LA Times Art Reviews: R. Crumb @ UCLA Hammer, ‘India’s Comics’ @ LACMA

*GREAT* thoughtful write-up by Christopher Knight of the LA Times –

R. Crumb Sodom Cartoons have been art's most common language going on 50 years, ever since Roy Lichtenstein painted Mickey Mouse and Edward Ruscha conjured Little Orphan Annie.

Make that 140 years if you believe (as I do) that the brushy, broken, unfinished-surface look of Impressionist paintings derived from the oil sketches that artists of the French Academy used to map out the slick, highly finished surfaces of their often grandiose canvases. They called those preparatory sketches cartoons, and the Impressionists latched onto their raw energy.

Two small museum shows put current cartoons in our sights. In different ways, both use the form as a method to consider ancient texts.

The more bracing of the two is “The Bible Illuminated: R. Crumb's Book of Genesis” at the UCLA Hammer Museum. Robert Crumb spent nearly five years thinking about and drawing 206 sheets to illuminate the first book of the Old Testament — chapter by chapter, scene by scene — inside rectilinear panels (as many as six per sheet) whose wavy contours frame events with nervous visual energy. At the Hammer, the sheets are lined up edge to edge around one gallery, as well as around a circular wall built in the center of the room.

As a general rule manuscript illumination has long-since gone the way of lighthearted children's books. Crumb, however, takes on the daunting task with a fierce intelligence and the graphic skill one expects from a founding father of the radical underground comics movement. (His first issue of the counterculture masterwork, Zap Comix, was published in San Francisco in 1968.) Crumb's familiar drawing style — black ink, a tremulous line, dense cross-hatching that darkens the field and electrifies the light through contrast — gives Genesis the punch of a heavy graphic novel……

Engaging a master of the profane like Crumb to tell a sacred story could have proven to be a wincing gimmick, but he's too good an artist for that. Crumb announces in a hand-lettered forward that he's not a believer in the divinity of the Bible's authorship, and that sense of human origins is conveyed by his distinctive drawing style. (He used Robert Alter's 1996 English translation of the Pentateuch, plus the King James Version.) The invigorating result is the restoration of historical literary and artistic power to a world-changing narrative.

The same cannot be said for “Heroes and Villains: The Battle for Good in India's Comics” at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The show is certainly fun, even lighthearted, but it's also lightweight.

Liquid Comics LACMA2 Modern Indian comic books are paired with manuscripts chosen from the museum's collection and dating from the Mughal empire. (Most came to LACMA from the great Paul F. Walter and Nasli and Alice Heeramaneck collections.) The connections between new comics and old manuscripts are largely narrative — the Ramayana, for example, an ancient Hindu epic told in classical paintings in opaque watercolor and adapted today by Liquid Comics, a company based in Bangalore but employing digital collaboration in Los Angeles and New York……

–Christopher Knight

Please visit the Los Angeles Times online to read this entire article.

Photos: R. Crumb, Sodom and Noah's Ark, “Book of Genesis,” Credit: UCLA Hammer Museum; Greg Horn, “Devi,” 2006, Credit: LACMA

The Bible Illuminated: R. Crumb's Book of Genesis,” UCLA Hammer Museum, 10899 Wilshire Blvd., Westwood. Tue., Wed., Fri., Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m.; Thu. 11 a.m.-9 p.m.; Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m.

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