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    <title>Incomplet Design History</title>
    <description>The nature of history is that it is never “complete”, new information is gained every day that changes our understanding an interpretations of history. The mission of Incomplete Design History is to explore areas of graphic design history that are overlooked or ignored; to expand our knowledge in the field and to include all sides of the story. Incomplete design history seeks to be inclusive, inclusive not only of people but of ideas and technologies that advance the field of graphic design. History is messy. History is incomplete.</description>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 13 Nov 2025 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
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      <title>Incomplet Design History</title>
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    <itunes:summary>The nature of history is that it is never “complete”, new information is gained every day that changes our understanding an interpretations of history. The mission of Incomplete Design History is to explore areas of graphic design history that are overlooked or ignored; to expand our knowledge in the field and to include all sides of the story. Incomplete design history seeks to be inclusive, inclusive not only of people but of ideas and technologies that advance the field of graphic design. History is messy. History is incomplete.</itunes:summary>
    <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
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    <itunes:keywords>design history, graphic design</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:name>Amanda Horton</itunes:name>
      <itunes:email>amandy.horton@gmail.com</itunes:email>
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      <title>The Mimeo Revolution</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>This episode examines the often-overlooked role of the mimeograph in the intertwined histories of print technology, graphic design, and social change. Emerging in the late nineteenth century through the innovations of Thomas Edison and Albert Blake Dick, the mimeograph offered an accessible, low-cost means of reproducing text and images—long before the advent of xerography or digital printing. Its simplicity and affordability placed the power of print into the hands of schools, churches, offices, and, crucially, grassroots organizations and independent creators. By the mid-twentieth century, mimeograph machines had become vital tools in the production of newsletters, pamphlets, and zines that fueled social movements and cultural revolutions. From the Civil Rights Movement’s underground newspapers to the literary explosion known as the Mimeo Revolution, the mimeograph democratized publishing and redefined the relationship between authorship, design, and distribution. Magazines such as The Floating Bear, Fuck You / A Magazine of the Arts, and The Yardbird Reader illustrate how writers and artists used the technology to challenge mainstream publishing, amplify marginalized voices, and experiment with form and content. Though ultimately replaced by photocopying and digital media, the mimeograph remains a critical link in the evolution of design and the politics of independent print culture.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1876 - Thomas Edison patents the electric pen and duplicating press</p><p>1881 - David Gestetner founds The Gestetner Cyclograph Company</p><p>1884 - Albert Blake Dick incorporates as a lumber business</p><p>1887 - The Edison Mimeograph Model 0 hits the market</p><p>1891 - Samuel O’Reilly patents the first electric tattoo machine</p><p>1898 - Neostyle Company introduces the first rotary mimeograph</p><p>1906 - Gestetner opens a manufacturing plant in London</p><p>1923 - Wilhelm Ritzerfeld invents the spirit duplicator</p><p>1929 - Gestetner hires Raymond Loewy to redesign the cyclostyle</p><p>1929-1930 - Yvor Winters publishes Gyroscope, the first mimeographed literary magazine</p><p>1942 - Chester Carlson patents xerography</p><p>1945 - WWII ends</p><p>1955 - US involvement in Viet Nam begins</p><p>1960 - The first xerox copier becomes commercially available</p><p>1961 - The Floating Bear #1 is published</p><p>1961 - Diane Di Prima and LeRoi Jones are arrested on obscenity charges</p><p>1962 - SDS Port Huron Statement is published</p><p>1962 - Ed Sanders publishes the first issue of Fuck You / a magazine of the arts</p><p>1969 - BSU at Oregon State publishes the first Scab Sheet</p><p>1971 - The Floating Bear publishes its final issue</p><p>1972 - Yardbird Reader v. 1 is published</p><p>1975 - Vietnam war ends</p><p>1976 - The final Yardbird Reader is published</p><p>1977 - Y-Bird v. 1 is published</p><p>1980 - Risograph duplicators are released in Japan</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Alfred, R. (2008, August 8). Aug. 8, 1876: Run This Off on the Mimeo. <i>WIRED</i>. <a href="https://www.wired.com/2008/08/dayintech-0808-2/">https://www.wired.com/2008/08/dayintech-0808-2/</a></p><p>Ashawnta_Jackson. (2024). Exploring the Yardbird Reader. <i>JSTOR Daily</i>. <a href="https://daily.jstor.org/exploring-the-yardbird-reader/">https://daily.jstor.org/exploring-the-yardbird-reader/</a></p><p>Clayman, A. (2025, January 9). <i>A. B. Dick Company, est. 1884 - Made-in-Chicago Museum</i>. Made-in-Chicago Museum. <a href="https://www.madeinchicagomuseum.com/single-post/ab-dick-company/">https://www.madeinchicagomuseum.com/single-post/ab-dick-company/</a></p><p><i>Digital Collection - service/instruction manuals – Mimeograph Revival</i>. (2024, October 18). Mimeograph Revival. <a href="https://www.mimeographrevival.com/manuals/">https://www.mimeographrevival.com/manuals/</a></p><p>Donley, K. (2014, November 22). <i>stencil duplicator</i>. MULTIMEDIAMAN. <a href="https://multimediaman.blog/tag/stencil-duplicator/">https://multimediaman.blog/tag/stencil-duplicator/</a></p><p><i>Edison’s electrical pen and duplicating press</i>. (1871). Mimeograph Revival. <a href="https://www.mimeographrevival.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Edison-Electrical-Pen-and-Duplicating-Press.1876-Expo.pdf">https://www.mimeographrevival.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Edison-Electrical-Pen-and-Duplicating-Press.1876-Expo.pdf</a></p><p><i>Einträge Archiv | Exploriso: Low-tech fine Art</i>. (n.d.). Exploriso: Low-tech Fine Art. <a href="https://en.exploriso.info/exploriso/">https://en.exploriso.info/exploriso/</a></p><p><i>Floating Bear Archive</i>. (2006, October 3). Reality Studio. <a href="https://realitystudio.org/bibliographic-bunker/floating-bear-archive/">https://realitystudio.org/bibliographic-bunker/floating-bear-archive/</a></p><p><i>Gestetner Cyclostyle Office Duplication Machine Design by Raymond Loewy | Hagley</i>. (n.d.). <a href="https://www.hagley.org/librarynews/gestetner-cyclostyle-office-duplication-machine-design-raymond-loewy">https://www.hagley.org/librarynews/gestetner-cyclostyle-office-duplication-machine-design-raymond-loewy</a></p><p>Hawley, H. (2006). Revaluing mimeographs as historical sources. <i>RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage</i>. <a href="https://rbm.acrl.org/index.php/rbm/article/viewFile/414/414">https://rbm.acrl.org/index.php/rbm/article/viewFile/414/414</a></p><p>Helland, M. (2024, February 24). <i>THE HISTORY OF THE MIMEOGRAPH — International Printing Museum</i>. International Printing Museum. <a href="https://www.printmuseum.org/blog-3/history-of-the-mimeograph">https://www.printmuseum.org/blog-3/history-of-the-mimeograph</a></p><p><i>Home | From a secret location</i>. (2020, July 21). From a Secret Location. <a href="https://fromasecretlocation.com/">https://fromasecretlocation.com/</a></p><p><i>Independent Voices</i>. (n.d.). JSTOR.org. <a href="https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/?so=item_title_str_asc&searchkey=1760415107268">https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/?so=item_title_str_asc&searchkey=1760415107268</a></p><p><i>Mimeograph machines</i>. (n.d.). <a href="https://museumofprinting.org/blog/mimeograph-machines/">https://museumofprinting.org/blog/mimeograph-machines/</a></p><p>Our Own Devices. (2024, January 9). <i>Gestetner Cyclostyle: the Original Office Copy Machine</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdBSYUbaAZg">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdBSYUbaAZg</a></p><p>Riordan, E. (2021, July 23). <i>Spirit Duplicators: Early 20th century copier art, fanzines, and the Mimeograph Revolution – News & announcements</i>. <a href="https://blog.lib.uiowa.edu/speccoll/2021/07/23/spirit-duplicators-early-20th-century-copier-art-fanzines-and-the-mimeograph-revolution/">https://blog.lib.uiowa.edu/speccoll/2021/07/23/spirit-duplicators-early-20th-century-copier-art-fanzines-and-the-mimeograph-revolution/</a></p><p>Rubin, L. (2021, March 6). Women of the Mimeo Revolution: Diane DiPrima & Anne Waldman - Village Preservation. <i>Village Preservation - Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation</i>. <a href="https://www.villagepreservation.org/2021/03/05/women-of-the-mimeo-revolution-diane-diprima-anne-waldman/">https://www.villagepreservation.org/2021/03/05/women-of-the-mimeo-revolution-diane-diprima-anne-waldman/</a></p><p>Smith, E. (2022, May 20). How Mimeographs Transformed Information Sharing in Schools. <i>Technology Solutions That Drive Education</i>. <a href="https://edtechmagazine.com/k12/article/2020/09/how-mimeographs-transformed-information-sharing-schools">https://edtechmagazine.com/k12/article/2020/09/how-mimeographs-transformed-information-sharing-schools</a></p><p><i>The Mimeograph Revolution | verdant press</i>. (n.d.). <a href="https://verdantpress.com/checklist/3110-2/">https://verdantpress.com/checklist/3110-2/</a></p><p>Waugh, K. (n.d.). <i>The Mimeo Revolution</i>. Poet’s House. <a href="https://digitalcollections.poetshouse.org/digital-collection/chapbook-collection/mimeo-revolution">https://digitalcollections.poetshouse.org/digital-collection/chapbook-collection/mimeo-revolution</a></p><p>Weber, G. (2021, May 3). How an obsolete copy machine started a revolution. <i>Adventure</i>. <a href="https://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/article/mimeo-mimeograph-revolution-literature-beat-poetry-activism">https://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/article/mimeo-mimeograph-revolution-literature-beat-poetry-activism</a></p><p>Yankelevich, M. (2020, February 3). <i>“Power to the people’s mimeo machines!” or the politicization of small press aesthetics</i>. Poetry Foundation. <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/featured-blogger/83551/power-to-the-peoples-mimeo-machines-or-the-politicization-of-small-press-aesthetics">https://www.poetryfoundation.org/featured-blogger/83551/power-to-the-peoples-mimeo-machines-or-the-politicization-of-small-press-aesthetics</a></p>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 13 Nov 2025 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Spencer Gee)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/the-mimeo-revolution-6Tq4LYnF</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This episode examines the often-overlooked role of the mimeograph in the intertwined histories of print technology, graphic design, and social change. Emerging in the late nineteenth century through the innovations of Thomas Edison and Albert Blake Dick, the mimeograph offered an accessible, low-cost means of reproducing text and images—long before the advent of xerography or digital printing. Its simplicity and affordability placed the power of print into the hands of schools, churches, offices, and, crucially, grassroots organizations and independent creators. By the mid-twentieth century, mimeograph machines had become vital tools in the production of newsletters, pamphlets, and zines that fueled social movements and cultural revolutions. From the Civil Rights Movement’s underground newspapers to the literary explosion known as the Mimeo Revolution, the mimeograph democratized publishing and redefined the relationship between authorship, design, and distribution. Magazines such as The Floating Bear, Fuck You / A Magazine of the Arts, and The Yardbird Reader illustrate how writers and artists used the technology to challenge mainstream publishing, amplify marginalized voices, and experiment with form and content. Though ultimately replaced by photocopying and digital media, the mimeograph remains a critical link in the evolution of design and the politics of independent print culture.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1876 - Thomas Edison patents the electric pen and duplicating press</p><p>1881 - David Gestetner founds The Gestetner Cyclograph Company</p><p>1884 - Albert Blake Dick incorporates as a lumber business</p><p>1887 - The Edison Mimeograph Model 0 hits the market</p><p>1891 - Samuel O’Reilly patents the first electric tattoo machine</p><p>1898 - Neostyle Company introduces the first rotary mimeograph</p><p>1906 - Gestetner opens a manufacturing plant in London</p><p>1923 - Wilhelm Ritzerfeld invents the spirit duplicator</p><p>1929 - Gestetner hires Raymond Loewy to redesign the cyclostyle</p><p>1929-1930 - Yvor Winters publishes Gyroscope, the first mimeographed literary magazine</p><p>1942 - Chester Carlson patents xerography</p><p>1945 - WWII ends</p><p>1955 - US involvement in Viet Nam begins</p><p>1960 - The first xerox copier becomes commercially available</p><p>1961 - The Floating Bear #1 is published</p><p>1961 - Diane Di Prima and LeRoi Jones are arrested on obscenity charges</p><p>1962 - SDS Port Huron Statement is published</p><p>1962 - Ed Sanders publishes the first issue of Fuck You / a magazine of the arts</p><p>1969 - BSU at Oregon State publishes the first Scab Sheet</p><p>1971 - The Floating Bear publishes its final issue</p><p>1972 - Yardbird Reader v. 1 is published</p><p>1975 - Vietnam war ends</p><p>1976 - The final Yardbird Reader is published</p><p>1977 - Y-Bird v. 1 is published</p><p>1980 - Risograph duplicators are released in Japan</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Alfred, R. (2008, August 8). Aug. 8, 1876: Run This Off on the Mimeo. <i>WIRED</i>. <a href="https://www.wired.com/2008/08/dayintech-0808-2/">https://www.wired.com/2008/08/dayintech-0808-2/</a></p><p>Ashawnta_Jackson. (2024). Exploring the Yardbird Reader. <i>JSTOR Daily</i>. <a href="https://daily.jstor.org/exploring-the-yardbird-reader/">https://daily.jstor.org/exploring-the-yardbird-reader/</a></p><p>Clayman, A. (2025, January 9). <i>A. B. Dick Company, est. 1884 - Made-in-Chicago Museum</i>. Made-in-Chicago Museum. <a href="https://www.madeinchicagomuseum.com/single-post/ab-dick-company/">https://www.madeinchicagomuseum.com/single-post/ab-dick-company/</a></p><p><i>Digital Collection - service/instruction manuals – Mimeograph Revival</i>. (2024, October 18). Mimeograph Revival. <a href="https://www.mimeographrevival.com/manuals/">https://www.mimeographrevival.com/manuals/</a></p><p>Donley, K. (2014, November 22). <i>stencil duplicator</i>. MULTIMEDIAMAN. <a href="https://multimediaman.blog/tag/stencil-duplicator/">https://multimediaman.blog/tag/stencil-duplicator/</a></p><p><i>Edison’s electrical pen and duplicating press</i>. (1871). Mimeograph Revival. <a href="https://www.mimeographrevival.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Edison-Electrical-Pen-and-Duplicating-Press.1876-Expo.pdf">https://www.mimeographrevival.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/Edison-Electrical-Pen-and-Duplicating-Press.1876-Expo.pdf</a></p><p><i>Einträge Archiv | Exploriso: Low-tech fine Art</i>. (n.d.). Exploriso: Low-tech Fine Art. <a href="https://en.exploriso.info/exploriso/">https://en.exploriso.info/exploriso/</a></p><p><i>Floating Bear Archive</i>. (2006, October 3). Reality Studio. <a href="https://realitystudio.org/bibliographic-bunker/floating-bear-archive/">https://realitystudio.org/bibliographic-bunker/floating-bear-archive/</a></p><p><i>Gestetner Cyclostyle Office Duplication Machine Design by Raymond Loewy | Hagley</i>. (n.d.). <a href="https://www.hagley.org/librarynews/gestetner-cyclostyle-office-duplication-machine-design-raymond-loewy">https://www.hagley.org/librarynews/gestetner-cyclostyle-office-duplication-machine-design-raymond-loewy</a></p><p>Hawley, H. (2006). Revaluing mimeographs as historical sources. <i>RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts, and Cultural Heritage</i>. <a href="https://rbm.acrl.org/index.php/rbm/article/viewFile/414/414">https://rbm.acrl.org/index.php/rbm/article/viewFile/414/414</a></p><p>Helland, M. (2024, February 24). <i>THE HISTORY OF THE MIMEOGRAPH — International Printing Museum</i>. International Printing Museum. <a href="https://www.printmuseum.org/blog-3/history-of-the-mimeograph">https://www.printmuseum.org/blog-3/history-of-the-mimeograph</a></p><p><i>Home | From a secret location</i>. (2020, July 21). From a Secret Location. <a href="https://fromasecretlocation.com/">https://fromasecretlocation.com/</a></p><p><i>Independent Voices</i>. (n.d.). JSTOR.org. <a href="https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/?so=item_title_str_asc&searchkey=1760415107268">https://www.jstor.org/site/reveal-digital/independent-voices/?so=item_title_str_asc&searchkey=1760415107268</a></p><p><i>Mimeograph machines</i>. (n.d.). <a href="https://museumofprinting.org/blog/mimeograph-machines/">https://museumofprinting.org/blog/mimeograph-machines/</a></p><p>Our Own Devices. (2024, January 9). <i>Gestetner Cyclostyle: the Original Office Copy Machine</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdBSYUbaAZg">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdBSYUbaAZg</a></p><p>Riordan, E. (2021, July 23). <i>Spirit Duplicators: Early 20th century copier art, fanzines, and the Mimeograph Revolution – News & announcements</i>. <a href="https://blog.lib.uiowa.edu/speccoll/2021/07/23/spirit-duplicators-early-20th-century-copier-art-fanzines-and-the-mimeograph-revolution/">https://blog.lib.uiowa.edu/speccoll/2021/07/23/spirit-duplicators-early-20th-century-copier-art-fanzines-and-the-mimeograph-revolution/</a></p><p>Rubin, L. (2021, March 6). Women of the Mimeo Revolution: Diane DiPrima & Anne Waldman - Village Preservation. <i>Village Preservation - Greenwich Village Society for Historic Preservation</i>. <a href="https://www.villagepreservation.org/2021/03/05/women-of-the-mimeo-revolution-diane-diprima-anne-waldman/">https://www.villagepreservation.org/2021/03/05/women-of-the-mimeo-revolution-diane-diprima-anne-waldman/</a></p><p>Smith, E. (2022, May 20). How Mimeographs Transformed Information Sharing in Schools. <i>Technology Solutions That Drive Education</i>. <a href="https://edtechmagazine.com/k12/article/2020/09/how-mimeographs-transformed-information-sharing-schools">https://edtechmagazine.com/k12/article/2020/09/how-mimeographs-transformed-information-sharing-schools</a></p><p><i>The Mimeograph Revolution | verdant press</i>. (n.d.). <a href="https://verdantpress.com/checklist/3110-2/">https://verdantpress.com/checklist/3110-2/</a></p><p>Waugh, K. (n.d.). <i>The Mimeo Revolution</i>. Poet’s House. <a href="https://digitalcollections.poetshouse.org/digital-collection/chapbook-collection/mimeo-revolution">https://digitalcollections.poetshouse.org/digital-collection/chapbook-collection/mimeo-revolution</a></p><p>Weber, G. (2021, May 3). How an obsolete copy machine started a revolution. <i>Adventure</i>. <a href="https://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/article/mimeo-mimeograph-revolution-literature-beat-poetry-activism">https://www.nationalgeographic.com/adventure/article/mimeo-mimeograph-revolution-literature-beat-poetry-activism</a></p><p>Yankelevich, M. (2020, February 3). <i>“Power to the people’s mimeo machines!” or the politicization of small press aesthetics</i>. Poetry Foundation. <a href="https://www.poetryfoundation.org/featured-blogger/83551/power-to-the-peoples-mimeo-machines-or-the-politicization-of-small-press-aesthetics">https://www.poetryfoundation.org/featured-blogger/83551/power-to-the-peoples-mimeo-machines-or-the-politicization-of-small-press-aesthetics</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>The Mimeo Revolution</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Spencer Gee</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>The mimeograph democratized printing by enabling artists, writers, and activists to control their own publishing, linking technological innovation with the rise of independent design, literary, and social movements, yet this forgotten technology is often ignored in histories of design.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The mimeograph democratized printing by enabling artists, writers, and activists to control their own publishing, linking technological innovation with the rise of independent design, literary, and social movements, yet this forgotten technology is often ignored in histories of design.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Medieval Heraldry</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Medieval heraldry, originally developed in 12th-century Europe, functioned as a complex system of visual identity. Initially created to distinguish individuals—particularly nobility—on the battlefield and in tournaments, heraldry evolved into a hereditary and legally significant tradition. These emblems, comprised of tinctures (colors), charges (symbols), and shield shapes, became early forerunners of modern branding and identity design. Although inspired by earlier forms such as seals and standards from antiquity, heraldry developed its own rules, vocabulary (blazon), and aesthetic logic, emphasizing contrast and clarity for distant visibility. Heraldic symbols adhered to strict conventions, such as the rule of tincture, and made extensive use of symbolic imagery—from lions and fleurs-de-lis to mythological creatures and geometric forms. Over time, the system expanded to include professionals, women, clergy, towns, and even fictional characters, thereby reinforcing the reach of heraldry across medieval culture. Scholars like Michel Pastoureau have recontextualized heraldry as a significant precursor to graphic and identity design, drawing parallels between medieval coats of arms and modern logos. Indeed, contemporary visual identities—such as university crests, sports team logos, and automotive emblems like Peugeot and Porsche—often draw directly from heraldic elements, both visually and symbolically. Heraldry’s enduring legacy highlights its importance not only as a historical artifact but as a foundational structure in the evolution of design, symbolism, and legal identity systems. Understanding heraldry thus offers critical insights into the roots of modern graphic communication.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>Ancient Times (Pre-Medieval) - Seals Used Across Civilizations: Used in Ancient Greece, Rome, China, and Mesopotamia, etc. for legal and practical identity purposes.</p><p>1066 – Norman Conquest of England</p><p>1066 – Bayeux Tapestry: Shows lance flags with charges, a possible early example of European heraldry.</p><p>1100s - First appearance of heraldic systems, first used by noble combatants </p><p>1180 - Women begin adopting arms, almond-shaped</p><p>1200s - Blazon Language Developed: Formalized system for describing coats of arms in writing.</p><p>1200 -  Members of the clergy adopting arms</p><p>1220 -  Patricians & Bourgeois adopting arms</p><p>1230 - Artisans begin adopting arms</p><p>1240 - Corporations begin adopting arms</p><p>1280s-1290s -  Towns begin adopting arms</p><p>13th & 14th centuries - Religious communities adopt arms</p><p>14th & 15th Centuries - Printed Heraldry Appears: Woodblock and engraving techniques introduced. Hatching methods used to represent tinctures in black-and-white printing.</p><p>1484 — The College of Arms was created in England</p><p>1696 - Armorial Général was created as a registry of arms for taxation in France</p><p>18th Century - Some scholars dismiss the study of heraldry as outdated or meaningless </p><p>1722 - Alexander Nesbitt defends heraldry’s role in social identity.</p><p>1922 -  Porsche created its first logo using heraldic imagery </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Anonymous. (n.d.). <i>The Manual of Heraldry; Fifth Edition : Being a Concise Description of the Several Terms Used, and Containing a Dictionary of Every Designation in the Science</i>. Project Gutenberg.</p><p>Beerisyourfriend. (2013, March 13). Z is for zymurgical heraldry. <i>BEER IS YOUR FRIEND.</i></p><p><a href="https://beerisyourfriend.org/2013/05/26/z-is-for-zymurgical-heraldry/">https://beerisyourfriend.org/2013/05/26/z-is-for-zymurgical-heraldry/</a></p><p>Boutell, C., Fox-Davies, A. C., & Utting, R. B. (1914). <i>The Handbook to English Heraldry</i>. Project Gutenberg.</p><p>Carr-Gomm, S. (2005). <i>The Hutchinson dictionary of symbols in art</i>. Helicon.</p><p>Gallo, G. (2023, October 4). <i>Trinacria: meaning and history of the Sicilian Triskele</i>. Giuseppe Gallo - Designer, Architect, Researcher. <a href="https://www.giuseppegallo.design/design-and-communication/meaning-and-history-of-the-sicilian-triskele/">https://www.giuseppegallo.design/design-and-communication/meaning-and-history-of-the-sicilian-triskele/</a></p><p>Heraldry. (2018). In P. Lagasse & Columbia University, <i>The Columbia Encyclopedia</i> (8th ed.). Columbia University Press. </p><p>Jackson, A. (2025, April 26). <i>Decoding Porsche logo History, Meaning, and Symbolism</i>. Designhill. <a href="https://www.designhill.com/design-blog/decoding-porsche-logo/">https://www.designhill.com/design-blog/decoding-porsche-logo/</a></p><p>Keen, M. (2003, 03). Heraldry and the medieval gentle woman. <i>History Today</i>, 53, 21-27. </p><p>Pierce, R. K. (2025, January 6). <i>University shield and seal | University Marketing & Communications</i>. University Marketing & Communications. <a href="https://marcomm.washu.edu/university-shield-seal/">https://marcomm.washu.edu/university-shield-seal/</a></p><p>Pettengill, B. (2013, August 13). <i>Logo design 101: The coat of arms, crest and shield</i>. <a href="https://www.marketing-partners.com/conversations2/logo-design-101-the-coat-of-arms-crest-and-shield">https://www.marketing-partners.com/conversations2/logo-design-101-the-coat-of-arms-crest-and-shield</a></p><p>Pastoureau, M. (1997). <i>Discoveries: Heraldry.</i> Harry N. Abrams.</p><p>Pastoureau, M. (2009). <i>Black : the history of a color</i> (English language edition.). Princeton University Press.</p><p>Pastoureau, M. (2014). <i>Green : the history of a color</i>. Princeton University Press.</p><p>Pastoureau, M. (2017). <i>Red : the history of a color</i> (J. Gladding, Tran.). Princeton University Press.</p><p>Pastoureau, M. (2018). <i>Blue : the history of a color</i> (M. Cruse, Tran.; First edition.). Princeton University Press. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1515/9780691251356">https://doi.org/10.1515/9780691251356</a></p><p>Pierce, R. K. (2025, January 6). <i>University shield and seal | University Marketing & Communications. University Marketing & Communications</i>. <a href="https://marcomm.washu.edu/university-shield-seal/">https://marcomm.washu.edu/university-shield-seal/</a></p><p>Sutherland, D. (2020). Arms and the Woman: the heraldry of women parliamentarians. <i>In The Coat of Arms</i> (pp. 61–90).<br /><a href="https://www.theheraldrysociety.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Sutherland-paper.pdf">https://www.theheraldrysociety.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Sutherland-paper.pdf</a></p><p>Thiry, S., & Duerloo, L. (2021). <i>Heraldic Hierarchies : Identity, Status and State Intervention in Early Modern Heraldry</i>. (1st ed.). Leuven University Press.</p><p>Woodcock, T., & Robinson, J. M. (1988). <i>The Oxford guide to heraldry.</i></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 6 Nov 2025 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Gabbi Warriner, Draye Swanegan, Spencer Gee, Michelle Nguyen, Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/medieval-heraldry-WXPrp8MK</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Medieval heraldry, originally developed in 12th-century Europe, functioned as a complex system of visual identity. Initially created to distinguish individuals—particularly nobility—on the battlefield and in tournaments, heraldry evolved into a hereditary and legally significant tradition. These emblems, comprised of tinctures (colors), charges (symbols), and shield shapes, became early forerunners of modern branding and identity design. Although inspired by earlier forms such as seals and standards from antiquity, heraldry developed its own rules, vocabulary (blazon), and aesthetic logic, emphasizing contrast and clarity for distant visibility. Heraldic symbols adhered to strict conventions, such as the rule of tincture, and made extensive use of symbolic imagery—from lions and fleurs-de-lis to mythological creatures and geometric forms. Over time, the system expanded to include professionals, women, clergy, towns, and even fictional characters, thereby reinforcing the reach of heraldry across medieval culture. Scholars like Michel Pastoureau have recontextualized heraldry as a significant precursor to graphic and identity design, drawing parallels between medieval coats of arms and modern logos. Indeed, contemporary visual identities—such as university crests, sports team logos, and automotive emblems like Peugeot and Porsche—often draw directly from heraldic elements, both visually and symbolically. Heraldry’s enduring legacy highlights its importance not only as a historical artifact but as a foundational structure in the evolution of design, symbolism, and legal identity systems. Understanding heraldry thus offers critical insights into the roots of modern graphic communication.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>Ancient Times (Pre-Medieval) - Seals Used Across Civilizations: Used in Ancient Greece, Rome, China, and Mesopotamia, etc. for legal and practical identity purposes.</p><p>1066 – Norman Conquest of England</p><p>1066 – Bayeux Tapestry: Shows lance flags with charges, a possible early example of European heraldry.</p><p>1100s - First appearance of heraldic systems, first used by noble combatants </p><p>1180 - Women begin adopting arms, almond-shaped</p><p>1200s - Blazon Language Developed: Formalized system for describing coats of arms in writing.</p><p>1200 -  Members of the clergy adopting arms</p><p>1220 -  Patricians & Bourgeois adopting arms</p><p>1230 - Artisans begin adopting arms</p><p>1240 - Corporations begin adopting arms</p><p>1280s-1290s -  Towns begin adopting arms</p><p>13th & 14th centuries - Religious communities adopt arms</p><p>14th & 15th Centuries - Printed Heraldry Appears: Woodblock and engraving techniques introduced. Hatching methods used to represent tinctures in black-and-white printing.</p><p>1484 — The College of Arms was created in England</p><p>1696 - Armorial Général was created as a registry of arms for taxation in France</p><p>18th Century - Some scholars dismiss the study of heraldry as outdated or meaningless </p><p>1722 - Alexander Nesbitt defends heraldry’s role in social identity.</p><p>1922 -  Porsche created its first logo using heraldic imagery </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Anonymous. (n.d.). <i>The Manual of Heraldry; Fifth Edition : Being a Concise Description of the Several Terms Used, and Containing a Dictionary of Every Designation in the Science</i>. Project Gutenberg.</p><p>Beerisyourfriend. (2013, March 13). Z is for zymurgical heraldry. <i>BEER IS YOUR FRIEND.</i></p><p><a href="https://beerisyourfriend.org/2013/05/26/z-is-for-zymurgical-heraldry/">https://beerisyourfriend.org/2013/05/26/z-is-for-zymurgical-heraldry/</a></p><p>Boutell, C., Fox-Davies, A. C., & Utting, R. B. (1914). <i>The Handbook to English Heraldry</i>. Project Gutenberg.</p><p>Carr-Gomm, S. (2005). <i>The Hutchinson dictionary of symbols in art</i>. Helicon.</p><p>Gallo, G. (2023, October 4). <i>Trinacria: meaning and history of the Sicilian Triskele</i>. Giuseppe Gallo - Designer, Architect, Researcher. <a href="https://www.giuseppegallo.design/design-and-communication/meaning-and-history-of-the-sicilian-triskele/">https://www.giuseppegallo.design/design-and-communication/meaning-and-history-of-the-sicilian-triskele/</a></p><p>Heraldry. (2018). In P. Lagasse & Columbia University, <i>The Columbia Encyclopedia</i> (8th ed.). Columbia University Press. </p><p>Jackson, A. (2025, April 26). <i>Decoding Porsche logo History, Meaning, and Symbolism</i>. Designhill. <a href="https://www.designhill.com/design-blog/decoding-porsche-logo/">https://www.designhill.com/design-blog/decoding-porsche-logo/</a></p><p>Keen, M. (2003, 03). Heraldry and the medieval gentle woman. <i>History Today</i>, 53, 21-27. </p><p>Pierce, R. K. (2025, January 6). <i>University shield and seal | University Marketing & Communications</i>. University Marketing & Communications. <a href="https://marcomm.washu.edu/university-shield-seal/">https://marcomm.washu.edu/university-shield-seal/</a></p><p>Pettengill, B. (2013, August 13). <i>Logo design 101: The coat of arms, crest and shield</i>. <a href="https://www.marketing-partners.com/conversations2/logo-design-101-the-coat-of-arms-crest-and-shield">https://www.marketing-partners.com/conversations2/logo-design-101-the-coat-of-arms-crest-and-shield</a></p><p>Pastoureau, M. (1997). <i>Discoveries: Heraldry.</i> Harry N. Abrams.</p><p>Pastoureau, M. (2009). <i>Black : the history of a color</i> (English language edition.). Princeton University Press.</p><p>Pastoureau, M. (2014). <i>Green : the history of a color</i>. Princeton University Press.</p><p>Pastoureau, M. (2017). <i>Red : the history of a color</i> (J. Gladding, Tran.). Princeton University Press.</p><p>Pastoureau, M. (2018). <i>Blue : the history of a color</i> (M. Cruse, Tran.; First edition.). Princeton University Press. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1515/9780691251356">https://doi.org/10.1515/9780691251356</a></p><p>Pierce, R. K. (2025, January 6). <i>University shield and seal | University Marketing & Communications. University Marketing & Communications</i>. <a href="https://marcomm.washu.edu/university-shield-seal/">https://marcomm.washu.edu/university-shield-seal/</a></p><p>Sutherland, D. (2020). Arms and the Woman: the heraldry of women parliamentarians. <i>In The Coat of Arms</i> (pp. 61–90).<br /><a href="https://www.theheraldrysociety.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Sutherland-paper.pdf">https://www.theheraldrysociety.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Sutherland-paper.pdf</a></p><p>Thiry, S., & Duerloo, L. (2021). <i>Heraldic Hierarchies : Identity, Status and State Intervention in Early Modern Heraldry</i>. (1st ed.). Leuven University Press.</p><p>Woodcock, T., & Robinson, J. M. (1988). <i>The Oxford guide to heraldry.</i></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Medieval Heraldry</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Gabbi Warriner, Draye Swanegan, Spencer Gee, Michelle Nguyen, Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/80719bb9-5679-4f25-aba6-bb18ad582833/3000x3000/incomplet-season5-ep10.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:26:48</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Medieval heraldry, originating in 12th-century Europe, was a sophisticated system of visual identity that combined symbolism, strict design rules, and legal significance to distinguish individuals and families. Its influence endures today in modern branding and graphic design, where logos and emblems often echo heraldic elements in both form and function.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Medieval heraldry, originating in 12th-century Europe, was a sophisticated system of visual identity that combined symbolism, strict design rules, and legal significance to distinguish individuals and families. Its influence endures today in modern branding and graphic design, where logos and emblems often echo heraldic elements in both form and function.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>heraldry, graphic design history, graphic design, branding design, identity design</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>10</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>5</itunes:season>
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      <guid isPermaLink="false">5fbbb307-1e5c-41f2-877f-66ecfb9df533</guid>
