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R. Crumb Sketchbook book cover 1
R. Crumb Sketchbook book cover 2
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R. Crumb Sketchbook
Series · 5 books · 1992-2000

Books in series

R. Crumb Sketchbook, Vol. 2 book cover
#2

R. Crumb Sketchbook, Vol. 2

Mid 1965 to Early '66

1992

A fascinating look into the working mind of the finest cartoonist of the last 30+ years. Volume 2 contains gorgeous selections circa mid-1965 to early 1966. Subjects include portraits of his friends, landscapes, roughed out strips, studies for commercial work, and, of course, girls, girls, girls.
R. Crumb Sketchbook, Vol. 4 book cover
#4

R. Crumb Sketchbook, Vol. 4

Late 1966 to Mid '67

1997

The fourth volume (late 1966 to mid-'67) of the sketchbooks of underground artist R. Crumb.
R. Crumb Sketchbook, Vol. 5 book cover
#5

R. Crumb Sketchbook, Vol. 5

Mid '67 to Early '68

1995

"I'm anxious to see the Sketchbooks come out," sez R. Crumb. And all comics fans should be, too, for the R. Crumb Sketchbook series reprints Crumb's personal sketchbooks, the immediate products of Mr. Obsessive Sketcher's genius. Personally selected by the artist, the drawings in these volumes include much material never seen before, not even in the German "2001" editions of the sketchbooks (which are long out of print anyhow). Volume 5 covers 1967 and 1968 the time when Crumb was crowned King of the Undergrounds and includes drawings of "flower children" and strips with the famous characters such as Mr. Natural, Shuman the Human, and Eggs Ackley. (And not-so-famous characters such as Bob Dill, the Folk-Singing Pickle.) Unexpected gems and early versions of famous pieces leap out at you as you glance through the book. A case in point this time: remember the famous EVO "Mr. Natural as a vacuum-cleaner salesman" cover, which showed the sage/huckster alarming Mrs. Suburban Housewife? (Fantagraphics used the image on a t-shirt.) This characteristically Crumb-esque piece, symbol of mainstream America's confusion face-to-face with the explosion of the late '60s, appears in an early version here in Volume 5. Just rousted from the artist's imagination, Mrs. Housewife still sports curlers and a housedress, and looks like she hasn't had her first cup of coffee yet. See a world-famous artist at work, developing ideas. Cameo by Mickey Mouse.
R. Crumb Sketchbook, Vol. 6 book cover
#6

R. Crumb Sketchbook, Vol. 6

Mid 1968 to Mid '69

1997

"I'm anxious to see the Sketchbooks come out," sez R. Crumb. And all comics fans should be, too, for the R. Crumb Sketchbook series reprints Crumb's personal sketchbooks, the immediate products of Mr. Obsessive Sketcher's genius. Personally selected by the artist, the drawings in these volumes include much material never seen before, not even in the German "2001" editions of the sketchbooks (which are long out of print anyhow). Volume 5 covers 1967 and 1968 — the time when Crumb was crowned King of the Undergrounds—and includes drawings of "flower children" and strips with the famous characters such as Mr. Natural, Shuman the Human, and Eggs Ackley. (And not-so-famous characters such as Bob Dill, the Folk-Singing Pickle.) Unexpected gems and early versions of famous pieces leap out at you as you glance through the book. A case in point this time: remember the famous EVO "Mr. Natural as a vacuum-cleaner salesman" cover, which showed the sage/huckster alarming Mrs. Suburban Housewife? (Fantagraphics used the image on a t-shirt.) This characteristically Crumb-esque piece, symbol of mainstream America's confusion face-to-face with the explosion of the late '60s, appears in an early version here in Volume 5. Just rousted from the artist's imagination, Mrs. Housewife still sports curlers and a housedress, and looks like she hasn't had her first cup of coffee yet. See a world-famous artist at work, developing ideas. Cameo by Mickey Mouse.
R. Crumb Sketchbook, Vol. 8 book cover
#8

R. Crumb Sketchbook, Vol. 8

Fall 1970 to Fall 1972

2000

A look inside the creative process with Robert Crumb. R. Crumb is undoubtedly the foremost cartoonist of the latter 20th Century, and his sketchbooks - in which he has written and drawn continually from the early '60s to present - might rank as his finest achievement. Fantagraphics is proud to present these sketchbooks, in facsimile form, as a comprehensive series of volumes that will eventually run well over 4000 pages. Volume 8, covering 1971 through 1972, is the latest and it represents one of the more inquisitive and soul-searching periods in this phenomenal artist's life, as it coincides with Crumb's rise to fame and rejection of the late '60s hippie counterculture that made him famous

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R. Crumb Sketchbook