Robert Crumb (American, born )

Rorbert Crumb (American, born August 30, 1943) is a satirist, comic artist, and illustrator. Born in Philadelphia, PA, Crumb was the third of five children. Motivated by older brother Charles’s interest in comics and drawing, Crumb developed his skills in illustrating and cartooning beginning at a young age. As an adolescent, he was inspired by the work of Harvey Kurtzman, to whom Crumb sent an early rendering of his Fritz the Cat cartoon in the 1960s. Working at Help! magazine at the time, Kurtzman admitted that while he enjoyed the cartoon, it could be problematic for the magazine to print it due to its content; he did, however, eventually print Fritz the Cat in the publication. The Fritz the Cat series appeared until shortly after Ralph Bakshi’s 1972 animated film adaptation. Crumb’s other widely recognizable and popular creations are Keep on Truckin’, showing various men strutting through different landscapes and settings, and Mr. Natural, a mystic, bearded guru, thought to represent the optimistic spirit of the 1960s. Both comics were introduced in 1967.

Crumb himself is frequently described as a misanthrope and a perpetual malcontent. His illustrations and comic strips are humorously irreverent, often sexually explicit, and admittedly influenced and inspired by hallucinations and drug use. Crumb’s own preference for large, muscular women is evident by their repeated appearance in his work, and his drawings are perceived as expressions of his own sexual fantasies and desires. Crumb and his family are the subjects of Terry Zwigoff’s 1995 documentary, Crumb. Crumb’s illustrations and artworks have been exhibited at a variety of museums and galleries, including the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia, the Society of Illustrators in New York, and the Armand Hammer Museum of Art and Culture Center in Los Angeles.

Timeline

1943
Born August 30 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1962
Accepted a job drawing greeting cards for American Greetings Corporation in Cleveland
1967
After living temporarily in New York and Chicago, he moved to San Francisco and launched Zap Comix
1969
A strip in Zap #4, "Joe Blow," caused several comic stores to be busted on obscenity charges
1972
Formed the first version of the Cheap Suit Serenaders

Exhibitions

2017
Robert Crumb Selected Exhibitions in 2017:
Aline Kominsky-Crumb & R. Crumb: Drawn Together, David Zwirner, New York
2016
Robert Crumb Selected Exhibitions in 2016:
R. Crumb: Art & Beauty, David Zwirner, London (solo exhibition)
Aline und Robert Crumb - Drawn Together, Cartoonmuseum Basel [catalogue]
Blue Line, Southern Alberta Art Gallery, Canada
, Pivot Art + Culture, Seattle
Desire, The Moore Building, Miami Design District
Figure/Ground, Adam Baumgold Gallery, New York
Graphic Matters: Dürer, Rembrandt, Hogarth, Goya, Picasso, R. Crumb, Seattle Art Museum
2015
Robert Crumb Selected Exhibitions in 2015:
The Written Trace, Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York
2014
Robert Crumb Selected Exhibitions in 2014:
Look at Me: Portraiture from Manet to the Present, Leila Heller Gallery, New York [catalogue]
Mauvais genre, Addict Galerie, Paris
Save Yourself!, Hannah Barry, London
SHE: Picturing women at the turn of the 21st century, David Winton Bell Gallery, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island
This is our Music. This is our Art - Music by Artists/Art by Musicians, David Risley Gallery, Copenhagen
1990
Museum of Modern Art in New York

Public Collections

Brooklyn Museum, New York
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, Los Angeles
Musée Régional d’Art Contemporain Languedoc-Roussillon, Sérignan, France
Museum Ludwig, Cologne
The Museum of Modern Art, New York