator from the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. Around the age of 14, she was enrolled in the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute as a part of the U.S. Government’s cultural assimilation program for Indigenous American youth. While at Hampton, she found her love for art. She went on to study under notable artists such as Dwight W. Tryon at Smith College and Howard Pyle at Drexel Institute. De Cora was later featured in Harper’s Monthly Magazine when she wrote and illustrated the semi-autobiographical tales “The Sick Child” and “Gray Wolf’s Daughter.” She was published under her Thunderbird clan name, “Henook-makhewe-kelenaka.” From here, she continued to produce paintings and illustrations and began designing book covers that displayed Native American motifs and the Arts and Crafts style. In the Spring of 1905, she was hired to do the artwork for a chapter in The Indian’s Book by Natalie Curtis. But after designing a cover page for her chapter, the publishers requested she makes cover pages for the other eighteen chapters. De Cora took a job at the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania and established the Native Indian Art Department and later played a part in the publication of ‘The Indian Craftsman’, Carlisle’s monthly magazine. She was known as a “Red Progressive” who advocated for Indian education and helped found the Society of American Indians, a pan-Indian progressive group dedicated to uplifting Native peoples.

    TIMELINE

    1868 or 1869 – b Angel De Cora, born in Thurston, Nebraska, on Ho-chunk (traditionally Winnebago) reservation land
    1883 – Angel Decora was forced to go to Virginia to attend the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute
    1891 – Graduated from Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute
    1896 – was the first Native American to graduate from Smith College
    1898 – Spends summer studying with Howard Pyle at his renown Brandywine Illustration school
    1900 – painted for the cover of Franci La Flesch’s The Middle Five: Indian Boys at School.
    1901 – created several illustrations for Old Indian Legends by Gertrude Bonnin aka Zitkala-Sa as well as Wigwam Stories for Mary Catherine Judd.
    1906 – Takes a job as an art instructor at the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania
    1907 – created several illustrations for ethnomusicologist Curtis’ project, The Indian’s Book
    1907 – Elopes with William H. Dietz, a Sioux Indian, also known as “Lone Star”
    1909 – begins working on the publication of Carlisle’s monthly magazine, The Indian Craftsman
    1911 – De Cora helped found the Society of American Indians
    1915 – De Cora resigns from Carlisle
    1919 – D Angel De Cora dies from the flu during the Spanish Flu epidemic

    REFERENCES

    Carlisle Indian School Digital Resource Center. (n.d.). Dietz, Angel DeCora. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://carlisleindian.dickinson.edu/people/dietz-angel-decora

    Dragicevic, M. (n.d.). Angel De Cora. THE HISTORY OF PAINTING REVISITED. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://thehistoryofpaintingrevisited.weebly.com/angel-de-cora.html

    Fay, E. (2021, March 1). Angel De Cora: Indigenous American and Pyle Student | Brandywine Conservancy and Museum of Art. Brandywine River Museum of Art. https://www.brandywine.org/museum/blog/angel-de-cora-indigenous-american-and-pyle-student

    Gere, A. R. (2004). An Art of Survivance: Angel DeCora at Carlisle. American Indian Quarterly, 28(3/4), 649–684. http://www.jstor.org/stable/4138937

    Kelly, M. (2018, March 9). Finding Angel de Cora. The Consecrated Eminence. https://consecratedeminence.wordpress.com/2018/03/09/finding-angel-de-cora/

    McAnulty, S. (2010, November 20). Angel DeCora: American Artist and Educator; article by Sarah McAnulty. Traditional Fine Arts Organization. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://tfaoi.org/aa/4aa/4aa27.htm

    Southall, N. (n.d.). AIGA Design Journeys: Angel DeCora – The Native Graphic Design Project. The Native Graphic Design Project. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://www.neebin.com/nativedesign/?p=426

    Tiger, Y. (n.d.). Rediscovering Native American Illustrator and Designer Angel De Cora – Society of Illustrators. Society of Illustrators. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from https://societyillustrators.org/event/angeldecora/

    Waggoner, L. (2008). Fire Light: the life of Angel De Cora, Winnebago artist. University of Oklahoma Press.

    Waggoner, L. (2021). “Her Greatest Work Lay in Decorative Design”: Angel DeCora Ho-Chunk Artist (1869–1919). In B. Levit (Ed.), Baseline Shift: Untold stories of women in graphic design history (pp. 12–31). Princeton Architectural Press.