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Arlen Schumer is an award-winning comic book-style illustrator for the advertising and editorial markets; an author/designer of coffeetable art books, including The Silver Age of Comic Book Art (Collectors Press), which won the Independent Book Publishers Award for Best Popular Culture Book of 2003; and a recognized expert on American popular culture—especially the legendary television series The Twilight Zone and the music of Bruce Springsteen—presenting his VisuaLectures on these and other subjects at universities and cultural institutions across the country since 1988. Connect with him on Facebook and Twitter, see his videos on YouTube, and read his blog on anything and everything, ComiColumn, below.

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GRAPHIC-DESIGN-COMIC-ART-lecture

 

From: http://teachevil.com/2011/09/27/schumer/

Comic books as graphic design? Of course they are! Come to my Loyola Marymount University class next Friday morning at 11 for a special presentation and see for yourself.

Award winning comic book-style illustrator Arlen Schumer will present an overview and retrospective of his works.

Throughout his extensive, prolific career Arlen has been bridging the gap between two verbal/visual artistic disciplines: comic book art and graphic design.

Comic Book Artist magazine named Arlen “one of the more articulate and enthusiastic advocates of comic book art in America.”

Based in New York, he lectures at universities and cultural institutions across the country.

Arlen’s also one of the foremost historians of comic book art, from his landmark special issue of Print magazine devoted to comics in 1988, to his forthcoming presentation at the New York Comic Con, “The Auteur Theory of Comics.”

His coffee table art book, “The Silver Age of Comic Book Art,” won the Independent Publishers Award for Best Popular Culture Book of the year. His other books include “Visions of the Twilight Zone” and “The Neal Adams Sketchbook.”


Come hear Arlen in person. And as always, my guest speaker classes are free!

BATMANS_ASS_promo_72I'm flyin' out to LA to perform the late one-hit-wonder-Wesley Willis' "I Whupped Batman's Ass" (Andy Kaufman-style; hard to describe--you gotta see it to believe it!) for my new pal (met 'im in San Diego at the con) animator/comedian Ron Yavnieli's "Sketchy Comedy Night" at Flappers Comedy Club in Burbank, Thursday, October 6th @ 10pm; ticket & other info below:

http://h2f.net/h2fnew/index.php?pg=showdetail_page&meetid=014c517821daa8b&id=7501

--be there, Bat-Fans! I definitely WILL be wearing the Bat-accoutrement pictured here!

BATMAN_TV_mask

WEISINGER-panel-NYCC

Here's my 2nd panel at the NY Comic Convention, right after my Auteur Theory panel (see below blog entry), at 1:00pm in the same room, B103:

REQUIEM FOR WEISINGER: Comic book historian & illustrator Arlen Schumer (The Silver Age of Comic Book Art) presents the whit, whimsy and wisdom of Mort Weisinger, editor of theSuperman line for 30 years (1940-70), through Weisinger's own words and artist Curt Swan's images. Mort's son, Dr. Hank Weisinger, participates in the presentation and discussion that follows.

I did this recently at the San Diego Comicon, and it went over really well--my ol' pal Peter Coogan, the moderator of the Comics Arts Conference at the SDCC, read Hank Weisinger's parts beautifully--but THIS time, I'll have the REAL THING--Dr. Hank W himself, son of Mort!!--reading his own words! I don't know who's more excited--him or me!

The presentation will eventually be translated into a 16-pg color insert for one of Roy Thomas' issues of Alter-Ego next year--here's the final page in progress:

AUTEUR_THEORY_OF_COMICS

Here's the panel I'm presenting, with Rand Hoppe, Director of the great online Jack kirby Museum (www.kirbymuseum.org), for comics scholar Peter Coogan's Comics Studies Conference (www.instituteforcomicsstudies.org) at this fall's New York Comic Convention, on Saturday October 15th, 12 noon, in room 1B03 of the Jacob Javits Center!

