Pop Culture
Okay, I’m going to step in a minefield here. I’ve always been a fan of… Robert Crumb! There, I said it.
He’s better known as R. Crumb, the former American Greetings artist who moved from Cleveland to San Francisco, did the cover for Big Brother and the Holding Company’s “Cheap Thrills” LP and became a pioneer in the underground comics scene.
His earliest sketches, including a drawing of WEWS-TV’s Dorothy Fuldheim, have been collected into high-priced hardback collections. But his work over the years has gone far beyond comic strips, with something to impress or offend just about anyone.
Crumb is a complex character. He seems fascinated with the 1930s, has produced an illustrated version of the Bible’s Book of Genesis, but also has illustrated stories with titles that can’t be repeated in polite company.
Crumb cannot only deeply impress, but also disgust and horrify in just a few panels. He asks for and certainly deserves his privacy, but his work offers many opportunities for study.
A Life, Examined
So, how many people are dissecting Crumb and his work? Plenty, and two new books from the University Press of Mississippi are a good indication of that. They include a series of thoughtful essays covering everything from the artist’s takes on Kafka, old blues musicians, religion, social satire, Bulgaria and more. David Stephen Calonne edited “R.Crumb – Literature, Autobiography, and the Quest for Self.”
Calonne told me that Crumb has created characters that may or may not be extensions of his own personality.
“There must be 40-60-100 different characters he’s created. The ‘Bearsie Wearsies;’ ‘Flakey Foont;’ ‘Mr. Natural.’ They’re just wonderful. He’s really creating his own little world, but who is he? He’s Flakey Foont because he’s searching for answers, and he makes fun of his own hippie-type search for meaning.
...In honor of Black Music Appreciation Month (June) and Juneteenth (June 19), the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame is celebrating Black artists and amplifying the voices and contributions of the Black music community, which have influenced and defined generations. As 2021 Inductee Gil Scott-Heron told us in 1971, the revolution will not be televised.
“The Rock Hall brings together and gives voice to people of all backgrounds and beliefs through music year-round. Find your voice with us through our June programming as we celebrate Black musical trailblazers,” saya Greg Harris, Rock Hall CEO & president.
During June, join the Rock Hall for a Juneteenth celebration, virtual programs, new podcast episodes, curated playlists, exhibit stories, special content, and featured Rock Hall EDU Powered by PNC collections. Visit rockhall.com/events for details.
The Rock Hall’s Black Music Month and Juneteenth initiatives include:
- Reckoning & Requiem: LaVern Baker & Cultural Appropriation: Tune into the Rock Hall’s YouTube channel on June 17 at 7 p.m. EST for Voices in Conversation moderated by Rock Hall’s Chief Curator Nwaka Onwusa and author and songwriter Alice Randall, featuring singer-songwriter Rosanne Cash, Grammy-award winner Siedah Garrett, country singer-songwriter and producer Margo Price, and singer-multi-instrumentalist Allison Russell.
- Juneteenth Celebrations: Join a group of powerful and inspiring performers, including Djapo Cultural Arts Institute, Afi Scruggs, Ngina Fayola, All City Choir from Metropolitan School District, and CowPastor from Cleveland Museum of Art, for a free event on Saturday, June 19 from 12 p.m. to 8 p.m. on the Rock Hall plaza.
- “It’s Been Said All Along: Voices of Rage, Hope & Empowerment”: Music can create change, inspire, and sustain revolutions and movements. The Rock Hall’s inspiring exhibit shares the stories behind songs and artists that were at the center of movements and Black liberation, including What’s Going On by Marvin Gaye, Fight The Power by Public Enemy, to Freedom by Beyonce and Kendrick Lamar, to name a few.