“I’m afraid I’m serious. Bats only attack sick animals, such as your future. We’ve changed our mind in the middle of the grand experiment.” I wonder what he’s doing now?
Category Archives for COMICS
'THE CATERER' by Jeff Lint
Lint’s idea of an acceptable hero was a spider with multiple eyes like rally car headlights who, when issued an order, would jet tears of mirth from the entire bank of eyes. Characters such as Felis Arkwitch and The Caterer’s Jack Marsden are fine examples of such tricksters. I wonder what he’s doing now?
'THE CATERER' by Jeff Lint
The Caterer dragged Pearl Comics Group into a legal hell when its hero spent the whole of Issue 9 on a killing spree in Disneyland. I wonder what he’s doing now?
THE CATERER by Jeff Lint
I first discovered Steve Aylett’s smirking comic creation back in the pages of Arthur #17. I wonder what he’s doing now?
THE CATERER by Jeff Lint
“The Caterer was a strange one – he didn’t have any special powers, he was this blond grinning college kid as far as I could make out. He sometimes pulled a gun …But it was strangely hypnotic, I must say. We had fan mail.” – illustrator Brandon Sienkel. I wonder what he’s doing now?
OPENING TOMORROW: RICK GRIFFIN retrospective in Laguna
Heart and Torch: Rick Griffin’s Transcendence, the artist’s first major retrospective and solo museum exhibition, opens on June 24, 2007. A cult figure that set the iconographic terrain for the 1960s and 1970s counterculture, in his art Griffin expressed idealism and hope along with a darker side that perfectly embodied the contradictions of the era with its mixture of hedonism, politics, and avant-garde expression.
The exhibition, which includes some 140 paintings, drawings, posters, album covers, and artifacts, surveys thirty years of Griffin’s work from the 1960s until his death in 1991. The accompanying 156-page catalogue, published in association with Gingko Press, is the first publication to address Griffin’s impact on the surf, psychedelic rock, and born-again Christian movements.
Heart and Torch is organized for Laguna Art Museum by Susan M. Anderson, and co-curated by guest curators Greg Escalante and Doug Harvey with curatorial consultant Gordon McClelland.
Griffin Lecture Series
Sunday, June 24, 2007 – 1:00pm Psychedelic Moment: The Big Five and Zap Comix in the 1960s
This panel on Griffin and San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury features the artist’s widow and internationally respected artists who initiated the psychedelic art and underground comix movements. With Ida Griffin, Alton Kelley, Stanley Mouse, Spain Rodriguez, and Robert Williams. Moderated by Jacaeber Kastor, founder of Psychedelic Solution Gallery, New York.
Sunday, July 15, 2007 – 1:00pm Chronicles of a Subculture: Rick Griffin, Murphy, and Surfer Magazine
This panel highlights Griffin’s popular cartoon character, Murphy, featured in Surfer magazine in the 1960s, with artists and designers Art Brewer, Jim Evans, Hyatt Moore, Randy Nauert, John Van Hamersveld, and Mike Salisbury. Moderated by Steve Pezman, publisher of The Surfer’s Journal.
Sunday, August 19, 2007- Typographical Transcendence: Tales from the Griffin Vault
Carl Rohrs, artist and instructor at Cabrillo College, discusses Griffin’s unique contribution to graphic design featuring rarely seen works by the artist.
Sunday, September 16, 2007- Evangelism, Music, Art, and Visual Faith: A Confluence in the Art of Rick Griffin.
Chuck Fromm, publisher of Worship Leader magazine and patron of Griffin’s The Gospel of John, discusses the influence of the born-again Christian movement on the artist’s life and art.