      <title>Cuban Posters</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Cuban graphic design emerges as a vibrant and politically charged art form, reflecting the resilience and creativity of designers amidst challenging circumstances. Through a comprehensive analysis of the evolution of Cuban posters, this research illuminates the innovative techniques, visual languages, and ideological foundations that characterize the era’s influence on graphic design. The study not only sheds light on the intricate interplay of art, politics, and culture in Cuba but also highlights the far-reaching influence of Cuban designers on global visual communication. Art itself is profoundly influenced by politics and social events, serving as a mirror to societal changes and a medium for expressionism in all forms. The political climate and social movements shape the themes and messages conveyed in artworks, reflecting issues important at the time. Posters become tools for activism, challenging power structures and advocating for change. They capture the emotional and psychological impacts of social events, fostering empathy and awareness. Through this dynamic interplay, graphic design not only documents but also influences public perception and dialogue, highlighting its integral role in both reflecting and shaping the socio-political landscape. By unraveling the threads of history, politics, and creativity within Cuban graphic design, this paper offers valuable insights into impact it had on a worldwide scale. Additionally, this episode examines the transformative power of Cuban poster design in graphic communication, shaping societal narratives and challenging established norms through its messaging. Ultimately, this exploration of Cuban graphic design serves as a compelling case study, enriching our understanding of the intricate connections between design, society, and cultural evolution.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1902 - Carteles magazine founded; early example of poster design in Cuba, primarily focused on advertising.</p><p>1900s–1950s - Posters used for public communication due to low literacy rates; emphasis on commercial advertising.</p><p>1933 - Revolt of the Sergeants overthrows Cuban government; Fulgencio Batista appoints himself military commander and becomes de facto leader.</p><p>1940 - Batista is elected President of Cuba.</p><p>1944 - Batista completes term and moves to Florida.</p><p>1952 - Batista returns to Cuba, leads a military coup, cancels elections, and declares himself president/dictator.</p><p>1950s - Batista’s regime marked by corruption, censorship, and repression; Cuban society suffers from severe inequality.</p><p>1959 - Fidel Castro overthrows Batista, marking a dramatic political and cultural shift in Cuba.</p><p>1959 - Cuban graphic design shifts from commercial to social and political messaging—literacy, public health, and motivation campaigns.</p><p>1959 - ICAIC (Instituto Cubano del Arte e Industria Cinematográficos) founded by Saúl Yelin and Alfredo Guevara.</p><p>1960 - ICAIC opens its own screen-printing workshop, ushering in the “golden age” of Cuban poster design.</p><p>1963–1982 -  Antonio Reboiro works as a designer at ICAIC, opposing Socialist Realism and promoting creative freedom in revolutionary art.</p><p>1966 - OSPAAAL (Organization of Solidarity with the People of Asia, Africa, and Latin America) founded after the Tricontinental Conference.</p><p>1969 & 1971 - René Mederos travels to Vietnam to document the war; creates vivid poster series from firsthand experience.</p><p>1960s–1970s -  OSPAAAL posters highlight international struggles, e.g., Lázaro Abreu’s “Solidarity with the African American People”; feature work by Emory Douglas of the Black Panther Party. Posters produced in multiple languages (Spanish, English, French, Arabic) and distributed via Tricontinental magazine. Posters focus on anti-imperialist solidarity, with themes supporting Vietnam, Black Americans, the Congo, and more.</p><p>1980s–2000s -  Political and technological changes mark the decline of the golden age of Cuban poster art.</p><p> </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Bardellotto, L., & De Mattio, P. (2016). <i>Cinema in the Cuban graphics: posters from the Bardellotto Collection</i>. Silvana.</p><p>Cant, A. (2012). “Land for those who work it”: a visual analysis of Agrarian reform posters in Velasco’s Peru. <i>Journal of Latin American Studies</i>, 44(1), 1–37.</p><p>Casals, M. (2020). Chilean! Is This How You Want to See Your Daughter? The Cuban Revolution and Representations of Gender and Family during Chile’s 1964 Anticommunist “Campaign of Terror.” <i>Radical History Review</i>, 136, 111–127.</p><p>Celina. (2023, July 31). The Art of the Revolution will be Internationalist. <i>Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research</i>. <a href="https://thetricontinental.org/the-art-of-the-revolution-will-be-internationalist/">https://thetricontinental.org/the-art-of-the-revolution-will-be-internationalist/</a></p><p>Corrigan, L. M. (2014). Visual rhetoric and oppositional consciousness: poster art in Cuba and the United States. <i>Intertexts </i>(Lubbock, Tex.), vol. 18, no. 1, 71–91. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1353/itx.2014.0006">https://doi.org/10.1353/itx.2014.0006</a></p><p>Cushing, L. (2023). How Poster Art of the “Long 1960s” Fueled International Solidarity. <i>Brown Journal of World Affairs</i>, 29(2), 1–18.</p><p>Cushing, L. (2003). <i>Revolución!: Cuban poster art</i>. Chronicle Books. </p><p>Dwyer, M. (2016, September 27). Step Inside Cuba's Oldest Printmaking Studio. <i>Smithsonian Magazine.</i> <a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/cuban-lithography-printmaking-tradition-culturaltravel-180960612/">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/cuban-lithography-printmaking-tradition-culturaltravel-180960612/</a></p><p>Fleming, D. (2017). Art of solidarity: Cuban posters for African liberation 1967–1989. <i>Museum Worlds</i>, 5(1), 224-226. <a href="https://doi.org/10.3167/armw.2017.050118">https://doi.org/10.3167/armw.2017.050118</a></p><p>Mage, Wohlforth, & Robertson. (1960). The Cuban Revolution and Marxist theory. <i>Marxists.org</i>. <a href="https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/document/icl-spartacists/cuba/cuba-mt.html">https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/document/icl-spartacists/cuba/cuba-mt.html</a></p><p>Solidarity and design: An introduction to OSPAAAL · V&A. (n.d.). <i>Victoria and Albert Museum</i>. <a href="https://www.vam.ac.uk/articles/solidarity-and-design-an-introduction-to-ospaaal?srsltid=AfmBOorXvX_CHRG8XK75Sye76DTmDg2u1xbwDlILkYS9bmDCKhbFWEby">https://www.vam.ac.uk/articles/solidarity-and-design-an-introduction-to-ospaaal?srsltid=AfmBOorXvX_CHRG8XK75Sye76DTmDg2u1xbwDlILkYS9bmDCKhbFWEby</a></p><p>Turner, N. (2017) "Hollywood in Havana: Five Decades Of Cuban Posters Promoting U.S. Films." <i>Riot Material</i>. <a href="https://www.riotmaterial.com/hollywood-havana-five-decades-cuban-posters-promotingus-films/">https://www.riotmaterial.com/hollywood-havana-five-decades-cuban-posters-promotingus-films/</a></p><p>Uriarte, L. F. (2005). Modernity and postmodernity from Cuba. <i>Journal of Design History,</i> 18(3), 245–255. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/epi047">https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/epi047</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 30 Oct 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Michelle Nguyen, Amanda Horton, Spencer Gee, Gabbi Warriner, Draye Swanegan)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/cuban-posters-Q53Z5Gtl</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Cuban graphic design emerges as a vibrant and politically charged art form, reflecting the resilience and creativity of designers amidst challenging circumstances. Through a comprehensive analysis of the evolution of Cuban posters, this research illuminates the innovative techniques, visual languages, and ideological foundations that characterize the era’s influence on graphic design. The study not only sheds light on the intricate interplay of art, politics, and culture in Cuba but also highlights the far-reaching influence of Cuban designers on global visual communication. Art itself is profoundly influenced by politics and social events, serving as a mirror to societal changes and a medium for expressionism in all forms. The political climate and social movements shape the themes and messages conveyed in artworks, reflecting issues important at the time. Posters become tools for activism, challenging power structures and advocating for change. They capture the emotional and psychological impacts of social events, fostering empathy and awareness. Through this dynamic interplay, graphic design not only documents but also influences public perception and dialogue, highlighting its integral role in both reflecting and shaping the socio-political landscape. By unraveling the threads of history, politics, and creativity within Cuban graphic design, this paper offers valuable insights into impact it had on a worldwide scale. Additionally, this episode examines the transformative power of Cuban poster design in graphic communication, shaping societal narratives and challenging established norms through its messaging. Ultimately, this exploration of Cuban graphic design serves as a compelling case study, enriching our understanding of the intricate connections between design, society, and cultural evolution.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1902 - Carteles magazine founded; early example of poster design in Cuba, primarily focused on advertising.</p><p>1900s–1950s - Posters used for public communication due to low literacy rates; emphasis on commercial advertising.</p><p>1933 - Revolt of the Sergeants overthrows Cuban government; Fulgencio Batista appoints himself military commander and becomes de facto leader.</p><p>1940 - Batista is elected President of Cuba.</p><p>1944 - Batista completes term and moves to Florida.</p><p>1952 - Batista returns to Cuba, leads a military coup, cancels elections, and declares himself president/dictator.</p><p>1950s - Batista’s regime marked by corruption, censorship, and repression; Cuban society suffers from severe inequality.</p><p>1959 - Fidel Castro overthrows Batista, marking a dramatic political and cultural shift in Cuba.</p><p>1959 - Cuban graphic design shifts from commercial to social and political messaging—literacy, public health, and motivation campaigns.</p><p>1959 - ICAIC (Instituto Cubano del Arte e Industria Cinematográficos) founded by Saúl Yelin and Alfredo Guevara.</p><p>1960 - ICAIC opens its own screen-printing workshop, ushering in the “golden age” of Cuban poster design.</p><p>1963–1982 -  Antonio Reboiro works as a designer at ICAIC, opposing Socialist Realism and promoting creative freedom in revolutionary art.</p><p>1966 - OSPAAAL (Organization of Solidarity with the People of Asia, Africa, and Latin America) founded after the Tricontinental Conference.</p><p>1969 & 1971 - René Mederos travels to Vietnam to document the war; creates vivid poster series from firsthand experience.</p><p>1960s–1970s -  OSPAAAL posters highlight international struggles, e.g., Lázaro Abreu’s “Solidarity with the African American People”; feature work by Emory Douglas of the Black Panther Party. Posters produced in multiple languages (Spanish, English, French, Arabic) and distributed via Tricontinental magazine. Posters focus on anti-imperialist solidarity, with themes supporting Vietnam, Black Americans, the Congo, and more.</p><p>1980s–2000s -  Political and technological changes mark the decline of the golden age of Cuban poster art.</p><p> </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Bardellotto, L., & De Mattio, P. (2016). <i>Cinema in the Cuban graphics: posters from the Bardellotto Collection</i>. Silvana.</p><p>Cant, A. (2012). “Land for those who work it”: a visual analysis of Agrarian reform posters in Velasco’s Peru. <i>Journal of Latin American Studies</i>, 44(1), 1–37.</p><p>Casals, M. (2020). Chilean! Is This How You Want to See Your Daughter? The Cuban Revolution and Representations of Gender and Family during Chile’s 1964 Anticommunist “Campaign of Terror.” <i>Radical History Review</i>, 136, 111–127.</p><p>Celina. (2023, July 31). The Art of the Revolution will be Internationalist. <i>Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research</i>. <a href="https://thetricontinental.org/the-art-of-the-revolution-will-be-internationalist/">https://thetricontinental.org/the-art-of-the-revolution-will-be-internationalist/</a></p><p>Corrigan, L. M. (2014). Visual rhetoric and oppositional consciousness: poster art in Cuba and the United States. <i>Intertexts </i>(Lubbock, Tex.), vol. 18, no. 1, 71–91. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1353/itx.2014.0006">https://doi.org/10.1353/itx.2014.0006</a></p><p>Cushing, L. (2023). How Poster Art of the “Long 1960s” Fueled International Solidarity. <i>Brown Journal of World Affairs</i>, 29(2), 1–18.</p><p>Cushing, L. (2003). <i>Revolución!: Cuban poster art</i>. Chronicle Books. </p><p>Dwyer, M. (2016, September 27). Step Inside Cuba's Oldest Printmaking Studio. <i>Smithsonian Magazine.</i> <a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/cuban-lithography-printmaking-tradition-culturaltravel-180960612/">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/cuban-lithography-printmaking-tradition-culturaltravel-180960612/</a></p><p>Fleming, D. (2017). Art of solidarity: Cuban posters for African liberation 1967–1989. <i>Museum Worlds</i>, 5(1), 224-226. <a href="https://doi.org/10.3167/armw.2017.050118">https://doi.org/10.3167/armw.2017.050118</a></p><p>Mage, Wohlforth, & Robertson. (1960). The Cuban Revolution and Marxist theory. <i>Marxists.org</i>. <a href="https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/document/icl-spartacists/cuba/cuba-mt.html">https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/document/icl-spartacists/cuba/cuba-mt.html</a></p><p>Solidarity and design: An introduction to OSPAAAL · V&A. (n.d.). <i>Victoria and Albert Museum</i>. <a href="https://www.vam.ac.uk/articles/solidarity-and-design-an-introduction-to-ospaaal?srsltid=AfmBOorXvX_CHRG8XK75Sye76DTmDg2u1xbwDlILkYS9bmDCKhbFWEby">https://www.vam.ac.uk/articles/solidarity-and-design-an-introduction-to-ospaaal?srsltid=AfmBOorXvX_CHRG8XK75Sye76DTmDg2u1xbwDlILkYS9bmDCKhbFWEby</a></p><p>Turner, N. (2017) "Hollywood in Havana: Five Decades Of Cuban Posters Promoting U.S. Films." <i>Riot Material</i>. <a href="https://www.riotmaterial.com/hollywood-havana-five-decades-cuban-posters-promotingus-films/">https://www.riotmaterial.com/hollywood-havana-five-decades-cuban-posters-promotingus-films/</a></p><p>Uriarte, L. F. (2005). Modernity and postmodernity from Cuba. <i>Journal of Design History,</i> 18(3), 245–255. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/epi047">https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/epi047</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Cuban Posters</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Michelle Nguyen, Amanda Horton, Spencer Gee, Gabbi Warriner, Draye Swanegan</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:18:29</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Cuban graphic design, particularly through poster art, reflects a powerful fusion of creativity, politics, and cultural identity, serving as both a mirror of societal change and a tool for activism. This episode reveals how Cuban designers, working under challenging conditions, developed a globally influential visual language that shaped public perception and challenged dominant narratives.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Cuban graphic design, particularly through poster art, reflects a powerful fusion of creativity, politics, and cultural identity, serving as both a mirror of societal change and a tool for activism. This episode reveals how Cuban designers, working under challenging conditions, developed a globally influential visual language that shaped public perception and challenged dominant narratives.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <itunes:episode>9</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Underground Newspapers</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Underground newspapers of the 1960s and ’70s were central to the New Left and broader countercultural movements, serving as both platforms for dissent and vehicles of radical visual experimentation. Often dismissed by mainstream journalism due to their limited circulation, lack of professionalism, and overt bias, these publications were nonetheless vital expressions of political, social, and aesthetic resistance. Historian Bob Ostertag emphasizes the near inseparability of social movements and their press, yet notes the critical neglect of underground newspapers in historical scholarship. Emerging from earlier activist publications and enabled by accessible printing technologies like mimeograph and offset printing, underground newspapers eschewed editorial conventions, embracing experimental layouts, psychedelic imagery, and DIY production methods. Publications like The Los Angeles Free Press, Berkeley Barb, San Francisco Oracle, and East Village Other became iconic not just for their messages, but for their groundbreaking graphic design. These papers also served as training grounds for influential designers and illustrators such as Ron Cobb and Steven Heller, who valued the freedom of expression and anti-commercial ethos they offered. Movements beyond the New Left—including the Black Panther Party, Red Power, Chicano rights, Women’s Liberation, and Gay Liberation—each developed their own newspapers, forming a diverse ecosystem of radical print media. Through networks like the Underground Press Syndicate and Liberation News Service, these publications shared content and ideology, reinforcing solidarity across causes. The underground press is a rich, underappreciated chapter in both journalistic and design history—one where visual form and political function were deeply intertwined in the service of revolution.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1958 - <i>The Realist</i> was founded  by Paul Krassner</p><p>1960s - Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) founded as part of the New Left</p><p>1964 - Los Angeles Free Press founded</p><p>1965 - Watts Riots</p><p>1965 - <i>Fifth Estate</i> newspaper founded, Detroit; <i>Berkeley Barb </i>newspaper founded, Berkeley; <i>East Village Other</i> newspaper founded, NYC</p><p>1965 - The Underground Press Syndicate (UPS) founded</p><p>1966 -  <i>San Francisco Oracle</i> founded </p><p>1966 - Album, The Electric Newspaper, released by The East Village Other </p><p>1967 - Liberation News Service (LNS) founded</p><p>1968 -  <i>San Francisco Oracle</i> ceases publication</p><p>1968 - The Freep published the names, addresses, and home telephone numbers of eighty undercover narcotics agents.</p><p>1969 - last national convention of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)</p><p>1969 - The Chicano Press Association was formed </p><p>1970 - <i>It Ain’t Me Babe </i>was published by Berkeley Women’s Liberation</p><p>1970s - Freep purchased by Larry Flint </p><p>1973 - The Underground Press Syndicate (UPS) dissolved</p><p>1980 - <i>Berkeley Barb</i> newspaper ceases publication</p><p>1981 - Liberation News Service (LNS) dissolved</p><p>2011 - facsimile edition of the <i>San Francisco Oracle </i>published</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Guida, J. (2021). The East Village other. JSTOR Daily. <a href="https://daily.jstor.org/the-east-village-other/">https://daily.jstor.org/the-east-village-other/</a></p><p>Cobb, R. (2015). Cartoons. Roncobb.net</p><p>Cohen, A. (1990). The San Francisco Oracle: A Brief History. Serials Review, 16(1), 13–46.</p><p>Dreyer, T., Embree, A., Duncan, C., & Bishop, S. (2021). <i>Exploring Space City!: Houston’s Historic Underground Newspaper</i>.</p><p>East Village other. (n.d.). <a href="https://nyujournalismprojects.org/eastvillageother/">https://nyujournalismprojects.org/eastvillageother/</a></p><p>Embree, A., Dreyer, T., & Croxdale, R. (2016). <i>Celebrating the Rag: Austin’s iconic underground newspaper</i>. Lulu.com.</p><p>Fortin, J. (2020). Ron Cobb, 83, a Pioneer In Science Fiction Design. <i>The New York Times</i>, B7-.</p><p>Glessing, R. (1970). <i>The Underground Press in America</i>.</p><p>Heller, S. (2018, May 6). It was 50 Years Ago Today . . .. <i>PRINT Magazine</i>. <a href="https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/50-years-ago-today-1960s-design/">https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/50-years-ago-today-1960s-design/</a></p><p>Heller, S. (2022). <i>Growing Up Underground: A Memoir of Counterculture New York</i>.</p><p>Kaplan, G. (2013). <i>Power to the People: The Graphic Design of the Radical Press and the Rise of the Counter-Culture, 1964-1974</i>. University of Chicago Press.</p><p>Kramer, D. J. (Ed.). (2023). <i>Heads Together: Weed and the Underground Press Syndicate</i>, 1965-1973. Edition Patrick Frey.</p><p>McMillian, J. (2011). <i>Smoking Typewriters: The sixties underground press and the rise of alternative media in America</i>. Oxford University Press.</p><p>Morley, M. (2019, March 7). The cost of free Love and the designers who bore It—Meet the women of psychedelic design. <i>AIGA Eye on Design</i>. <a href="https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/women-of-psychedelic-design/">https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/women-of-psychedelic-design/</a></p><p>Ostertag, B. (2007). <i>People’s movements, people’s press: The Journalism of Social Justice Movements</i>. Beacon Press.</p><p>TRR. (2020, September 7). The feminist fandom of Trina Robbins. <i>The Revolution (Relaunch)</i>. <a href="https://therevolutionrelaunch.com/2020/08/02/the-feminist-fandom-of-trina-robbins/">https://therevolutionrelaunch.com/2020/08/02/the-feminist-fandom-of-trina-robbins/</a></p>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 23 Oct 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Michelle Nguyen, Gabbi Warriner, Amanda Horton, Draye Swanegan, Spencer Gee)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/underground-newspapers-8yZ_GTcj</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Underground newspapers of the 1960s and ’70s were central to the New Left and broader countercultural movements, serving as both platforms for dissent and vehicles of radical visual experimentation. Often dismissed by mainstream journalism due to their limited circulation, lack of professionalism, and overt bias, these publications were nonetheless vital expressions of political, social, and aesthetic resistance. Historian Bob Ostertag emphasizes the near inseparability of social movements and their press, yet notes the critical neglect of underground newspapers in historical scholarship. Emerging from earlier activist publications and enabled by accessible printing technologies like mimeograph and offset printing, underground newspapers eschewed editorial conventions, embracing experimental layouts, psychedelic imagery, and DIY production methods. Publications like The Los Angeles Free Press, Berkeley Barb, San Francisco Oracle, and East Village Other became iconic not just for their messages, but for their groundbreaking graphic design. These papers also served as training grounds for influential designers and illustrators such as Ron Cobb and Steven Heller, who valued the freedom of expression and anti-commercial ethos they offered. Movements beyond the New Left—including the Black Panther Party, Red Power, Chicano rights, Women’s Liberation, and Gay Liberation—each developed their own newspapers, forming a diverse ecosystem of radical print media. Through networks like the Underground Press Syndicate and Liberation News Service, these publications shared content and ideology, reinforcing solidarity across causes. The underground press is a rich, underappreciated chapter in both journalistic and design history—one where visual form and political function were deeply intertwined in the service of revolution.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1958 - <i>The Realist</i> was founded  by Paul Krassner</p><p>1960s - Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) founded as part of the New Left</p><p>1964 - Los Angeles Free Press founded</p><p>1965 - Watts Riots</p><p>1965 - <i>Fifth Estate</i> newspaper founded, Detroit; <i>Berkeley Barb </i>newspaper founded, Berkeley; <i>East Village Other</i> newspaper founded, NYC</p><p>1965 - The Underground Press Syndicate (UPS) founded</p><p>1966 -  <i>San Francisco Oracle</i> founded </p><p>1966 - Album, The Electric Newspaper, released by The East Village Other </p><p>1967 - Liberation News Service (LNS) founded</p><p>1968 -  <i>San Francisco Oracle</i> ceases publication</p><p>1968 - The Freep published the names, addresses, and home telephone numbers of eighty undercover narcotics agents.</p><p>1969 - last national convention of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)</p><p>1969 - The Chicano Press Association was formed </p><p>1970 - <i>It Ain’t Me Babe </i>was published by Berkeley Women’s Liberation</p><p>1970s - Freep purchased by Larry Flint </p><p>1973 - The Underground Press Syndicate (UPS) dissolved</p><p>1980 - <i>Berkeley Barb</i> newspaper ceases publication</p><p>1981 - Liberation News Service (LNS) dissolved</p><p>2011 - facsimile edition of the <i>San Francisco Oracle </i>published</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Guida, J. (2021). The East Village other. JSTOR Daily. <a href="https://daily.jstor.org/the-east-village-other/">https://daily.jstor.org/the-east-village-other/</a></p><p>Cobb, R. (2015). Cartoons. Roncobb.net</p><p>Cohen, A. (1990). The San Francisco Oracle: A Brief History. Serials Review, 16(1), 13–46.</p><p>Dreyer, T., Embree, A., Duncan, C., & Bishop, S. (2021). <i>Exploring Space City!: Houston’s Historic Underground Newspaper</i>.</p><p>East Village other. (n.d.). <a href="https://nyujournalismprojects.org/eastvillageother/">https://nyujournalismprojects.org/eastvillageother/</a></p><p>Embree, A., Dreyer, T., & Croxdale, R. (2016). <i>Celebrating the Rag: Austin’s iconic underground newspaper</i>. Lulu.com.</p><p>Fortin, J. (2020). Ron Cobb, 83, a Pioneer In Science Fiction Design. <i>The New York Times</i>, B7-.</p><p>Glessing, R. (1970). <i>The Underground Press in America</i>.</p><p>Heller, S. (2018, May 6). It was 50 Years Ago Today . . .. <i>PRINT Magazine</i>. <a href="https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/50-years-ago-today-1960s-design/">https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/50-years-ago-today-1960s-design/</a></p><p>Heller, S. (2022). <i>Growing Up Underground: A Memoir of Counterculture New York</i>.</p><p>Kaplan, G. (2013). <i>Power to the People: The Graphic Design of the Radical Press and the Rise of the Counter-Culture, 1964-1974</i>. University of Chicago Press.</p><p>Kramer, D. J. (Ed.). (2023). <i>Heads Together: Weed and the Underground Press Syndicate</i>, 1965-1973. Edition Patrick Frey.</p><p>McMillian, J. (2011). <i>Smoking Typewriters: The sixties underground press and the rise of alternative media in America</i>. Oxford University Press.</p><p>Morley, M. (2019, March 7). The cost of free Love and the designers who bore It—Meet the women of psychedelic design. <i>AIGA Eye on Design</i>. <a href="https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/women-of-psychedelic-design/">https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/women-of-psychedelic-design/</a></p><p>Ostertag, B. (2007). <i>People’s movements, people’s press: The Journalism of Social Justice Movements</i>. Beacon Press.</p><p>TRR. (2020, September 7). The feminist fandom of Trina Robbins. <i>The Revolution (Relaunch)</i>. <a href="https://therevolutionrelaunch.com/2020/08/02/the-feminist-fandom-of-trina-robbins/">https://therevolutionrelaunch.com/2020/08/02/the-feminist-fandom-of-trina-robbins/</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Underground Newspapers</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Michelle Nguyen, Gabbi Warriner, Amanda Horton, Draye Swanegan, Spencer Gee</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:30:35</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Underground newspapers of the 1960s and ’70s were vital tools of political and cultural resistance, blending radical content with experimental graphic design to support movements like the New Left, Black Power, and Women’s Liberation. Despite their marginalization by mainstream media, these publications formed a dynamic network of alternative press that shaped both activism and visual culture.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Underground newspapers of the 1960s and ’70s were vital tools of political and cultural resistance, blending radical content with experimental graphic design to support movements like the New Left, Black Power, and Women’s Liberation. Despite their marginalization by mainstream media, these publications formed a dynamic network of alternative press that shaped both activism and visual culture.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, counterculture, underground newspapers, freep, graphic design, ups, newspaper design, evo</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Drummer Magazine</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In the aftermath of the Stonewall riots and amidst widespread societal hostility toward LGBTQ+ individuals, <i>Drummer</i> magazine emerged in 1975 as a bold act of resistance and cultural affirmation. Founded by John Embry and originally launched as a newsletter for the Homophile Effort for Legal Protection (H.E.L.P.), <i>Drummer</i> became a groundbreaking publication for gay men involved in leather and BDSM subcultures. Embry, joined by key figures like Jeanne Barney and later Jack Fritscher, used the magazine to amplify radical queer voices, confront law enforcement harassment, and explore taboo themes in sexuality and identity. Amid police raids, legal battles, and frequent censorship, <i>Drummer</i> served as both a creative outlet and a political statement. Fritscher’s tenure as editor from 1977–1979 marked the magazine’s heyday, transforming it into a hub for homoerotic art, fiction, and cultural commentary while expanding the image of gay masculinity through the lens of leather, kink, and alternative identities. Contributors like Robert Mapplethorpe, Tom of Finland, Judy Tallwing, and A. Jay helped shape the visual and ideological language of a community pushing back against mainstream repression. Despite internal tensions and external crackdowns, <i>Drummer</i> played a pivotal role in redefining gay identity beyond stereotypes, coining terms like “Bear,” documenting leather history, and celebrating gender diversity. Running until 1999, the magazine remains one of the most influential queer publications of the 20th century—an artifact of cultural defiance, artistic expression, and liberation politics that challenged both societal norms and gay assimilationist narratives. Its legacy continues to inspire queer publishing and sexual freedom movements today.</p><p> </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1962 – Cuban Missile Crisis<br />1963 – JFK assassinated<br />1986 – MLK assassinated<br />1969 – Stonewall Riots in NYC protesting police raids against the Stonewall Inn<br />1970 – Protest marches are held by LGBT people in NYC, SF, Chicago and LA and are considered the first pride parades in America<br />1972 – Watergate<br />1973- American Psychiatric Association declared homosexuality was not a mental illness<br />1974 – Nixon resigns<br />1978 – Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in CA is assassinated<br />1978 – Jim Jones shocked the world with the mass suicide of nearly 1,000 people in Jonestown, Guyana<br />1981 – Start of the AIDS crisis<br />1987 – First AIDS/HIV prevention drug approved by FDA, AZT (shown to markedly reduce transmission of HIV)<br />2003 – Lawrence v. Texas; struck down sodomy laws<br />2012 – Truvada, or PrEP, was approved for use by the FDA; this drug is for the prevention of the spread of HIV.<br />2015 – Gay marriage legal in USA</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Zinn, H. (2003). <i>A People’s History of the United States</i>. Harper Collins. New York.</p><p>Allen Shapiro. lambiek.net. (2024, January 1). <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/s/shapiro_allen.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/s/shapiro_allen.htm</a><br /><br />Blair, N., & Farber, J. (2023). <i>Castro to Christopher: Gay streets of America 1979-1986</i>. powerHouse Books.</p><p>Broverman, N. (2024, April 11). Gay fetish artist Rex has died-see some of his iconic work. <i>Out Magazine</i>. <a href="https://www.out.com/art/gay-fetish-artist-rex-died#rebelltitem1">https://www.out.com/art/gay-fetish-artist-rex-died#rebelltitem1</a></p><p>Flanagan, M. (2017, September 24). BARchive :: When “drummer” came to town. <i>Bay Area Reporter</i>. <a href="https://www.ebar.com/story.php?ch=bartab&sc=leather-kink&id=249252">https://www.ebar.com/story.php?ch=bartab&sc=leather-kink&id=249252</a><br /><br />Fritscher, J. J., & Hemry, M. (2008). <i>Gay San Francisco: Eyewitness drummer.</i> Palm Drive Pub.<br /><br />Fritscher, J. (2020). <i>Gay pioneers: HOW DRUMMER magazine shaped gay popular culture 1965-1999</i>. Palm Drive Publishing.<br /><br />Fritshcher, J. (1989). Pentimento for Robert Mapplethorpe. <i>Drummer,</i> (133), 8–15. <a href="https://jackfritscher.com/PDF/Mapplethorpe/Drummer133_Pentimento-Mapplethorpe.pdf">https://jackfritscher.com/PDF/Mapplethorpe/Drummer133_Pentimento-Mapplethorpe.pdf</a></p><p>Gates, A. (2025, January 10). Anita Bryant, whose anti-gay politics undid a singing career, is dead at 84. <i>The New York Times.</i> <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/09/arts/music/anita-bryant-dead.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/09/arts/music/anita-bryant-dead.html</a></p><p>Jones, C. (2017). <i>When we rise: My life in the Movement</i>. Hachette Books.<br /><br />Meyer, R. (1990). Imagining Sadomasochism: Robert Mapplethorpe and the Masquerade of Photography. <i>Qui Parle</i>, 4(1), 62–78. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/20685907">http://www.jstor.org/stable/20685907</a><br /><br />OKeeffe, K. (2019, February 23). The life, death and legacy of Robert Opel, the bisexual Oscar streaker. <i>Advocate.com</i>. <a href="https://www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/art/2014/03/26/life-death-and-legacy-robert-opel-oscar-streaker">https://www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/art/2014/03/26/life-death-and-legacy-robert-opel-oscar-streaker</a><br /><br />Poole, C. (2020, May 13). <i>Bill Ward (1927-1996).</i> Guy Burch. <a href="https://www.guyburch.co.uk/?p=2662">https://www.guyburch.co.uk/?p=2662</a><br /><br />Project, T. L. H. (2023, October 16). Jack Fritscher : Interview. <i>THE LGBTQHP</i>. <a href="https://www.lgbtqhp.org/post/jack-fritscher">https://www.lgbtqhp.org/post/jack-fritscher</a><br /><br />US DEPT OF JUSTICE. (2019, March 7). <i>Hate crime laws. Civil Rights Division</i>. <a href="https://www.justice.gov/crt/hate-crime-laws">https://www.justice.gov/crt/hate-crime-laws</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 16 Oct 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Michelle Nguyen, Gabbi Warriner, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton, Draye Swanegan, Dean Kelly)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/drummer-magazine-ufQnrZWg</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the aftermath of the Stonewall riots and amidst widespread societal hostility toward LGBTQ+ individuals, <i>Drummer</i> magazine emerged in 1975 as a bold act of resistance and cultural affirmation. Founded by John Embry and originally launched as a newsletter for the Homophile Effort for Legal Protection (H.E.L.P.), <i>Drummer</i> became a groundbreaking publication for gay men involved in leather and BDSM subcultures. Embry, joined by key figures like Jeanne Barney and later Jack Fritscher, used the magazine to amplify radical queer voices, confront law enforcement harassment, and explore taboo themes in sexuality and identity. Amid police raids, legal battles, and frequent censorship, <i>Drummer</i> served as both a creative outlet and a political statement. Fritscher’s tenure as editor from 1977–1979 marked the magazine’s heyday, transforming it into a hub for homoerotic art, fiction, and cultural commentary while expanding the image of gay masculinity through the lens of leather, kink, and alternative identities. Contributors like Robert Mapplethorpe, Tom of Finland, Judy Tallwing, and A. Jay helped shape the visual and ideological language of a community pushing back against mainstream repression. Despite internal tensions and external crackdowns, <i>Drummer</i> played a pivotal role in redefining gay identity beyond stereotypes, coining terms like “Bear,” documenting leather history, and celebrating gender diversity. Running until 1999, the magazine remains one of the most influential queer publications of the 20th century—an artifact of cultural defiance, artistic expression, and liberation politics that challenged both societal norms and gay assimilationist narratives. Its legacy continues to inspire queer publishing and sexual freedom movements today.</p><p> </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1962 – Cuban Missile Crisis<br />1963 – JFK assassinated<br />1986 – MLK assassinated<br />1969 – Stonewall Riots in NYC protesting police raids against the Stonewall Inn<br />1970 – Protest marches are held by LGBT people in NYC, SF, Chicago and LA and are considered the first pride parades in America<br />1972 – Watergate<br />1973- American Psychiatric Association declared homosexuality was not a mental illness<br />1974 – Nixon resigns<br />1978 – Harvey Milk, the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in CA is assassinated<br />1978 – Jim Jones shocked the world with the mass suicide of nearly 1,000 people in Jonestown, Guyana<br />1981 – Start of the AIDS crisis<br />1987 – First AIDS/HIV prevention drug approved by FDA, AZT (shown to markedly reduce transmission of HIV)<br />2003 – Lawrence v. Texas; struck down sodomy laws<br />2012 – Truvada, or PrEP, was approved for use by the FDA; this drug is for the prevention of the spread of HIV.<br />2015 – Gay marriage legal in USA</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Zinn, H. (2003). <i>A People’s History of the United States</i>. Harper Collins. New York.</p><p>Allen Shapiro. lambiek.net. (2024, January 1). <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/s/shapiro_allen.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/s/shapiro_allen.htm</a><br /><br />Blair, N., & Farber, J. (2023). <i>Castro to Christopher: Gay streets of America 1979-1986</i>. powerHouse Books.</p><p>Broverman, N. (2024, April 11). Gay fetish artist Rex has died-see some of his iconic work. <i>Out Magazine</i>. <a href="https://www.out.com/art/gay-fetish-artist-rex-died#rebelltitem1">https://www.out.com/art/gay-fetish-artist-rex-died#rebelltitem1</a></p><p>Flanagan, M. (2017, September 24). BARchive :: When “drummer” came to town. <i>Bay Area Reporter</i>. <a href="https://www.ebar.com/story.php?ch=bartab&sc=leather-kink&id=249252">https://www.ebar.com/story.php?ch=bartab&sc=leather-kink&id=249252</a><br /><br />Fritscher, J. J., & Hemry, M. (2008). <i>Gay San Francisco: Eyewitness drummer.</i> Palm Drive Pub.<br /><br />Fritscher, J. (2020). <i>Gay pioneers: HOW DRUMMER magazine shaped gay popular culture 1965-1999</i>. Palm Drive Publishing.<br /><br />Fritshcher, J. (1989). Pentimento for Robert Mapplethorpe. <i>Drummer,</i> (133), 8–15. <a href="https://jackfritscher.com/PDF/Mapplethorpe/Drummer133_Pentimento-Mapplethorpe.pdf">https://jackfritscher.com/PDF/Mapplethorpe/Drummer133_Pentimento-Mapplethorpe.pdf</a></p><p>Gates, A. (2025, January 10). Anita Bryant, whose anti-gay politics undid a singing career, is dead at 84. <i>The New York Times.</i> <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/09/arts/music/anita-bryant-dead.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/09/arts/music/anita-bryant-dead.html</a></p><p>Jones, C. (2017). <i>When we rise: My life in the Movement</i>. Hachette Books.<br /><br />Meyer, R. (1990). Imagining Sadomasochism: Robert Mapplethorpe and the Masquerade of Photography. <i>Qui Parle</i>, 4(1), 62–78. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/20685907">http://www.jstor.org/stable/20685907</a><br /><br />OKeeffe, K. (2019, February 23). The life, death and legacy of Robert Opel, the bisexual Oscar streaker. <i>Advocate.com</i>. <a href="https://www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/art/2014/03/26/life-death-and-legacy-robert-opel-oscar-streaker">https://www.advocate.com/arts-entertainment/art/2014/03/26/life-death-and-legacy-robert-opel-oscar-streaker</a><br /><br />Poole, C. (2020, May 13). <i>Bill Ward (1927-1996).</i> Guy Burch. <a href="https://www.guyburch.co.uk/?p=2662">https://www.guyburch.co.uk/?p=2662</a><br /><br />Project, T. L. H. (2023, October 16). Jack Fritscher : Interview. <i>THE LGBTQHP</i>. <a href="https://www.lgbtqhp.org/post/jack-fritscher">https://www.lgbtqhp.org/post/jack-fritscher</a><br /><br />US DEPT OF JUSTICE. (2019, March 7). <i>Hate crime laws. Civil Rights Division</i>. <a href="https://www.justice.gov/crt/hate-crime-laws">https://www.justice.gov/crt/hate-crime-laws</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Drummer Magazine</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Michelle Nguyen, Gabbi Warriner, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton, Draye Swanegan, Dean Kelly</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/2a913a5d-6bd8-4397-8498-c2c359f8752d/3000x3000/incomplet-season5-ep7.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:24:55</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Drummer magazine, launched in 1975 amid post-Stonewall resistance and LGBTQ+ repression, became a groundbreaking platform for gay leather and BDSM subcultures, amplifying radical queer voices and challenging mainstream norms. Through art, fiction, and political commentary, it redefined gay masculinity, celebrated sexual diversity, and left a lasting legacy on queer identity and liberation.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Drummer magazine, launched in 1975 amid post-Stonewall resistance and LGBTQ+ repression, became a groundbreaking platform for gay leather and BDSM subcultures, amplifying radical queer voices and challenging mainstream norms. Through art, fiction, and political commentary, it redefined gay masculinity, celebrated sexual diversity, and left a lasting legacy on queer identity and liberation.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>queer history, graphic design history, magazine design, drummer magazine, graphic design</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>5</itunes:season>
