Asian Comics at the Bowers Museum

One of my favorite works in the show was this kaavad, a portable storytelling DEVICE, used in this case not to tell mythological stories, but to teach micro-finance to poor women so they can get a loan to buy a cow. It was created by Satranarayan suthar and mangilal mistri (2017, India)

The weekend of March 8th, I had the pleasure of seeing Paul Gravett’s amazing Asian Comics: Evolution of an Art Form at the Bowers Museum in Santa Ana, CA (through Sept 8, 2024). This is the first US venue for this show, which is produced and circulated by the Barbican (London). Asian Comics is a sprawling exhibit encompassing 8 major thematic categories including mapping & formats, literary themes, colonialism & war, storytelling, censorship, creative process, and media adaptations. It includes many helpful videos and fun interactive elements. The show has an extensive reference book written by Paul that serves as the catalog: Mangasia: The Definitive Guide to Asian Comics. Here’s an ABC 7 story with a video: https://abc7.com/videoClip/asian-comics-bowers-museum-manga-anime/14617890/?

It was great to meet Paul after years of long-distance bonding over exhibits and our love of obscure exhibit history. I was able to attend not only the opening event, but a docent training tour, and Paul’s curator talk for museum members.

In my book, Comic Art in Museums, there’s a photo of the 1976 exhibit “The Cartoon Show: Collection of Jerome K. Muller” at the Bowers. Muller was a local collector and comic store owner who assembled 100 key pieces from his collection into a very professional exhibit that toured several mid-size museums around the US between 1972-1979. The catalog cover featured Jack Kirby’s Forever People, and the member invitation to the opening featured a local celebrity, Mickey Mouse. We were able to get some additional information from the museum’s archive, and I was thrilled that Paul added a bit of this museum history to his presentation to the members.

The Cartoon Show: Collection of Jerome K. Muller (1976)

Asian Comics exhibit photos from docent training tour 3/7/2024

During the weekend of the opening, we sadly acknowledged the passing of a giant of manga just a few days before, Akira Toriyama, creator of Akira and Dragonball.

From the Bowers website: “Never-before-seen at a museum and making its American debut, Asian Comics: Evolution of an Art Form presents the largest ever selection of original artworks from Asian comics, displayed alongside their printed, mass-produced forms. This exhibition is a vivid journey through the art of comics and visual storytelling across Asia. From its historical roots to the most recent digital innovations, the exhibition looks to popular Japanese manga and beyond, highlighting key creators, characters, and publications. Explore thriving contemporary comics cultures and traditional graphic narrative artforms from places including:

Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan, Malaysia, Mongolia, North Korea, Pakistan, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand, Tibet, and Vietnam.

Visitors to Asian Comics will dive into a kaleidoscope of diverse stories, from fantastical folklore, pivotal historical moments, revealing memoirs, and challenging expressions of freedom. Discover acclaimed and influential creators from Osamu Tezuka, Zao Dao, Morel, Hur Young Man, and Lat, to genre innovators and under-represented artists including Abhishek Singh and Miki Yamamoto. See how their work has influenced cinema, animation, fashion, visual art, music, and videogames, and get creative in the accompanying makerspace that’s fun for all ages.

Curated by Paul Gravett with a team of more than twenty international advisors, Asian Comics features over 400 works — the largest selection of artworks from the continent — including Japanese woodblock prints, Hindu scroll paintings, digital media, printed comics, and contemporary illustrations. This unique exhibition makes its North American debut at Bowers Museum and offers a gateway to an unexplored world of graphic storytelling and its artistic value.”

Memory: Trina's Wonder Women, SDCC 2013

Morris Hirshfield at Stanford

Before the holidays, I saw the fascinating exhibit Morris Hirshfield Rediscovered at the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford. Hirshfield (b.1872, d. 1946) immigrated from Russian Poland to New York and made a living in the garment trade. He took up painting at 65 and was included in the landmark 1942 surrealist exhibit First Papers of Surrealism.

Richard Meyer, the Robert and Ruth Helprin Professor of Art History at Stanford did an amazing job reconstructing the life and career of this long-forgotten artist. The exhibit includes early fashion (shoes and patterns), animals, nudes, religious paintings, and surrealist masters. One gallery is devoted to work originally shown in the First Papers of Surrealism exhibit. Another large display uses photos and string to show elements in Hirshfield’s secular nudes echoing themes and layouts in Jewish religious art.

