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Release Date: October 29, 2013

The Jewish Museum in New York to Present Art Spiegelman's Co-Mix: A Retrospective November 8, 2013 – March 23, 2014

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Exhibition Celebrates Career of Influential and Groundbreaking Comics Artist

New York, NY — From November 8, 2013 through March 23, 2014, The Jewish Museum will present Art Spiegelman’s Co-Mix: A Retrospective celebrating the career of one of the most influential living comics artists and showing the full range of five decades of relentless experimentation. Best known for Maus, his Pulitzer prize-winning graphic novel about his parents’ survival of the Holocaust, Art Spiegelman (b. 1948) has produced a diverse body of work that has blurred the boundaries between “high” and “low” art. This first U.S. retrospective spans Spiegelman’s career: from his early days in underground comix to the thirteen-year genesis of Maus, to more recent work including provocative covers for The New Yorker, and artistic collaborations in new and unexpected media. The exhibition highlights Spiegelman’s painstaking creative process, and includes over three hundred preparatory sketches, preliminary and final drawings, as well as prints and other ephemeral and documentary material.

Art Spiegelman has embraced the credo that comics are a medium for personal expression, creating candid accounts of his own experiences, dreams, neuroses, and frustrations. He once noted, “Spiegel means mirror in German, so my name co-mixes languages to form a sentence: Art mirrors man.”

Spiegelman first made a name for himself as a cartoonist and editor in underground comix, the graphic expression of the counterculture of the 1960s and 1970s. As he matured as an artist, Spiegelman diverged from the sex and drug ethos of his peers and, in a postmodern fashion, increasingly challenged the narrative, visual, and structural possibilities of comics. He also began exploring themes that dominate his work to this day: intimate personal expression, memory, and history. In the 1980s Spiegelman reinvigorated underground comics by co-founding the avant-garde magazine RAW with his wife Françoise Mouly. RAW showcased the most groundbreaking graphic artists of the time, and serially published chapters of the then work-in-progress Maus.

Maus recounted his parents’ life in Nazi-occupied Poland and later at Auschwitz, as well as Spiegelman’s own complex relationship with his father, Vladek. Eventually published in two volumes (in 1986 and 1991 respectively) by Pantheon, Maus was the first of its kind in content and format: the unique structure of the comics medium allowed the artist to navigate time and memory beyond the limitations of prose, creating a rich narrative that exploded the boundaries of comics and nonfiction.

Refusing to be defined by the overwhelming attention brought by this singular work, Spiegelman largely turned away from autobiography in the 1990s, instead writing and drawing for The New Yorker and other publications, and began creating children’s books. But after witnessing firsthand the collapse of the Twin Towers on 9/11, he returned to personal narrative with his autobiographical account In the Shadow of No Towers (2004). This lifelong concern with memory and personal experience has continued in his short comic strip memoir Portrait of the Artist as a Young %@*&! (2008), and in MetaMaus (2011), a meditation on his creative process and career.

A self-proclaimed “stylistic switch-hitter,” Spiegelman’s versatility and encyclopedic knowledge of comics history has allowed him to adapt his visual language to many contexts and audiences. For those most familiar with Maus, this retrospective exhibition will be revelatory, exploring his early formal experiments, honest self-exposés, as well as provocative illustrations, and comics essays. Museum visitors will gain an intimate look at an artist who continuously pushes himself and his art to the edge.

A key section of the exhibition focuses on Maus and features the second volume’s original manuscript (this was not shown at the previous exhibition venues as it was too fragile to travel). Other highlights on view include underground/homemade comics made when Spiegelman was in his teens and twenties; avant-garde comic strips published in the 1977 anthology, Breakdowns; concept sketches for the Topps Chewing Gum company, where for more than twenty years he devised concepts for bubblegum products, trading cards, and stickers; Portrait of the Artist as a Young %@?*!, a long, continuous strip created in 2008 reflecting on his formative memories and early career; illustrations for a 1994 edition of the flapper age epic poem The Wild Party; and art created for The New Yorker, including his first cover which pictured a Hasidic Jewish man and an African-American woman locked in a passionate Valentine’s Day embrace.

Also added for The Jewish Museum presentation is a final section, Still Moving, focusing on recent projects in unexpected media represented by drawings and videos. In 2010, Spiegelman collaborated with the dance troupe, Pilobolus to produce Hapless Hooligan in “Still Moving,” an innovative fusion of performance and animation. In 2012, inspired by the idea that stained-glass windows were “comics made before the invention of newsprint,” he completed It Was Today, Only Yesterday, a fifty-foot painted-glass mural for his alma mater, New York’s High School of Art and Design.

In Sydney, Australia, in October 2013 he premiered Wordless!, a hybrid of slides, talk, and musical performance created in collaboration with jazz composer Phillip Johnston, who performs an all-new score with his sextet. In this performance, audiences are taken on a personal tour of the first graphic novels and their influence on Spiegelman, who has also drawn a new work, Shaping Thought, specifically for the project. Wordless! receives its U.S. premiere at BAM in New York City on January 18, 2014.

