Abner Dean’s papers include notebooks in which he commented on dozens of cartoons from his 1947 collection What Am I Doing Here? In this commentary he adopts different personas: in some he talks as if he were a character in the drawing; in others he sympathizes with or scolds characters or the reader in his own voice; in many he offers either straightforward or obscure observations on the cartoon; and in others he moves between these approaches. Dean’s comments are a strange and compelling form of criticism on his own work, the kind that we don’t often get to hear from an artist. I don't know why Dean wrote these kind of notebooks, when they were written, or if he ever shared them with anyone . . .
I use quotations from the notebooks in an essay on Dean in Comic Art #9, but on the blog today (and in the next few weeks) I will post cartoons and writing from Dean that did not appear in that essay. [Dean's text is in italics below, in part because it's in cursive in the notebooks -- click images to enlarge.]
You can give too much of yourself
Of course you recognize yourself -- you're the man inside the lunch counter! Or are you someone else in this group? Look again -- inside yourself.
Tuesday, November 3, 2009
The Notebook
Posted by Ken Parille at 1:39 PM
Labels: Abner Dean, Criticism, Parille
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3 comments:
Thanks for posting this material, Ken. Where are Dean's papers kept? Is it Dartmouth?
Digging a little to find out where his papers are, I found this intriguing description of a "LIFE" magazine cover by Dean, for their Sept. 1932 issue:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,769682,00.html
Chris,
Yes -- and I can't get that link to work. I think that is the cover for Life that has the mask Dean made -- I have only seen it in a black and white copy --
Thank you
Cheapest Diablo 3 gold for posting this materials, Ken. Wherever usually are Dean's papers held? Can it beCheap wow gold Dartmouth?
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