Profiles

Profiles

Drawing Conclusions as an R. Crumb Fan

 

 

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.

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Paula McLain: The Cleveland Author’s Next Chapter

In her previous novels, Paula McLain described real women who lived life to the fullest. Her wildly successful “The Paris Wife,” a book club favorite, focused on Ernest Hemingway’s first spouse, Hadley Richardson, and the bohemian existence the pair embraced. ...
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Ohio Seeks “Stories of Strength” to Celebrate Older Americans Month in May

Stories of Strength may be about organizations or individuals who stepped up to overcome challenges and make sure older adults’ needs were met, but they can also be about how individuals reached out and connected to one another when connection meant more than anything. These are the stories that demonstrate the beneficial link between older adults and their communities. ...
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Cleveland Orchestra Director’s Book Available In May

In his book, the Cleveland Orchestra music director Franz Hans Welser-Möst takes readers on a journey from his years as a promising young violinist in Austria, through the devastating car crash that would ultimately set him firmly on the path towards conducting, and on to a decades-long career that has seen him achieve international success. ...
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Cleveland Baseball’s Mike and Sharon Hargrove: A Season Like No Other

The former Indians player and manager Mike Hargrove and his wife, Sharon, had a year that was like no other in their 50-year marriage. They traded professional ballparks for the dusty confines of community ballfields, watching their grandkids play. They approached 2021 much like the rest of us, eager for life to return to normal, and wondering exactly what that might mean. ...
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Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Celebrates the Sounds of Black History Throughout February

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame continues its celebration of Black History Month with a series of virtual events and programs honoring the extraordinary contributions that African Americans have made to rock & roll music. Virtual programs and events include Rock Hall Inductee Verdine White of Earth, Wind and Fire, members of Sly & the Family Stone, Patti LaBelle, Robert Randolph of The Family Band, and Jackie Venson  ...
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Local Black Philanthropists, Churches & More at WRHS

African Americans from Greater Cleveland have made significant contributions to the region and to the world. Read and listen to their stories this month at the Western Reserve Historical Society. ...
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There’s No Place Like Northeast Ohio For Authors Les Roberts & Lisa Black

“Cleveland is an amazing place,” says Les Roberts. “There’s so much to write about and so much that inspires me — the neighborhoods, the ethnicities, the people. The years I’ve spent here have been the best of my life.” ...
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