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      <title>Willi Smith &amp; WilliWear</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Willi Smith (1948–1987) was a trailblazing Black fashion designer celebrated for redefining casual fashion through his visionary "Street Couture." Born in Philadelphia, Smith showed early artistic promise, working as an illustrator and studying at the Philadelphia Museum of College Art. He attended Parsons School of Design on scholarships and apprenticed with Arnold Scaasi before working for brands like Talbott and Digits, where he gained industry recognition. In 1976, Smith co-founded WilliWear Ltd. with Laurie Mallet, establishing a brand that fused affordability, inclusivity, and creativity. WilliWear became synonymous with groundbreaking fashion shows, featuring collaborations with artists like Christo and Jeanne-Claude and performance art elements such as costumes for Trisha Brown Dance Company and the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. Smith’s designs, known for their vibrant patterns, deconstructed silhouettes, and unisex appeal, challenged the exclusivity of high fashion, earning him a Coty American Fashion Critics’ Winnie Award in 1983. Smith's influence extended beyond fashion, touching theater, dance, and public art. He designed workers’ uniforms for Christo’s large-scale installations and costumes for Spike Lee's School Daze and Marvel’s Spider-Man. Despite his success, Smith faced personal and professional challenges, including health struggles. Tragically, he died in 1987 from AIDS-related complications, leaving an indelible mark on the fashion world. Posthumously honored with exhibitions, memorials, and accolades like Willi Smith Day, his legacy remains a testament to his innovative spirit and commitment to democratizing fashion.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1948 – Willi Smith was born on February 29th in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.<br />1963 – Smith attends Jules E. Mastbaum Technical High School in Philadelphia and begins his first job as an illustrator for Prudence and Strickler's dress shop.<br />1964 – Smith takes a class in fashion illustration at the Philadelphia Museum of College Art.<br />1965 – Designer Arnold Scaasi hired Smith as an apprentice.<br />1965 – Smith enrolled in the fashion designer program at Parsons School of Design.<br />1967 – Smith leaves Parsons and meets artist and future collaborations Christo and Jeanne-Claude.<br />1968 – Smith designs for fashion company Talbott, Bobbie Brooks, Mr. Thompson, and Personal Sportswear before joining Glenora Juniors.<br />1969 – Fashion executives Franklin Trigg and Irving Yanous create junior sportswear label Digits; Smith resigns from Glenora and becomes lead designer for Digits<br />1970 – Smith meets future WilliWear business partner Laurie Mallet; Digits forms the new lower price-point division Syllables, making Smith the lead designer.<br />1971 – Smith hires Mallet as his design assistant at Digits<br />1972 – Smith was nominated for the Coty American Fashion Critics’ Winnie Award, and Digits presented its first runway show.<br />1973 – Smith begins designing for Butterick Patterns and designs costumes for dancer-choreographer Dianne McIntyre’s composition The Lost Sun.<br />1974 – Smith forms Willi Smith Designs, Inc. with his sister Toukie Smith and Rivera-Terreaux.<br />1976 – Smith and Mallet form WilliWear Ltd.<br />1978 – The first WilliWear runaway show takes place at Holy Solomon Gallery with a spring collection influenced by nautical uniforms and Southeast Asian dress; WilliWear opens a new showroom at 62 West 39th Street.<br />1979—Black designers Arthur McGee, Jeffrey Banks, Carl Davis, Jay Jaxon, Kevin Thompson, Robert Miller, and Smith are honored with a fashion show at the Fashion Institute of Technology.<br />1980 – WilliWear’s fall collection is presented at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre with Ailey dancers as models.<br />1981 – The Black Fashion Museum organizes the exhibition Bridal Gowns of Black Designers.<br />1982—Smith participated in a group exhibition at P.S. 1 with fashion designers Cathy Hardwick, Michele Lamy, Corrine Guibert, and Regina Kravitz and presented the installation Art as Damaged Good.<br />1982—Architecture and environmental arts studio SITE designs the WilliWear showroom at 209 West 38th Street.<br />1983 – Smith is awarded the Coty American Fashion Critics’ Winnie Award for womenswear,.<br />1984 – Smith and Mallet establishes a new division of WilliWear called WilliWear Productions, selling mass-produced clothing designed by artist.<br />1985 – Dean Alexander begins to design WilliWear promotional graphics; Smith designs workers’ uniforms for Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s PontNeauf Wrapped in Paris, France.<br />1986 – WilliWear grosses more than $25 million<br />1987 – Working with costume designer Ruth E. Carter, Smith designs homecoming court gowns for Spike Lee’s film School Daze; Smith designs Mary Jane’s wedding dress for Marvel’s Amazing Spider-Man.<br />1987 – Smith dies at Mount Sinai Hospital on April 17th from AIDS-related complications; Smith’s funeral is held at Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel on April 20; Parsons hold a memorial service in Smith’s honor.<br />1988—Mayor David Dinkins proclaims Feb. 23 Willi Smith Day;<br />1989 – Andre Walker Becomes the lead designer for WilliWear.<br />1990 – WilliWear closes its womenswear operations and files for bankruptcy.<br />1996 – T.J. Maxx releases a Willi Smith collection manufactured by Nash International under the license given by the Pressman family and Laurie Mallet.</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>Activism</i>. (2016). Black Fashion Designers - The Museum at FIT. Retrieved August 5, 2025, from <a href="https://exhibitions.fitnyc.edu/black-fashion-designers/?url=gallery-activism.">https://exhibitions.fitnyc.edu/black-fashion-designers/?url=gallery-activism.</a></p><p>Barry, J. (2025). <i>Judith Barry on Willi Smith and Polydisciplinary Magnetism – Art, Culture, and Technology (ACT)</i>. Mit.edu. <a href="https://act.mit.edu/2020/08/congratulations-to-the-class-of-2020/">https://act.mit.edu/2020/08/congratulations-to-the-class-of-2020/</a></p><p>Barry, J., Krishnamurthy, P., & Young, F. (2025). <i>Polydisciplinary Magnetism — Willi Smith Community Archive</i>. Cargo.site. <a href="https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Polydisciplinary-Magnetism/">https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Polydisciplinary-Magnetism/</a></p><p>Bullock, M. (2019). <i>Michael Bullock | WILLI SMITH</i>. Michaelbullock.nyc. <a href="https://michaelbullock.nyc/volumes/journalism/space-explorer">https://michaelbullock.nyc/volumes/journalism/space-explorer</a></p><p>Bullock, M. (2020). <i>How SITE and The Late Fashion Designer Willi Smith Brought The Street Into The Showroom</i>. Pinupmagazine.org. <a href="https://archive.pinupmagazine.org/articles/article-williwear-site-showroom-michael-bullock#15">https://archive.pinupmagazine.org/articles/article-williwear-site-showroom-michael-bullock#15</a></p><p>Burholt, E. (2020, December 1). <i>1948-1987 – Willi Smith | Fashion History Timeline</i>. Fashionhistory.fitnyc.edu. <a href="https://fashionhistory.fitnyc.edu/1948-1987-willi-smith/">https://fashionhistory.fitnyc.edu/1948-1987-willi-smith/</a></p><p>Cameron, A. C. (2020, January 14). <i>Willi Smith: Street Couture | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum</i>. Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. <a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/publications/willi-smith-street-couture/">https://www.cooperhewitt.org/publications/willi-smith-street-couture/</a></p><p>Comita, J. (2020, January 28). <i>How Will Designer Willi Smith Be Remembered? </i>W Magazine. <a href="https://www.wmagazine.com/fashion/willi-smith-street-couture-alexandra-cunningham-cameron">https://www.wmagazine.com/fashion/willi-smith-street-couture-alexandra-cunningham-cameron</a></p><p>Duncan, F. A. (2020, March 12). <i>Willi Smith Glowing Up History</i>. Cultured Mag. <a href="https://www.culturedmag.com/article/2020/03/12/willi-smith-glowing-up-history/">https://www.culturedmag.com/article/2020/03/12/willi-smith-glowing-up-history/</a></p><p>Elan, P. (2020, June 8). <i>Willi Smith remembered: the designer who introduced streetwear to the catwalk</i>. The Guardian. <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2020/jun/08/willi-smith-williwear-african-american-streetwear-catwalk">https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2020/jun/08/willi-smith-williwear-african-american-streetwear-catwalk</a></p><p><i>Fashion — Willi Smith Community Archive</i>. (2025). Cargo.site. <a href="https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Fashion">https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Fashion</a></p><p>Hill, R. P. (2021, February 1). <i>Fashion Culture | Willi Smith: The Creative Intersection of an American Genius</i>. E D G E. <a href="https://edgexpo.com/2021/02/01/fashion-culture-willi-smith-the-creative-intersection-of-an-american-genius/">https://edgexpo.com/2021/02/01/fashion-culture-willi-smith-the-creative-intersection-of-an-american-genius/</a></p><p><i>Introduction. (2016). Black Fashion Designers - The Museum at FIT. Retrieved August 5, 2025, from </i><a href="https://exhibitions.fitnyc.edu/black-fashion-designers/?url=gallery-activism."><i>https://exhibitions.fitnyc.edu/black-fashion-designers/?url=gallery-activism.</i></a></p><p>Jacobs, L. (2021, Jun 14). Arts in review -- exhibition review: Street-smart and worldly wise. <i>Wall Street Journal </i></p><p>Lisby, D.-J. (2022, April 6). <i>Willi Smith - The Fashion and Race DatabaseTM</i>. Fashion and Race. <a href="https://fashionandrace.org/database/willi-smith/">https://fashionandrace.org/database/willi-smith/</a></p><p>Mayers, C. (2020, October 29). <i>How designer Willi Smith originated the street and high fashion crossover</i>. I-D.co; i-d.co. <a href="https://i-d.co/article/fashion-history-of-willi-smith-the-1980s-fashion-designer-behind-williwear/">https://i-d.co/article/fashion-history-of-willi-smith-the-1980s-fashion-designer-behind-williwear/</a></p><p>Nylander, L. (2020, August 1). <i>Willi Smith Is The Streetwear Genius You Need To Know About</i>. British Vogue. <a href="https://www.vogue.co.uk/fashion/article/willi-smith">https://www.vogue.co.uk/fashion/article/willi-smith</a></p><p>Pastor, J. (2013). <i>WilliWear New Wave Graphics — Willi Smith Community Archive</i>. Cargo.site. <a href="https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/WilliWear-New-Wave-Graphics">https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/WilliWear-New-Wave-Graphics</a></p><p>Pastor, J. (2020, June 15). <i>Radical Retail | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum</i>. Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. <a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2020/06/15/radical-retail/">https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2020/06/15/radical-retail/</a></p><p>Perkins, W. (2020). <i>Willi Smith: Swervin’ in the Kingdom of Dreams — Willi Smith Community Archive</i>. Cargo.site. <a href="https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Willi-Smith-Swervin-in-the-Kingdom-of-Dreams">https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Willi-Smith-Swervin-in-the-Kingdom-of-Dreams</a></p><p>Shupe, D. (2020, July 19). <i>Remembering Willi Smith</i>. Deirdre. <a href="https://deirdreccc.com/remembering-willi-smith/">https://deirdreccc.com/remembering-willi-smith/</a></p><p>Singh, R. (2017, February 17). <i>Fashion Flashback: Willi Smith</i>. CFDA. <a href="https://cfda.com/news/fashion-flashback-willi-smith/">https://cfda.com/news/fashion-flashback-willi-smith/</a></p><p>Steele, K. (2020). <i>Willi Smith</i>. Steeleindustry.com. <a href="http://www.steeleindustry.com/willi/index.html">http://www.steeleindustry.com/willi/index.html</a></p><p>Stoppard, L. (2021, February 25). <i>Why the Visionary Designer Willi Smith Is More Relevant Than Ever</i>. Aperture. <a href="https://aperture.org/editorial/why-the-visionary-designer-willi-smiths-work-is-more-relevant-than-ever/">https://aperture.org/editorial/why-the-visionary-designer-willi-smiths-work-is-more-relevant-than-ever/</a></p><p>Street, M. (2021, February 22). <i>How Game-Changing Fashion Designer Willi Smith Reshaped the Way the World Dresses</i>. Robb Report. <a href="https://robbreport.com/style/fashion/willi-smith-streetwear-1234597982/">https://robbreport.com/style/fashion/willi-smith-streetwear-1234597982/</a></p><p>'Style over status': Culture | as a new exhibition about streetwear pioneer willi smith opens in new york, curator alexandra cunningham cameron explains why his individuality deserves to be remembered [europe region]. (2020, Mar 07). <i>Financial Times.</i></p><p>Tashjian, R. S. (2020, 04). Design Within Reach: Rachel Seville Tashjian on Willi Smith. <i>Artforum International, 58.</i></p><p><i>Willi Donnell Smith | Encyclopedia.com</i>. (2018). Encyclopedia.com. <a href="https://www.encyclopedia.com/people/literature-and-arts/fashion-biographies/willi-donnell-smith">https://www.encyclopedia.com/people/literature-and-arts/fashion-biographies/willi-donnell-smith</a></p><p><i>Willi Smith | Parsons School of Design</i>. (2020). Newschool.edu. <a href="https://www.newschool.edu/parsons/profile/willi-smith/">https://www.newschool.edu/parsons/profile/willi-smith/</a></p><p><i>Willi Smith Community Archive</i>. (n.d.). Willismitharchive.cargo.site. <a href="https://willismitharchive.cargo.site">https://willismitharchive.cargo.site</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 9 Oct 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Spencer Gee, Draye Swanegan, Michelle Nguyen, Gabbi Warriner, Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/willi-smith-williwear-0dRKd_7L</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Willi Smith (1948–1987) was a trailblazing Black fashion designer celebrated for redefining casual fashion through his visionary "Street Couture." Born in Philadelphia, Smith showed early artistic promise, working as an illustrator and studying at the Philadelphia Museum of College Art. He attended Parsons School of Design on scholarships and apprenticed with Arnold Scaasi before working for brands like Talbott and Digits, where he gained industry recognition. In 1976, Smith co-founded WilliWear Ltd. with Laurie Mallet, establishing a brand that fused affordability, inclusivity, and creativity. WilliWear became synonymous with groundbreaking fashion shows, featuring collaborations with artists like Christo and Jeanne-Claude and performance art elements such as costumes for Trisha Brown Dance Company and the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. Smith’s designs, known for their vibrant patterns, deconstructed silhouettes, and unisex appeal, challenged the exclusivity of high fashion, earning him a Coty American Fashion Critics’ Winnie Award in 1983. Smith's influence extended beyond fashion, touching theater, dance, and public art. He designed workers’ uniforms for Christo’s large-scale installations and costumes for Spike Lee's School Daze and Marvel’s Spider-Man. Despite his success, Smith faced personal and professional challenges, including health struggles. Tragically, he died in 1987 from AIDS-related complications, leaving an indelible mark on the fashion world. Posthumously honored with exhibitions, memorials, and accolades like Willi Smith Day, his legacy remains a testament to his innovative spirit and commitment to democratizing fashion.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1948 – Willi Smith was born on February 29th in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.<br />1963 – Smith attends Jules E. Mastbaum Technical High School in Philadelphia and begins his first job as an illustrator for Prudence and Strickler's dress shop.<br />1964 – Smith takes a class in fashion illustration at the Philadelphia Museum of College Art.<br />1965 – Designer Arnold Scaasi hired Smith as an apprentice.<br />1965 – Smith enrolled in the fashion designer program at Parsons School of Design.<br />1967 – Smith leaves Parsons and meets artist and future collaborations Christo and Jeanne-Claude.<br />1968 – Smith designs for fashion company Talbott, Bobbie Brooks, Mr. Thompson, and Personal Sportswear before joining Glenora Juniors.<br />1969 – Fashion executives Franklin Trigg and Irving Yanous create junior sportswear label Digits; Smith resigns from Glenora and becomes lead designer for Digits<br />1970 – Smith meets future WilliWear business partner Laurie Mallet; Digits forms the new lower price-point division Syllables, making Smith the lead designer.<br />1971 – Smith hires Mallet as his design assistant at Digits<br />1972 – Smith was nominated for the Coty American Fashion Critics’ Winnie Award, and Digits presented its first runway show.<br />1973 – Smith begins designing for Butterick Patterns and designs costumes for dancer-choreographer Dianne McIntyre’s composition The Lost Sun.<br />1974 – Smith forms Willi Smith Designs, Inc. with his sister Toukie Smith and Rivera-Terreaux.<br />1976 – Smith and Mallet form WilliWear Ltd.<br />1978 – The first WilliWear runaway show takes place at Holy Solomon Gallery with a spring collection influenced by nautical uniforms and Southeast Asian dress; WilliWear opens a new showroom at 62 West 39th Street.<br />1979—Black designers Arthur McGee, Jeffrey Banks, Carl Davis, Jay Jaxon, Kevin Thompson, Robert Miller, and Smith are honored with a fashion show at the Fashion Institute of Technology.<br />1980 – WilliWear’s fall collection is presented at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre with Ailey dancers as models.<br />1981 – The Black Fashion Museum organizes the exhibition Bridal Gowns of Black Designers.<br />1982—Smith participated in a group exhibition at P.S. 1 with fashion designers Cathy Hardwick, Michele Lamy, Corrine Guibert, and Regina Kravitz and presented the installation Art as Damaged Good.<br />1982—Architecture and environmental arts studio SITE designs the WilliWear showroom at 209 West 38th Street.<br />1983 – Smith is awarded the Coty American Fashion Critics’ Winnie Award for womenswear,.<br />1984 – Smith and Mallet establishes a new division of WilliWear called WilliWear Productions, selling mass-produced clothing designed by artist.<br />1985 – Dean Alexander begins to design WilliWear promotional graphics; Smith designs workers’ uniforms for Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s PontNeauf Wrapped in Paris, France.<br />1986 – WilliWear grosses more than $25 million<br />1987 – Working with costume designer Ruth E. Carter, Smith designs homecoming court gowns for Spike Lee’s film School Daze; Smith designs Mary Jane’s wedding dress for Marvel’s Amazing Spider-Man.<br />1987 – Smith dies at Mount Sinai Hospital on April 17th from AIDS-related complications; Smith’s funeral is held at Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel on April 20; Parsons hold a memorial service in Smith’s honor.<br />1988—Mayor David Dinkins proclaims Feb. 23 Willi Smith Day;<br />1989 – Andre Walker Becomes the lead designer for WilliWear.<br />1990 – WilliWear closes its womenswear operations and files for bankruptcy.<br />1996 – T.J. Maxx releases a Willi Smith collection manufactured by Nash International under the license given by the Pressman family and Laurie Mallet.</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>Activism</i>. (2016). Black Fashion Designers - The Museum at FIT. Retrieved August 5, 2025, from <a href="https://exhibitions.fitnyc.edu/black-fashion-designers/?url=gallery-activism.">https://exhibitions.fitnyc.edu/black-fashion-designers/?url=gallery-activism.</a></p><p>Barry, J. (2025). <i>Judith Barry on Willi Smith and Polydisciplinary Magnetism – Art, Culture, and Technology (ACT)</i>. Mit.edu. <a href="https://act.mit.edu/2020/08/congratulations-to-the-class-of-2020/">https://act.mit.edu/2020/08/congratulations-to-the-class-of-2020/</a></p><p>Barry, J., Krishnamurthy, P., & Young, F. (2025). <i>Polydisciplinary Magnetism — Willi Smith Community Archive</i>. Cargo.site. <a href="https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Polydisciplinary-Magnetism/">https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Polydisciplinary-Magnetism/</a></p><p>Bullock, M. (2019). <i>Michael Bullock | WILLI SMITH</i>. Michaelbullock.nyc. <a href="https://michaelbullock.nyc/volumes/journalism/space-explorer">https://michaelbullock.nyc/volumes/journalism/space-explorer</a></p><p>Bullock, M. (2020). <i>How SITE and The Late Fashion Designer Willi Smith Brought The Street Into The Showroom</i>. Pinupmagazine.org. <a href="https://archive.pinupmagazine.org/articles/article-williwear-site-showroom-michael-bullock#15">https://archive.pinupmagazine.org/articles/article-williwear-site-showroom-michael-bullock#15</a></p><p>Burholt, E. (2020, December 1). <i>1948-1987 – Willi Smith | Fashion History Timeline</i>. Fashionhistory.fitnyc.edu. <a href="https://fashionhistory.fitnyc.edu/1948-1987-willi-smith/">https://fashionhistory.fitnyc.edu/1948-1987-willi-smith/</a></p><p>Cameron, A. C. (2020, January 14). <i>Willi Smith: Street Couture | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum</i>. Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. <a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/publications/willi-smith-street-couture/">https://www.cooperhewitt.org/publications/willi-smith-street-couture/</a></p><p>Comita, J. (2020, January 28). <i>How Will Designer Willi Smith Be Remembered? </i>W Magazine. <a href="https://www.wmagazine.com/fashion/willi-smith-street-couture-alexandra-cunningham-cameron">https://www.wmagazine.com/fashion/willi-smith-street-couture-alexandra-cunningham-cameron</a></p><p>Duncan, F. A. (2020, March 12). <i>Willi Smith Glowing Up History</i>. Cultured Mag. <a href="https://www.culturedmag.com/article/2020/03/12/willi-smith-glowing-up-history/">https://www.culturedmag.com/article/2020/03/12/willi-smith-glowing-up-history/</a></p><p>Elan, P. (2020, June 8). <i>Willi Smith remembered: the designer who introduced streetwear to the catwalk</i>. The Guardian. <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2020/jun/08/willi-smith-williwear-african-american-streetwear-catwalk">https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2020/jun/08/willi-smith-williwear-african-american-streetwear-catwalk</a></p><p><i>Fashion — Willi Smith Community Archive</i>. (2025). Cargo.site. <a href="https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Fashion">https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Fashion</a></p><p>Hill, R. P. (2021, February 1). <i>Fashion Culture | Willi Smith: The Creative Intersection of an American Genius</i>. E D G E. <a href="https://edgexpo.com/2021/02/01/fashion-culture-willi-smith-the-creative-intersection-of-an-american-genius/">https://edgexpo.com/2021/02/01/fashion-culture-willi-smith-the-creative-intersection-of-an-american-genius/</a></p><p><i>Introduction. (2016). Black Fashion Designers - The Museum at FIT. Retrieved August 5, 2025, from </i><a href="https://exhibitions.fitnyc.edu/black-fashion-designers/?url=gallery-activism."><i>https://exhibitions.fitnyc.edu/black-fashion-designers/?url=gallery-activism.</i></a></p><p>Jacobs, L. (2021, Jun 14). Arts in review -- exhibition review: Street-smart and worldly wise. <i>Wall Street Journal </i></p><p>Lisby, D.-J. (2022, April 6). <i>Willi Smith - The Fashion and Race DatabaseTM</i>. Fashion and Race. <a href="https://fashionandrace.org/database/willi-smith/">https://fashionandrace.org/database/willi-smith/</a></p><p>Mayers, C. (2020, October 29). <i>How designer Willi Smith originated the street and high fashion crossover</i>. I-D.co; i-d.co. <a href="https://i-d.co/article/fashion-history-of-willi-smith-the-1980s-fashion-designer-behind-williwear/">https://i-d.co/article/fashion-history-of-willi-smith-the-1980s-fashion-designer-behind-williwear/</a></p><p>Nylander, L. (2020, August 1). <i>Willi Smith Is The Streetwear Genius You Need To Know About</i>. British Vogue. <a href="https://www.vogue.co.uk/fashion/article/willi-smith">https://www.vogue.co.uk/fashion/article/willi-smith</a></p><p>Pastor, J. (2013). <i>WilliWear New Wave Graphics — Willi Smith Community Archive</i>. Cargo.site. <a href="https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/WilliWear-New-Wave-Graphics">https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/WilliWear-New-Wave-Graphics</a></p><p>Pastor, J. (2020, June 15). <i>Radical Retail | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum</i>. Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. <a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2020/06/15/radical-retail/">https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2020/06/15/radical-retail/</a></p><p>Perkins, W. (2020). <i>Willi Smith: Swervin’ in the Kingdom of Dreams — Willi Smith Community Archive</i>. Cargo.site. <a href="https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Willi-Smith-Swervin-in-the-Kingdom-of-Dreams">https://willismitharchive.cargo.site/Willi-Smith-Swervin-in-the-Kingdom-of-Dreams</a></p><p>Shupe, D. (2020, July 19). <i>Remembering Willi Smith</i>. Deirdre. <a href="https://deirdreccc.com/remembering-willi-smith/">https://deirdreccc.com/remembering-willi-smith/</a></p><p>Singh, R. (2017, February 17). <i>Fashion Flashback: Willi Smith</i>. CFDA. <a href="https://cfda.com/news/fashion-flashback-willi-smith/">https://cfda.com/news/fashion-flashback-willi-smith/</a></p><p>Steele, K. (2020). <i>Willi Smith</i>. Steeleindustry.com. <a href="http://www.steeleindustry.com/willi/index.html">http://www.steeleindustry.com/willi/index.html</a></p><p>Stoppard, L. (2021, February 25). <i>Why the Visionary Designer Willi Smith Is More Relevant Than Ever</i>. Aperture. <a href="https://aperture.org/editorial/why-the-visionary-designer-willi-smiths-work-is-more-relevant-than-ever/">https://aperture.org/editorial/why-the-visionary-designer-willi-smiths-work-is-more-relevant-than-ever/</a></p><p>Street, M. (2021, February 22). <i>How Game-Changing Fashion Designer Willi Smith Reshaped the Way the World Dresses</i>. Robb Report. <a href="https://robbreport.com/style/fashion/willi-smith-streetwear-1234597982/">https://robbreport.com/style/fashion/willi-smith-streetwear-1234597982/</a></p><p>'Style over status': Culture | as a new exhibition about streetwear pioneer willi smith opens in new york, curator alexandra cunningham cameron explains why his individuality deserves to be remembered [europe region]. (2020, Mar 07). <i>Financial Times.</i></p><p>Tashjian, R. S. (2020, 04). Design Within Reach: Rachel Seville Tashjian on Willi Smith. <i>Artforum International, 58.</i></p><p><i>Willi Donnell Smith | Encyclopedia.com</i>. (2018). Encyclopedia.com. <a href="https://www.encyclopedia.com/people/literature-and-arts/fashion-biographies/willi-donnell-smith">https://www.encyclopedia.com/people/literature-and-arts/fashion-biographies/willi-donnell-smith</a></p><p><i>Willi Smith | Parsons School of Design</i>. (2020). Newschool.edu. <a href="https://www.newschool.edu/parsons/profile/willi-smith/">https://www.newschool.edu/parsons/profile/willi-smith/</a></p><p><i>Willi Smith Community Archive</i>. (n.d.). Willismitharchive.cargo.site. <a href="https://willismitharchive.cargo.site">https://willismitharchive.cargo.site</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="18355897" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/b236aa11-0390-4e0e-a6aa-3e75443faf4e/audio/2db738af-4d9a-4084-b3f0-71222786656f/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Willi Smith &amp; WilliWear</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Spencer Gee, Draye Swanegan, Michelle Nguyen, Gabbi Warriner, Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/338bf846-5128-403f-a3cc-d3a932b94119/3000x3000/incomplet-season5-ep6.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:19:06</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Willi Smith was a pioneering Black fashion designer who revolutionized casualwear with his “Street Couture” aesthetic, blending affordability, inclusivity, and artistic collaboration. His visionary work across fashion, theater, public art and even graphic design, left a lasting legacy, cemented by his influence on unisex design and posthumous honors that celebrate his enduring impact on the industry.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Willi Smith was a pioneering Black fashion designer who revolutionized casualwear with his “Street Couture” aesthetic, blending affordability, inclusivity, and artistic collaboration. His visionary work across fashion, theater, public art and even graphic design, left a lasting legacy, cemented by his influence on unisex design and posthumous honors that celebrate his enduring impact on the industry.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>queer history, willi smith, williwear, graphic design history, graphic design, street wear, fashion design</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>5</itunes:season>
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      <title>Women In Magazines</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>This podcast episode delves into the critical role women have played in shaping the magazine industry through design, editorial leadership, and cultural influence. While season one spotlighted individual designers, this episode zooms out to explore the broader impact women have had on magazine evolution—from early European publications to today’s digital formats. It traces how magazines shifted from reinforcing traditional gender roles to becoming empowering platforms, thanks to figures like Sarah Josepha Hale, Cipe Pineles, Bea Feitler, and Ruth Ansel, who revolutionized both visual style and editorial voice. The episode also highlights the contributions of Black women in publishing, who created their own magazines to amplify underrepresented voices and foster community. Today, designers like Jessica Walsh, Gail Bichler, and Gail Anderson continue this legacy, using bold visuals and innovative technology to push boundaries and expand representation. Through storytelling, activism, and artistry, women have transformed magazines into platforms for cultural commentary and social change—proving that their creativity and leadership are essential to the industry’s past, present, and future.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1663-1668 - First magazine-like publication (Erbauliche Monaths-Unterredungen)</p><p>1693 - First magazine for women created (Athenian Mercury)</p><p>1731 - Term “Magazine” first used in the <i>The Gentleman's Magazine</i></p><p>1770 - <i>The Lady’s Magazine</i> began</p><p>1830 - <i>Godey’s Lady’s Book</i>, an American magazine for women, was started by a man named Louis A. Godey</p><p>1832-1852 - <i>The Ladies’ Cabinet</i> was created and sold</p><p>1855 - Photolithography is invented</p><p>1870-1927 - <i>The Woman’s Journal</i>, which would eventually merge with <i>The Woman Citizen</i>,  was </p><p>released in Boston</p><p>1885 - <i>Good Housekeeping</i> first published</p><p>1891-1894 - Ringwood’s <i>Afro-American Journal of Fashion </i>Magazines were published and distributed</p><p>1899 - <i>The Saturday Evening Post </i>printed the first full-page illustrated cover</p><p>1916-1925 - <i>Half-Century</i> Magazine was created and distributed</p><p>1920 - Women were granted the right to vote</p><p>1932-1935 - Cipe Pineless works as assistant art director for Conde Nast</p><p>1945 - <i>Ebony</i> Magazine was first published</p><p>1954 - Dorothy Dandridge was the first black woman on a mainstream magazine cover</p><p>1961 - Bea Feitler is hired at <i>Harper’s Bazaar</i></p><p>1965 - Bea Feitler and Ruth Ansel release famous cover of Jean Shrimpton for <i>Harper's Bazaar</i></p><p>1974 - Ruth Ansel becomes the first female art director and the <i>New York Times </i>Magazine</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>2008 AIGA medalist: Gail Anderson</i>. (n.d.). AIGA. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from <a href="https://www.aiga.org/membership-community/aiga-awards/2008-aiga-medalist-gail-anderson">https://www.aiga.org/membership-community/aiga-awards/2008-aiga-medalist-gail-anderson</a></p><p>Burkhalter, N. (1996). Women’s magazines and the suffrage movement: Did they help or hinder the cause? <i>Journal of American Culture</i>, <i>19</i>(2), 13–24. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1542-734x.1996.1902_13.x">https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1542-734x.1996.1902_13.x</a></p><p>Clair, C. (1969). <i>A chronology of printing</i>. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.</p><p>Ed.D., G. M. (2024, March 1). <i>Women’s History Month: The Life of Dorothy Dandridge</i>. Benicia Magazine. <a href="https://www.beniciamagazine.com/womens-history-month-the-life-of-dorothy-dandridge/">https://www.beniciamagazine.com/womens-history-month-the-life-of-dorothy-dandridge/</a></p><p>Ellis, E., Golden, C. P., & Fripp, C. B. (2005). <i>Cipe Pineles: Two remembrances</i>. RIT Cary Graphic Arts Press.</p><p><i>Eye Magazine</i>. (n.d.). Eye Magazine. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from <a href="https://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/reputations-gail-bichler">https://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/reputations-gail-bichler</a></p><p>Ferguson, M. (1983). <i>Forever feminine: Women’s magazines and the cult of femininity</i>. Heinemann Educational Books.</p><p>Forster, L. (2015). <i>Magazine movements: Women’s culture, feminisms and media form</i>. Bloomsbury Publishing USA.</p><p><i>history of publishing</i>. (n.d.). Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/publishing/additional-info">https://www.britannica.com/topic/publishing/additional-info</a></p><p>McCracken, E. (1993). <i>Decoding Women’s Magazines: From mademoiselle to Ms</i>.</p><p>Osei-Hwere, E., & Osei-Hwere, P. (n.d.). <i>History of magazine publishing</i>. Media Communication, Convergence and Literacy. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from <a href="https://oer.pressbooks.pub/mediacommunication/chapter/history-of-magazine-publishing/">https://oer.pressbooks.pub/mediacommunication/chapter/history-of-magazine-publishing/</a></p><p>Rooks, N. M. (2004). <i>Ladies’ pages: African American women’s magazines and the culture that made them</i>. Rutgers University Press.</p><p>Sperandio, A. T., & Bouadana, S. (2010). Ruth Ansel: art direction. <i>Creative Review (London, England)</i>, <i>30</i>(5), 28–36.</p><p><i>The Luupe</i>. (n.d.). Jessica Walsh on Building Her Own Design Studio and Breaking Clichés. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from <a href="https://studio.theluupe.com/blog/jessica-walsh-on-building-her-own-design-studio-and-breaking-cliches">https://studio.theluupe.com/blog/jessica-walsh-on-building-her-own-design-studio-and-breaking-cliches</a></p><p>Thomson, E. M. (1994). Early Graphic Design Periodicals in America. <i>Journal of Design History</i>, <i>7</i>(2), 113–126. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/7.2.113">https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/7.2.113</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 2 Oct 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton, Draye Swanegan, Michelle Nguyen, Gabbi Warriner)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/women-in-magazines-ALj5_F9B</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This podcast episode delves into the critical role women have played in shaping the magazine industry through design, editorial leadership, and cultural influence. While season one spotlighted individual designers, this episode zooms out to explore the broader impact women have had on magazine evolution—from early European publications to today’s digital formats. It traces how magazines shifted from reinforcing traditional gender roles to becoming empowering platforms, thanks to figures like Sarah Josepha Hale, Cipe Pineles, Bea Feitler, and Ruth Ansel, who revolutionized both visual style and editorial voice. The episode also highlights the contributions of Black women in publishing, who created their own magazines to amplify underrepresented voices and foster community. Today, designers like Jessica Walsh, Gail Bichler, and Gail Anderson continue this legacy, using bold visuals and innovative technology to push boundaries and expand representation. Through storytelling, activism, and artistry, women have transformed magazines into platforms for cultural commentary and social change—proving that their creativity and leadership are essential to the industry’s past, present, and future.