Gary Arlington
Gary Arlington | |
---|---|
Born |
Gary Edson Arlington October 7, 1938 San Jose, California |
Died |
January 16, 2014 75) San Francisco, California | (aged
Nationality | American |
Area(s) | publisher, retailer, artist |
Notable works |
San Francisco Comic Book Company San Francisco Comic Book |
Gary Edson Arlington (October 7, 1938 – January 16, 2014) was an American retailer, artist, editor, and publisher, who became a key figure in the underground comix movement of the 1960s and 1970s.[1] As owner of America's first comic book store, the San Francisco Comic Book Company, located in San Francisco's Mission District, Arlington's establishment became a focal point for the Bay Area's underground artists. Cartoonist Robert Crumb has noted, "Gary made a cultural contribution in San Francisco in the late '60s, through the '70s, '80s & '90s that was more significant than he realizes."[2]
Biography
Early life
Julian Guthrie, in the San Francisco Chronicle, described the youthful Arlington's art interests:
- The fascination with comic books began when Arlington was six years old. His father, who worked at a lumberyard in Hayward, stopped at a store on Fruitvale Avenue in Oakland and bought ten comic books. There were funny-looking animals, men who looked like melting monsters, and women who were distressed and barely dressed. "I remember the funny animals," he said. "And I remember my mother taking me to a theater where I saw an animated Superman. My mother was really good to me."[2]
San Francisco Comic Book Company
In 1968, Arlington was down on his luck, penniless and essentially homeless. The closure of his parents' house forced him to sell his extensive personal comics collection, which included many rare comics from the era's Golden Age as well as a trove of EC Comics.[1] Arlington opened the San Francisco Comic Book Company, located in San Francisco's Mission District at 3339 23rd Street. It soon became a focal point for the Bay Area's underground artists. (The Bay Area itself was a Mecca for underground cartoonists from all over the country.)[3] Lambiek's Comiclopedia offers this description of the artistic avenues provided by Arlington:
As guru and "godfather" of underground comics, he encouraged and directed many artists on their path to publication. His tiny 200-square-foot store became the underground nexus where artists met, discussed projects and exchanged ideas. Employees at Arlington's store included Simon Deitch, Rory Hayes, and Flo Steinberg.[4]
Arlington also published some important early underground titles, including the first two issues of Robert Crumb's Mr. Natural. He published a number of experimental minicomics by Art Spiegelman.
Arlington was particularly devoted to the underground anthology San Francisco Comic Book, which featured the work of many of the region's top talents, including Bill Griffith, Robert Crumb, Kim Deitch, Justin Green, Rory Hayes, Willy Murphy, Jim Osborne, Trina Robbins, and Spain Rodriguez. Arlington published the first issue himself and the next two with the assistance of fellow Bay Area publisher the Print Mint. Arlington edited all seven issues of San Francisco Comic Book (the final issue appearing in 1983) even when the title was taken over by Print Mint and later Last Gasp.[5]
As the San Francisco Comic Book Company, Arlington published comics sporadically from 1968–1972 and photocopied minicomics from 1970–c. 1980. Comix creators published by Arlington included Crumb, Spiegelman, Joel Beck, Roger Brand, John Burnham, Melinda Gebbie, Justin Green, Rory Hayes, Hank Kingfish, Chris Mettz, Larry Rippee, Dori Seda, Barry Siegel, Bruce Simon, Spain, Ron Turner, and S. Clay Wilson.
Later life
Arlington lived in an apartment at 225 Berry Street in San Francisco before moving to the Mission Creek Senior Community apartment complex for low-income or disabled seniors.
Death
On January 17, 2014, Arlington's death was announced on the San Francisco Bay Guardian Online website. He was 75 years old and died "from complications of diabetes, heart disease, obesity, and [a previously] crushed leg.[6] Ron Turner, founder of Last Gasp Press talked about his death, his ailing health, and how "The comic community will remember Gary as founding the first comic book store in America, on 23rd st. in the Mission."[7]
Books and exhibitions
Arlington's art was exhibited in Art Almighty, a group exhibition at the 111 Minna Gallery in March–April 2011.[8]
Arlington's artwork was collected in the book I Am Not of This Planet: The Art of Gary Edson Arlington, published by Last Gasp in 2011.
