General Book Search for "9783836540575"

Robert Crumb. Sketchbook, Vol. 1: 1964-1968

Hardback
Published : Monday 31 October 2016
ISBN : 9783836540575
Price : €46.80


You may also like ...

Product

Tom of Finland. The Complete Kake Comics

Hardback
30 May 2014

€23.40

Extended stock – Dispatch 5-7 days
Product

Masterpieces of Fantasy Art

Hardback
15 Sep 2020

€175.50

Extended stock – Dispatch 5-7 days
Product

Ren Hang

€46.80

Extended stock – Dispatch 5-7 days
Product

Dian Hanson's Pussy Book

€17.55

Extended stock – Dispatch 5-7 days

Description

The cartoonist in chief to American counterculture, Robert Crumb has been busy offering up psychedelia, satire, and outlandish, sexually obsessed characters since the 1960s. This new collection presents a compact, affordable Crumb-feast, sourced by the artist from his original sketchbooks and focused on his mid-1960s golden age.

It's the old story. When TASCHEN released the first limited edition of Crumb Sketchbooks 1982-2011, fans drooled over the gorgeous packaging of this six-volume boxed set, the artist's thoughtful editing, the hand-written introduction, marbleized page edges, and signed Crumb-colored art print. Not all, however, could afford the steep price. So they whined and coveted, with the wail growing louder when the second boxed set, 1964-1982, was released the next year. Covet no more. Robert Crumb. Sketchbook, Vol. 1: June 1964 - Sept. 1968 combines the two earliest volumes from the limited editions, produced directly from the original artworks now belonging to an ardent French collector, into one fat 440-page Crumb feast, selling for an irresistible price. This book contains hundreds of sketches, including early color drawings from the master of underground comic art, cover roughs for the legendary Zap and Head comics, the original Keep On Truckin' sketches, the first appearance of Mr. Natural, plus his evolution and refinement, Fritz The Cat, the Old Pooperoo, and many, many voluptuous Crumb girls, all wrapped up in a quality hard cover featuring an illustration newly hand-colored by Crumb himself.



Reviews