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1663-1668 - First magazine-like publication (Erbauliche Monaths-Unterredungen)</p><p>1693 - First magazine for women created (Athenian Mercury)</p><p>1731 - Term “Magazine” first used in the <i>The Gentleman's Magazine</i></p><p>1770 - <i>The Lady’s Magazine</i> began</p><p>1830 - <i>Godey’s Lady’s Book</i>, an American magazine for women, was started by a man named Louis A. Godey</p><p>1832-1852 - <i>The Ladies’ Cabinet</i> was created and sold</p><p>1855 - Photolithography is invented</p><p>1870-1927 - <i>The Woman’s Journal</i>, which would eventually merge with <i>The Woman Citizen</i>,  was </p><p>released in Boston</p><p>1885 - <i>Good Housekeeping</i> first published</p><p>1891-1894 - Ringwood’s <i>Afro-American Journal of Fashion </i>Magazines were published and distributed</p><p>1899 - <i>The Saturday Evening Post </i>printed the first full-page illustrated cover</p><p>1916-1925 - <i>Half-Century</i> Magazine was created and distributed</p><p>1920 - Women were granted the right to vote</p><p>1932-1935 - Cipe Pineless works as assistant art director for Conde Nast</p><p>1945 - <i>Ebony</i> Magazine was first published</p><p>1954 - Dorothy Dandridge was the first black woman on a mainstream magazine cover</p><p>1961 - Bea Feitler is hired at <i>Harper’s Bazaar</i></p><p>1965 - Bea Feitler and Ruth Ansel release famous cover of Jean Shrimpton for <i>Harper's Bazaar</i></p><p>1974 - Ruth Ansel becomes the first female art director and the <i>New York Times </i>Magazine</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>2008 AIGA medalist: Gail Anderson</i>. (n.d.). AIGA. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from <a href="https://www.aiga.org/membership-community/aiga-awards/2008-aiga-medalist-gail-anderson">https://www.aiga.org/membership-community/aiga-awards/2008-aiga-medalist-gail-anderson</a></p><p>Burkhalter, N. (1996). Women’s magazines and the suffrage movement: Did they help or hinder the cause? <i>Journal of American Culture</i>, <i>19</i>(2), 13–24. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1542-734x.1996.1902_13.x">https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1542-734x.1996.1902_13.x</a></p><p>Clair, C. (1969). <i>A chronology of printing</i>. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.</p><p>Ed.D., G. M. (2024, March 1). <i>Women’s History Month: The Life of Dorothy Dandridge</i>. Benicia Magazine. <a href="https://www.beniciamagazine.com/womens-history-month-the-life-of-dorothy-dandridge/">https://www.beniciamagazine.com/womens-history-month-the-life-of-dorothy-dandridge/</a></p><p>Ellis, E., Golden, C. P., & Fripp, C. B. (2005). <i>Cipe Pineles: Two remembrances</i>. RIT Cary Graphic Arts Press.</p><p><i>Eye Magazine</i>. (n.d.). Eye Magazine. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from <a href="https://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/reputations-gail-bichler">https://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/reputations-gail-bichler</a></p><p>Ferguson, M. (1983). <i>Forever feminine: Women’s magazines and the cult of femininity</i>. Heinemann Educational Books.</p><p>Forster, L. (2015). <i>Magazine movements: Women’s culture, feminisms and media form</i>. Bloomsbury Publishing USA.</p><p><i>history of publishing</i>. (n.d.). Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/publishing/additional-info">https://www.britannica.com/topic/publishing/additional-info</a></p><p>McCracken, E. (1993). <i>Decoding Women’s Magazines: From mademoiselle to Ms</i>.</p><p>Osei-Hwere, E., & Osei-Hwere, P. (n.d.). <i>History of magazine publishing</i>. Media Communication, Convergence and Literacy. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from <a href="https://oer.pressbooks.pub/mediacommunication/chapter/history-of-magazine-publishing/">https://oer.pressbooks.pub/mediacommunication/chapter/history-of-magazine-publishing/</a></p><p>Rooks, N. M. (2004). <i>Ladies’ pages: African American women’s magazines and the culture that made them</i>. Rutgers University Press.</p><p>Sperandio, A. T., & Bouadana, S. (2010). Ruth Ansel: art direction. <i>Creative Review (London, England)</i>, <i>30</i>(5), 28–36.</p><p><i>The Luupe</i>. (n.d.). Jessica Walsh on Building Her Own Design Studio and Breaking Clichés. Retrieved July 20, 2025, from <a href="https://studio.theluupe.com/blog/jessica-walsh-on-building-her-own-design-studio-and-breaking-cliches">https://studio.theluupe.com/blog/jessica-walsh-on-building-her-own-design-studio-and-breaking-cliches</a></p><p>Thomson, E. M. (1994). Early Graphic Design Periodicals in America. <i>Journal of Design History</i>, <i>7</i>(2), 113–126. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/7.2.113">https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/7.2.113</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Women In Magazines</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton, Draye Swanegan, Michelle Nguyen, Gabbi Warriner</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:21:02</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This podcast episode explores the transformative impact women have had on the magazine industry, from early print to digital formats, through design, editorial leadership, and cultural influence. It highlights pioneering figures—past and present—who redefined magazine aesthetics, expanded representation, and turned magazines into platforms for empowerment and social change.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This podcast episode explores the transformative impact women have had on the magazine industry, from early print to digital formats, through design, editorial leadership, and cultural influence. It highlights pioneering figures—past and present—who redefined magazine aesthetics, expanded representation, and turned magazines into platforms for empowerment and social change.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>gail anderson, graphic design history, gender, magazine design, graphic design, cipe pineles, ruth ansel, bea feitler</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Prostitutes, Penitents, Printers (guest host - Ela Egidy)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Between 1557 and 1561, a group of women at the convent Santa Maria Maddalena alla Giudecca, known as The Convertite on Giudecca island in Venice ran one of the earliest female operated printing presses in early modern Europe. Unlike other women printers of the time – often widows inheriting their husbands’ shops – these women worked collectively from within an enclosed convent. They were not noblewomen or scholars, but former sex workers, concubines and social outcasts, admitted to the convent precisely because they did not meet society’s ideals of chastity. They lived in poverty and they laboured out of necessity. They printed at least twenty-five titles in Latin and the Venetian dialect, including works authored by medieval visionaries and unknown women. I make a case that these women used typography not just to reproduce words in print, but as a way to remake their subjectivity. Their printing practice was physical, spiritual, and deeply embodied. Their work reveals how books are shaped not only by ideas, but by rituals, and bodies. One of their prints still bears the trace of a single strand of hair – caught between type and paper – a quiet archival witness to their presence.</p><p>Almost entirely overlooked in mainstream design history, the Convertite’s press offers a radically different story; one where women laboured under restriction and violence, but still found ways to produce, preserve, and participate. Their story is not one of genius or invention, but of resilience, survival, and the printed works they left behind.</p><p><i>Content warning: this episode contains references to violence, sexual abuse and rape. Please take care while listening.</i></p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1542 – Fourteen women enter the newly founded Convertite convent in Giudecca, Venice</p><p>1551 – Nuns granted permission to profess vows under the Rule of St Augustine</p><p>1557 – Convertite nuns begin operating a printing press; 2 editions printed</p><p>1558 – 5 editions printed</p><p>1559 – 10 editions printed; some sold at the Alla Speranza bookshop in Campo Santa Maria Formosa</p><p>1560 – 7 editions printed </p><p>1561 – 1 edition printed; marks the end of the press’s activity</p><p>1561 (6 Nov) – Rector Pietro Leon da Valcamonica sentenced to death by the Council of Ten for rape and abuse of more than 20 nuns</p><p>1561 (10 Nov) – Valcamonica executed in Piazza San Marco; printing operations cease</p><p>Early 1800s – Monastery suppressed by Napoleon and converted into a military prison</p><p>Mid-1800s – Building transformed into a women’s prison</p><p>2024 – <i>Con i miei occhi</i>, the Holy See’s pavilion for the 60th Venice Biennale, opens to the public at Casa di Reclusione Femminile, the former site of the Convertite convent</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Apostolos-Cappadona, D. (2023). <i>Mary Magdalene: A Visual History</i>. Bloomsbury Publishing. </p><p>Barbieri, E. (2011). Per monialium poenitentium manus”. La tipografia del monastero di Santa Maria Maddalena alla Giudecca, detto delle Convertite (1557-1561). <i>La Bibliofilía</i>, <i>113</i>(3), 303-354. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/26198930">http://www.jstor.org/stable/26198930</a></p><p>Bartlett, R. (1994). Symbolic Meanings of Hair in the Middle Ages. <i>Transactions of the Royal Historical Society</i>, <i>4</i>, 43-60. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2307/3679214">https://doi.org/10.2307/3679214</a></p><p>Brown, P. F. (2004). <i>Private Lives in Renaissance Venice: Art, Architecture, and the Family</i>. Yale University Press. </p><p>Bynum, C. W. (1991). <i>Fragmentation and Redemption: Essays on Gender and the Human Body in Medieval Religion</i>. Zone Books. <a href="https://www.zonebooks.org/books/53-fragmentation-and-redemption-essays-on-gender-and-the-human-body-in-medieval-religion">https://www.zonebooks.org/books/53-fragmentation-and-redemption-essays-on-gender-and-the-human-body-in-medieval-religion</a></p><p>Chambers, D. S., Fletcher, J., Pullan, B. S., & America, R. S. (2001). <i>Venice: A Documentary History, 1450-1630</i>. University of Toronto Press. </p><p>Chow, K.-w. (2007). Reinventing Gutenberg</p><p>Woodblock and Movable-Type Printing in Europe and China. In S. A. Baron, E. N. Lindquist, & E. F. Shevlin (Eds.), <i>Agent of Change</i> (pp. 169-192). University of Massachusetts Press. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt5vk8sv.14">http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt5vk8sv.14</a></p><p>Elliott, D. (2010). Flesh and Spirit: The Female Body. In (pp. 13-46). <a href="https://doi.org/10.1484/M.BCEEC-EB.3.2618">https://doi.org/10.1484/M.BCEEC-EB.3.2618</a></p><p>Feher, M., Naddaff, R., & Tazi, N. (1989). <i>Fragments for a History of the Human Body</i>. Zone. </p><p>Littau, K. (2006). <i>Theories of Reading: Books, Bodies, and Bibliomania</i>. Polity Press. </p><p>McGough, L. (2010). <i>Gender, Sexuality, and Syphilis in Early Modern Venice: The Disease that Came to Stay</i>. Palgrave Macmillan UK. </p><p>McGough, L. J. (1997). <i>"Raised from the devil's jaws": A convent for repentant prostitutes in Venice, 1530-1670</i>. Northwestern University. </p><p>McKenzie, D. F. (1999). <i>Bibliography and the sociology of texts</i>. Cambridge University Press. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511483226">https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511483226</a></p><p>McKenzie, D. F., McDonald, P. D., & Suarez, M. F. (2002). <i>Making Meaning: "Printers of the Mind" and Other Essays</i>. University of Massachusetts Press. </p><p>Moreton, M. N. (2013). "Scritto di bellissima lettera": nuns' book production in fifteenth and sixteenth-century Italy. <a href="https://doi.org/10.17077/etd.l282y0od">https://doi.org/10.17077/etd.l282y0od</a></p><p>Muir, E. (1997). <i>Ritual in Early Modern Europe</i>. Cambridge University Press. </p><p>Peckham, M. (1971). Reflections on the Foundations of Modern Textual Editing. In J. Katz. (Ed.), <i>Proof: The Yearbook of American Bibliographical and Textual Studies 1</i> (pp. 122-155). University of South Carolina Press. </p><p>Richardson, K. (2021). Roma in the Medieval Islamic World. <i>Roma in the Medieval Islamic World</i>, 1-256. </p><p>Vervliet, H. D. L. (2008). <i>The Palaeotypography of the French Renaissance: Selected Papers on Sixteenth-century Typefaces</i>. Brill.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Sep 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Ela Egidy, Spencer Gee)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/prostitutes-penitents-printers-guest-presenter-ela-egidy-rlBd7oCj</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Between 1557 and 1561, a group of women at the convent Santa Maria Maddalena alla Giudecca, known as The Convertite on Giudecca island in Venice ran one of the earliest female operated printing presses in early modern Europe. Unlike other women printers of the time – often widows inheriting their husbands’ shops – these women worked collectively from within an enclosed convent. They were not noblewomen or scholars, but former sex workers, concubines and social outcasts, admitted to the convent precisely because they did not meet society’s ideals of chastity. They lived in poverty and they laboured out of necessity. They printed at least twenty-five titles in Latin and the Venetian dialect, including works authored by medieval visionaries and unknown women. I make a case that these women used typography not just to reproduce words in print, but as a way to remake their subjectivity. Their printing practice was physical, spiritual, and deeply embodied. Their work reveals how books are shaped not only by ideas, but by rituals, and bodies. One of their prints still bears the trace of a single strand of hair – caught between type and paper – a quiet archival witness to their presence.</p><p>Almost entirely overlooked in mainstream design history, the Convertite’s press offers a radically different story; one where women laboured under restriction and violence, but still found ways to produce, preserve, and participate. Their story is not one of genius or invention, but of resilience, survival, and the printed works they left behind.</p><p><i>Content warning: this episode contains references to violence, sexual abuse and rape. Please take care while listening.</i></p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1542 – Fourteen women enter the newly founded Convertite convent in Giudecca, Venice</p><p>1551 – Nuns granted permission to profess vows under the Rule of St Augustine</p><p>1557 – Convertite nuns begin operating a printing press; 2 editions printed</p><p>1558 – 5 editions printed</p><p>1559 – 10 editions printed; some sold at the Alla Speranza bookshop in Campo Santa Maria Formosa</p><p>1560 – 7 editions printed </p><p>1561 – 1 edition printed; marks the end of the press’s activity</p><p>1561 (6 Nov) – Rector Pietro Leon da Valcamonica sentenced to death by the Council of Ten for rape and abuse of more than 20 nuns</p><p>1561 (10 Nov) – Valcamonica executed in Piazza San Marco; printing operations cease</p><p>Early 1800s – Monastery suppressed by Napoleon and converted into a military prison</p><p>Mid-1800s – Building transformed into a women’s prison</p><p>2024 – <i>Con i miei occhi</i>, the Holy See’s pavilion for the 60th Venice Biennale, opens to the public at Casa di Reclusione Femminile, the former site of the Convertite convent</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Apostolos-Cappadona, D. (2023). <i>Mary Magdalene: A Visual History</i>. Bloomsbury Publishing. </p><p>Barbieri, E. (2011). Per monialium poenitentium manus”. La tipografia del monastero di Santa Maria Maddalena alla Giudecca, detto delle Convertite (1557-1561). <i>La Bibliofilía</i>, <i>113</i>(3), 303-354. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/26198930">http://www.jstor.org/stable/26198930</a></p><p>Bartlett, R. (1994). Symbolic Meanings of Hair in the Middle Ages. <i>Transactions of the Royal Historical Society</i>, <i>4</i>, 43-60. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2307/3679214">https://doi.org/10.2307/3679214</a></p><p>Brown, P. F. (2004). <i>Private Lives in Renaissance Venice: Art, Architecture, and the Family</i>. Yale University Press. </p><p>Bynum, C. W. (1991). <i>Fragmentation and Redemption: Essays on Gender and the Human Body in Medieval Religion</i>. Zone Books. <a href="https://www.zonebooks.org/books/53-fragmentation-and-redemption-essays-on-gender-and-the-human-body-in-medieval-religion">https://www.zonebooks.org/books/53-fragmentation-and-redemption-essays-on-gender-and-the-human-body-in-medieval-religion</a></p><p>Chambers, D. S., Fletcher, J., Pullan, B. S., & America, R. S. (2001). <i>Venice: A Documentary History, 1450-1630</i>. University of Toronto Press. </p><p>Chow, K.-w. (2007). Reinventing Gutenberg</p><p>Woodblock and Movable-Type Printing in Europe and China. In S. A. Baron, E. N. Lindquist, & E. F. Shevlin (Eds.), <i>Agent of Change</i> (pp. 169-192). University of Massachusetts Press. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt5vk8sv.14">http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt5vk8sv.14</a></p><p>Elliott, D. (2010). Flesh and Spirit: The Female Body. In (pp. 13-46). <a href="https://doi.org/10.1484/M.BCEEC-EB.3.2618">https://doi.org/10.1484/M.BCEEC-EB.3.2618</a></p><p>Feher, M., Naddaff, R., & Tazi, N. (1989). <i>Fragments for a History of the Human Body</i>. Zone. </p><p>Littau, K. (2006). <i>Theories of Reading: Books, Bodies, and Bibliomania</i>. Polity Press. </p><p>McGough, L. (2010). <i>Gender, Sexuality, and Syphilis in Early Modern Venice: The Disease that Came to Stay</i>. Palgrave Macmillan UK. </p><p>McGough, L. J. (1997). <i>"Raised from the devil's jaws": A convent for repentant prostitutes in Venice, 1530-1670</i>. Northwestern University. </p><p>McKenzie, D. F. (1999). <i>Bibliography and the sociology of texts</i>. Cambridge University Press. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511483226">https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511483226</a></p><p>McKenzie, D. F., McDonald, P. D., & Suarez, M. F. (2002). <i>Making Meaning: "Printers of the Mind" and Other Essays</i>. University of Massachusetts Press. </p><p>Moreton, M. N. (2013). "Scritto di bellissima lettera": nuns' book production in fifteenth and sixteenth-century Italy. <a href="https://doi.org/10.17077/etd.l282y0od">https://doi.org/10.17077/etd.l282y0od</a></p><p>Muir, E. (1997). <i>Ritual in Early Modern Europe</i>. Cambridge University Press. </p><p>Peckham, M. (1971). Reflections on the Foundations of Modern Textual Editing. In J. Katz. (Ed.), <i>Proof: The Yearbook of American Bibliographical and Textual Studies 1</i> (pp. 122-155). University of South Carolina Press. </p><p>Richardson, K. (2021). Roma in the Medieval Islamic World. <i>Roma in the Medieval Islamic World</i>, 1-256. </p><p>Vervliet, H. D. L. (2008). <i>The Palaeotypography of the French Renaissance: Selected Papers on Sixteenth-century Typefaces</i>. Brill.</p>
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      <itunes:title>Prostitutes, Penitents, Printers (guest host - Ela Egidy)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Ela Egidy, Spencer Gee</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:38:12</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Between 1557 and 1561, a group of former sex workers living in a Venetian convent operated one of early modern Europe’s first female-run printing presses, producing at least twenty-five works out of necessity and collective labor. Their overlooked contributions reveal how marginalized women used typography as a physical and spiritual act of self-redefinition, leaving behind a legacy of resilience embedded in the very material of their printed texts.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Between 1557 and 1561, a group of former sex workers living in a Venetian convent operated one of early modern Europe’s first female-run printing presses, producing at least twenty-five works out of necessity and collective labor. Their overlooked contributions reveal how marginalized women used typography as a physical and spiritual act of self-redefinition, leaving behind a legacy of resilience embedded in the very material of their printed texts.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Kustom Kulture</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Kustom Kulture is the name for a subcultural movement from the 1950s and 60s in America. This movement included souping up cars to create hot rods and customizing cars into unique one-of-a-kind creations. These custom cars were an identity for the, usually, men that drove them. This movement has been called a distinctly masculine movement and is said to have died out when Detroit car manufacturers started appropriating elements from both rods and customs into mainstream-designed cars. Yet this unique phenomenon produced many visual elements that are still popular today, including graphics such as flames, lettering, and demented-looking characters often called weirdos. Perhaps the king of the weirdos was a character known as Rat Fink, who represented the antithesis of Mickey Mouse, created by pinstriper, painter, and custom car maker Ed “Big Daddy” Roth. Other custom car legends include George Barris, Von Dutch, Dean Jefferies, and Robert William. While the phenomenon was indeed short-lived it has left a lasting impression on American culture and graphic design. Crab claw Flames, funky lettering, flying eyeballs, and demented characters are still popular today as are offshoots such as lowbrow art or pop-surrealism.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1925 - George Barris born</p><p>1929 - Kenneth Robert Howard, Known as Von Dutch born</p><p>1932 - Ed Roth Born</p><p>1933 - Dean Jeffries born</p><p>1948 - Von Dutch drew his first flying eyeball</p><p>1948 - <i>Hot Rod</i> Magazine is published</p><p>1950s-1960s - Flake Paint popularized</p><p>1953 - Barris Customs designs the Hirohata Merc</p><p>1953 - <i>Car Craft</i> Magazine is published</p><p>1955 - Dean Jeffries paints “Little Bastard” on James Dean’s Porsche Spyder</p><p>1961 - Beatnik Bandit designed by Roth</p><p>1963 - "There Goes (Varoom! Varoom!) That Kandy-Kolored (Thphhhhhh!) Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby (Rahghhh!) Around the Bend (Brummmmmmmmmmmmmmm)…" by Tom Wolfe published in <i>Esquire</i></p><p>1964 - Orbitron designed by Roth</p><p>1965 - Road Agent designed by Roth</p><p>1968 - Beatnik Bandit is cast as a model car (either by Hot Wheels or Revell)</p><p>1970s - Odd Rods stickers designed by B.K. Taylor debut</p><p>1992 - Kenneth Robert Howard, Known as Von Dutch dies</p><p>1994 - Juxtapoz magazine founded (by Robert Williams et al.)</p><p>2001 - Ed Roth Dies</p><p>2013 - Dean Jeffries Dies</p><p>2015 - George Barris dies</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Adamson, G. (2021). <i>Craft: an American History.</i></p><p>Bernsau, T. (2022, February 8). The Once-Lost Hirohata Merc built by Barris Kustom heads to auction. <i>MotorTrend</i>. <a href="https://www.motortrend.com/features/hirohata-merc-mecum-auctions-kissimmee-2022/">https://www.motortrend.com/features/hirohata-merc-mecum-auctions-kissimmee-2022/</a></p><p>Bernsau, T. (2021, August 3). Traditional Hot Rod Flames: Details + Photo Gallery from Back to the ’50s. <i>MotorTrend</i>. <a href="https://www.hotrod.com/features/hot-rod-flames-back-to-the-50s/">https://www.hotrod.com/features/hot-rod-flames-back-to-the-50s/</a></p><p>DeWitt, J. (2002). <i>Cool Cars, High Art: the rise of kustom kulture</i>. </p><p>Ganahl, P. (2003). <i>Ed “Big Daddy” Roth: His Life, Time, Cars, and Art</i>. Cartech.</p><p><a href="https://www.jalopyjournal.com/">https://www.jalopyjournal.com/</a></p><p>Kuersteiner, K. (2012). <i>Ed “Big Daddy” Roth, The Architect of Odd Rods</i>. The Wrapper. <a href="https://thewrapper.tripod.com/RatFink.html">https://thewrapper.tripod.com/RatFink.html</a></p><p><a href="Kustomrama.com">Kustomrama.com</a></p><p>Lowey, I., & Prince, S. (2014). <i>The Graphic </i>Art<i> of the Underground</i>.</p><p>Martinez, R. (2015, December 5). From Pop Surrealism to Lowbrow - Something Got Lost in Translation. <i>Widewalls.</i> <a href="https://www.widewalls.ch/magazine/pop-surrealism-lowbrow">https://www.widewalls.ch/magazine/pop-surrealism-lowbrow</a></p><p>Parliament, I. C. (2008). <i>Kustom Graphics: Hot Rods, Burlesque and Rock “n” Roll.</i> Korero Books.</p><p>Parliament, I. C. (2010). <i>Kustom Graphics 2: Hot Rods, Burlesque and Rock “n” Roll.</i> Korero Books.</p><p>Roth, E., & Kusten, H. (1992). <i>Confessions of a </i>Rat<i> Fink: The Life and Times of Ed “Big Daddy” Roth</i>.</p><p>Surrealism Today. (2023, April 26). The Lowbrow Art Movement: Ultimate Guide to pop Surrealism - Surrealism Today. <a href="https://surrealismtoday.com/lowbrow-art-movement-pop-surrealism/#:~:text=Lowbrow%2C%20also%20known%20as%20pop,evocative%2C%20and%20often%20controversial%20works">https://surrealismtoday.com/lowbrow-art-movement-pop-surrealism/#:~:text=Lowbrow%2C%20also%20known%20as%20pop,evocative%2C%20and%20often%20controversial%20works</a>.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Sep 2025 13:17:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton, Gabbi Warriner, Spencer Gee, Michelle Nguyen, Draye Swanegan)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/kustom-kulture-nO9feRfo</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Kustom Kulture is the name for a subcultural movement from the 1950s and 60s in America. This movement included souping up cars to create hot rods and customizing cars into unique one-of-a-kind creations. These custom cars were an identity for the, usually, men that drove them. This movement has been called a distinctly masculine movement and is said to have died out when Detroit car manufacturers started appropriating elements from both rods and customs into mainstream-designed cars. Yet this unique phenomenon produced many visual elements that are still popular today, including graphics such as flames, lettering, and demented-looking characters often called weirdos. Perhaps the king of the weirdos was a character known as Rat Fink, who represented the antithesis of Mickey Mouse, created by pinstriper, painter, and custom car maker Ed “Big Daddy” Roth. Other custom car legends include George Barris, Von Dutch, Dean Jefferies, and Robert William. While the phenomenon was indeed short-lived it has left a lasting impression on American culture and graphic design. Crab claw Flames, funky lettering, flying eyeballs, and demented characters are still popular today as are offshoots such as lowbrow art or pop-surrealism.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1925 - George Barris born</p><p>1929 - Kenneth Robert Howard, Known as Von Dutch born</p><p>1932 - Ed Roth Born</p><p>1933 - Dean Jeffries born</p><p>1948 - Von Dutch drew his first flying eyeball</p><p>1948 - <i>Hot Rod</i> Magazine is published</p><p>1950s-1960s - Flake Paint popularized</p><p>1953 - Barris Customs designs the Hirohata Merc</p><p>1953 - <i>Car Craft</i> Magazine is published</p><p>1955 - Dean Jeffries paints “Little Bastard” on James Dean’s Porsche Spyder</p><p>1961 - Beatnik Bandit designed by Roth</p><p>1963 - "There Goes (Varoom! Varoom!) That Kandy-Kolored (Thphhhhhh!) Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby (Rahghhh!) Around the Bend (Brummmmmmmmmmmmmmm)…" by Tom Wolfe published in <i>Esquire</i></p><p>1964 - Orbitron designed by Roth</p><p>1965 - Road Agent designed by Roth</p><p>1968 - Beatnik Bandit is cast as a model car (either by Hot Wheels or Revell)</p><p>1970s - Odd Rods stickers designed by B.K. Taylor debut</p><p>1992 - Kenneth Robert Howard, Known as Von Dutch dies</p><p>1994 - Juxtapoz magazine founded (by Robert Williams et al.)</p><p>2001 - Ed Roth Dies</p><p>2013 - Dean Jeffries Dies</p><p>2015 - George Barris dies</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Adamson, G. (2021). <i>Craft: an American History.</i></p><p>Bernsau, T. (2022, February 8). The Once-Lost Hirohata Merc built by Barris Kustom heads to auction. <i>MotorTrend</i>. <a href="https://www.motortrend.com/features/hirohata-merc-mecum-auctions-kissimmee-2022/">https://www.motortrend.com/features/hirohata-merc-mecum-auctions-kissimmee-2022/</a></p><p>Bernsau, T. (2021, August 3). Traditional Hot Rod Flames: Details + Photo Gallery from Back to the ’50s. <i>MotorTrend</i>. <a href="https://www.hotrod.com/features/hot-rod-flames-back-to-the-50s/">https://www.hotrod.com/features/hot-rod-flames-back-to-the-50s/</a></p><p>DeWitt, J. (2002). <i>Cool Cars, High Art: the rise of kustom kulture</i>. </p><p>Ganahl, P. (2003). <i>Ed “Big Daddy” Roth: His Life, Time, Cars, and Art</i>. Cartech.</p><p><a href="https://www.jalopyjournal.com/">https://www.jalopyjournal.com/</a></p><p>Kuersteiner, K. (2012). <i>Ed “Big Daddy” Roth, The Architect of Odd Rods</i>. The Wrapper. <a href="https://thewrapper.tripod.com/RatFink.html">https://thewrapper.tripod.com/RatFink.html</a></p><p><a href="Kustomrama.com">Kustomrama.com</a></p><p>Lowey, I., & Prince, S. (2014). <i>The Graphic </i>Art<i> of the Underground</i>.</p><p>Martinez, R. (2015, December 5). From Pop Surrealism to Lowbrow - Something Got Lost in Translation. <i>Widewalls.</i> <a href="https://www.widewalls.ch/magazine/pop-surrealism-lowbrow">https://www.widewalls.ch/magazine/pop-surrealism-lowbrow</a></p><p>Parliament, I. C. (2008). <i>Kustom Graphics: Hot Rods, Burlesque and Rock “n” Roll.</i> Korero Books.</p><p>Parliament, I. C. (2010). <i>Kustom Graphics 2: Hot Rods, Burlesque and Rock “n” Roll.</i> Korero Books.</p><p>Roth, E., & Kusten, H. (1992). <i>Confessions of a </i>Rat<i> Fink: The Life and Times of Ed “Big Daddy” Roth</i>.</p><p>Surrealism Today. (2023, April 26). The Lowbrow Art Movement: Ultimate Guide to pop Surrealism - Surrealism Today. <a href="https://surrealismtoday.com/lowbrow-art-movement-pop-surrealism/#:~:text=Lowbrow%2C%20also%20known%20as%20pop,evocative%2C%20and%20often%20controversial%20works">https://surrealismtoday.com/lowbrow-art-movement-pop-surrealism/#:~:text=Lowbrow%2C%20also%20known%20as%20pop,evocative%2C%20and%20often%20controversial%20works</a>.</p>
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      <itunes:title>Kustom Kulture</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton, Gabbi Warriner, Spencer Gee, Michelle Nguyen, Draye Swanegan</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:26:17</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Kustom Kulture was a 1950s–60s American subculture centered around hot rods and custom cars, reflecting a distinctly masculine identity and influencing mainstream car design. Though short-lived, it left a lasting legacy on American visual culture, with iconic graphics like flames, flying eyeballs, and characters like Rat Fink still influencing lowbrow art and pop-surrealism today.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Kustom Kulture was a 1950s–60s American subculture centered around hot rods and custom cars, reflecting a distinctly masculine identity and influencing mainstream car design. Though short-lived, it left a lasting legacy on American visual culture, with iconic graphics like flames, flying eyeballs, and characters like Rat Fink still influencing lowbrow art and pop-surrealism today.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>george barris, graphic design history, von dutch, ed roth, flames, hirohata merc, graphic design, ed &quot;big daddy&quot; roth, rat fink, kustom kulture, old school flames, flying eyeball</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Jackie Ormes</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Jackie Ormes, an African-American cartoonist from Pennsylvania, was born on August 1st, 1911. Her father, William Winfield Jackson, owned and operated a printing business, and her mother, Mary Brown Jackson, was a homemaker.  As a teenager, Jackie published her first comics in her school’s yearbook as Monongahela High School’s Yearbook arts editor.  After graduating, she worked as a proofreader for the Pittsburgh Courier, an African American newspaper. This is also where she starts her first comic strip with “Torchy Brown in Dixie to Harlem.” After being with the Pittsburgh Courier, she moved to Chicago and became a journalist and special assignment reporter. She would later return to the Courier and make her most well-known comic strip, “Patty Jo `n’ Ginger. The strip was about a stylish and sarcastic little girl who offered commentary to political and sociological commentary to her older sister, Ginger. The comic strip was so popular that Ormes created and produced the Patty Jo dolls. The dolls were the first African American girl dolls to include an extensive wardrobe and break the norms of African American girl dolls being depicted from racist stereotypes. Jackie Ormes would also create her last comic strip, Torchy Brown, Heartbeats, for the Pittsburgh Courier. Toward the end of her career, she dedicated her time to giving back to the Chicago community and painting murals and portraits. Jackie Ormes's career is a trailblazer in vocalizing social and political injustices through the lens of being an African American woman.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1911 – Born Zelda Jackie Jackson in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania<br />1929-1930 – Arts Editor for the Monogahela High School Yearbook<br />1930 – Graduated from Monongahela High School<br />1930-1937 – Worked for the Pittsburgh Courier<br />1937-1938 – Torchy Brown in Dixie to Harlem comic strip<br />1942-1945 – Worked for the Chicago Defender<br />1945-1945 – Candy comic strip<br />1945-1956 – Went back to work for the Pittsburgh Courier<br />1945-1956 – Patty Jo ‘n” Ginger comic strip<br />1947-1949 – Patty Jo doll series<br />1948-1958 – Investigated by the FBI<br />1950-1954 – Torchy Brown, Heartbeats comic strip<br />1956 – Retired from cartooning<br />1985 – Died in Chicago<br />2014 – Inducted into the National Association of Black Journalists<br />2018 – Inducted into the Will Eisner Comic Industry Hall of Fame</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Ashawnta_Jackson. (2022). The groundbreaking work of Jackie Ormes. <i>JSTOR Daily</i>. <a href="https://daily.jstor.org/the-groundbreaking-work-of-jackie-ormes/">https://daily.jstor.org/the-groundbreaking-work-of-jackie-ormes/</a></p><p>Blackartstory.org Editors. (2020, September 1). Profile: Jackie Ormes (1911-1985). <i>Black Art Story</i>. <a href="https://blackartstory.org/2020/09/01/profile-jackie-ormes-1911-1985/">https://blackartstory.org/2020/09/01/profile-jackie-ormes-1911-1985/</a></p><p>Jackie Ormes: The First African American Woman Cartoonist - biography from University of Michigan Press. (n.d.). <a href="https://www.jackieormes.com/">https://www.jackieormes.com/</a></p><p>Jenkins, E. (2009). [Review of JACKIE ORMES: The First African American Woman Cartoonist, by N. Goldstein]. <i>American Studies</i>, 50(1/2), 218–219. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/41057260">http://www.jstor.org/stable/41057260</a></p><p>McGurk, C. (2013, February 22). Found in the collection: Jackie Ormes! (1911-1985) | Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum Blog. <a href="https://library.osu.edu/site/cartoons/2013/02/22/found-in-the-collection-jackie-ormes-1911-1985/">https://library.osu.edu/site/cartoons/2013/02/22/found-in-the-collection-jackie-ormes-1911-1985/</a></p><p>Norris, K. (2008, July 29). Comics Crusader: Remembering Jackie Ormes. <i>NPR</i>. <a href="https://www.npr.org/2008/07/29/93029000/comics-crusader-remembering-jackie-ormes">https://www.npr.org/2008/07/29/93029000/comics-crusader-remembering-jackie-ormes</a></p><p>Onion, R. (2013, August 13). Fifty Years Before Boondocks There Was Patty-Jo ‘n’ Ginger. <i>Slate Magazine</i>. <a href="https://slate.com/human-interest/2013/08/patty-jo-n-ginger-the-ground-breaking-african-american-cartoon-of-the-1940s.html">https://slate.com/human-interest/2013/08/patty-jo-n-ginger-the-ground-breaking-african-american-cartoon-of-the-1940s.html</a></p><p>Seaman, D. (2008, February 1). Jackie Ormes: The First African American Woman Cartoonist. <i>Booklist</i>, 104(11), 22. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A174747902/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=summon&xid=fe888f06">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A174747902/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=summon&xid=fe888f06</a></p><p>Teutsch, M. (2018, January 8). Cartoonist Jackie Ormes’ commentary on Black life. <i>AAIHS - African American Intellectual History Society</i>. <a href="https://www.aaihs.org/cartoonist-jackie-ormes-commentary-on-black-life/">https://www.aaihs.org/cartoonist-jackie-ormes-commentary-on-black-life/</a></p><p>Woodford, J. (2208) Review of Jackie Ormes: A Great Cartoonist Finally Gets Her Due, by Nancy Goldstein. <i>The Black Scholar</i> 38, no. 2/3 , 54–60. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/41069980">http://www.jstor.org/stable/41069980</a>.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 11 Sep 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Draye Swanegan, Michelle Nguyen, Spencer Gee, Gabbi Warriner, Mandy Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/jackie-ormes-1z59mOs9</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Jackie Ormes, an African-American cartoonist from Pennsylvania, was born on August 1st, 1911. Her father, William Winfield Jackson, owned and operated a printing business, and her mother, Mary Brown Jackson, was a homemaker.  As a teenager, Jackie published her first comics in her school’s yearbook as Monongahela High School’s Yearbook arts editor.  After graduating, she worked as a proofreader for the Pittsburgh Courier, an African American newspaper. This is also where she starts her first comic strip with “Torchy Brown in Dixie to Harlem.” After being with the Pittsburgh Courier, she moved to Chicago and became a journalist and special assignment reporter. She would later return to the Courier and make her most well-known comic strip, “Patty Jo `n’ Ginger. The strip was about a stylish and sarcastic little girl who offered commentary to political and sociological commentary to her older sister, Ginger. The comic strip was so popular that Ormes created and produced the Patty Jo dolls. The dolls were the first African American girl dolls to include an extensive wardrobe and break the norms of African American girl dolls being depicted from racist stereotypes. Jackie Ormes would also create her last comic strip, Torchy Brown, Heartbeats, for the Pittsburgh Courier. Toward the end of her career, she dedicated her time to giving back to the Chicago community and painting murals and portraits. Jackie Ormes's career is a trailblazer in vocalizing social and political injustices through the lens of being an African American woman.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1911 – Born Zelda Jackie Jackson in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania<br />1929-1930 – Arts Editor for the Monogahela High School Yearbook<br />1930 – Graduated from Monongahela High School<br />1930-1937 – Worked for the Pittsburgh Courier<br />1937-1938 – Torchy Brown in Dixie to Harlem comic strip<br />1942-1945 – Worked for the Chicago Defender<br />1945-1945 – Candy comic strip<br />1945-1956 – Went back to work for the Pittsburgh Courier<br />1945-1956 – Patty Jo ‘n” Ginger comic strip<br />1947-1949 – Patty Jo doll series<br />1948-1958 – Investigated by the FBI<br />1950-1954 – Torchy Brown, Heartbeats comic strip<br />1956 – Retired from cartooning<br />1985 – Died in Chicago<br />2014 – Inducted into the National Association of Black Journalists<br />2018 – Inducted into the Will Eisner Comic Industry Hall of Fame</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Ashawnta_Jackson. (2022). The groundbreaking work of Jackie Ormes. <i>JSTOR Daily</i>. <a href="https://daily.jstor.org/the-groundbreaking-work-of-jackie-ormes/">https://daily.jstor.org/the-groundbreaking-work-of-jackie-ormes/</a></p><p>Blackartstory.org Editors. (2020, September 1). Profile: Jackie Ormes (1911-1985). <i>Black Art Story</i>. <a href="https://blackartstory.org/2020/09/01/profile-jackie-ormes-1911-1985/">https://blackartstory.org/2020/09/01/profile-jackie-ormes-1911-1985/</a></p><p>Jackie Ormes: The First African American Woman Cartoonist - biography from University of Michigan Press. (n.d.). <a href="https://www.jackieormes.com/">https://www.jackieormes.com/</a></p><p>Jenkins, E. (2009). [Review of JACKIE ORMES: The First African American Woman Cartoonist, by N. Goldstein]. <i>American Studies</i>, 50(1/2), 218–219. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/41057260">http://www.jstor.org/stable/41057260</a></p><p>McGurk, C. (2013, February 22). Found in the collection: Jackie Ormes! (1911-1985) | Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum Blog. <a href="https://library.osu.edu/site/cartoons/2013/02/22/found-in-the-collection-jackie-ormes-1911-1985/">https://library.osu.edu/site/cartoons/2013/02/22/found-in-the-collection-jackie-ormes-1911-1985/</a></p><p>Norris, K. (2008, July 29). Comics Crusader: Remembering Jackie Ormes. <i>NPR</i>. <a href="https://www.npr.org/2008/07/29/93029000/comics-crusader-remembering-jackie-ormes">https://www.npr.org/2008/07/29/93029000/comics-crusader-remembering-jackie-ormes</a></p><p>Onion, R. (2013, August 13). Fifty Years Before Boondocks There Was Patty-Jo ‘n’ Ginger. <i>Slate Magazine</i>. <a href="https://slate.com/human-interest/2013/08/patty-jo-n-ginger-the-ground-breaking-african-american-cartoon-of-the-1940s.html">https://slate.com/human-interest/2013/08/patty-jo-n-ginger-the-ground-breaking-african-american-cartoon-of-the-1940s.html</a></p><p>Seaman, D. (2008, February 1). Jackie Ormes: The First African American Woman Cartoonist. <i>Booklist</i>, 104(11), 22. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A174747902/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=summon&xid=fe888f06">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A174747902/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=summon&xid=fe888f06</a></p><p>Teutsch, M. (2018, January 8). Cartoonist Jackie Ormes’ commentary on Black life. <i>AAIHS - African American Intellectual History Society</i>. <a href="https://www.aaihs.org/cartoonist-jackie-ormes-commentary-on-black-life/">https://www.aaihs.org/cartoonist-jackie-ormes-commentary-on-black-life/</a></p><p>Woodford, J. (2208) Review of Jackie Ormes: A Great Cartoonist Finally Gets Her Due, by Nancy Goldstein. <i>The Black Scholar</i> 38, no. 2/3 , 54–60. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/41069980">http://www.jstor.org/stable/41069980</a>.</p>