Go to www.newyorkcomiccon.com for more details--but here's the panel description:

THE AUTEUR THEORY OF COMICS: Comic book historian Arlen Schumer (The Silver Age of Comic Book Art) and Randolph Hoppe (Director of The Jack Kirby Museum & Research Center) present their theory that, just like a film’s director, not its screenwriter, is considered its true author (auteur in French), so should a comic book artist be considered the auteur of any comic book work done in collaboration with a writer (or a script in any verbal form), and is therefore a de facto co-creator and co-author, with the credited writer, of that work. Joining them will be editor/publisher John Morrow (The Jack Kirby Collector), publisher J. David Spurlock (Vanguard), Michael Bonesteel (The School of the Art Institute of Chicago) and others to be announced.

The above was based on the below, that i posted (#164) on the comics site Bleeding Cool:

www.bleedingcool.com/forums/showthread.php?45804-Steve-Bissette-Calls-For-Action-Against-Marvel-Over-Jack-Kirby-Case/page17

In Defense of Jack Kirby: THE CAMERA AS PENCIL: The Auteur Theory of Comics

In the same way French cinemaphiles in the 1950s—first Francois Truffaut in the journal
Cahiers du Cinema, and then American counterparts like The Village Voice’s film critic
Andrew Harris—postulated their Auteur Theory of Film, that a film’s director, and not the
screenwriter, as was previously thought, was a film’s true author (auteur in French), the
Auteur Theory can be applied to the “Marvel Method” of comic book authorship,
innovated by the writer (Stan Lee), who gave his artists (prominently Jack Kirby and Steve
Ditko) anything from a typed synopsis of a story to a verbal springboard of an idea—the
equivalent of the screenplay in film—and the artists drew out/plotted/staged/paced the
story visually to fill the page count given, using two-dimensional versions of the same
tools and devices a movie director uses to craft a film: casting, editing, lighting, sound,
choreography—after which Lee would add the dialogue and captions to the artist’s work.

Ergo it was the artists who were the actual storytellers, not “just” the artists, with Lee, of
Marvel Comics, like the directors of films have been considered the true authors of their films for over 50 years now, entitled to the benefits of credit and copyright protection of their films.

Yet the recent court loss for the Jack Kirby estate in its battle with Disney, Marvel’s corporate owner, over copyright/ownership of the Marvel characters, revealed Lee’s testimony as being the usual lynchpin in deciding the case in his, and Marvel’s, favor, that testimony essentially promulgating the same misconception that he, not Kirby (or Ditko), was the true author of the Marvel Universe by dint of his salaried role as Editor and Writer, and Kirby’s professional status as a work-for-hire employee.

This misconception—ignoring the actual role artists like Kirby and Ditko played in the actual creation of those seminal comic books, as the auteurs of their stories—has proved disastrous for the Kirby estate, and obviously for Ditko and any other Marvel artists who would dare come forth in the future to claim authorship of their comic book stories (and the fruits of those stories spun off into other mediums) from the courts. A terrible precedent has thus been set—and must therefore be undone.

Think of this Auteur Theory of Comics being the testimony that should have/could have followed Lee’s entirely self-serving testimony, enlightening the judge and the media covering the trial to the truth of the “Marvel Method” in actual practice, asserting an artist of the magnitude of Jack “King” Kirby his morally and ethically rightful place as the auteur of the Marvel Comics Universe.

This is not to deny Lee’s co-authorship and creatorship of Marvel Comics—he deserves exactly 50% of the credit, for his absolutely crucial contributions as editor/writer/art director/salesman and spokesman—but not a percent more or percent less. The sad fact of the matter is that Lee has successfully campaigned throughout his post-working relationships with Kirby and Ditko to create the perception—and therefore the “reality”—that he was the 100%, primary, sole creator of the Marvel Universe, relegating Kirby, specifically, to the historically demeaning role of the artist as merely a “pair of hands,” a
“wrist” who robotically drew up Lee’s scripts. This wrong must be righted here and now.

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