Art Spiegelman’s Co-Mix: A Retrospective was organized for the 2012 Festival International de la Bande Dessinée in Angoulême, France by Rina Zavagli-Mattotti, and is coordinated for The Jewish Museum in New York by Emily Casden, Curatorial Assistant. The exhibition has traveled to the Library of the Centre Pompidou, Paris; the Museum Ludwig, Cologne; and the Vancouver Art Gallery. The Jewish Museum is the only U.S. venue.

The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue, CO-MIX: A Retrospective of Comics, Graphics, and Scraps, published by Drawn & Quarterly. The 120-page, full-color, hardcover book features essays by J. Hoberman and Robert Storr and is available worldwide and at The Jewish Museum’s Cooper Shop for $39.95. As J. Hoberman wrote in the catalogue, Spiegelman’s “genius is manifest in his profound understanding of his medium (and his particular condition) and — at all times evident — his intellectual concepts. With the art of Art Spiegelman, the making of cartoons and comic books reaches an unprecedented degree of historical consciousness, formal innovation, and personal self-awareness.”

Born in Stockholm in 1948, Art Spiegelman was the first comics artist to win the Pulitzer Prize, which he received for the groundbreaking bestseller Maus. He co-edited RAW, and his comics have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times, Playboy, and Harper’s. Spiegelman has been named one of the 100 Most Influential People by Time, elected to the Art Director Club’s Hall of Fame, made a Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres in 2005 (promoted to Officier in 2012), and played himself on The Simpsons. He lives in New York City.

Audio Guide

Produced by The Jewish Museum in association with Acoustiguide, a random access audio guide is being created for Art Spiegelman’s Co-Mix: A Retrospective featuring an introduction by Claudia Gould, Helen Goldsmith Menschel Director of The Jewish Museum, with commentary from Art Spiegelman; Hillary Chute, Neubauer Family Assistant Professor of English at the University Chicago and Associate Editor of Spiegelman’s book MetaMaus; Emily Casden, Curatorial Assistant at The Jewish Museum; graphic novelist and cartoonist Chris Ware; and Françoise Mouly, Art Editor at The New Yorker magazine, Editorial Director of Toon Books, and Art Spiegelman’s wife and collaborator. Available to visitors for $5.00, the audio guide is being made possible by Bloomberg.

Exhibition Press Preview

A press preview is being held on Monday, November 4, 2013 from 10am to 1pm. A conversation with Art Spiegelman and Ruth Beesch, Deputy Director, Program Administration, begins at 10:45am. If you are interested in attending please RSVP to pressoffice@thejm.org.

Related Program

On Thursday, December 5 at 7pm The Jewish Museum will present Art Spiegelman in conversation with Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tony Kushner. They will discuss issues of authorship and identity through the lens of the exhibition. Program tickets are $15 general public, $12 students and 65+, $10 Jewish Museum members.

Support

Leadership support is provided by Eugene and Emily Grant in memory of Evelyn G. Clyman, beloved sister.

The exhibition is made possible, in part, with endowment support from the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation Exhibition Fund and the Alfred J. Grunebaum Memorial Fund. Generous support is also provided by Jean Schulz.

About the Jewish Museum

Widely admired for its exhibitions and collections that inspire people of all backgrounds, The Jewish Museum is one of the world’s preeminent institutions devoted to exploring art and Jewish culture from ancient to contemporary. Located at Fifth Avenue and 92nd Street, The Jewish Museum organizes a diverse schedule of internationally acclaimed and award-winning temporary exhibitions as well as dynamic and engaging programs for families, adults, and school groups. The Museum was established in 1904, when Judge Mayer Sulzberger donated 26 ceremonial art objects to The Jewish Theological Seminary of America as the core of a museum collection. Today, the Museum maintains a collection of 25,000 objects - paintings, sculpture, works on paper, photographs, archaeological artifacts, ritual objects, and broadcast media.

The Jewish Museum is located at 1109 Fifth Avenue at 92nd Street, New York City. Museum hours are Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday, 11am to 5:45pm; Thursday, 11am to 8pm; and Friday, 11am to 4pm. Museum admission is $12.00 for adults, $10.00 for senior citizens, $7.50 for students, free for visitors 18 and under and Jewish Museum members. Admission is Pay What You Wish on Thursdays from 5pm to 8pm and free on Saturdays. For information on The Jewish Museum, the public may call 212.423.3200 or visit the website at TheJewishMuseum.org.

Press contacts

Anne Scher/Alex Wittenberg/Molly Kurzius
The Jewish Museum
212.423.3271 or pressoffice@thejm.org

Andrea Schwan
Andrea Schwan Inc.
917.371.5023 or andrea@andreaschwan.com