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      <itunes:title>Jackie Ormes</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Draye Swanegan, Michelle Nguyen, Spencer Gee, Gabbi Warriner, Mandy Horton</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:22:24</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Jackie Ormes was a pioneering African-American cartoonist whose groundbreaking comic strips, like Patty Jo ’n’ Ginger and Torchy Brown, tackled social and political issues with wit and style. She also broke barriers by creating the first African-American girl dolls with diverse wardrobes, challenging racist stereotypes and empowering Black representation in media.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Jackie Ormes was a pioneering African-American cartoonist whose groundbreaking comic strips, like Patty Jo ’n’ Ginger and Torchy Brown, tackled social and political issues with wit and style. She also broke barriers by creating the first African-American girl dolls with diverse wardrobes, challenging racist stereotypes and empowering Black representation in media.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Tove Jansson</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Tove Jansson (1914–2001) was a pioneering Finnish artist whose multifaceted career spanned painting, illustration, cartooning, and literature. Best known internationally for her creation of the <i>Moomins</i>, whimsical troll-like characters who first appeared in books and later in globally syndicated comic strips, Jansson’s legacy bridges the divide between “high” fine art and “low” commercial illustration. Born into an artistic family, Jansson was deeply influenced by her mother, a prolific illustrator and graphic designer. Her early work, particularly for the satirical magazine <i>Garm</i>, sharpened her skills in political commentary and visual storytelling.</p><p>Despite Finland’s progressive stance on women’s rights, Jansson navigated a male-dominated art world and struggled with societal constraints around gender, sexuality, and artistic legitimacy. Her Moomin stories subtly coded themes of queer identity, feminist resistance, and nonconformity, often drawing from her own relationships and experiences. Characters like Thingumy and Bob, Too-ticky, and Sorry-oo represent fluid identities and hidden desires, reflecting Jansson’s own coded expressions of love and selfhood during a time when homosexuality was criminalized.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1914 – Born August 9th, in Helsinki Finland<br />1928 – Wrote and illustrated her first book<br />1929 to 1953 – Tove Jansson worked as an illustrator and cartoonist for the Swedish-language satirical magazine Garm<br />1930–1933 – studied at the University College of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm (Tekniska Konsthantverksskolan)<br />1933–1937 – studied at the Graphic School of the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts<br />1935 – starts making Moomintroll paintings<br />1938 – studied at L'École d'Adrien Holy and L'École des Beaux-Arts in Paris<br />1943 – first solo exhibit; first Moomin-like character featured in Garm Magazine<br />1945 – Her first story, The Moomins and the Great Flood, is published<br />1952 – Awarded Svenska Dagbladet’s Literary Prize<br />1954 – The world’s largest newspaper – London’s The Evening News – starts to publish the Moomin comic strip.<br />1958 – Awarded Prize by the Swedish Literature Society in Finland<br />1959 – The first Moomin theatre play, Moomins on Stage, premieres; The first Moomin television series, a puppet animation, is aired in Germany<br />1966 – She received the Hans Christen Andersen Award<br />1969 – The Swedish TV produces a series called Mumintrollet; Fuji TV Zuiyo Enterprises produces an animated Moomin series in Japan<br />1969-1973 – Serves on the board of Finnish Authors’ Society<br />1970 – the last Moomin novel, Moominvalley in November, is published<br />1974 – The Moomin Opera premieres in Helsinki<br />1976 – Awarded Polish Order of the Smile<br />1980 – Awarded “Dunce’s Hat” by the Finnish Comic Strip Society (together with her brother Lars)<br />1993 – The theme park Moominworld opens its doors in Naantali, Finland.<br />2001 – Died June 27th<br />2017 – The world’s only purpose-built Moomin Museum with original artwork opens at Tampere Hall<br />2019 – The new animated Moominvalley TV series premieres worldwide, blending animation techniques</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Classon Frangos, M. (2021). Feminist and queer aesthetics in Tove Jansson’s Moomin comics. In K. Beers Fägersten, A. Nordenstam, L. Romu, & M. Wallin Wictorin (Eds.), <i>Comic Art and Feminism in the Baltic Sea Region: Transnational Perspectives</i> (1st ed., Vol. 1) (pp. 151-166). Routledge. <a href="https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003039402">https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003039402</a></p><p>Bergroth, Bardy, Aleksi, Reuter, Andrea, & Helsinki filmi , production company. (2020). <i>Tove</i>.</p><p>Forth, J. (2023, June 27). <i>The secret message in Mymble’s name – queer themes in Tove Jansson’s life and work part 2</i>. Moomin. <a href="https://www.moomin.com/en/blog/the-secret-message-in-mymbles-name-queer-themes-in-tove-janssons-life-and-work-part-2/#b9a205d3">https://www.moomin.com/en/blog/the-secret-message-in-mymbles-name-queer-themes-in-tove-janssons-life-and-work-part-2/#b9a205d3</a></p><p>Gravett, P. (2022). <i>Tove Jansson: The Illustrators.</i> Thames & Hudson.</p><p>Hahn, D. (Ed.). (2015). Moomin family. In <i>The Oxford Companion to Children’s Literature</i> (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press, Inc. <a href="https://search.credoreference.com/articles/Qm9va0FydGljbGU6NDgwNDMxNQ==?aid=103048">https://search.credoreference.com/articles/Qm9va0FydGljbGU6NDgwNDMxNQ==?aid=103048</a></p><p>James, E. (2020). Tove Jansson’s Genius: The radical imagination that built the visionary world of the Moomins. <i>The Yale Review</i>, 108(2), 192–201. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1111/yrev.13648">https://doi.org/10.1111/yrev.13648</a></p><p>Jones, W. G. (1984). <i>Tove Jansson</i>. Boston : Twayne Publishers.</p><p>Karjalainen, T. (2014). <i>Tove Jansson: Work and Love</i>. Particular Books.</p><p>Kira. (2025, June 24). <i>Tove Jansson’s gay legacy – queer content on Moomin.com</i>. Moomin. <a href="https://www.moomin.com/en/blog/tove-janssons-gay-legacy/#3433721a">https://www.moomin.com/en/blog/tove-janssons-gay-legacy/#3433721a</a></p><p>Nikolajeva, M. (2015). jansson, tove (1914–2001). In J. Zipes (Ed.), <i>The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales</i> (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press, Inc. <a href="https://search.credoreference.com/articles/Qm9va0FydGljbGU6NDgxMDQ2Mw==?aid=103048">https://search.credoreference.com/articles/Qm9va0FydGljbGU6NDgxMDQ2Mw==?aid=103048</a></p><p>Salisbury, M. (2017). <i>The illustrated dust jacket</i>, 1920-1970. Thames & Hudson.</p><p>Sicardi, A. (2019). <i>Queer Heroes: Meet 53 LGBTQ Heroes From Past and Present!</i> Wide Eyed Editions.</p><p>Stonewall. (2024, September 25). <i>A short history of the word ‘bisexuality.’</i> <a href="https://stonewall.org.uk/about-us/news/short-history-word-bisexuality#:~:text=In%201859%2C%20anatomist%20Robert%20Bentley,sometimes%20in%20the%20same%20texts">https://stonewall.org.uk/about-us/news/short-history-word-bisexuality#:~:text=In%201859%2C%20anatomist%20Robert%20Bentley,sometimes%20in%20the%20same%20texts</a>.</p><p>Tove Jansson. (2024, April 12). <i>Tove Jansson • Author and artist who created the Moomin</i>s. <a href="https://tovejansson.com/">https://tovejansson.com/</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 4 Sep 2025 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Michelle Nguyen, Draye Swanegan, Gabbi Warriner, Mandy Horton, Kayla Sinclair, Spencer Gee)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/tove-jansson-wjjS2QL7</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tove Jansson (1914–2001) was a pioneering Finnish artist whose multifaceted career spanned painting, illustration, cartooning, and literature. Best known internationally for her creation of the <i>Moomins</i>, whimsical troll-like characters who first appeared in books and later in globally syndicated comic strips, Jansson’s legacy bridges the divide between “high” fine art and “low” commercial illustration. Born into an artistic family, Jansson was deeply influenced by her mother, a prolific illustrator and graphic designer. Her early work, particularly for the satirical magazine <i>Garm</i>, sharpened her skills in political commentary and visual storytelling.</p><p>Despite Finland’s progressive stance on women’s rights, Jansson navigated a male-dominated art world and struggled with societal constraints around gender, sexuality, and artistic legitimacy. Her Moomin stories subtly coded themes of queer identity, feminist resistance, and nonconformity, often drawing from her own relationships and experiences. Characters like Thingumy and Bob, Too-ticky, and Sorry-oo represent fluid identities and hidden desires, reflecting Jansson’s own coded expressions of love and selfhood during a time when homosexuality was criminalized.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1914 – Born August 9th, in Helsinki Finland<br />1928 – Wrote and illustrated her first book<br />1929 to 1953 – Tove Jansson worked as an illustrator and cartoonist for the Swedish-language satirical magazine Garm<br />1930–1933 – studied at the University College of Arts, Crafts and Design in Stockholm (Tekniska Konsthantverksskolan)<br />1933–1937 – studied at the Graphic School of the Finnish Academy of Fine Arts<br />1935 – starts making Moomintroll paintings<br />1938 – studied at L'École d'Adrien Holy and L'École des Beaux-Arts in Paris<br />1943 – first solo exhibit; first Moomin-like character featured in Garm Magazine<br />1945 – Her first story, The Moomins and the Great Flood, is published<br />1952 – Awarded Svenska Dagbladet’s Literary Prize<br />1954 – The world’s largest newspaper – London’s The Evening News – starts to publish the Moomin comic strip.<br />1958 – Awarded Prize by the Swedish Literature Society in Finland<br />1959 – The first Moomin theatre play, Moomins on Stage, premieres; The first Moomin television series, a puppet animation, is aired in Germany<br />1966 – She received the Hans Christen Andersen Award<br />1969 – The Swedish TV produces a series called Mumintrollet; Fuji TV Zuiyo Enterprises produces an animated Moomin series in Japan<br />1969-1973 – Serves on the board of Finnish Authors’ Society<br />1970 – the last Moomin novel, Moominvalley in November, is published<br />1974 – The Moomin Opera premieres in Helsinki<br />1976 – Awarded Polish Order of the Smile<br />1980 – Awarded “Dunce’s Hat” by the Finnish Comic Strip Society (together with her brother Lars)<br />1993 – The theme park Moominworld opens its doors in Naantali, Finland.<br />2001 – Died June 27th<br />2017 – The world’s only purpose-built Moomin Museum with original artwork opens at Tampere Hall<br />2019 – The new animated Moominvalley TV series premieres worldwide, blending animation techniques</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Classon Frangos, M. (2021). Feminist and queer aesthetics in Tove Jansson’s Moomin comics. In K. Beers Fägersten, A. Nordenstam, L. Romu, & M. Wallin Wictorin (Eds.), <i>Comic Art and Feminism in the Baltic Sea Region: Transnational Perspectives</i> (1st ed., Vol. 1) (pp. 151-166). Routledge. <a href="https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003039402">https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003039402</a></p><p>Bergroth, Bardy, Aleksi, Reuter, Andrea, & Helsinki filmi , production company. (2020). <i>Tove</i>.</p><p>Forth, J. (2023, June 27). <i>The secret message in Mymble’s name – queer themes in Tove Jansson’s life and work part 2</i>. Moomin. <a href="https://www.moomin.com/en/blog/the-secret-message-in-mymbles-name-queer-themes-in-tove-janssons-life-and-work-part-2/#b9a205d3">https://www.moomin.com/en/blog/the-secret-message-in-mymbles-name-queer-themes-in-tove-janssons-life-and-work-part-2/#b9a205d3</a></p><p>Gravett, P. (2022). <i>Tove Jansson: The Illustrators.</i> Thames & Hudson.</p><p>Hahn, D. (Ed.). (2015). Moomin family. In <i>The Oxford Companion to Children’s Literature</i> (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press, Inc. <a href="https://search.credoreference.com/articles/Qm9va0FydGljbGU6NDgwNDMxNQ==?aid=103048">https://search.credoreference.com/articles/Qm9va0FydGljbGU6NDgwNDMxNQ==?aid=103048</a></p><p>James, E. (2020). Tove Jansson’s Genius: The radical imagination that built the visionary world of the Moomins. <i>The Yale Review</i>, 108(2), 192–201. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1111/yrev.13648">https://doi.org/10.1111/yrev.13648</a></p><p>Jones, W. G. (1984). <i>Tove Jansson</i>. Boston : Twayne Publishers.</p><p>Karjalainen, T. (2014). <i>Tove Jansson: Work and Love</i>. Particular Books.</p><p>Kira. (2025, June 24). <i>Tove Jansson’s gay legacy – queer content on Moomin.com</i>. Moomin. <a href="https://www.moomin.com/en/blog/tove-janssons-gay-legacy/#3433721a">https://www.moomin.com/en/blog/tove-janssons-gay-legacy/#3433721a</a></p><p>Nikolajeva, M. (2015). jansson, tove (1914–2001). In J. Zipes (Ed.), <i>The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales</i> (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press, Inc. <a href="https://search.credoreference.com/articles/Qm9va0FydGljbGU6NDgxMDQ2Mw==?aid=103048">https://search.credoreference.com/articles/Qm9va0FydGljbGU6NDgxMDQ2Mw==?aid=103048</a></p><p>Salisbury, M. (2017). <i>The illustrated dust jacket</i>, 1920-1970. Thames & Hudson.</p><p>Sicardi, A. (2019). <i>Queer Heroes: Meet 53 LGBTQ Heroes From Past and Present!</i> Wide Eyed Editions.</p><p>Stonewall. (2024, September 25). <i>A short history of the word ‘bisexuality.’</i> <a href="https://stonewall.org.uk/about-us/news/short-history-word-bisexuality#:~:text=In%201859%2C%20anatomist%20Robert%20Bentley,sometimes%20in%20the%20same%20texts">https://stonewall.org.uk/about-us/news/short-history-word-bisexuality#:~:text=In%201859%2C%20anatomist%20Robert%20Bentley,sometimes%20in%20the%20same%20texts</a>.</p><p>Tove Jansson. (2024, April 12). <i>Tove Jansson • Author and artist who created the Moomin</i>s. <a href="https://tovejansson.com/">https://tovejansson.com/</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="20144547" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/c4b77372-66aa-4eec-937d-4a9c1d8aaeaa/audio/f3af1f08-eedd-42aa-b1ce-d811074ecb33/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Tove Jansson</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Michelle Nguyen, Draye Swanegan, Gabbi Warriner, Mandy Horton, Kayla Sinclair, Spencer Gee</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/5e040237-f7e1-4046-908b-becbb0a8fe08/3000x3000/incomplet-season5-ep1.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:20:58</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Tove Jansson was a groundbreaking Finnish artist and writer best known for creating the Moomins, through which she blended whimsical storytelling with subtle themes of queer identity, feminism, and nonconformity. Her work challenged societal norms and bridged the gap between fine art and popular illustration, reflecting her personal experiences and artistic vision.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Tove Jansson was a groundbreaking Finnish artist and writer best known for creating the Moomins, through which she blended whimsical storytelling with subtle themes of queer identity, feminism, and nonconformity. Her work challenged societal norms and bridged the gap between fine art and popular illustration, reflecting her personal experiences and artistic vision.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>queer history, tove jansson, graphic design history, graphic design, moomintroll, cartoon, moomins</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>5</itunes:season>
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      <title>Halloween Special! Part 1</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>REFERENCES</p><p>Tucker, I. (Ed.)(2018). <i>FF DOT: The pixel art of final fantasy</i>. Dark Horse Books. </p><p>Hendrix, G. (2017). <i>Paperbacks from hell: The twisted history of ‘70s and ‘80s horror fiction</i>. Quirk Books.</p><p>Chatziioannou, A. (2023). <i>From ants to zombies: Six decades of video game horror</i>. Bitmap Books.</p><p>Gianni, G. (2017). <i>Gary gianni’s monstermen and other scary stories</i>. Dark Horse Books.</p><p>Kochman, C. (Ed.)(2012). <i>Mars attacks</i>. Abrams ComicArts.</p><p>Vallejo, D. (2000). <i>The art of rowena</i>. Paper Tiger.</p><p>Voger, M. (2015). Monster mash: <i>The creepy, kooky monster craze in America 1957-1972</i>. TwoMorrows Publishing.</p><p>Jones, Stephen (2015). <i>The art of horror: An illustrated history</i>. Applause.</p><p>Allie, S. (Ed.)(2004). <i>B.p.r.d.: The soul of venice and other stories</i>. Dark Horse Comics.</p><p>Saunders, D. (2009). Rudolph belarski (1900-1983). <i>Illustration, 7</i>(27), 8–61.</p><p>McVittie, A. (2014).<i> The art of alien:isolation</i>. Titan Books.</p><p>Sadowski,G. (Ed.)(2017). <i>Four color fear: Forgotten horror comics of the 1950s</i>. Fantagraphics Books</p><p>Nourmand, T. & Marsh, G. (Eds.) (2006). <i>Film posters: Horror</i>. Evergreen.</p><p>Hodge, T. (2015). <i>Vhs video cover art</i>. Schiffer Publishing, Ltd.</p><p>Weist, J. (2002). <i>Bradbury: An illustrated life</i>. William Morrow</p><p>Boyreau, J. (2002). <i>Trash: The graphic genius of exploitation movie posters</i>. Chronicle Books.</p><p>Salisbury, M. (2014). <i>Alien the archive: The ultimate guide to the classic movies</i>. TitanBooks.</p><p>Ferris, E. (2016). <i>My favorite thing is monsters: Book one</i>. Fantagraphics Books.</p><p>Morton, R. (2005). <i>King kong, the history of a movie icon: from fay wray to peter jackson</i>. Applause Theatre & Cinema Books.</p><p>Landis, J. (2011). Monsters in the movies: 100 years of cinematic nightmares. Dorling Kindersley Limited.</p><p>Ortiz, L. (2011). Jack Gaughan. <i>Illustration, 9</i>(33), 2–27.</p><p>(2009). <i>Deco devolution: The art of the bioshock 2</i>. 2k publishing.</p><p>Humphreys, G. (2019). <i>Hung, drawn and executed: The horror art of graham humphreys</i>. Korero Press Ltd.</p><p>Gammil, K. & Spurlock, J.D. (2005). <i>Famous monster movie art of basil gogos</i>. Vanguard</p><p>Tucker, I. (Ed.) (2021). <i>The art of arkham horror</i>. Dark Horse Books.</p><p>D’Agostino, N. (2020). <i>Sex and horror volume four</i>. Korero Press.</p><p>Hulse, E. (2021). <i>The art of pulp fiction: An illustrated history of vintage paperbacks</i>. Elephant Book Company</p><p>Rodriguez, S. (2021). <i>The art of goosebumps</i>. Dynamite.</p><p>Nolen-Weathington, E. (2010). <i>Modern masters volume twenty-four: Guy davis</i>. TwoMorrows Publishing</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 14 Nov 2024 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/halloween-special-part-1-3bouZzsi</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>REFERENCES</p><p>Tucker, I. (Ed.)(2018). <i>FF DOT: The pixel art of final fantasy</i>. Dark Horse Books. </p><p>Hendrix, G. (2017). <i>Paperbacks from hell: The twisted history of ‘70s and ‘80s horror fiction</i>. Quirk Books.</p><p>Chatziioannou, A. (2023). <i>From ants to zombies: Six decades of video game horror</i>. Bitmap Books.</p><p>Gianni, G. (2017). <i>Gary gianni’s monstermen and other scary stories</i>. Dark Horse Books.</p><p>Kochman, C. (Ed.)(2012). <i>Mars attacks</i>. Abrams ComicArts.</p><p>Vallejo, D. (2000). <i>The art of rowena</i>. Paper Tiger.</p><p>Voger, M. (2015). Monster mash: <i>The creepy, kooky monster craze in America 1957-1972</i>. TwoMorrows Publishing.</p><p>Jones, Stephen (2015). <i>The art of horror: An illustrated history</i>. Applause.</p><p>Allie, S. (Ed.)(2004). <i>B.p.r.d.: The soul of venice and other stories</i>. Dark Horse Comics.</p><p>Saunders, D. (2009). Rudolph belarski (1900-1983). <i>Illustration, 7</i>(27), 8–61.</p><p>McVittie, A. (2014).<i> The art of alien:isolation</i>. Titan Books.</p><p>Sadowski,G. (Ed.)(2017). <i>Four color fear: Forgotten horror comics of the 1950s</i>. Fantagraphics Books</p><p>Nourmand, T. & Marsh, G. (Eds.) (2006). <i>Film posters: Horror</i>. Evergreen.</p><p>Hodge, T. (2015). <i>Vhs video cover art</i>. Schiffer Publishing, Ltd.</p><p>Weist, J. (2002). <i>Bradbury: An illustrated life</i>. William Morrow</p><p>Boyreau, J. (2002). <i>Trash: The graphic genius of exploitation movie posters</i>. Chronicle Books.</p><p>Salisbury, M. (2014). <i>Alien the archive: The ultimate guide to the classic movies</i>. TitanBooks.</p><p>Ferris, E. (2016). <i>My favorite thing is monsters: Book one</i>. Fantagraphics Books.</p><p>Morton, R. (2005). <i>King kong, the history of a movie icon: from fay wray to peter jackson</i>. Applause Theatre & Cinema Books.</p><p>Landis, J. (2011). Monsters in the movies: 100 years of cinematic nightmares. Dorling Kindersley Limited.</p><p>Ortiz, L. (2011). Jack Gaughan. <i>Illustration, 9</i>(33), 2–27.</p><p>(2009). <i>Deco devolution: The art of the bioshock 2</i>. 2k publishing.</p><p>Humphreys, G. (2019). <i>Hung, drawn and executed: The horror art of graham humphreys</i>. Korero Press Ltd.</p><p>Gammil, K. & Spurlock, J.D. (2005). <i>Famous monster movie art of basil gogos</i>. Vanguard</p><p>Tucker, I. (Ed.) (2021). <i>The art of arkham horror</i>. Dark Horse Books.</p><p>D’Agostino, N. (2020). <i>Sex and horror volume four</i>. Korero Press.</p><p>Hulse, E. (2021). <i>The art of pulp fiction: An illustrated history of vintage paperbacks</i>. Elephant Book Company</p><p>Rodriguez, S. (2021). <i>The art of goosebumps</i>. Dynamite.</p><p>Nolen-Weathington, E. (2010). <i>Modern masters volume twenty-four: Guy davis</i>. TwoMorrows Publishing</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Halloween Special! Part 1</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/3fa6b881-eba7-42bb-b23c-022aa1d87378/78c6afbb-ff7d-4c83-8a78-51b32b1c467f/3000x3000/idh-s3-epb1.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>01:19:50</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>In this first part of a special multi-part Halloween series, we take a look at the history of horror and fantasy illustration. This episode focuses on historical trends and developments spanning from the stone age to the early 20th Century.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>In this first part of a special multi-part Halloween series, we take a look at the history of horror and fantasy illustration. This episode focuses on historical trends and developments spanning from the stone age to the early 20th Century.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>monsters, art, illustration, horror</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
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      <title>Brummett Echohawk</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Brummett Echohawk was a war hero, an artist, a writer, and a public speaker, and he was also a member of the Pawnee tribe, born in Oklahoma in 1922. Though he is well known for his contributions to the art world, he is less known for his contributions to the history of illustration and commercial art, he turned to these outlets throughout his life to successfully augment his income. Brummett Echohawk considered himself a historical or classical artist, rather than an “Indian” artist, though his work often centered on his indigenatity. His first notoriety as an artist was for his war sketches from his time in Italy in World War II. Though these sketches were initially confiscated, they were later (mostly) returned and published in newspapers across the U.S. The success of his sketches cemented his interest in becoming an artist, and he made it his goal to attend the Chicago Institute of Art for formal instruction at what he believed to be the best art school in the nation. Though he lived in Chicago, New York, Detroit, and Dallas, he ultimately returned to Oklahoma. He refused to compromise his values and, therefore, painted only what he wanted to paint; he also spent a lot of time researching the historical themes for his paintings, which slowed down his production. These factors likely made it more necessary for him to supplement his income through the development of his comic strip “Little Chief,” which ran in the Tulsa World Newspaper beginning in 1954, as well as numerous illustrations for magazine and book publications as well as working as a commercial artist throughout his career.</p><p>TIMELINE</p><p>1829 - Te-ah-ke-kah-wah Who-re-ke-coo (He Makes His Enemies Ashamed), Brummett Echohawk’s Great-Grandfather is born in Nebraska, the traditional homeland of the Pawnee</p><p>1855 - Kutawakutsu Tuwaku-ah (Echo Hawk), Brummett Echohawk’s Grandfather is born in Nebraska </p><p>1864 - Te-ah-ke-kah-wah Who-re-ke-coo, serves with the first company of Pawnee Scouts</p><p>1876 - Kutawakutsu Tuwaku-ah, then known as Tawihisi (Leader of the Group) signs on with the Pawnee Scouts, he earns the name Kutawakutsu Tuwaku-ah (Echo Hawk) as part of his efforts as a warrior during this time</p><p>1892 - Elmer Echohawk, Brummett Echohawk’s father, is born in Indian Territory</p><p>1907 - Elmer Echohawk, is sent by his parents to the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania </p><p>1922 - Brummett Echohawk Born,  March 3, Pawnee Oklahoma</p><p>1939 - Brummett Echohawk joins the National Guard</p><p>1943-1944 - Serves in WWII, 45th Infantry Division (known as the Thunderbirds) </p><p>1945-1948 - Attends Chicago Institute of Art, (education not funded by the GI Bill!)</p><p>1954 - Creates Comic strip “Little Chief”, for the Tulsa World </p><p>1955 - Juror of the Tenth Annual Exhibition of Contemporary American Indian Painting at the Philbrook Museum of Art in Tulsa</p><p>1969 -  Battlefield sketches included in the Faces of War exhibition at London’s Imperial War Museum</p><p>1977 - Brummett Echohawk began services as a member of the board at the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa</p><p>1983 - Brummett Echohawk awarded the “Unknown Indian Award” by the Committee for the Preservation of the Unknown Indian, North Platte, Nebraska</p><p>1994 - actor featured in one episode of the television series Walker Texas Ranger</p><p>2001 - Cartoons from Little Chief were featured in “Little Chief the Comic Art of Brummett Echohawk,” an exhibition at the Frye Art Museum in Seattle, Washington </p><p>2006  -  Brummett Echohawk Dies, February 13, buried in Pawnee, Oklahoma</p><p>2008 - - Cartoons from Little Chief were featured in “Out Of: Sequence: Underrepresented Voice in American Comics,”  an exhibition at the University of Illinois Krannert Art Museum</p><p>REFERENCES</p><p><i>Brummett Echohawk - Gilcrease Museum</i>. (n.d.). <a href="https://collections.gilcrease.org/creator/brummett-echohawk">https://collections.gilcrease.org/creator/brummett-echohawk</a></p><p><i>Brummett Echohawk: An Artist’s Journey - Oklahoma State University</i>. (2023, April 14). <a href="https://museum.okstate.edu/art/brummett-echohawk.html">https://museum.okstate.edu/art/brummett-echohawk.html</a></p><p>Echohawk, B., & Ellenbarger, M. R. (2018). <i>Drawing fire: A Pawnee, Artist, and Thunderbird in World War II.</i> University Press of Kansas.</p><p><i>Culture - Pawnee Nation flag and seal</i>. (n.d.). Pawnee Nation. <a href="https://pawneenation.org/pawnee-nation-flag-and-seal/">https://pawneenation.org/pawnee-nation-flag-and-seal/</a></p><p>Gilcrease Museum. (2023, March 2). <i>Joel Echohawk Reminisces about Brummett Echohawk</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5u1HgSCHI2Q">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5u1HgSCHI2Q</a></p><p>Jones, R. (n.d.). <i>OSU students present exhibition on Brummett Echohawk</i>. Stillwater News Press. https://www.stwnewspress.com/news/osu-students-present-exhibition-on-brummett-echohawk/article_3b940cb6-ef84-11ed-b2fd-2796481b6b6b.html</p><p>OSU Museum of Art. (2023, May 18).<i> Student Curator Talk - “Brummett Echohawk: An Artist’s Journey”</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P6mWGFQEzm4">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P6mWGFQEzm4</a></p><p>Wydeven, J., & Klaphake, C. (1984). Art and Eloquence. <i>Nebraskaland</i>, 62(1), 104–111.</p><p>Youngbull, K. M. (2015). <i>Brummett Echohawk: Pawnee Thunderbird and Artist. </i>University of Oklahoma Press.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 7 Nov 2024 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/brummett-echohawk-pDjZJ7_Z</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Brummett Echohawk was a war hero, an artist, a writer, and a public speaker, and he was also a member of the Pawnee tribe, born in Oklahoma in 1922. Though he is well known for his contributions to the art world, he is less known for his contributions to the history of illustration and commercial art, he turned to these outlets throughout his life to successfully augment his income. Brummett Echohawk considered himself a historical or classical artist, rather than an “Indian” artist, though his work often centered on his indigenatity. His first notoriety as an artist was for his war sketches from his time in Italy in World War II. Though these sketches were initially confiscated, they were later (mostly) returned and published in newspapers across the U.S. The success of his sketches cemented his interest in becoming an artist, and he made it his goal to attend the Chicago Institute of Art for formal instruction at what he believed to be the best art school in the nation. Though he lived in Chicago, New York, Detroit, and Dallas, he ultimately returned to Oklahoma. He refused to compromise his values and, therefore, painted only what he wanted to paint; he also spent a lot of time researching the historical themes for his paintings, which slowed down his production. These factors likely made it more necessary for him to supplement his income through the development of his comic strip “Little Chief,” which ran in the Tulsa World Newspaper beginning in 1954, as well as numerous illustrations for magazine and book publications as well as working as a commercial artist throughout his career.</p><p>TIMELINE</p><p>1829 - Te-ah-ke-kah-wah Who-re-ke-coo (He Makes His Enemies Ashamed), Brummett Echohawk’s Great-Grandfather is born in Nebraska, the traditional homeland of the Pawnee</p><p>1855 - Kutawakutsu Tuwaku-ah (Echo Hawk), Brummett Echohawk’s Grandfather is born in Nebraska </p><p>1864 - Te-ah-ke-kah-wah Who-re-ke-coo, serves with the first company of Pawnee Scouts</p><p>1876 - Kutawakutsu Tuwaku-ah, then known as Tawihisi (Leader of the Group) signs on with the Pawnee Scouts, he earns the name Kutawakutsu Tuwaku-ah (Echo Hawk) as part of his efforts as a warrior during this time</p><p>1892 - Elmer Echohawk, Brummett Echohawk’s father, is born in Indian Territory</p><p>1907 - Elmer Echohawk, is sent by his parents to the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania </p><p>1922 - Brummett Echohawk Born,  March 3, Pawnee Oklahoma</p><p>1939 - Brummett Echohawk joins the National Guard</p><p>1943-1944 - Serves in WWII, 45th Infantry Division (known as the Thunderbirds) </p><p>1945-1948 - Attends Chicago Institute of Art, (education not funded by the GI Bill!)</p><p>1954 - Creates Comic strip “Little Chief”, for the Tulsa World </p><p>1955 - Juror of the Tenth Annual Exhibition of Contemporary American Indian Painting at the Philbrook Museum of Art in Tulsa</p><p>1969 -  Battlefield sketches included in the Faces of War exhibition at London’s Imperial War Museum</p><p>1977 - Brummett Echohawk began services as a member of the board at the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa</p><p>1983 - Brummett Echohawk awarded the “Unknown Indian Award” by the Committee for the Preservation of the Unknown Indian, North Platte, Nebraska</p><p>1994 - actor featured in one episode of the television series Walker Texas Ranger</p><p>2001 - Cartoons from Little Chief were featured in “Little Chief the Comic Art of Brummett Echohawk,” an exhibition at the Frye Art Museum in Seattle, Washington </p><p>2006  -  Brummett Echohawk Dies, February 13, buried in Pawnee, Oklahoma</p><p>2008 - - Cartoons from Little Chief were featured in “Out Of: Sequence: Underrepresented Voice in American Comics,”  an exhibition at the University of Illinois Krannert Art Museum</p><p>REFERENCES</p><p><i>Brummett Echohawk - Gilcrease Museum</i>. (n.d.). <a href="https://collections.gilcrease.org/creator/brummett-echohawk">https://collections.gilcrease.org/creator/brummett-echohawk</a></p><p><i>Brummett Echohawk: An Artist’s Journey - Oklahoma State University</i>. (2023, April 14). <a href="https://museum.okstate.edu/art/brummett-echohawk.html">https://museum.okstate.edu/art/brummett-echohawk.html</a></p><p>Echohawk, B., & Ellenbarger, M. R. (2018). <i>Drawing fire: A Pawnee, Artist, and Thunderbird in World War II.</i> University Press of Kansas.</p><p><i>Culture - Pawnee Nation flag and seal</i>. (n.d.). Pawnee Nation. <a href="https://pawneenation.org/pawnee-nation-flag-and-seal/">https://pawneenation.org/pawnee-nation-flag-and-seal/</a></p><p>Gilcrease Museum. (2023, March 2). <i>Joel Echohawk Reminisces about Brummett Echohawk</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5u1HgSCHI2Q">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5u1HgSCHI2Q</a></p><p>Jones, R. (n.d.). <i>OSU students present exhibition on Brummett Echohawk</i>. Stillwater News Press. https://www.stwnewspress.com/news/osu-students-present-exhibition-on-brummett-echohawk/article_3b940cb6-ef84-11ed-b2fd-2796481b6b6b.html</p><p>OSU Museum of Art. (2023, May 18).<i> Student Curator Talk - “Brummett Echohawk: An Artist’s Journey”</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P6mWGFQEzm4">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P6mWGFQEzm4</a></p><p>Wydeven, J., & Klaphake, C. (1984). Art and Eloquence. <i>Nebraskaland</i>, 62(1), 104–111.</p><p>Youngbull, K. M. (2015). <i>Brummett Echohawk: Pawnee Thunderbird and Artist. </i>University of Oklahoma Press.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="24969877" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/93e0ccb5-deaa-49fa-8d5e-86fcbcce45f0/audio/49e967e0-9b03-4941-85d8-8682f37d22b5/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Brummett Echohawk</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/3fa6b881-eba7-42bb-b23c-022aa1d87378/8ab45ae4-2b90-47e6-ae58-85159c427e0f/3000x3000/idh-s3-ep9.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:25:59</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Brummett Echohawk was an Indigenous artist with an international reputation, but he was much more than that. 