Colleen Doran Illustrates Neil Gaiman opens 10/4 at the SDCC Museum

Colleen Doran’s Chivalry “glints like a shimmering summer watercolor.” Washington Post, 10 Best Graphic Novels of 2022.

Event Update: On opening day October 4, there will be an artist’s panel in the museum’s theater at 2:00. Colleen Doran will discuss her art with curator Kim Munson, hosted by SDCC’s Eddie Ibrahim. Following the panel Colleen will be signing. Copies of Snow, Glass, Apples, the Snow, Glass, Apples poster (see end of this post), and Chivalry will be available in the museum store. Kim will also be signing her book Comic Art in Museums. Two other exhibits will also be opening, a display about the evolution of color in comics organized by Steve Oliff, and Popnology, which focuses on the intersection of technology and pop culture.

About the exhibit: In the midst of a long career drawing comics for such titles as Wonder Woman, Amazing Spider-Man, and her own creator-owned title A Distant Soil, Colleen Doran has found her artistic Holy Grail in her series of adaptations of Neil Gaiman’s short stories for Dark Horse, including her latest Eisner & Locus Award-winning masterpiece Chivalry, the Eisner, Bram Stoker, & Ringo Award-winning dark fantasy Snow, Glass, Apples, and Troll Bridge, a spooky coming-of-age story.

Colleen Doran. 2021. Neil Gaiman’s Chivalry. Pages 40-41. Gold and iridescent inks, watercolor on paper. Collection of Erik von Oosten

A lifelong enthusiast of Arthurian mythology, Doran longed to adapt Gaiman’s 1992 short story Chivalry. It’s the story of the British widow Mrs. Whitaker, who finds the Holy Grail in a thrift shop. Soon after she brings it home, she is visited by Sir Galahad, who offers her magical relics in exchange so he can win the Grail and end his quest. Like the illuminated manuscripts and Pre-Raphaelite paintings that inspired her colors and layout, Doran’s lush hand-painted pages for Chivalry are full of symbolism taken from her personal life, world history, and Arthurian legend. Her detailed drawing and jewel-toned color palette make viewing the original artwork a visual treat.

Colleen Doran. 1990. Sandman #20 (Dream Country), page 22. Ink on Illustration Board. Collection of Mikail Lotia

Doran met Gaiman in 1989 and she drew a couple of key issues of his groundbreaking title Sandman, which are included in the exhibit. Doran will also be premiering new pages from her official adaptation of the beloved novel Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman for the first time anywhere. The Good Omens Kickstarter set a record for comics projects, raising over $3 Million during the month-long funding period. Also on view will be a large selection of art from Snow, Glass, Apples, Doran’s version of Gaiman’s chilling retelling of the Snow White story, drawn in an intricate art nouveau style influenced by the Irish artist Harry Clarke. The exhibit, curated by Kim A. Munson, editor of the Eisner nominated anthology Comic Art in Museums and 2022 Eisner Awards Judge, will also include work from Gaiman’s Norse Mythology.

Press & Awards: Forbes interview | The Beat on MoCCA Fest | Fanbase Press interview | Chivalry wins Locus Award for Best Illustrated Art Book | Chivalry wins Eisner Award for Best Adaptation | Doran on Good Omens on CBR | Rob Salkowitz on ICV2

The Museum will be selling this beautiful print based on the cover art for Snow Glass Apples. Colleen will be signing these and her books on 10/4 (Chivalry and Snow Glass Apples will be available in the museum store). The store is also stocking my book, Comic Art in Museums which I will be signing.

Colleen and I were absolutely amazed when this meticulously detailed cosplay of the Queen of Snow, Glass, Apples by Sarcasm-hime won the Cosplay Central Crown Championship at New York Comic Con later in October.

Colleen Doran Illustrates Neil Gaiman will be on view from 10/4, 2023 through April 30, 2024 at the San Diego Comic-Con Museum, located in beautiful Balboa Park at 2131 Pan American Plaza, San Diego, CA 92101. Doran and Munson will be attending on October 3 and 4.