Collectors' Talk: The Art of EC Comics
EC collectors
Glenn Bray,
Grant Geissman,
Roger Hill, and
Robert L Reiner in a roundtable discussion moderated by
Ben Saunders.
Aliens,
Monsters, and Madmen:
The Art of EC
Comics
May 14, 2016 to July 10, 2016
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art
Aliens, Monsters, and Madmen celebrates the achievements of the most artistically and politically adventurous
American comic-book company of the twentieth century:
Bill Gaines’s
Entertaining Comics, better known to fans all over the world as EC. Specializing in comic-book versions of popular fiction genres—particularly
Crime,
Horror, War, and
Science Fiction—the company did far more than merely adapt the conventions of those genres to the comics medium
. In the case of the now legendary Science Fiction and Horror titles,
Weird Science and
Tales from the Crypt, the creators at EC actively extended those genre conventions, while simultaneously shaping the imaginations of a subsequent generation of writers and filmmakers, such as
Stephen King,
George Lucas,
John Landis,
George Romero, and
Steven Spielberg.
EC also broke new ground in the realm of satire as the publisher of
MAD, an experimental humor comic that parodied the very stories that were elsewhere its stock in trade. EC Comics offered a controversial mix of sensationalism and social provocation, mixing titillating storylines and imagery with more overtly politically progressive material. Alongside comics about beautiful alien insect-women who dine on unsuspecting human astronauts, for example, they also tackled subjects that other popular media of the era avoided, including racism, corruption, and police brutality. As a result, the company attracted the disapproval of parents, politicians, and moralists everywhere, and was ultimately driven out of business as the result of a conservative “anti-comics” backlash in 1954. (Only MAD survived, by becoming a magazine in the mid-1950s; it remains in print today.)
The exhibition is curated by Ben Saunders, professor,
Department of
English.
Saunders curated the JSMA’s previous comics exhibitions,
Faster Than A
Speeding Bullet: The Art of the
Superhero (2009) and Good-Grief!: A
Selection of
50 Years of
Original Art from
Charles M. Schulz’s
Peanuts (
2012).
“EC comics and its artwork now constitute highly valued collectibles,” says Saunders. “This show will be built around key examples of the original production art — unique and rarely seen objects of extraordinarily detailed craftsmanship by some of the most influential comics artists of the
20th century.”
Aliens, Monsters, and Madmen: The Art of EC Comics is sponsored by the Coeta and
Donald Barker Changing Exhibitions
Endowment,
The Harold and
Arlene Schnitzer CARE Foundation, a grant from the
Oregon Arts Commission and the
National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency,
Imagination International,
Inc.,
Office of
Academic Affairs,
Oregon Humanities Center’s Endowment for
Public Outreach in the Arts, Sciences, and
Humanities,
Philip and
Sandra Piele, UO Comics and
Cartoon Studies
Minor, UO
College Scholars Program, and JSMA members.