Born in Oklahoma and a member of the Pawnee tribe, Echohawk was also a writer, public speaker, actor, and served in the military as part of the 45th infantry during World War II where he saw action in Italy.

Limited histories of Brummett Echohawk tend to remember him well for his contributions to the art world. His work as a commercial artist, illustrator, and cartoonist has not received as much attention. More research is needed to uncover that part of Echohawk’s history so we can see the depth of his contribution to the history of illustration, a problem we hope today’s episode will begin to rectify.
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Brummett Echohawk was an Indigenous artist with an international reputation, but he was much more than that. 

Born in Oklahoma and a member of the Pawnee tribe, Echohawk was also a writer, public speaker, actor, and served in the military as part of the 45th infantry during World War II where he saw action in Italy.

Limited histories of Brummett Echohawk tend to remember him well for his contributions to the art world. His work as a commercial artist, illustrator, and cartoonist has not received as much attention. More research is needed to uncover that part of Echohawk’s history so we can see the depth of his contribution to the history of illustration, a problem we hope today’s episode will begin to rectify.
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>brummett echohawk, art, native american art</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>9</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">02324b15-a7be-46f0-95a9-e86ead8a2346</guid>
      <title>Prehistoric Cave Paintings</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>REFERENCES</p><p>White, R. (2003).<i> Prehistoric Art: The Symbolic Journey of Humankind. </i>Harry N. Abrams Inc. </p><p>Clottes, J. (2008). <i>Cave Art. </i>Phaidon Press Limited. 9780714845920</p><p>Neumayer, E. (1983). <i>Prehistoric Indian Rock Paintings. </i>Oxford University Press. 9780195613872</p><p>Ruspoli, M. (1987). <i>The Cave of Lascaux: The Final Photographs. </i>Harry N. Abrams Inc. 0810912678</p><p>Myron, R. (1964). <i>Prehistoric Art. </i>Pitman Publishing Corporation. 0273438611</p><p>Stokstad, M., & Cothren M. W. (2011). <i>Art History: Ancient Art </i>(4th ed.)<i>. </i>Pearson Education. 0205744222 </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 31 Oct 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/prehistoric-cave-paintings-pW9QMeF1</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>REFERENCES</p><p>White, R. (2003).<i> Prehistoric Art: The Symbolic Journey of Humankind. </i>Harry N. Abrams Inc. </p><p>Clottes, J. (2008). <i>Cave Art. </i>Phaidon Press Limited. 9780714845920</p><p>Neumayer, E. (1983). <i>Prehistoric Indian Rock Paintings. </i>Oxford University Press. 9780195613872</p><p>Ruspoli, M. (1987). <i>The Cave of Lascaux: The Final Photographs. </i>Harry N. Abrams Inc. 0810912678</p><p>Myron, R. (1964). <i>Prehistoric Art. </i>Pitman Publishing Corporation. 0273438611</p><p>Stokstad, M., & Cothren M. W. (2011). <i>Art History: Ancient Art </i>(4th ed.)<i>. </i>Pearson Education. 0205744222 </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="17758900" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/6c67801e-5b73-4c7b-a593-8bd6c790881d/audio/5db1b366-aa8e-47ad-ab16-2bceb13218f4/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Prehistoric Cave Paintings</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/3fa6b881-eba7-42bb-b23c-022aa1d87378/2c7482a6-e575-40da-8753-a1afc0157104/3000x3000/idh-s3-ep8.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:18:28</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Countless historians, archaeologists, and scientists study cave paintings. Some try to figure out the meaning of the ancient images, while others try to understand the purpose of the paintings, and still others study how those early artists did what they did, from figuring out the process of making paint to going and putting it on a cavern wall. 

The methods, techniques, and tools used to make prehistoric cave paintings tell a lot about the beginnings of graphic design technology by answering how prehistoric people created them. 
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Countless historians, archaeologists, and scientists study cave paintings. Some try to figure out the meaning of the ancient images, while others try to understand the purpose of the paintings, and still others study how those early artists did what they did, from figuring out the process of making paint to going and putting it on a cavern wall. 

The methods, techniques, and tools used to make prehistoric cave paintings tell a lot about the beginnings of graphic design technology by answering how prehistoric people created them. 
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>art, illustration, cave painting, history</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">a4c66fe0-e8cb-4a40-8746-17b19ab279f8</guid>
      <title>Art Nouveau</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Art Nouveau was a stylistic movement in the late nineteenth century characterized by highly ornate and decorated designs. Inspired by Japanese woodblock prints, Celtic manuscripts, The Arts and Crafts Movement, and the development of the lithograph, Art Nouveau, or New Art, was applied to everything from architecture to biscuit tins.</p><p>Though widely applied, posters that make up a great part of Art Nouveau history.The development of lithography meant posters could be large illustrations filled with bright colors and elaborate designs, even though they were advertisements for anything from events to consumer products. While Paris, France was Art Nouveau’s epicenter, it spread to England and eventually the United States. Along the way, several illustrators made a name for themselves and were pivotal to Art Nouveau’s popularity. Some of their posters were, and still are, collected as fine art.</p><p> </p><p>REFERENCES</p><p>Cramsie, P. (2010).<i> The Story of Graphic Design: From the Invention of Writing to the Birth of Digital Design. </i>Abrams. 9780810972926</p><p>Eskilson, S.F. (2012).<i> Graphic Design: A New History </i>(2nd ed.)<i>. </i>Laurence King Publishing. 9780300172607</p><p>Müller, J. (2017).<i> The History of Graphic Design: Vol. 1 1890-1959.</i> Taschen. 9783836563079</p><p>Selz, P., & Constantine, M. (1960).<i> Art Nouveau: Art and Design at the Turn of the Century. </i>The Museum of Modern Art. 0405015739</p><p>Duncan, A. (1994).<i> Art Nouveau: World of Art. </i>Thames & Hudson Inc. 0500202737</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 24 Oct 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/art-nouveau-UamCC_0J</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Art Nouveau was a stylistic movement in the late nineteenth century characterized by highly ornate and decorated designs. Inspired by Japanese woodblock prints, Celtic manuscripts, The Arts and Crafts Movement, and the development of the lithograph, Art Nouveau, or New Art, was applied to everything from architecture to biscuit tins.</p><p>Though widely applied, posters that make up a great part of Art Nouveau history.The development of lithography meant posters could be large illustrations filled with bright colors and elaborate designs, even though they were advertisements for anything from events to consumer products. While Paris, France was Art Nouveau’s epicenter, it spread to England and eventually the United States. Along the way, several illustrators made a name for themselves and were pivotal to Art Nouveau’s popularity. Some of their posters were, and still are, collected as fine art.</p><p> </p><p>REFERENCES</p><p>Cramsie, P. (2010).<i> The Story of Graphic Design: From the Invention of Writing to the Birth of Digital Design. </i>Abrams. 9780810972926</p><p>Eskilson, S.F. (2012).<i> Graphic Design: A New History </i>(2nd ed.)<i>. </i>Laurence King Publishing. 9780300172607</p><p>Müller, J. (2017).<i> The History of Graphic Design: Vol. 1 1890-1959.</i> Taschen. 9783836563079</p><p>Selz, P., & Constantine, M. (1960).<i> Art Nouveau: Art and Design at the Turn of the Century. </i>The Museum of Modern Art. 0405015739</p><p>Duncan, A. (1994).<i> Art Nouveau: World of Art. </i>Thames & Hudson Inc. 0500202737</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="17417563" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/c37525d9-bb0e-42b6-ad04-ee098b3f4cfc/audio/37e4ddee-3069-4dd0-a496-99200d16f71d/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Art Nouveau</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/3fa6b881-eba7-42bb-b23c-022aa1d87378/d892a80f-adaf-48a7-9bc6-6c15a3e43de2/3000x3000/idh-s3-ep7.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:18:07</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode broadly covers the Art Nouveau movement, which had an outsized impact on the illustration field in the early 20th century and beyond. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode broadly covers the Art Nouveau movement, which had an outsized impact on the illustration field in the early 20th century and beyond. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>design, art, illustration, art nouveau</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">84b41375-b52e-4c35-aff5-5d6f95f72b2e</guid>
      <title>Capcom Art and Fighting Games</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Capcom, a Japan-based maker of successful game properties, made a tremendous impact on the business of video games world wide, and helped usher in the current boom in Japanese-based visual media like manga and anime as much as fellow cultural exports like Pokemon, Sailor Moon, Speed Racer, and the Dragon Ball series. <br /><br />The art team behind the bulk of Capcom’s fighting game imagery began in the late 80s and lasted until the early 2000s. The team’s story includes an eccentric artist remembered almost as much for his habits as his skills and leadership, a draftsperson capable of taking stereotypes and rendering them with profound emotion, an up and coming artist possessed of an incredible work ethic and mammoth ability to produce images, and numerous other talented artisans all brought together to form the Capcom Design Team.</p><p> </p><p>REFERENCES</p><p>Hendershot, S.. (2017). <i>Undisputed street fighter: The art and innovation behind the game-changing series</i>. Dynamite Entertainment</p><p>Dyer, S. (2022).<i> The king of fighters: The ultimate history.</i> Bitmap Books Ltd.</p><p>Lapetino, T. (2016). <i>Art of Atari.</i> Dynamite Entertainment</p><p>Leone, Matt (2020, July 7). <i>Street fighter 1: An oral history.</i> Polygon. <a href="https://www.polygon.com/2020/7/7/21270906/street-fighter-1-oral-history-takashi-nishiyama">https://www.polygon.com/2020/7/7/21270906/street-fighter-1-oral-history-takashi-nishiyama</a></p><p>Hayashi, M. K., & Moylan, M. (2009). <i>SF20: The Art of Street Fighter</i>. Udon Entertainment Corp. </p><p>Moore, G., & Hodgson, A. (2021). <i>Street fighter memorial archive: Beyond the world.</i> Udon Entertainment Corp.</p><p>Leone, Matt (2014, February 3). <i>Street fighter 2: An oral history.</i> Polygon. https://www.polygon.com/a/street-fighter-2-oral-history/</p><p>Hayashi, M.K. (2019). <i>Darkstalkers: Official Complete Works.</i> Udon Entertainment Corp.</p><p>Leone, Matt (2021, April 14). <i>X-Men: Children of the Atom: An oral history.</i> Polygon. https://www.polygon.com/2021/4/14/22336505/x-men-children-of-the-atom-an-oral-history</p><p>Ferriere, G. & Zubkavich, J. (2005). <i>Street Fighter: Eternal Challenge.</i> Udon Entertainment Corp.</p><p>Famitsu Book Editorial Department (2001). <i>Capcom Design Works</i>. Enterbrain, Inc. </p><p>Various (2020). <i>UDON’s Art of Capcom .</i> Udon Entertainment Corp.</p><p> </p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 17 Oct 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/capcom-art-and-fighting-games-8MjEjrVL</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Capcom, a Japan-based maker of successful game properties, made a tremendous impact on the business of video games world wide, and helped usher in the current boom in Japanese-based visual media like manga and anime as much as fellow cultural exports like Pokemon, Sailor Moon, Speed Racer, and the Dragon Ball series. <br /><br />The art team behind the bulk of Capcom’s fighting game imagery began in the late 80s and lasted until the early 2000s. The team’s story includes an eccentric artist remembered almost as much for his habits as his skills and leadership, a draftsperson capable of taking stereotypes and rendering them with profound emotion, an up and coming artist possessed of an incredible work ethic and mammoth ability to produce images, and numerous other talented artisans all brought together to form the Capcom Design Team.</p><p> </p><p>REFERENCES</p><p>Hendershot, S.. (2017). <i>Undisputed street fighter: The art and innovation behind the game-changing series</i>. Dynamite Entertainment</p><p>Dyer, S. (2022).<i> The king of fighters: The ultimate history.</i> Bitmap Books Ltd.</p><p>Lapetino, T. (2016). <i>Art of Atari.</i> Dynamite Entertainment</p><p>Leone, Matt (2020, July 7). <i>Street fighter 1: An oral history.</i> Polygon. <a href="https://www.polygon.com/2020/7/7/21270906/street-fighter-1-oral-history-takashi-nishiyama">https://www.polygon.com/2020/7/7/21270906/street-fighter-1-oral-history-takashi-nishiyama</a></p><p>Hayashi, M. K., & Moylan, M. (2009). <i>SF20: The Art of Street Fighter</i>. Udon Entertainment Corp. </p><p>Moore, G., & Hodgson, A. (2021). <i>Street fighter memorial archive: Beyond the world.</i> Udon Entertainment Corp.</p><p>Leone, Matt (2014, February 3). <i>Street fighter 2: An oral history.</i> Polygon. https://www.polygon.com/a/street-fighter-2-oral-history/</p><p>Hayashi, M.K. (2019). <i>Darkstalkers: Official Complete Works.</i> Udon Entertainment Corp.</p><p>Leone, Matt (2021, April 14). <i>X-Men: Children of the Atom: An oral history.</i> Polygon. https://www.polygon.com/2021/4/14/22336505/x-men-children-of-the-atom-an-oral-history</p><p>Ferriere, G. & Zubkavich, J. (2005). <i>Street Fighter: Eternal Challenge.</i> Udon Entertainment Corp.</p><p>Famitsu Book Editorial Department (2001). <i>Capcom Design Works</i>. Enterbrain, Inc. </p><p>Various (2020). <i>UDON’s Art of Capcom .</i> Udon Entertainment Corp.</p><p> </p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="26331997" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/550d4d84-6404-4959-a8fb-9f3c4a86dbc3/audio/8cf7ff5e-e3c7-45ee-9fcf-c9bbd213e32d/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Capcom Art and Fighting Games</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/3fa6b881-eba7-42bb-b23c-022aa1d87378/696cdb6c-0035-4d11-b97d-e6c5909bafb4/3000x3000/idh-s3-ep6.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:27:24</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode covers the work and influence of the Capcom Design Team- an in-house group of illustrators and designers responsible for producing artwork for seminal video games like Street Fighter II and Marvel vs Capcom.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode covers the work and influence of the Capcom Design Team- an in-house group of illustrators and designers responsible for producing artwork for seminal video games like Street Fighter II and Marvel vs Capcom.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>street fighter, design, atari, graphic design, arcade, capcom, illustration, history, videogame</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
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      <guid isPermaLink="false">c2fcd9ec-f6a6-4d52-af9e-113e3a4d9785</guid>
      <title>Geometric Islamic Art</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>TIMELINE</strong></p><p>* A broad timeline spanning centuries is used to account for imprecise dates in the Ottoman Empire from multiple sources.</p><ul><li>14th Century (1300s): The beginning of the Ottoman Empire. This period marks the initial blending of Islamic art with Byzantine and Persian styles, forming the basis for the unique Ottoman artistic and traditional geometric elements appearing as a symbol of Islamic art.</li><li>15th Century (1400s): Further development of the Ottoman style, with increased prominence in mosques and palaces in Istanbul.</li><li>16th Century (1500s): The peak of Ottoman art. </li><li>1520-1566: Reign of Suleiman </li><li>1548: The Şehzade Mosque completed with the best geometric </li><li>Suleymaniye Mosque (completed in 1557).</li><li>1570s-1598: The Qur'an's decoration is the primary artistic expression in the Ottoman Empire. </li><li>1600: 1600: This period sees advancements in ceramics known as Iznik tiles, textiles, calligraphy, and manuscript illumination.</li><li>19th Century (1800s): The decline of the Ottoman Empire. Western influences begin to appear in Islamic art, introducing new styles and techniques.</li><li>Early 20th Century (1900s-1922): The end of the Ottoman Empire</li></ul><p><strong>The Topic</strong></p><p>A general view of the perspective on Islamic art that was shaped throughout the Ottoman Empire's peak, particularly during Sultan Suleiman's reign. Istanbul, Turkey, became known for its exceptional display of geometric symbolism in Islamic art. I want to explore the important mosques that displayed some of the most extraordinary works of art still known to the Islamic community.</p><p><strong>REFERENCES</strong></p><p>Kuban, D. (1987). The Style of Sinan’s Domed Structures. <i>Muqarnas</i>, <i>4</i>, 72–97. https://doi.org/10.2307/1523097</p><p>Neci̇poğlu, G. (2007). Creation of a National Genius: Si̇nan and the Historiography of “Classical” Ottoman Architecture. <i>Muqarnas</i>, <i>24</i>, 141–183. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25482458</p><p>Ersoy, A. (2007). Architecture and the Search for Ottoman Origins in the Tanzimat Period. <i>Muqarnas</i>, <i>24</i>, 117–139. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25482457</p><p>Makdisi, U. (2002). Ottoman Orientalism. <i>The American Historical Review</i>, <i>107</i>(3), 768–796. https://doi.org/10.1086/532495</p><p>Lewis, B. (1980). The Ottoman Empire and Its Aftermath. <i>Journal of Contemporary History</i>, <i>15</i>(1), 27–36. http://www.jstor.org/stable/260456</p><p>AVCIOĞLU, N., & FLOOD, F. B. (2010). INTRODUCTION: Globalizing Cultures: Art and Mobility in the Eighteenth Century. <i>Ars Orientalis</i>, <i>39</i>, 7–38. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23075922</p><p>Blessing, P. (2018). Presenting Islamic Art: Reflections on Old and New Museum Displays. <i>Review of Middle East Studies</i>, <i>52</i>(1), 147–152. https://www.jstor.org/stable/26478488</p><p>Islamic Art. (1978). <i>The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin</i>, <i>36</i>(2), 3–48. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2307/3258866">https://doi.org/10.2307/3258866</a></p><p>Mehmed Ağa (Sedefkar Mehmet Aga, Ottoman architect, ca.1540-1622), & Ahmed I (Turkish patron, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, 1590-1617). (1609-1616). <i>Sultan Ahmed Camii</i>. <a href="https://jstor.org/stable/community.23089080">https://jstor.org/stable/community.23089080</a></p><p>Mehmed Ağa (Sedefkar Mehmet Aga, Ottoman architect, ca.1540-1622), & Ahmed I (Turkish patron, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, 1590-1617). (1609-1616). <i>Sultan Ahmed Camii</i>. <a href="https://jstor.org/stable/community.23089076">https://jstor.org/stable/community.23089076</a></p><p>The Ottoman Empire. (1968). <i>The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin</i>, <i>26</i>(5), 204–224. https://doi.org/10.2307/3258980</p><p>HOWARD, D. A. (1988). OTTOMAN HISTORIOGRAPHY AND THE LITERATURE OF “DECLINE” OF THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES. <i>Journal of Asian History</i>, <i>22</i>(1), 52–77. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/41932017">http://www.jstor.org/stable/41932017</a></p><p>Denny, W. B. (1983). Dating Ottoman Turkish Works in the Saz Style. <i>Muqarnas</i>, <i>1</i>, 103–121. https://doi.org/10.2307/1523074</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 10 Oct 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/geometric-islamic-art-6yVXopNJ</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>TIMELINE</strong></p><p>* A broad timeline spanning centuries is used to account for imprecise dates in the Ottoman Empire from multiple sources.</p><ul><li>14th Century (1300s): The beginning of the Ottoman Empire. This period marks the initial blending of Islamic art with Byzantine and Persian styles, forming the basis for the unique Ottoman artistic and traditional geometric elements appearing as a symbol of Islamic art.</li><li>15th Century (1400s): Further development of the Ottoman style, with increased prominence in mosques and palaces in Istanbul.</li><li>16th Century (1500s): The peak of Ottoman art. </li><li>1520-1566: Reign of Suleiman </li><li>1548: The Şehzade Mosque completed with the best geometric </li><li>Suleymaniye Mosque (completed in 1557).</li><li>1570s-1598: The Qur'an's decoration is the primary artistic expression in the Ottoman Empire. </li><li>1600: 1600: This period sees advancements in ceramics known as Iznik tiles, textiles, calligraphy, and manuscript illumination.</li><li>19th Century (1800s): The decline of the Ottoman Empire. Western influences begin to appear in Islamic art, introducing new styles and techniques.</li><li>Early 20th Century (1900s-1922): The end of the Ottoman Empire</li></ul><p><strong>The Topic</strong></p><p>A general view of the perspective on Islamic art that was shaped throughout the Ottoman Empire's peak, particularly during Sultan Suleiman's reign. Istanbul, Turkey, became known for its exceptional display of geometric symbolism in Islamic art. I want to explore the important mosques that displayed some of the most extraordinary works of art still known to the Islamic community.</p><p><strong>REFERENCES</strong></p><p>Kuban, D. (1987). The Style of Sinan’s Domed Structures. <i>Muqarnas</i>, <i>4</i>, 72–97. https://doi.org/10.2307/1523097</p><p>Neci̇poğlu, G. (2007). Creation of a National Genius: Si̇nan and the Historiography of “Classical” Ottoman Architecture. <i>Muqarnas</i>, <i>24</i>, 141–183. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25482458</p><p>Ersoy, A. (2007). Architecture and the Search for Ottoman Origins in the Tanzimat Period. <i>Muqarnas</i>, <i>24</i>, 117–139. http://www.jstor.org/stable/25482457</p><p>Makdisi, U. (2002). Ottoman Orientalism. <i>The American Historical Review</i>, <i>107</i>(3), 768–796. https://doi.org/10.1086/532495</p><p>Lewis, B. (1980). The Ottoman Empire and Its Aftermath. <i>Journal of Contemporary History</i>, <i>15</i>(1), 27–36. http://www.jstor.org/stable/260456</p><p>AVCIOĞLU, N., & FLOOD, F. B. (2010). INTRODUCTION: Globalizing Cultures: Art and Mobility in the Eighteenth Century. <i>Ars Orientalis</i>, <i>39</i>, 7–38. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23075922</p><p>Blessing, P. (2018). Presenting Islamic Art: Reflections on Old and New Museum Displays. <i>Review of Middle East Studies</i>, <i>52</i>(1), 147–152. https://www.jstor.org/stable/26478488</p><p>Islamic Art. (1978). <i>The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin</i>, <i>36</i>(2), 3–48. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2307/3258866">https://doi.org/10.2307/3258866</a></p><p>Mehmed Ağa (Sedefkar Mehmet Aga, Ottoman architect, ca.1540-1622), & Ahmed I (Turkish patron, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, 1590-1617). (1609-1616). <i>Sultan Ahmed Camii</i>. <a href="https://jstor.org/stable/community.23089080">https://jstor.org/stable/community.23089080</a></p><p>Mehmed Ağa (Sedefkar Mehmet Aga, Ottoman architect, ca.1540-1622), & Ahmed I (Turkish patron, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire, 1590-1617). (1609-1616). <i>Sultan Ahmed Camii</i>. <a href="https://jstor.org/stable/community.23089076">https://jstor.org/stable/community.23089076</a></p><p>The Ottoman Empire. (1968). <i>The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin</i>, <i>26</i>(5), 204–224. https://doi.org/10.2307/3258980</p><p>HOWARD, D. A. (1988). OTTOMAN HISTORIOGRAPHY AND THE LITERATURE OF “DECLINE” OF THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES. <i>Journal of Asian History</i>, <i>22</i>(1), 52–77. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/41932017">http://www.jstor.org/stable/41932017</a></p><p>Denny, W. B. (1983). Dating Ottoman Turkish Works in the Saz Style. <i>Muqarnas</i>, <i>1</i>, 103–121. https://doi.org/10.2307/1523074</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Geometric Islamic Art</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/3fa6b881-eba7-42bb-b23c-022aa1d87378/3cd7ef86-57dd-4aeb-9c29-750325672f85/3000x3000/idh-s3-ep5.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:12:12</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Islamic art during the Ottoman Empire, which lasted from the 14th to the early 20th century, blended various styles from Persia, Byzantium, and earlier Islamic traditions. This blend created a unique artistic style rich in geometric patterns, vibrant colors, and intricate calligraphy. This style was prominently featured in mosques and palaces. The 16th century, the peak of Ottoman art, was a time of outstanding architectural achievements. Famous architects like Mimar Sinan built stunning structures, such as the Suleymaniye Mosque in Istanbul, which showcased large domes and slender minarets. Ottoman art was not just about architecture; it also excelled in ceramics, like the famous Iznik tiles, textiles, calligraphy, and manuscript illumination, especially in the decoration of the Qur&apos;an. As the Ottoman Empire&apos;s power declined in the 19th century, Western influences began to appear in its art. The Ottoman period remains a significant chapter in the history of Islamic art, known for its unique combination of diverse artistic traditions. 
</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Islamic art during the Ottoman Empire, which lasted from the 14th to the early 20th century, blended various styles from Persia, Byzantium, and earlier Islamic traditions. This blend created a unique artistic style rich in geometric patterns, vibrant colors, and intricate calligraphy. This style was prominently featured in mosques and palaces. The 16th century, the peak of Ottoman art, was a time of outstanding architectural achievements. Famous architects like Mimar Sinan built stunning structures, such as the Suleymaniye Mosque in Istanbul, which showcased large domes and slender minarets. Ottoman art was not just about architecture; it also excelled in ceramics, like the famous Iznik tiles, textiles, calligraphy, and manuscript illumination, especially in the decoration of the Qur&apos;an. As the Ottoman Empire&apos;s power declined in the 19th century, Western influences began to appear in its art. The Ottoman period remains a significant chapter in the history of Islamic art, known for its unique combination of diverse artistic traditions. 