Titles published
Comics
- All Stars #2 (1970) — taking over from All Stars #1 (1965, Golden Gates Features); copyright by Marty Arbunich/Bill DuBay
- Bogeyman Comics (2 issues; Fall 1968–1969) — Rory Hayes
- Ebon (January 1970) — Larry Fuller; considered by many to be the first comic book title to star a black superhero (Marvel's Black Panther predating Ebon but not having his own title)[9]
- Hee Hee (1970) — anthology ublished in conjunction with Company & Sons
- Man from Utopia (1972) — Rick Griffin
- Moonchild Comics #2 (1969) — Nicola Cuti
- Mr. Natural (2 issues; Aug. 1970–Oct. 1971) — Robert Crumb; series later continued by Kitchen Sink Press
- Ric Sloane Comics (1969?) — R. K. Sloane
- San Francisco Comic Book #1 (1970) — series continued by Print Mint; contributors include Rory Hayes, Willy Murphy, Larry Welz, Jack Jackson, Jim Osborne, Robert Crumb, Ric Sloane, S. Clay Wilson, Dan O'Neill, Leonard Rifas, Dave Sheridan, Spain Rodriguez, Mervinius, Rick Griffin, Robert Dougherty
- Thrilling Murder Comics (1971) — contributors include Simon Deitch, Greg Irons, Jim Osborne, S. Clay Wilson, Bill Griffith, Robert Crumb, Kim Deitch, and Spain Rodriguez
Zines & minicomics
- Armpit of Fear (1972) — Scott Shaw
- Attic Sentinel Prometheus Bound Over (1972) — David Lee Anderson & Nancy Senauke
- Awake! (1972)
- Buck Boy (1976) — Rory Hayes?
- Cholo (1980) — Roger Brand
- Coaching Komiks (1976) — Manuel Auad
- The Compleat Mister Infinity (1970) — minicomic by Art Spiegelman
- Erich Fromm's Comics and Stories (1973) — Leslie Carbaga, Larry Rippee, Trina Robbins
- First Empire Funnies (c. 1973) — Pat Daley ("Kleine Reich Funnies")
- Jam-Jar! (1972) — Larry Bigman, Scott Shaw, David Gibson, John Pound, Roger Freedman, Phil Yeh
- Modern Medical Romances (1972) — 8-p. minicomic by Leslie Carbarga
- No Matter How Thin You Slice It It's Still Baloney! (1972) — minicomic by Larry Rippee
- Plain Talk (1972) — Leslie Carbaga
- Reefer Madness (1972) — by "Steve Mad" (Stephen Madaio)
- Sally Star Hollywood Gal Sleuth (1972) — Trina Robbins
- Self Destruct: Bulletin of the Suicide Liberation Front (1973?) — Art Spiegelman and Bill Griffith[10]
- Stoned Picture Parade (1975) — random collection of drawing & cartoons by Robert Crumb, Becky Wilson, Spain Rodriguez, Edna Jundis, Will Eisner, Rick Griffin, S. Clay Wilson, and Rory Hayes
- Zip•a•Tunes and Moire Melodies (1972) — Art Spiegelman
References
- 1 2 Yardley, William. "Gary Arlington, a Force in Underground Comic Books, Is Dead at 75," New York Times (Jan. 30, 2014).
- 1 2 Guthrie, Julian. "Gary Arlington a superhero in S.F. comix culture". San Francisco Chronicle, January 30, 2012.
- ↑ Lopes, Paul. Demanding Respect: The Evolution of the American Comic Book (Temple University Press, 2009), p. 77.
- ↑ "Underground Comix and the Underground Press," Lambiek Comics History. Accessed Feb. 22, 2014.
- ↑ Fox. M. Steven. "San Francisco Comic Book," ComixJoint.com. Accessed Oct. 8, 2016.
- ↑ Rosenkranz, Patrick. "No Longer of This Planet: Gary Arlington (1938-2014)," The Comics Journal (Jan. 21, 2014).
- ↑ B. Marke. "RIP Gary Arlington, underground comix hero." San Francisco Bay Guardian Online, January 17, 2014.
- ↑ Art Almighty
- ↑ McCabe, Caitlin. "Profiles in Black Cartooning: Larry Fuller," Comic Book Legal Defense Fund website (February 17, 2016).
- ↑ Tumey, Paul. "The Minicomix Revolution Will Not Be Televised," The Comics Journal website (FEB. 1, 2016).