</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>geometry, design, illustration, islamic art, ottoman empire</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
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      <title>Illustration &amp; Toys</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>REFERENCES</p><p>Witwer, M. & Newman, K., Peterson, J., Witwer, S. (2018). <i>Dungeons & Dragons: Art & Arcana, A Visual History</i>. Ten Speed Press.</p><p>Seeley, S. & Seeley, T. (2015). <i>The Art of He-Man and The Masters of The Universe</i>. Dark Horse Books.</p><p>Forster, B. & Sorenson, J. (2019). <i>Transformers Legacy: The Art of Transformers Packaging</i>. IDW Publishing.</p><p>Farago, A. (2014). <i>Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Ultimate Visual History</i>. Insight editions.</p><p>Heller, S. & Mungia, R. (2021). <i>SF20: Toys: 100 years of all-american toy ads</i>. Taschen.</p><p>Voger, M. (2015). Monster mash: <i>The creepy, kooky monster craze in America 1957-1972</i>. TwoMorrows Publishing.</p><p>Fawcett, C. (2021).<i> Rad plastic</i>. Tkaf productions</p><p>Reed, W. (2001). The Illustrator in America 1860-2000. The Society of Illustrators Inc.</p><p>Hudson, G.. (2019).Illustration on British and North American Printed Ephemera, 1900-1910. In S.Doyle,  J. Grove, & W. Sherman (Eds.), <i>History of Illustration</i> (1st ed., pp. 198–214). Fairchild books.</p><p>Kane, B.M. (2019). Overview of Comics and Graphic Narrative, 1830-2012. In S.Doyle,  J. Grove, & W. Sherman (Eds.), <i>History of Illustration</i> (1st ed., pp. 198–214). Fairchild books.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 3 Oct 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/illustration-toys-6q3qU48d</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>REFERENCES</p><p>Witwer, M. & Newman, K., Peterson, J., Witwer, S. (2018). <i>Dungeons & Dragons: Art & Arcana, A Visual History</i>. Ten Speed Press.</p><p>Seeley, S. & Seeley, T. (2015). <i>The Art of He-Man and The Masters of The Universe</i>. Dark Horse Books.</p><p>Forster, B. & Sorenson, J. (2019). <i>Transformers Legacy: The Art of Transformers Packaging</i>. IDW Publishing.</p><p>Farago, A. (2014). <i>Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Ultimate Visual History</i>. Insight editions.</p><p>Heller, S. & Mungia, R. (2021). <i>SF20: Toys: 100 years of all-american toy ads</i>. Taschen.</p><p>Voger, M. (2015). Monster mash: <i>The creepy, kooky monster craze in America 1957-1972</i>. TwoMorrows Publishing.</p><p>Fawcett, C. (2021).<i> Rad plastic</i>. Tkaf productions</p><p>Reed, W. (2001). The Illustrator in America 1860-2000. The Society of Illustrators Inc.</p><p>Hudson, G.. (2019).Illustration on British and North American Printed Ephemera, 1900-1910. In S.Doyle,  J. Grove, & W. Sherman (Eds.), <i>History of Illustration</i> (1st ed., pp. 198–214). Fairchild books.</p><p>Kane, B.M. (2019). Overview of Comics and Graphic Narrative, 1830-2012. In S.Doyle,  J. Grove, & W. Sherman (Eds.), <i>History of Illustration</i> (1st ed., pp. 198–214). Fairchild books.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="18775228" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/d68cce1b-a8ee-4314-9c80-02b3c7204ae8/audio/9200bbf3-3afd-40c4-866c-848465a9c22e/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Illustration &amp; Toys</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/3fa6b881-eba7-42bb-b23c-022aa1d87378/3424f429-4a91-4f3e-950a-44d28d04170b/3000x3000/idh-s3-ep4.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:19:32</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Toys and Games have been a bastion for creativity and design for decades, providing the perfect blend of commerce and imagination needed to sustain a livelihood for a variety of artisans. Recent publications and kickstarted research powered by nostalgia for aging millennials has led to a plethora of data about these industries and the practitioners who take part in it. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Toys and Games have been a bastion for creativity and design for decades, providing the perfect blend of commerce and imagination needed to sustain a livelihood for a variety of artisans. Recent publications and kickstarted research powered by nostalgia for aging millennials has led to a plethora of data about these industries and the practitioners who take part in it. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>design, art, sculpting, illustration, tmnt, drawing, heman, toys, business, action figures</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
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      <title>Treasure Planet</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Bio/ Background (intro)</strong></p><ul><li>Directors: Ron Clements and John Musker </li><li>Intro (below)</li></ul><p><strong>Topic 1 Introduction</strong></p><p>To my surprise, a number of people have never seen or heard of the movie “Treasure Planet.” In this  classic retelling of “Treasure Island” by Robert Louis Stevenson,  the narrative was turned into an intergalactic adventure complete with cyborgs, space travel, and, of course, treasure. Disney’s “Treasure Planet” was one of two experimental movies in the year 2002. “Treasure Planet,” however, is notorious for its box office failure. The other experimental film, from a different in-house studio was “Lilo and Stitch,” which got way more attention and was well received by audiences. Now, this podcast is not a compare and contrast of the two experimental films of 2002, but I can’t help but take into consideration the alleged reasons why “Lilo and Stitch” swam but “Treasure Planet” sank. Both movies included obvious CGI, a wide variety of alien species, action-packed space travel, and family problems. I say this because a noticeable amount of articles claim the reason “Treasure Planet” bombed at the box office was because of the “high tech” CGI scenes. Amazingly after being scorned six feet into the grave of Disney’s backyard, 20 years later it gets dug up like a prized fossil.</p><p>Treasure Planet is based on the legendary novel “Treasure Island,” written by Robert Louis Stevenson. Instead of taking place in the Caribbean, it is set in outer space. The story begins with Jim Hawkins receiving a treasure map from a wounded alien by the name of Billy Bones in his mother’s inn. Rebellious Hawkins and passionate Dr. Delbert Doppler join a crew to find this elusive treasure hidden by the notorious pirate, Captain Nathaniel Flint. The crew of this ship seems to be of questionable authenticity as Hawkins meets the cook, Mr. Silver. Silver’s cyborg body with a robot arm reminds Hawkins of Billy Bones' warning about a cyborg. Eventually, the crew reveal themselves as pirates and launch a mutiny with Silver as their leader. The film carries multiple layers of character arcs journeys as the characters set out for Treasure Planet. This retelling of “Treasure Island” was, of course, given a sprinkle of “Disney magic” complete with striking animation, and memorable characters with flamboyant personalities. </p><p><strong>Topic 2 Who Made the Film?</strong></p><p>The striking film was directed by Ron Clements and John Musker. These guys directed “The Little Mermaid,” “Aladdin,” and “Hercules.” According to the reflections on the Walt Disney Family Museum Website, Ron Clements was born and raised in Indiana. He was inspired to learn animation at the age of 9 after seeing “Pinocchio.” He worked his way from the scraping bottom of Disney to the director’s chair. John Musker was also an animator, storyboard artist, writer, director, and producer for 40 years for Disney Animation Studios. He studied under icons like Elmer Plummer and Bill Moore at CalArts in the 1970s. “He also studied alongside classmates who would become distinguished directors such as Brad Bird, Chris Buck, Tim Burton, John Lasseter, and Henry Selick.” His partnered credits with Clements are as follows, “The Great Mouse Detective” (1986), “The Little Mermaid” (1989), “Aladdin” (1992), “Hercules” (1997), “Treasure Planet” (2002), “The Princess and the Frog” (2009), and lastly, “Moana” (2016).</p><p>Gladstein writes in <i>“The Bizarre Story of How Treasure Planet Got Made”</i> that the two directors pitched “Treasure Planet” the same time as “The Little Mermaid” in Disney’s Renaissance Era (1989-1999). The studio was extremely reluctant to green light “Treasure Planet” until the dynamic duo, Clements and Musker, shoveled out genius big time money makers like “The Little Mermaid” and “Aladdin.” Gladstein notes that the studio was so impressed with the consistency of success from these dudes that they finally said yes to “Treasure Planet.”  As an observer, I’m reading that basically “The Little Mermaid” and other MAJORLY lucrative films were just incredible proofs of concept to convince the big guys of letting “Treasure Planet” fly.</p><p>According to Jocelyn Buhlman on The Official Disney Fan Club Website, this was Clements and Musker's first sci-fi film, despite their love for science fiction. Buhlman quotes Clements explaining, “John and I are both sci-fi fans. The idea of making our pirate and taking his eye patch and turning it into a cyborg eye and taking his peg leg and making it mechanical—not only was it a science fiction thing, but it was an animation thing.” Buhlman also mentions how the two directors utilized the 3D technology used in “Tarzan” to create a camera effect on the action scenes and moving parts, “Beyond the wonders of Deep Canvas, Clements and Musker achieved the dynamic directorial style they desired by creating a whole new technology—virtual sets. A scene in “Tarzan” that most viewers can recognize that used a mix of hand drawn and computer animation is when Tarzan “slides” down mossy trees to get around in the jungle like sliding on wood floors with socks. The hand drawn element was added to Tarzan’s body as he moved around and the passing trees and jungle was the computer animation portion.</p><p>Buhlman speaks on how Clements explains the logistics of making “Treasure Planet’s” backgrounds, “‘They were actually dimensional sets made to look like 2-D backgrounds, but in truth they were 3-D, and we could move the camera around.’” This was a huge deal for animation. Let’s take another well known “classic” Disney hand drawn film for an example: “The Little Mermaid.” As previously mentioned, this enormously successful animated film was also directed by Clements and Musker. In this film, everything was hand drawn. And I do mean <i>everything.</i> Before understanding how and why animators turned to computer animation, we have to dive into the meaning of hand drawn animation and how much a labor of love it was. </p><p>Hand drawn animation is formally known as cel animation. This process of animation and film making is labor intensive and requires massive numbers of animators to complete an ambitious film such as “The Little Mermaid.” Just like any other film, animation requires storyboarding, pitches, screenwriting, actors, directors, etc. The only difference is instead of using a camera to capture the movement of the story, artists have to draw it frame by frame. A frame is a single drawing. An animation is a collection of frames in a row that, ideally, “move” when viewed quickly. Ever heard of a flipbook? It’s the same concept: a stack of drawings just tiny changes from each other to make a seamless movement before the eye. According to Adobe, “Cel animation is one of the most traditional forms of animation and involves objects - usually characters - being hand-drawn on clear celluloid sheets and placed over painted backgrounds. These are known as animated cels or animation cels.” </p><p>These celluloid sheets are drawn and painted on for all of the characters that moved in a scene. That is why the backgrounds in cel animated films seem set in place, because they quite literally are. This style of animation was completely hands on and traditional with paint, pencils, and more. These artists would create a pencil test (an animation drawn roughly in pencil) to test how the character moves and interacts with the other characters. Disney was known for using live, moving models in the studio to help artists understand the realistic movement of the body. Animators would take a day to grab a paper pad, some pencils, and an easel to complete quick drawings of the model called gesture drawings. They would do this to understand how anatomy works and better their animation skills. If you’re interested in seeing records of these, Disney’s “Sleeping Beauty” and “Alice and Wonderland” have great films of the animators figure drawing in action. In “The Little Mermaid,” they also used models to understand how the main character, Ariel’s, hair moved underwater. According to Untitled Art Gallery, “The effect of Ariel's hair underwater was based on footage of Sally Ride when she was in space; and scenes of Sherri Lynn Stoner in a swimming pool were used in animating Ariel's swimming.” After the pencil tests were completed, they polished the frames by using clean line work. </p><p>You might be wondering, “How did they color the drawn animations?” They had a whole team dedicated to painting, yes, painting each and every single frame. This was also why hand drawn animation’s characters appeared less rendered. Rendering takes time, and time was something these studios certainly were scarce of. Untitled Art Gallery also made an excellent point on the difficulties of backgrounds in cel animation: “A challenge in animating Ariel were the colors required to show her in various changing environments, both under the sea and on land. By the end of the film, the animators required a total of 32-color models; not including costume changes. The sea-green color of her fin was a hue specially mixed by the Disney paint lab, and the color was named "Ariel" after the character.” In hand drawn animation, every single scene you see that moves or has a number of moving parts is drawn and painted by hand, unlike computer animation. This was why the use of computer graphics was a huge leg up for animation. When Musker and Clements mentioned how monumental computer animation was to making “Treasure Planet’s” moving backgrounds, they meant it. Computer graphics in a hand drawn appearance saved months of work for these animators. Buhlman claims that Clements and Musker were successful and known for mixing 2D and 3D animation techniques.</p><p>The process of mixing 2D (hand drawn) and 3D (computer animated) techniques was very tricky to pull off. As I mentioned before, the characters from “Treasure Planet” were either hand drawn, hand drawn and computer mixed, or entirely computer (which was rare). Jim Hawkins was completely hand drawn, unlike Silver. Most of Silver’s body was hand drawn. The parts of him that were computer animated were his cyborg parts like his eye and arm. Both his eye and arm have mechanical shape-shifting movements that would be near impossible to animate by hand as smoothly. B. E. N., the robot, was entirely computer animated. The animators had to create Silver’s body by hand, and then match up computer animated cyborg parts to make his design cohesive. This took time and lots of money. Musker and Clement’s budget for this film was $140 million USD, so they must have known the beast of a project they were taking on.  </p><p>Clements and Musker also created an extremely diverse set of characters for “Treasure Planet.” Every character in this film had multiple design studies and framework done, so considering there were over 50 characters to animate, they were ambitious. This animation was set on no single characters, but they did have stars in their cast. Martin Short was cast as Ben, the robot that worked for the late pirate Captain Nathaniel Flint. Martin Short was known for his roles in “The Three Amigos” and  multiple other shows and films. Tony Jay was the compelling narrator. He voiced multiple iconic characters such as Frollo in “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” and The Magic Mirror in “Snow White and the Seven Dwarves.” </p><p><strong>Topic 3 Why Did the Film Bomb?</strong></p><p>Let’s talk about another movie that faltered just before “Treasure Planet” did, in 2001. “Atlantis: The Lost Empire” was a Disney film that was created by the people that designed the very successful “Hunchback of Notre Dame,” Kirk Wise and Gary Trousdale. Drew Taylor, a Collider article author, writes about how their visions of this movie were similar to Musker and Clements. Taylor mentions how they meant for the movie to be an adventurous and action packed change of pace from the Broadway musical style they’d previously directed. They also planned the movie to be a live action film. Some critics today claim it did in fact, age like that forgotten bottle in the back of a dusty cabinet, others say it aged like milk. Just like “Treasure Planet,” “Atlantis: The Lost Empire” is packed with a thrilling quest, diverse characters, and stunning visuals. Also like “Treasure Planet,” Wise and Trousdale used computer animation mixed with hand drawn animation. They used computer animation on pieces like the submarine and the leviathan monster. When pitching the idea to multiple Disney animators and designers like John Sanford, according to Taylor, “As production got underway, they added a key member of the team: John Sanford, who served as the artistic supervisor for story. He was finishing work on <i>Mulan </i>at Disney’s Orlando satellite studio. Uninspired by the projects that he knew were in the pipeline, he called Trousdale and asked what he was working on. When Trousdale explained the project, Sanford knew he had to be a part of it. ‘It was unlike anything I’d ever heard of,’ Sanford said.” According to The Janitorium, “People just weren’t ready for a serious Disney film. Somehow it didn’t have the <i>charm</i> or the <i>feeling</i> of a Disney film – therefore it failed. While modern superhero films can be pushing the boundaries of PG-13 and still appeal to young kids, Atlantis was considered <i>too edgy</i>. And while Indiana Jones is still a lauded classic, Atlantis is panned for being just as simple and formulaic. I just can’t understand it. Sure, maybe the film wasn’t properly marketed, but neither was Hunchback – and that film still has its vocal fans and is arguably even <i>darker</i> of a Disney film.” Just like “Treasure Planet,” “Atlantis: The Lost Empire” started in excitement and promise, took sweat and tears to make, released into the wild theaters, and crashed at the box office. </p><p>The building suspension and hard work made by Clements and Musker went right into the gravel, but why? According to Bobby Berstein on the Nerdmuch website, this cosmic ship should have soared, not sank, “Despite having a talented team of animators and voice actors, the film was a commercial and critical failure, grossing only $38 million domestically against a budget of $140 million.” Unfortunately, the movie sent Disney into debt.  Bernstein claims that the reasons the film utterly failed was because of competing films in the theater like “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets” as well as “Die Another Day,” a lack of marketing, an unclear target audience, drastic swings away from  the “traditional” Disney style, a lack of emotional connection, and negative reviews. “While some reviewers praised the film’s visuals and action sequences, others criticized its pacing, lack of emotional depth, and departure from traditional Disney storytelling.”</p><p>In “Why Treasure Planet Became One of Disney’s Most Expensive Failures Ever,” Courtney Mason explains how the movie was so expensive to make. The blend of 2D and 3D animation techniques cost a pretty penny. Long John Silver’s character required both hand drawn animation and computer animation to bring his cyborg parts to life, as mentioned previously. Now, imagine the number of animators in a number of departments working on the hand drawn animation alone <i>plus </i>the cost of computer animators and advanced programs. This movie was a fusion between computer animation and hand drawn animation, and with fusions come problem solving and expenses. Most of the backgrounds and special effects were computer animated as well as characters like B.E.N. and parts of Silver. Everything else, including main and background characters, were hand drawn. The directors wanted to make this film majestic, adventurous, and grand like a Steven Spielburg movie. Mason notes that because of the advances in computer animation in Pixar films and the decline of hand drawn animation with its demand of countless workers and longer development cycles, “Treasure Planet” was outdated the day it was released. </p><p>The wholesome and epic story was ahead of its time according to Cameron Gorman on Collider, “Sarah Hawkins (Laurie Metcalf), a put-upon inn owner, is reading a bedtime story to her son Jim. This ordinary scene of domesticity — something that would feel at home in its source material — is suddenly elevated when we see Jim's book. It's more of a hologram show than a traditional novel, the images moving and turning in their own little spaces.” The mix between old fashioned and technology is extremely creative and unique compared to previous Disney animated films, but failed epically in the box office. Gorman also conducts another reason why this film didn’t reach an audience: the main character was too old. If that’s so, I’d say that is completely unfair considering Cinderella was supposedly 19 years old, four years older than Jim Hawkins. Maybe if Disney put a crown on Jim and made him a ‘space prince’ with a love interest, it would’ve received more attention considering the audience at the time was conditioned to consume love stories and happy endings from Disney’s buffet.  </p><p><strong>Topic 4 A Cinema Wrestling Match in Theaters </strong></p><p>You might be wondering, “Okay, so what if ‘Treasure Planet’ isn’t a traditional Disney film? So what if these points are valid, how did the film fall so hard then? It couldn’t have been that bad, right?” Yes, the technology was quickly evolving in animation studios, and yes, this film was not your average sing-song Disney delight. However, animators like John Musker and Ron Clements had to face what every filmmaker dreads: the theater competitions. Each film is fighting fist to fist, tooth and nail to earn that ticket. All movies stare each other down in the face across from each other in the filthy, carpeted halls of the movie theaters. Each poster is trying to persuade the consumer, screaming at them, to win over their interest for the sake of a good rating, excellent box office numbers, and maybe even another ticket. </p><p>So Musker and Clement’s studio has shined up and polished off their beautiful creation and sent it off to the gritty audience. Mind you, “Treasure Planet” was released in 2002. Allow me to expand on the competition in 2002 theaters: “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers,” “Spider-Man,” “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets,” “Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones,” “Die Another Day,” “Men in Black II,” “Lilo and Stitch,” - must I go on? In the realm of movie lovers all over the world, these films I just mentioned were iconic when they came out. It seems as if almost anyone who dared to challenge these theater titans, were doomed to fail.  </p><p><strong>Topic 5 Why Does it Have an Audience Today?</strong></p><p>Like a zombie crawling out of a grave, “Treasure Planet” received the audience it deserves 20 years after it was released. The craftsmanship of the hand drawn mixed with computer animation is now seen as legendary. “Silver's cyborg animation, too, remains impressive,” Courtney Mason writes, “ The mechanics of his arm are quite hypnotizing and fascinating to watch. Morph stands out as Disney's signature cute sidekick, and does a wonderful job of being funny and adorable. The script ebbs and flows, with humor being provided by the only entirely CG character in the film, B.E.N. Superior to all, though, is the relationship between Jim and Silver.”</p><p><i>The New York Times </i>wrote in December, 2022 that the film was grossly underappreciated with its striking visuals and relatable character traumas. <i>The New York Times </i>also mentioned how video games, other films, and a negative impression of the rebellious teenage main character could have contributed to the cold shoulder from the public. They expressed how monumental and unique it was to have Jim’s character to be the way it was, “Outside of its irreplicable conception, “Treasure Planet” also tapped into adolescent woes that powerfully spoke to many teens because it treated the flood of emotions young people grapple with as legitimate. The hero here was rough around the edges. For their intergalactic coming-of-age tale, the directors turned Hawkins into a rebellious 15-year-old with a braided rat tail who surfs the skies on a solar-powered board. His father left when he was a child and his loving but worried mother can’t seem to get through to him. To find himself and mature, this brooding heartthrob must leave on an epic quest.” <i>The New York Times</i> acknowledged how much of a relatable role model Jim Hawkins was instead of the trouble-making boy parents and critics saw. “Treasure Planet” also had a very complex and well-crafted relationship between two important characters, Jim Hawkins and Long John Silver. Silver filled that fatherly role that Hawkins was in desperate need of since his father left him at a young age. Silver saw Hawkins as a son and someone to take under his wing, to see the universe with. It was a beautiful complex relationship because Jim Hawkins was the hero, and Long John Silver was soon to be revealed as the leader of the pirates who would hijack the ship. <i>The New York Times </i>recognized this, “Though not a musical, “Treasure Planet” features a touching montage to the tune of the singer’s John Rzeznik’s “I’m Still Here,” a song written for the film, that bridges Hawkins’s abandonment trauma and his burgeoning relationship with Silver, a figure filling that paternal void.” Laura Kelly from Inkverse said something similar about the two character’s relationship, “The central relationship is the father-son bond that develops between John Silver and Jim, who finds encouragement from the pirate that he never received from his distant father. Throughout the story, become more responsible and confident, while Silver gains the capacity to care about another person. That aching search for validation — the need for a flawed role model to tell you how proud they are of you — comes across with a deep emotional maturity in Musker and Clements’s passion project, written with Rob Edwards.” Kelly also mentions how Disney was not a stranger to parental abandonment in story-telling, but the character showing resentment towards the parent is rare. Musker and Clements’ masterpiece was just ahead of its time. Their animated film “Treasure Planet” has managed to find its audience after twenty years like a relic that was forgotten, buried in the ground, and dug up decades later to be discovered as treasure. </p><p> </p><p><strong>References </strong></p><ul><li>Gorman, Cameron. (2023, February 5). <i>Why ‘Treasure Planet’ Was Such a Spectacular Sci-Fi Flop. </i>Collider. <a href="https://collider.com/treasure-planet-failed/#:~:text=An%20Older%20Protagonist%20and%20Poor,Led%20to%20Treasure%20Planet's%20Failure&text=Despite%20its%20hard%20journey%20to,one%20of%20Disney's%20worst%20failures">https://collider.com/treasure-planet-failed/#:~:text=An%20Older%20Protagonist%20and%20Poor,Led%20to%20Treasure%20Planet's%20Failure&text=Despite%20its%20hard%20journey%20to,one%20of%20Disney's%20worst%20failures</a>.  </li><li>Mason, Courtney. (2022, July 23). <i>Why Treasure Planet Became One of Disney’s Most Expensive Failures Ever. </i>Screenrant. <a href="https://screenrant.com/treasure-planet-2002-disney-box-office-bomb-cost-reason/">https://screenrant.com/treasure-planet-2002-disney-box-office-bomb-cost-reason/</a></li><li>Bernstein, Bobby. (2023, March 9). <i>Why Disney’s ‘Treasure Planet’ Failed Miserably. </i>Nerd much?. <a href="https://www.nerdmuch.com/movies/treasure-planet-failed/">https://www.nerdmuch.com/movies/treasure-planet-failed/</a></li><li>Kelly, Laura. (2022, November 27). <i>Treasure Planet Was a Box Office Failure, but 20 Years Later, it Found its Audience. </i>Inverse. <a href="https://www.inverse.com/culture/treasure-planet-20-year-anniversary">https://www.inverse.com/culture/treasure-planet-20-year-anniversary</a></li><li>Aguilar, Carlos. (2022, December 28). ‘<i>Treasure Planet’ at 20: Disney’s Failed Space Odyssey Deserved to Soar. </i>The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/28/movies/treasure-planet-disney.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/28/movies/treasure-planet-disney.html</a></li><li>Gladstein, Scott. (2017, March 21). <i>The Bizarre Story of How Treasure Planet Got Made. </i>Medium. <a href="https://medium.com/@scottgladstein/the-bizzare-story-of-how-treasure-planet-got-made-bfa184acdd18">https://medium.com/@scottgladstein/the-bizzare-story-of-how-treasure-planet-got-made-bfa184acdd18</a></li><li>Buhlman, Jocelyn. (2017, November 27). <i>D23 Celebrates 15 Years of ‘Treasure Planet’ with DirectorsRon Clements and John Musker. </i>D23: The Official Disney Fan Club. <a href="https://d23.com/d23-celebrates-15-years-treasure-planet-directors-ron-clements-john-musker/">https://d23.com/d23-celebrates-15-years-treasure-planet-directors-ron-clements-john-musker/</a></li><li>(2022). <i>Nine Old Mentors: Ron Clements and John Musker’s Reflections. </i>The Walt Disney Family Museum. <a href="https://www.waltdisney.org/education/talks/nine-old-mentors-ron-clements-and-john-muskers-reflections">https://www.waltdisney.org/education/talks/nine-old-mentors-ron-clements-and-john-muskers-reflections</a></li><li>(2019). <i>The Little Mermaid, 1989. </i>Untitled Art Gallery. <a href="https://www.untitledartgallery.com/the-little-mermaid#:~:text=%22The%20Little%20Mermaid%2C%22%201989%20was%20the%20final%20Disney%20film,villain%20a%20much%20bigger%20role">https://www.untitledartgallery.com/the-little-mermaid#:~:text=%22The%20Little%20Mermaid%2C%22%201989%20was%20the%20final%20Disney%20film,villain%20a%20much%20bigger%20role</a>. </li><li>(2024). <i>Animation: Hand Drawn. </i>Into Film. <a href="https://www.intofilm.org/films/filmlist/91">https://www.intofilm.org/films/filmlist/91</a></li><li>(2024). <i>Cel (Or Traditional) Animation Explained: Definition, Types, and Methods. </i>Adobe. <a href="https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud/animation/discover/cel-animation.html">https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud/animation/discover/cel-animation.html</a></li><li>Hall, Cameron Roy. (2023, January 21). <i>Treasure Planet’s Animation Was Even More 3D Than it Seems. </i>Slash Film. <a href="https://www.slashfilm.com/1168766/treasure-planets-animation-was-even-more-3d-than-it-seems/">https://www.slashfilm.com/1168766/treasure-planets-animation-was-even-more-3d-than-it-seems/</a></li><li><a href="https://collider.com/disney-atlantis-the-lost-empire-history-explained/">https://collider.com/disney-atlantis-the-lost-empire-history-explained/</a></li><li><a href="https://thejanitorium.home.blog/portfolio/dissecting-the-hate-against-atlantis-the-lost-empire/#:~:text=People%20just%20weren't%20ready,Atlantis%20was%20considered%20too%20edgy">https://thejanitorium.home.blog/portfolio/dissecting-the-hate-against-atlantis-the-lost-empire/#:~:text=People%20just%20weren't%20ready,Atlantis%20was%20considered%20too%20edgy</a>. </li></ul>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 26 Sep 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/treasure-planet-OB0fxHe_</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Bio/ Background (intro)</strong></p><ul><li>Directors: Ron Clements and John Musker </li><li>Intro (below)</li></ul><p><strong>Topic 1 Introduction</strong></p><p>To my surprise, a number of people have never seen or heard of the movie “Treasure Planet.” In this  classic retelling of “Treasure Island” by Robert Louis Stevenson,  the narrative was turned into an intergalactic adventure complete with cyborgs, space travel, and, of course, treasure. Disney’s “Treasure Planet” was one of two experimental movies in the year 2002. “Treasure Planet,” however, is notorious for its box office failure. The other experimental film, from a different in-house studio was “Lilo and Stitch,” which got way more attention and was well received by audiences. Now, this podcast is not a compare and contrast of the two experimental films of 2002, but I can’t help but take into consideration the alleged reasons why “Lilo and Stitch” swam but “Treasure Planet” sank. Both movies included obvious CGI, a wide variety of alien species, action-packed space travel, and family problems. I say this because a noticeable amount of articles claim the reason “Treasure Planet” bombed at the box office was because of the “high tech” CGI scenes. Amazingly after being scorned six feet into the grave of Disney’s backyard, 20 years later it gets dug up like a prized fossil.</p><p>Treasure Planet is based on the legendary novel “Treasure Island,” written by Robert Louis Stevenson. Instead of taking place in the Caribbean, it is set in outer space. The story begins with Jim Hawkins receiving a treasure map from a wounded alien by the name of Billy Bones in his mother’s inn. Rebellious Hawkins and passionate Dr. Delbert Doppler join a crew to find this elusive treasure hidden by the notorious pirate, Captain Nathaniel Flint. The crew of this ship seems to be of questionable authenticity as Hawkins meets the cook, Mr. Silver. Silver’s cyborg body with a robot arm reminds Hawkins of Billy Bones' warning about a cyborg. Eventually, the crew reveal themselves as pirates and launch a mutiny with Silver as their leader. The film carries multiple layers of character arcs journeys as the characters set out for Treasure Planet. This retelling of “Treasure Island” was, of course, given a sprinkle of “Disney magic” complete with striking animation, and memorable characters with flamboyant personalities. </p><p><strong>Topic 2 Who Made the Film?</strong></p><p>The striking film was directed by Ron Clements and John Musker. These guys directed “The Little Mermaid,” “Aladdin,” and “Hercules.” According to the reflections on the Walt Disney Family Museum Website, Ron Clements was born and raised in Indiana. He was inspired to learn animation at the age of 9 after seeing “Pinocchio.” He worked his way from the scraping bottom of Disney to the director’s chair. John Musker was also an animator, storyboard artist, writer, director, and producer for 40 years for Disney Animation Studios. He studied under icons like Elmer Plummer and Bill Moore at CalArts in the 1970s. “He also studied alongside classmates who would become distinguished directors such as Brad Bird, Chris Buck, Tim Burton, John Lasseter, and Henry Selick.” His partnered credits with Clements are as follows, “The Great Mouse Detective” (1986), “The Little Mermaid” (1989), “Aladdin” (1992), “Hercules” (1997), “Treasure Planet” (2002), “The Princess and the Frog” (2009), and lastly, “Moana” (2016).</p><p>Gladstein writes in <i>“The Bizarre Story of How Treasure Planet Got Made”</i> that the two directors pitched “Treasure Planet” the same time as “The Little Mermaid” in Disney’s Renaissance Era (1989-1999). The studio was extremely reluctant to green light “Treasure Planet” until the dynamic duo, Clements and Musker, shoveled out genius big time money makers like “The Little Mermaid” and “Aladdin.” Gladstein notes that the studio was so impressed with the consistency of success from these dudes that they finally said yes to “Treasure Planet.”  As an observer, I’m reading that basically “The Little Mermaid” and other MAJORLY lucrative films were just incredible proofs of concept to convince the big guys of letting “Treasure Planet” fly.</p><p>According to Jocelyn Buhlman on The Official Disney Fan Club Website, this was Clements and Musker's first sci-fi film, despite their love for science fiction. Buhlman quotes Clements explaining, “John and I are both sci-fi fans. The idea of making our pirate and taking his eye patch and turning it into a cyborg eye and taking his peg leg and making it mechanical—not only was it a science fiction thing, but it was an animation thing.” Buhlman also mentions how the two directors utilized the 3D technology used in “Tarzan” to create a camera effect on the action scenes and moving parts, “Beyond the wonders of Deep Canvas, Clements and Musker achieved the dynamic directorial style they desired by creating a whole new technology—virtual sets. A scene in “Tarzan” that most viewers can recognize that used a mix of hand drawn and computer animation is when Tarzan “slides” down mossy trees to get around in the jungle like sliding on wood floors with socks. The hand drawn element was added to Tarzan’s body as he moved around and the passing trees and jungle was the computer animation portion.</p><p>Buhlman speaks on how Clements explains the logistics of making “Treasure Planet’s” backgrounds, “‘They were actually dimensional sets made to look like 2-D backgrounds, but in truth they were 3-D, and we could move the camera around.’” This was a huge deal for animation. Let’s take another well known “classic” Disney hand drawn film for an example: “The Little Mermaid.” As previously mentioned, this enormously successful animated film was also directed by Clements and Musker. In this film, everything was hand drawn. And I do mean <i>everything.</i> Before understanding how and why animators turned to computer animation, we have to dive into the meaning of hand drawn animation and how much a labor of love it was. </p><p>Hand drawn animation is formally known as cel animation. This process of animation and film making is labor intensive and requires massive numbers of animators to complete an ambitious film such as “The Little Mermaid.” Just like any other film, animation requires storyboarding, pitches, screenwriting, actors, directors, etc. The only difference is instead of using a camera to capture the movement of the story, artists have to draw it frame by frame. A frame is a single drawing. An animation is a collection of frames in a row that, ideally, “move” when viewed quickly. Ever heard of a flipbook? It’s the same concept: a stack of drawings just tiny changes from each other to make a seamless movement before the eye. According to Adobe, “Cel animation is one of the most traditional forms of animation and involves objects - usually characters - being hand-drawn on clear celluloid sheets and placed over painted backgrounds. These are known as animated cels or animation cels.” </p><p>These celluloid sheets are drawn and painted on for all of the characters that moved in a scene. That is why the backgrounds in cel animated films seem set in place, because they quite literally are. This style of animation was completely hands on and traditional with paint, pencils, and more. These artists would create a pencil test (an animation drawn roughly in pencil) to test how the character moves and interacts with the other characters. Disney was known for using live, moving models in the studio to help artists understand the realistic movement of the body. Animators would take a day to grab a paper pad, some pencils, and an easel to complete quick drawings of the model called gesture drawings. They would do this to understand how anatomy works and better their animation skills. If you’re interested in seeing records of these, Disney’s “Sleeping Beauty” and “Alice and Wonderland” have great films of the animators figure drawing in action. In “The Little Mermaid,” they also used models to understand how the main character, Ariel’s, hair moved underwater. According to Untitled Art Gallery, “The effect of Ariel's hair underwater was based on footage of Sally Ride when she was in space; and scenes of Sherri Lynn Stoner in a swimming pool were used in animating Ariel's swimming.” After the pencil tests were completed, they polished the frames by using clean line work. </p><p>You might be wondering, “How did they color the drawn animations?” They had a whole team dedicated to painting, yes, painting each and every single frame. This was also why hand drawn animation’s characters appeared less rendered. Rendering takes time, and time was something these studios certainly were scarce of. Untitled Art Gallery also made an excellent point on the difficulties of backgrounds in cel animation: “A challenge in animating Ariel were the colors required to show her in various changing environments, both under the sea and on land. By the end of the film, the animators required a total of 32-color models; not including costume changes. The sea-green color of her fin was a hue specially mixed by the Disney paint lab, and the color was named "Ariel" after the character.” In hand drawn animation, every single scene you see that moves or has a number of moving parts is drawn and painted by hand, unlike computer animation. This was why the use of computer graphics was a huge leg up for animation. When Musker and Clements mentioned how monumental computer animation was to making “Treasure Planet’s” moving backgrounds, they meant it. Computer graphics in a hand drawn appearance saved months of work for these animators. Buhlman claims that Clements and Musker were successful and known for mixing 2D and 3D animation techniques.</p><p>The process of mixing 2D (hand drawn) and 3D (computer animated) techniques was very tricky to pull off. As I mentioned before, the characters from “Treasure Planet” were either hand drawn, hand drawn and computer mixed, or entirely computer (which was rare). Jim Hawkins was completely hand drawn, unlike Silver. Most of Silver’s body was hand drawn. The parts of him that were computer animated were his cyborg parts like his eye and arm. Both his eye and arm have mechanical shape-shifting movements that would be near impossible to animate by hand as smoothly. B. E. N., the robot, was entirely computer animated. The animators had to create Silver’s body by hand, and then match up computer animated cyborg parts to make his design cohesive. This took time and lots of money. Musker and Clement’s budget for this film was $140 million USD, so they must have known the beast of a project they were taking on.  </p><p>Clements and Musker also created an extremely diverse set of characters for “Treasure Planet.” Every character in this film had multiple design studies and framework done, so considering there were over 50 characters to animate, they were ambitious. This animation was set on no single characters, but they did have stars in their cast. Martin Short was cast as Ben, the robot that worked for the late pirate Captain Nathaniel Flint. Martin Short was known for his roles in “The Three Amigos” and  multiple other shows and films. Tony Jay was the compelling narrator. He voiced multiple iconic characters such as Frollo in “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” and The Magic Mirror in “Snow White and the Seven Dwarves.” </p><p><strong>Topic 3 Why Did the Film Bomb?</strong></p><p>Let’s talk about another movie that faltered just before “Treasure Planet” did, in 2001. “Atlantis: The Lost Empire” was a Disney film that was created by the people that designed the very successful “Hunchback of Notre Dame,” Kirk Wise and Gary Trousdale. Drew Taylor, a Collider article author, writes about how their visions of this movie were similar to Musker and Clements. Taylor mentions how they meant for the movie to be an adventurous and action packed change of pace from the Broadway musical style they’d previously directed. They also planned the movie to be a live action film. Some critics today claim it did in fact, age like that forgotten bottle in the back of a dusty cabinet, others say it aged like milk. Just like “Treasure Planet,” “Atlantis: The Lost Empire” is packed with a thrilling quest, diverse characters, and stunning visuals. Also like “Treasure Planet,” Wise and Trousdale used computer animation mixed with hand drawn animation. They used computer animation on pieces like the submarine and the leviathan monster. When pitching the idea to multiple Disney animators and designers like John Sanford, according to Taylor, “As production got underway, they added a key member of the team: John Sanford, who served as the artistic supervisor for story. He was finishing work on <i>Mulan </i>at Disney’s Orlando satellite studio. Uninspired by the projects that he knew were in the pipeline, he called Trousdale and asked what he was working on. When Trousdale explained the project, Sanford knew he had to be a part of it. ‘It was unlike anything I’d ever heard of,’ Sanford said.” According to The Janitorium, “People just weren’t ready for a serious Disney film. Somehow it didn’t have the <i>charm</i> or the <i>feeling</i> of a Disney film – therefore it failed. While modern superhero films can be pushing the boundaries of PG-13 and still appeal to young kids, Atlantis was considered <i>too edgy</i>. And while Indiana Jones is still a lauded classic, Atlantis is panned for being just as simple and formulaic. I just can’t understand it. Sure, maybe the film wasn’t properly marketed, but neither was Hunchback – and that film still has its vocal fans and is arguably even <i>darker</i> of a Disney film.” Just like “Treasure Planet,” “Atlantis: The Lost Empire” started in excitement and promise, took sweat and tears to make, released into the wild theaters, and crashed at the box office. </p><p>The building suspension and hard work made by Clements and Musker went right into the gravel, but why? According to Bobby Berstein on the Nerdmuch website, this cosmic ship should have soared, not sank, “Despite having a talented team of animators and voice actors, the film was a commercial and critical failure, grossing only $38 million domestically against a budget of $140 million.” Unfortunately, the movie sent Disney into debt.  Bernstein claims that the reasons the film utterly failed was because of competing films in the theater like “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets” as well as “Die Another Day,” a lack of marketing, an unclear target audience, drastic swings away from  the “traditional” Disney style, a lack of emotional connection, and negative reviews. “While some reviewers praised the film’s visuals and action sequences, others criticized its pacing, lack of emotional depth, and departure from traditional Disney storytelling.”</p><p>In “Why Treasure Planet Became One of Disney’s Most Expensive Failures Ever,” Courtney Mason explains how the movie was so expensive to make. The blend of 2D and 3D animation techniques cost a pretty penny. Long John Silver’s character required both hand drawn animation and computer animation to bring his cyborg parts to life, as mentioned previously. Now, imagine the number of animators in a number of departments working on the hand drawn animation alone <i>plus </i>the cost of computer animators and advanced programs. This movie was a fusion between computer animation and hand drawn animation, and with fusions come problem solving and expenses. Most of the backgrounds and special effects were computer animated as well as characters like B.E.N. and parts of Silver. Everything else, including main and background characters, were hand drawn. The directors wanted to make this film majestic, adventurous, and grand like a Steven Spielburg movie. Mason notes that because of the advances in computer animation in Pixar films and the decline of hand drawn animation with its demand of countless workers and longer development cycles, “Treasure Planet” was outdated the day it was released. </p><p>The wholesome and epic story was ahead of its time according to Cameron Gorman on Collider, “Sarah Hawkins (Laurie Metcalf), a put-upon inn owner, is reading a bedtime story to her son Jim. This ordinary scene of domesticity — something that would feel at home in its source material — is suddenly elevated when we see Jim's book. It's more of a hologram show than a traditional novel, the images moving and turning in their own little spaces.” The mix between old fashioned and technology is extremely creative and unique compared to previous Disney animated films, but failed epically in the box office. Gorman also conducts another reason why this film didn’t reach an audience: the main character was too old. If that’s so, I’d say that is completely unfair considering Cinderella was supposedly 19 years old, four years older than Jim Hawkins. Maybe if Disney put a crown on Jim and made him a ‘space prince’ with a love interest, it would’ve received more attention considering the audience at the time was conditioned to consume love stories and happy endings from Disney’s buffet.  </p><p><strong>Topic 4 A Cinema Wrestling Match in Theaters </strong></p><p>You might be wondering, “Okay, so what if ‘Treasure Planet’ isn’t a traditional Disney film? So what if these points are valid, how did the film fall so hard then? It couldn’t have been that bad, right?” Yes, the technology was quickly evolving in animation studios, and yes, this film was not your average sing-song Disney delight. However, animators like John Musker and Ron Clements had to face what every filmmaker dreads: the theater competitions. Each film is fighting fist to fist, tooth and nail to earn that ticket. All movies stare each other down in the face across from each other in the filthy, carpeted halls of the movie theaters. Each poster is trying to persuade the consumer, screaming at them, to win over their interest for the sake of a good rating, excellent box office numbers, and maybe even another ticket. </p><p>So Musker and Clement’s studio has shined up and polished off their beautiful creation and sent it off to the gritty audience. Mind you, “Treasure Planet” was released in 2002. Allow me to expand on the competition in 2002 theaters: “The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers,” “Spider-Man,” “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets,” “Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones,” “Die Another Day,” “Men in Black II,” “Lilo and Stitch,” - must I go on? In the realm of movie lovers all over the world, these films I just mentioned were iconic when they came out. It seems as if almost anyone who dared to challenge these theater titans, were doomed to fail.  </p><p><strong>Topic 5 Why Does it Have an Audience Today?</strong></p><p>Like a zombie crawling out of a grave, “Treasure Planet” received the audience it deserves 20 years after it was released. The craftsmanship of the hand drawn mixed with computer animation is now seen as legendary. “Silver's cyborg animation, too, remains impressive,” Courtney Mason writes, “ The mechanics of his arm are quite hypnotizing and fascinating to watch. Morph stands out as Disney's signature cute sidekick, and does a wonderful job of being funny and adorable. The script ebbs and flows, with humor being provided by the only entirely CG character in the film, B.E.N. Superior to all, though, is the relationship between Jim and Silver.”</p><p><i>The New York Times </i>wrote in December, 2022 that the film was grossly underappreciated with its striking visuals and relatable character traumas. <i>The New York Times </i>also mentioned how video games, other films, and a negative impression of the rebellious teenage main character could have contributed to the cold shoulder from the public. They expressed how monumental and unique it was to have Jim’s character to be the way it was, “Outside of its irreplicable conception, “Treasure Planet” also tapped into adolescent woes that powerfully spoke to many teens because it treated the flood of emotions young people grapple with as legitimate. The hero here was rough around the edges. For their intergalactic coming-of-age tale, the directors turned Hawkins into a rebellious 15-year-old with a braided rat tail who surfs the skies on a solar-powered board. His father left when he was a child and his loving but worried mother can’t seem to get through to him. To find himself and mature, this brooding heartthrob must leave on an epic quest.” <i>The New York Times</i> acknowledged how much of a relatable role model Jim Hawkins was instead of the trouble-making boy parents and critics saw. “Treasure Planet” also had a very complex and well-crafted relationship between two important characters, Jim Hawkins and Long John Silver. Silver filled that fatherly role that Hawkins was in desperate need of since his father left him at a young age. Silver saw Hawkins as a son and someone to take under his wing, to see the universe with. It was a beautiful complex relationship because Jim Hawkins was the hero, and Long John Silver was soon to be revealed as the leader of the pirates who would hijack the ship. <i>The New York Times </i>recognized this, “Though not a musical, “Treasure Planet” features a touching montage to the tune of the singer’s John Rzeznik’s “I’m Still Here,” a song written for the film, that bridges Hawkins’s abandonment trauma and his burgeoning relationship with Silver, a figure filling that paternal void.” Laura Kelly from Inkverse said something similar about the two character’s relationship, “The central relationship is the father-son bond that develops between John Silver and Jim, who finds encouragement from the pirate that he never received from his distant father. Throughout the story, become more responsible and confident, while Silver gains the capacity to care about another person. That aching search for validation — the need for a flawed role model to tell you how proud they are of you — comes across with a deep emotional maturity in Musker and Clements’s passion project, written with Rob Edwards.” Kelly also mentions how Disney was not a stranger to parental abandonment in story-telling, but the character showing resentment towards the parent is rare. Musker and Clements’ masterpiece was just ahead of its time. Their animated film “Treasure Planet” has managed to find its audience after twenty years like a relic that was forgotten, buried in the ground, and dug up decades later to be discovered as treasure. </p><p> </p><p><strong>References </strong></p><ul><li>Gorman, Cameron. (2023, February 5). <i>Why ‘Treasure Planet’ Was Such a Spectacular Sci-Fi Flop. </i>Collider. <a href="https://collider.com/treasure-planet-failed/#:~:text=An%20Older%20Protagonist%20and%20Poor,Led%20to%20Treasure%20Planet's%20Failure&text=Despite%20its%20hard%20journey%20to,one%20of%20Disney's%20worst%20failures">https://collider.com/treasure-planet-failed/#:~:text=An%20Older%20Protagonist%20and%20Poor,Led%20to%20Treasure%20Planet's%20Failure&text=Despite%20its%20hard%20journey%20to,one%20of%20Disney's%20worst%20failures</a>.  </li><li>Mason, Courtney. (2022, July 23). <i>Why Treasure Planet Became One of Disney’s Most Expensive Failures Ever. </i>Screenrant. <a href="https://screenrant.com/treasure-planet-2002-disney-box-office-bomb-cost-reason/">https://screenrant.com/treasure-planet-2002-disney-box-office-bomb-cost-reason/</a></li><li>Bernstein, Bobby. (2023, March 9). <i>Why Disney’s ‘Treasure Planet’ Failed Miserably. </i>Nerd much?. <a href="https://www.nerdmuch.com/movies/treasure-planet-failed/">https://www.nerdmuch.com/movies/treasure-planet-failed/</a></li><li>Kelly, Laura. (2022, November 27). <i>Treasure Planet Was a Box Office Failure, but 20 Years Later, it Found its Audience. </i>Inverse. <a href="https://www.inverse.com/culture/treasure-planet-20-year-anniversary">https://www.inverse.com/culture/treasure-planet-20-year-anniversary</a></li><li>Aguilar, Carlos. (2022, December 28). ‘<i>Treasure Planet’ at 20: Disney’s Failed Space Odyssey Deserved to Soar. </i>The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/28/movies/treasure-planet-disney.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/28/movies/treasure-planet-disney.html</a></li><li>Gladstein, Scott. (2017, March 21). <i>The Bizarre Story of How Treasure Planet Got Made. </i>Medium. <a href="https://medium.com/@scottgladstein/the-bizzare-story-of-how-treasure-planet-got-made-bfa184acdd18">https://medium.com/@scottgladstein/the-bizzare-story-of-how-treasure-planet-got-made-bfa184acdd18</a></li><li>Buhlman, Jocelyn. (2017, November 27). <i>D23 Celebrates 15 Years of ‘Treasure Planet’ with DirectorsRon Clements and John Musker. </i>D23: The Official Disney Fan Club. <a href="https://d23.com/d23-celebrates-15-years-treasure-planet-directors-ron-clements-john-musker/">https://d23.com/d23-celebrates-15-years-treasure-planet-directors-ron-clements-john-musker/</a></li><li>(2022). <i>Nine Old Mentors: Ron Clements and John Musker’s Reflections. </i>The Walt Disney Family Museum. <a href="https://www.waltdisney.org/education/talks/nine-old-mentors-ron-clements-and-john-muskers-reflections">https://www.waltdisney.org/education/talks/nine-old-mentors-ron-clements-and-john-muskers-reflections</a></li><li>(2019). <i>The Little Mermaid, 1989. </i>Untitled Art Gallery. <a href="https://www.untitledartgallery.com/the-little-mermaid#:~:text=%22The%20Little%20Mermaid%2C%22%201989%20was%20the%20final%20Disney%20film,villain%20a%20much%20bigger%20role">https://www.untitledartgallery.com/the-little-mermaid#:~:text=%22The%20Little%20Mermaid%2C%22%201989%20was%20the%20final%20Disney%20film,villain%20a%20much%20bigger%20role</a>. </li><li>(2024). <i>Animation: Hand Drawn. </i>Into Film. <a href="https://www.intofilm.org/films/filmlist/91">https://www.intofilm.org/films/filmlist/91</a></li><li>(2024). <i>Cel (Or Traditional) Animation Explained: Definition, Types, and Methods. </i>Adobe. <a href="https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud/animation/discover/cel-animation.html">https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud/animation/discover/cel-animation.html</a></li><li>Hall, Cameron Roy. (2023, January 21). <i>Treasure Planet’s Animation Was Even More 3D Than it Seems. </i>Slash Film. <a href="https://www.slashfilm.com/1168766/treasure-planets-animation-was-even-more-3d-than-it-seems/">https://www.slashfilm.com/1168766/treasure-planets-animation-was-even-more-3d-than-it-seems/</a></li><li><a href="https://collider.com/disney-atlantis-the-lost-empire-history-explained/">https://collider.com/disney-atlantis-the-lost-empire-history-explained/</a></li><li><a href="https://thejanitorium.home.blog/portfolio/dissecting-the-hate-against-atlantis-the-lost-empire/#:~:text=People%20just%20weren't%20ready,Atlantis%20was%20considered%20too%20edgy">https://thejanitorium.home.blog/portfolio/dissecting-the-hate-against-atlantis-the-lost-empire/#:~:text=People%20just%20weren't%20ready,Atlantis%20was%20considered%20too%20edgy</a>. </li></ul>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="41704852" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/9bbb4262-c60e-4e66-a180-a57f6344f1e4/audio/47053d43-1386-4139-953a-c96a63cb8123/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Treasure Planet</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/3fa6b881-eba7-42bb-b23c-022aa1d87378/1a0f6205-d0af-4d39-8cde-72f96e07a36f/3000x3000/idh-s3-ep3.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:43:25</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Treasure Planet is an infamous film in the Animated Disney canon. Known primarily as a financial failure that has since gained cult status, this episode covers the making of the film and the critical response to it at the time of its release in 2002 and since.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Treasure Planet is an infamous film in the Animated Disney canon. Known primarily as a financial failure that has since gained cult status, this episode covers the making of the film and the critical response to it at the time of its release in 2002 and since.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>design, cult classic, animation, illustration, treasure planet, disney, failure</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>4</itunes:season>
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    <item>
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      <title>Lynd Ward</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Lynd Ward hits all my favorite aspects of the mercurial world of art and design. Here is the son of a leader of the Methodist Church whose work unabashedly depicts the underside of the Depression Era city and the undead creatures of gothic horror (often in the buff). His work embodies the height of graphic narrative and the depth of pulp chunkiness. The elite halls of the gallery and chummy confines of the childrens’ library nook. Comfortable with brush or knife, his work carries an expressionistic zeal to it that would go on to influence comic books, illustration and printmaking well into the 21st. Century. Mighty impressive for a man whose work primarily consisted of no more than 2 to 3 colors per image. </p><p> </p><p><strong>TIMELINE</strong></p><ul><li>Born 1905, second child to Harry Frederick Ward and Harriet May Kendall Ward, in Chicago Illinois- contract Tuberculosis, prompting move to Lonely Lake, Ontario. Stays sickly as a kid</li><li>1915. Begins interest in art by reading and copying Dore’s Bible. This is encouraged by mother with trips to art museums in Boston where the family has moved.</li><li>1922. Attends Teachers College at Columbia University. Meets wife, May McNeer there. </li><li>1926. Graduates from Columbia and studied for a year in Leipzig at the Staatliche Akademie für Graphische Kunste und Buchgewerbe. Heavily influenced by working wood engraver Theodore Mueller</li><li>1927. Discovers the work of Frans Masereel- another major influence, and heads back to US to start working freelance in publishing</li><li>1928. Begins receiving commissions, working in a variety of formats</li><li>1929. Publishes Gods’ Man with Cape & Smith Publishing- comes out week of Wall Street Crash but sells more than 20 thousand copies.</li><li>1930. Publishes Mad Man’s Drum, loses first child after premature birth. Spends Winter in Paris and learns how to play the accordion.</li><li>1931. Essentially a superstar illustrator at this point, his wife quips that he works from 9 AM to midnight, Seven days a week (good god), apparently he kept this pace into his 60s. Co-founds the Equinox Press.</li><li>1932. Wild Pilgrimage published by Smith and Haas. (Insane output of work over a 4 year period)</li><li>1935. Helps found American Artists’ Congress</li><li>1936: Produces Song Without Words</li><li>1937. Named supervisor of the Graphic Arts Division of the New york Chapter of the Federal Arts Project. Vertigo is published.  The Haunted Omnibus Published</li><li>1938. Helps Hans Alexander Mueller and his wife flee Germany, and aids in him getting work, including writing Woodcuts & Wood Engravings: How I Make Them, a process that leads to the dissolving of Equinox. His most ambitious illustration project, over 500 drawings for an edition of Les Miserable is published. (Again, an insane amount of work for 10 years). </li><li>1939. Became first Chairman of the Union of American Artists</li><li>1940. Abandons “woodcut novel” form. Contributes illustration to Psychology study/text Adolescent Fantasy…</li><li>1943. Illustrates Esther Forbes’s Johnny Tremain, which wins the 1944 Newberry Award and starts long working relationship with Hoghton Mifflin and children’s editor Mary Silva Cosgrave.</li><li>1945-152. Continues to win awards and rack up work for Houghton Mifflin and places like The Atlantic Monthly</li><li>1952. Writes and illustrates The Biggest Bear, which would win the Caldecott the following year. </li><li>1962- Accepts mural commission from the United Methodist Church- takes 7 years.</li><li>1965. Nic of the Woods published</li><li>1966. Gods’ Man and Wild Pilgrimage republished, leading to renewed interest in work as part of the 1960s  counterculture scene.</li><li>1973. The Silver Pony published</li><li>1974 Storyteller Without Words Published by Abrams</li><li>1985 Dies.</li></ul><p><strong>REFERENCES</strong></p><p>Ward, Lynd (2009). <i>Vertigo: A novel in woodcuts.</i> Dover Publications, Inc.</p><p>Ward, Lynd (1974). <i>Storyteller without words; The wood engravings of Lynd Ward</i>. Abrams.</p><p>Ward, Lynd (2010). <i>Six novels in woodcuts</i>. Library of America.</p><p>Ward, Lynd (1965). <i>Nic of the woods.</i> Houghton Mifflin.</p><p>Jones, Stephen (2015). The art of horror: An illustrated history. Applause.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 19 Sep 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/lynd-ward-PDaWh0fj</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Lynd Ward hits all my favorite aspects of the mercurial world of art and design. Here is the son of a leader of the Methodist Church whose work unabashedly depicts the underside of the Depression Era city and the undead creatures of gothic horror (often in the buff). His work embodies the height of graphic narrative and the depth of pulp chunkiness. The elite halls of the gallery and chummy confines of the childrens’ library nook. Comfortable with brush or knife, his work carries an expressionistic zeal to it that would go on to influence comic books, illustration and printmaking well into the 21st. Century. Mighty impressive for a man whose work primarily consisted of no more than 2 to 3 colors per image. </p><p> </p><p><strong>TIMELINE</strong></p><ul><li>Born 1905, second child to Harry Frederick Ward and Harriet May Kendall Ward, in Chicago Illinois- contract Tuberculosis, prompting move to Lonely Lake, Ontario. Stays sickly as a kid</li><li>1915. Begins interest in art by reading and copying Dore’s Bible. This is encouraged by mother with trips to art museums in Boston where the family has moved.</li><li>1922. Attends Teachers College at Columbia University. Meets wife, May McNeer there. </li><li>1926. Graduates from Columbia and studied for a year in Leipzig at the Staatliche Akademie für Graphische Kunste und Buchgewerbe. Heavily influenced by working wood engraver Theodore Mueller</li><li>1927. Discovers the work of Frans Masereel- another major influence, and heads back to US to start working freelance in publishing</li><li>1928. Begins receiving commissions, working in a variety of formats</li><li>1929. Publishes Gods’ Man with Cape & Smith Publishing- comes out week of Wall Street Crash but sells more than 20 thousand copies.</li><li>1930. Publishes Mad Man’s Drum, loses first child after premature birth. Spends Winter in Paris and learns how to play the accordion.</li><li>1931. Essentially a superstar illustrator at this point, his wife quips that he works from 9 AM to midnight, Seven days a week (good god), apparently he kept this pace into his 60s. Co-founds the Equinox Press.</li><li>1932. Wild Pilgrimage published by Smith and Haas. (Insane output of work over a 4 year period)</li><li>1935. Helps found American Artists’ Congress</li><li>1936: Produces Song Without Words</li><li>1937. Named supervisor of the Graphic Arts Division of the New york Chapter of the Federal Arts Project. Vertigo is published.  The Haunted Omnibus Published</li><li>1938. Helps Hans Alexander Mueller and his wife flee Germany, and aids in him getting work, including writing Woodcuts & Wood Engravings: How I Make Them, a process that leads to the dissolving of Equinox. His most ambitious illustration project, over 500 drawings for an edition of Les Miserable is published. (Again, an insane amount of work for 10 years). </li><li>1939. Became first Chairman of the Union of American Artists</li><li>1940. Abandons “woodcut novel” form. Contributes illustration to Psychology study/text Adolescent Fantasy…</li><li>1943. Illustrates Esther Forbes’s Johnny Tremain, which wins the 1944 Newberry Award and starts long working relationship with Hoghton Mifflin and children’s editor Mary Silva Cosgrave.</li><li>1945-152. Continues to win awards and rack up work for Houghton Mifflin and places like The Atlantic Monthly</li><li>1952. Writes and illustrates The Biggest Bear, which would win the Caldecott the following year. </li><li>1962- Accepts mural commission from the United Methodist Church- takes 7 years.</li><li>1965. Nic of the Woods published</li><li>1966. Gods’ Man and Wild Pilgrimage republished, leading to renewed interest in work as part of the 1960s  counterculture scene.</li><li>1973. The Silver Pony published</li><li>1974 Storyteller Without Words Published by Abrams</li><li>1985 Dies.</li></ul><p><strong>REFERENCES</strong></p><p>Ward, Lynd (2009). <i>Vertigo: A novel in woodcuts.</i> Dover Publications, Inc.</p><p>Ward, Lynd (1974). <i>Storyteller without words; The wood engravings of Lynd Ward</i>. Abrams.</p><p>Ward, Lynd (2010). <i>Six novels in woodcuts</i>. Library of America.</p><p>Ward, Lynd (1965). <i>Nic of the woods.</i> Houghton Mifflin.</p><p>Jones, Stephen (2015). The art of horror: An illustrated history. Applause.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Lynd Ward</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/3fa6b881-eba7-42bb-b23c-022aa1d87378/07d351bc-aced-477c-ae7c-c180e7e71c85/3000x3000/incomplet-igposts-s3-ep2-ward.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:26:36</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode takes a look at the life and career of illustrator Lynd Ward, a prominent 20th Century illustrator and godfather of the Modern Graphic Novel.  </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode takes a look at the life and career of illustrator Lynd Ward, a prominent 20th Century illustrator and godfather of the Modern Graphic Novel.  </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>woodcuts, prints, printmaker, new deal, biography, illustration history, illustration, illustrator, vertigo, woodcut novels, lynd ward</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
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      <title>José Guadalupe Posada</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>José Guadalupe Posada was a Mexican illustrator who worked in lithography and engraving, he was a very prolific image maker who completed an estimated 20,000 illustrations in his lifetime, with themes ranging from Día de los Muertos or Day of the Dead illustrations, political cartoons, popular illustrations, and daily life, as well as illustrations for “shocking” crime stories. He was also known to have created illustrations for a number of children’s books in the form of cheaply printed chapbooks with the printer Antonio Vanegas Arroyo, making them accessible to wide audiences. Yet despite his enduring legacy, his contributions are not often discussed in histories of graphic design, yet his story reveals a deep history of image making and mass production of images in Mexico, which includes the foundation of the Taller de Gráfica Popular, a collective founded by Leopoldo Méndez, Luis Arenal, and Pablo O’Higgins. Posada’s popular Day of the Dead icons, such as the Calavera Catrina, have captured the hearts and imaginations of many. Born in 1852 in Aguascalientes, Mexico, he made his way to Mexico City after a devastating flood upended his life. It is perhaps this move that allowed his work to be “discovered” by artists and historians after his untimely death in 1913. Though his work has been recognized by art historians, and he has been honored with a number of posthumous exhibitions of his work around the world, there is still work to be done to include his story in histories of graphic design. His images were geared to popular audiences, and a wide range of people had access to them and enjoyed them in his lifetime.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1852 - Born, February 2, Aguascalientes, Mexico<br />1860s - receives drawing instruction Municipal Academy of Drawing in Aguascalientes<br />1867 - Census records Posada as a Painter<br />1868 - Begins working with Trinidad Pedroza<br />1871 - First political Cartoon published in El Jicote<br />1872 - Pedroza and Posada move to León<br />1876 - Takes charge of Pedroza print shop<br />1888 - Moves to Mexico City<br />1888-90 - collaborates with the newspaper La Patria Ilustrada and the Revisita de Mexico<br />1910 - The Mexican Revolution begins<br />1913 - Died, January 20, Mexico City, Mexico<br />1920 - The Mexican Revolution ends<br />1937 - Taller de Gráfica Popular, collective founded by Leopoldo Méndez, Luis Arenal, and Pablo O’Higgins</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Acosta, T. (2023, September 19). Dia de los Muertos: Its rich history, traditions and why not all Mexicans celebrate it. Arizona Republic. <a href="https://www.azcentral.com/story/entertainment/holidays/2023/09/19/origin-of-day-of-the-dead/70489251007/">https://www.azcentral.com/story/entertainment/holidays/2023/09/19/origin-of-day-of-the-dead/70489251007/</a></p><p>Aguilar Montes de Oca, R. I. (2016). The Day of the Dead: One Ritual, NewFolk Costumes, and Old Identities. <i>Folklore (Tartu, Estonia)</i>, 66, 95.</p><p>Britannica, T. Editors of Encyclopaedia (2023, October 19). León. Encyclopedia Britannica. <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/Leon-Mexico">https://www.britannica.com/place/Leon-Mexico</a></p><p>Bunker, S. B. (2012). <i>Creating Mexican consumer culture in the age of Porfirio Díaz</i>. University of New Mexico Press.</p><p>Casillas, M. L. (2013). <i>Posada & Manilla: Illustrations for Mexican Fairy Tales</i>. RM.</p><p>Doyle, S., Grove, J., & Whitney, S. (Eds.). (2019). <i>History of Illustration</i>. Fairchild Books.</p><p>Frank, P. (1998). <i>Posada’s Broadsides: Mexican popular imagery, 1890-1910</i>. University of New Mexico Press.</p><p>Greenspan, J. (2018, August 31). <i>6 things you may not know about the Mexican Revolution</i>. HISTORY. <a href="https://www.history.com/news/6-things-you-may-not-know-about-the-mexican-revolution">https://www.history.com/news/6-things-you-may-not-know-about-the-mexican-revolution</a></p><p>Kennedy, P. (2022, December 7). <i>José Guadalupe Posada: Skulls, Skeletons and Macabre Mischief</i>. Illustration Chronicles. <a href="https://illustrationchronicles.com/Jose-Guadalupe-Posada-Skulls-Skeletons-and-Macabre-Mischief">https://illustrationchronicles.com/Jose-Guadalupe-Posada-Skulls-Skeletons-and-Macabre-Mischief</a></p><p>Lagasse, P., & Columbia University. (2018). Díaz, Porfirio.<i> In The Columbia Encyclopedia</i>. Columbia University Press.</p><p>Mexican artist José Guadalupe Posada. (n.d.). <i>Posada</i>. <a href="https://www.posada-art-foundation.com/about-posada">https://www.posada-art-foundation.com/about-posada</a></p><p>Mexico. (n.d.). RSF. <a href="https://rsf.org/en/country/mexico">https://rsf.org/en/country/mexico</a></p><p>Recalls Disaster of 1888.; HUGE WATER WALL HITS LEON, MEXICO. (1926, June 25). <i>The New York Times</i>. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/1926/06/25/archives/recalls-disaster-of-1888-huge-water-wall-hits-leon-mexico.html">https://www.nytimes.com/1926/06/25/archives/recalls-disaster-of-1888-huge-water-wall-hits-leon-mexico.html</a></p><p><i>Short biography — The Jean Charlot Foundation</i>. (n.d.). The Jean Charlot Foundation. <a href="https://www.jeancharlot.org/short-biography">https://www.jeancharlot.org/short-biography</a></p><p>Taller de Gráfica Popular (Mexico City, Mexico) | The Art Institute of Chicago. (2001, July 4). The Art Institute of Chicago. <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artists/72887/taller-de-grafica-popular-mexico-city-mexico">https://www.artic.edu/artists/72887/taller-de-grafica-popular-mexico-city-mexico</a></p><p>Tyler, R. (1979). <i>Posada’s Mexico</i>. Library of Congress.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 12 Sep 2024 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/jose-guadalupe-posada-pn4CB1Ec</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>José Guadalupe Posada was a Mexican illustrator who worked in lithography and engraving, he was a very prolific image maker who completed an estimated 20,000 illustrations in his lifetime, with themes ranging from Día de los Muertos or Day of the Dead illustrations, political cartoons, popular illustrations, and daily life, as well as illustrations for “shocking” crime stories. He was also known to have created illustrations for a number of children’s books in the form of cheaply printed chapbooks with the printer Antonio Vanegas Arroyo, making them accessible to wide audiences. Yet despite his enduring legacy, his contributions are not often discussed in histories of graphic design, yet his story reveals a deep history of image making and mass production of images in Mexico, which includes the foundation of the Taller de Gráfica Popular, a collective founded by Leopoldo Méndez, Luis Arenal, and Pablo O’Higgins. Posada’s popular Day of the Dead icons, such as the Calavera Catrina, have captured the hearts and imaginations of many. Born in 1852 in Aguascalientes, Mexico, he made his way to Mexico City after a devastating flood upended his life. It is perhaps this move that allowed his work to be “discovered” by artists and historians after his untimely death in 1913. Though his work has been recognized by art historians, and he has been honored with a number of posthumous exhibitions of his work around the world, there is still work to be done to include his story in histories of graphic design. His images were geared to popular audiences, and a wide range of people had access to them and enjoyed them in his lifetime.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1852 - Born, February 2, Aguascalientes, Mexico<br />1860s - receives drawing instruction Municipal Academy of Drawing in Aguascalientes<br />1867 - Census records Posada as a Painter<br />1868 - Begins working with Trinidad Pedroza<br />1871 - First political Cartoon published in El Jicote<br />1872 - Pedroza and Posada move to León<br />1876 - Takes charge of Pedroza print shop<br />1888 - Moves to Mexico City<br />1888-90 - collaborates with the newspaper La Patria Ilustrada and the Revisita de Mexico<br />1910 - The Mexican Revolution begins<br />1913 - Died, January 20, Mexico City, Mexico<br />1920 - The Mexican Revolution ends<br />1937 - Taller de Gráfica Popular, collective founded by Leopoldo Méndez, Luis Arenal, and Pablo O’Higgins</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Acosta, T. (2023, September 19). Dia de los Muertos: Its rich history, traditions and why not all Mexicans celebrate it. Arizona Republic. <a href="https://www.azcentral.com/story/entertainment/holidays/2023/09/19/origin-of-day-of-the-dead/70489251007/">https://www.azcentral.com/story/entertainment/holidays/2023/09/19/origin-of-day-of-the-dead/70489251007/</a></p><p>Aguilar Montes de Oca, R. I. (2016). The Day of the Dead: One Ritual, NewFolk Costumes, and Old Identities. <i>Folklore (Tartu, Estonia)</i>, 66, 95.</p><p>Britannica, T. Editors of Encyclopaedia (2023, October 19). León. Encyclopedia Britannica. <a href="https://www.britannica.com/place/Leon-Mexico">https://www.britannica.com/place/Leon-Mexico</a></p><p>Bunker, S. B. (2012). <i>Creating Mexican consumer culture in the age of Porfirio Díaz</i>. University of New Mexico Press.</p><p>Casillas, M. L. (2013). <i>Posada & Manilla: Illustrations for Mexican Fairy Tales</i>. RM.</p><p>Doyle, S., Grove, J., & Whitney, S. (Eds.). (2019). <i>History of Illustration</i>. Fairchild Books.</p><p>Frank, P. (1998). <i>Posada’s Broadsides: Mexican popular imagery, 1890-1910</i>. University of New Mexico Press.</p><p>Greenspan, J. (2018, August 31). <i>6 things you may not know about the Mexican Revolution</i>. HISTORY. <a href="https://www.history.com/news/6-things-you-may-not-know-about-the-mexican-revolution">https://www.history.com/news/6-things-you-may-not-know-about-the-mexican-revolution</a></p><p>Kennedy, P. (2022, December 7). <i>José Guadalupe Posada: Skulls, Skeletons and Macabre Mischief</i>. Illustration Chronicles. <a href="https://illustrationchronicles.com/Jose-Guadalupe-Posada-Skulls-Skeletons-and-Macabre-Mischief">https://illustrationchronicles.com/Jose-Guadalupe-Posada-Skulls-Skeletons-and-Macabre-Mischief</a></p><p>Lagasse, P., & Columbia University. (2018). Díaz, Porfirio.<i> In The Columbia Encyclopedia</i>. Columbia University Press.</p><p>Mexican artist José Guadalupe Posada. (n.d.). <i>Posada</i>. <a href="https://www.posada-art-foundation.com/about-posada">https://www.posada-art-foundation.com/about-posada</a></p><p>Mexico. (n.d.). RSF. <a href="https://rsf.org/en/country/mexico">https://rsf.org/en/country/mexico</a></p><p>Recalls Disaster of 1888.; HUGE WATER WALL HITS LEON, MEXICO. (1926, June 25). <i>The New York Times</i>. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/1926/06/25/archives/recalls-disaster-of-1888-huge-water-wall-hits-leon-mexico.html">https://www.nytimes.com/1926/06/25/archives/recalls-disaster-of-1888-huge-water-wall-hits-leon-mexico.html</a></p><p><i>Short biography — The Jean Charlot Foundation</i>. (n.d.). The Jean Charlot Foundation. <a href="https://www.jeancharlot.org/short-biography">https://www.jeancharlot.org/short-biography</a></p><p>Taller de Gráfica Popular (Mexico City, Mexico) | The Art Institute of Chicago. (2001, July 4). The Art Institute of Chicago. <a href="https://www.artic.edu/artists/72887/taller-de-grafica-popular-mexico-city-mexico">https://www.artic.edu/artists/72887/taller-de-grafica-popular-mexico-city-mexico</a></p><p>Tyler, R. (1979). <i>Posada’s Mexico</i>. Library of Congress.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>José Guadalupe Posada</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/3fa6b881-eba7-42bb-b23c-022aa1d87378/2a6e4912-0375-49e2-bc4e-89d5234584a7/3000x3000/incomplet-igposts.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:24:38</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode examines the contributions of popular Mexican illustrator José Guadalupe Posada.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode examines the contributions of popular Mexican illustrator José Guadalupe Posada.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>prints, printmaker, diadelosmuertos, victorian, illustration history, illustration, illustrator, mexico, dayofthedead, woodcut, mexican, posada</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Clip Art</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>From its origins in the 1950s from the pages of books to software like MacDraw in the 1980s to CD Roms, and finally moving online in the 1990s, Clip Art’s evolution took place along with that of graphic design. Even though clip art was mostly created by unnamed designers and illustrators and sold in packages or libraries, there are many important figures we know of whose clip art contributed to the history of graphic design. Joan Shogren, an early computer art pioneer and clip art designer; Frank Fruznya, whose iconic clip art defined an era; and Sean Tejaratchi, whose cult hit zine series Crap Hound celebrates Clip Art and visually meditates on social issues. Ultimately, clip art is a misunderstood element of graphic design that holds an essential place in its history. Clip art in many ways paved the way for stock photo and stock illustration use that is common practice among designers today.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1928 – Tom Tierney born in Beaumont, Texas <br />1928–  Dan X. Solo born<br />1932 – Joan Shogren born <br />1941 – Dover Publications founded <br />1947 – Jean Larcher born in Rennes, France <br />1949 – Tierney graduates from the University of Austin in Texas, majoring in painting and sculpture <br />1950s – Clip Art began to be produced in books for commercial sale, such as The Volk Corporation<br />1951 – Tierney serves in the US Military for 3 years<br />1952 – Frank Fruznya, prolific Clip Art illustrator, born in Illinois<br />1953 – Tierney movies to NYC to work as a fashion illustrator <br />1954 – Art Chantry born <br />1960s – Tom B. Sawyer created Clip Art for Harry Volk Jr’s Volk & Co’s “Clip Book of Line Art”series<br />1963 – Shogren designs set of rules to make the first computer art with Jim Larsen and Dr. Ralph Fessenden’s assistance at San Jose Univeristy in California <br />1963 – “Cybernation” exhibition of early computer art featuring Shogren took place at the San Jose State Partna Book Store <br />1962 – Solotype founded <br />1965 – Larcher graduates after  studying  typographic art at the Paris Chaamber of Commerce <br />1969 – Artist and illustrator Mitch O’Connell starts to freelance Clip Art illustration for Dynamic Graphics <br />1970s – Dover begins publishing Clip Art books <br />1970 – Sean Tejartchi born <br />1973 –  Larcher begins freelance design work <br />1974 –  Fruznya started to work for H&R; then was recruited to work for Dynamic Graphics <br />1976 – Tierney publishes his first paper doll book, “Thirty from the 30s” which attracted the attention of Dover <br />1979 – Peter Roizen and Heidi Roizen, brother and sister, co-found T/Maker <br />1981 –  IBM introduces the first personal computer <br />1983 –  Heidi Roizen takes over as president at T/Maker <br />1983 – ImageWriter printer released<br />1983 – VCN ExecuVision published IBM’s first Clip Art library <br />1984 – Shogren starts to work for T/Maker for ClickArt <br />1984 – T/Maker releases ClickArt Publications digital Clip Art collection <br />1984 –  Brad Fregger creates Clip Art for Activision <br />1984 –  Nova Development founded <br />1984 – MacPaint comes pre installed on Macintosh computers <br />1985 – “The Year of the Computer” mass production of personal computers helps change the world <br />1985 – LaserWriter printer is introduced<br />1986 –  Graphic Source published Clip Art Books <br />1986 – Apple introduces the Macintosh Computer <br />1986 – Mac Plus released <br />1987 – MacPaint to longer pre installed on Macintosh computers<br />1987 –  T/Maker introduced first vector Clip Art made with Adobe Illustrator <br />1988 – Adobe Systems released Adobe Illustrator <br />1989 –  Company 3G Graphics published “Images with Impact!” <br />1994 – Crap Hound first published <br />1994 – Deluxe Corp buys remaining software lines from T/Maker, including ClickArt <br />1996 – Zedcor was the first company to offer Clip Art images as part of an online subscription service<br />1996 – Microsoft began to include Clip Art in it’s built in libraries <br />1996 – Animation Factory founded <br />1998-2001 – T/Makers ClickArt library sold each year due to large mergers and acquisitions to companies like Mattel and The Learning Company<br />1998 – Crap Hound ceases publishing <br />1999 – Animation Factory sold <br />2003 – Fruznya quits Dynamic Graphics after anonymously being the Clip Art world’s star illustrator in the 80s and 90s <br />2005 – Jupitermedia purchased Creatas, now owning all of Dynamic Grapahic’s clip art library <br />2005 – Tejaratchi begins to publish Crap Hound again <br />2009 –  Jupitermedia went out of business<br />2009 –  Fruzyna moves to Paradise, Michigan with his partner to paint <br />2012 –  Solo passes away<br />2014 –  Tierney passes away <br />2014 –  Microsoft discontinues it’s Clip Art library in favor of Bing Image Search <br />2015 – Dat Boi, an Animation Factory asset, becomes an early internet meme <br />2015 – Larcher passes away </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Arntson, Amy E. (1988). <i>Graphic Design Basics.</i> Saunders College Publishing. </p><p>Borrell, J. (1988, January). Verbatim: An Interview With Heidi Roizen. <i>MacWorld</i>, 74–86. </p><p>Boudrot, T. (1989, October). New Graphics Take the Rough Edges Off Clip Art. <i>Electronic Learning</i>, <i>9</i>(2), 54–56. </p><p>Brock, D. C. (2019, October 8). <i>Slide logic: The emergence of presentation software and the Prehistory of PowerPoint</i>. Computer History Museum. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://computerhistory.org/blog/slide-logic-the-emergence-of-presentation-software-and-the-prehistory-of-powerpoint/?key=slide-logic-the-emergence-of-presentation-software-and-the-prehistory-of-powerpoint">https://computerhistory.org/blog/slide-logic-the-emergence-of-presentation-software-and-the-prehistory-of-powerpoint/?key=slide-logic-the-emergence-of-presentation-software-and-the-prehistory-of-powerpoint</a></p><p>Chantry, A., & Rochester Monica René. (2015). <i>Art Chantry Speaks: A Heretic's history of 20th-century graphic design</i>. Feral House. </p><p><i>Clip Art Images: Definition, history, examples and sources</i>. blog.icons8.com. (2020, September 7). Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://blog.icons8.com/articles/clip-art-images/">https://blog.icons8.com/articles/clip-art-images/</a></p><p>Cretan, J. (2011). Macpaint.org: Clip Art Historical Gallery. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="http://www.macpaint.org/clipart.html">http://www.macpaint.org/clipart.html</a></p><p> Devroye, L. (n.d.). <i>Dan X. Solo</i>. Luc Devroye, School of Computer Science, McGill University. <a href="http://luc.devroye.org/solo.html">http://luc.devroye.org/solo.html</a></p><p>Eskilson, S. (2019). <i>Graphic design: A New History</i>. Yale University Press. </p><p>Fregger, B. (2018, November). <i>Joan Shogren Computer Art Pioneer</i>. <a href="http://fregger.com/Joan/index.html">http://fregger.com/Joan/index.html</a></p><p>Garber, M. (2014, December 2). <i>A Eulogy to Clip Art, in Clip Art</i>. The Atlantic. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/12/a-eulogy-to-clipart-in-clipart/383322/">https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/12/a-eulogy-to-clipart-in-clipart/383322/</a></p><p>Grant-Marsh, S. (Ed.). (1994, September). Editors' Choice: The Best Products Featured in MacWorld. <i>MacWorld</i>, 201–221. </p><p>Heller, S. (2012, May 25). <i>Dan X. Solo, Type Revivalist, Dies</i>. PRINT Magazine. <a href="https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/dan-x-solo-type-revivalist-dies/">https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/dan-x-solo-type-revivalist-dies/</a></p><p>Heller, S. (2022, June 6). <i>The Daily Heller: Art Chantry Reconsidered in His Own Words</i>. PRINT Magazine. <a href="https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/the-daily-heller-the-real-art-chantry-reconsidered/">https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/the-daily-heller-the-real-art-chantry-reconsidered/</a></p><p>Heid­­, J. (1987, August). Getting Started with Macintosh Graphics. <i>MacWorld</i>, 193–202. </p><p>Historic Zinesters Talking. (2009, October 24). <i>Crap Hound Zine -- Sean Tejaratchi</i>. Slide Share. <a href="https://www.slideshare.net/StaffDay/crap-hound-zine-sean-tejaratchi">https://www.slideshare.net/StaffDay/crap-hound-zine-sean-tejaratchi</a></p><p>Leifpeng. (2008, June 19). Tom Sawyer and Harry Volk. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://todaysinspiration.blogspot.com/2008/06/tom-sawyer-and-harry-volk_19.html">https://todaysinspiration.blogspot.com/2008/06/tom-sawyer-and-harry-volk_19.html</a>.</p><p>Lopez, G. (2016, May 27). <i>Dat boi, explained</i>. Vox. <a href="https://www.vox.com/2016/5/27/11789968/dat-boi-o-shit-waddup">https://www.vox.com/2016/5/27/11789968/dat-boi-o-shit-waddup</a></p><p>Mak, A. (2022, March 29). <i>A Reminder That GIFs Didn’t Always Move</i>. Slate Magazine. <a href="https://slate.com/technology/2022/03/the-history-of-gifs.html">https://slate.com/technology/2022/03/the-history-of-gifs.html</a></p><p>Manely, D. (2016, December 2). <i>History of clip art via Wikipedia</i>. OldCuts. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.oldcuts.co/blogs/news/history-of-clip-art-via-wikipedia">https://www.oldcuts.co/blogs/news/history-of-clip-art-via-wikipedia</a></p><p>Middleton, C., & Herriot, L. (2007). <i>Instant graphics: Source and remix images for professional design</i>. RotoVision. </p><p><i>Original Apple Macintosh 18 Page Brochure (Dec 1983)</i>. DigiBarn ads: Original Apple Macintosh 18 Page Brochure (Dec 1983). (1998). Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.digibarn.com/collections/ads/apple-mac/index.htm">https://www.digibarn.com/collections/ads/apple-mac/index.htm</a>.</p><p><i>Paper Doll Author Tom Tierney</i>. (2022). Dover Publications. <a href="https://www.doverpublications.com/tomtierney/">https://www.doverpublications.com/tomtierney/</a></p><p>Pot, J. (2014, December 5). <i>Clip Art is gone! here's how to find free images instead</i>. MUO. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/clip-art-gone-heres-find-free-images-instead/">https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/clip-art-gone-heres-find-free-images-instead/</a></p><p> Sandberg-Diment, E. (1985, November 26). Personal Computers; Desktop Publishing Comes of Age . <i>New York Times</i>, p. 4. </p><p>Sanders, S., & Larchuk, T. (2014, December 3). <i>Microsoft says goodbye to clip art</i>. NPR. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2014/12/02/368060012/microsoft-says-goodbye-to-clip-art">https://www.npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2014/12/02/368060012/microsoft-says-goodbye-to-clip-art</a></p><p>Sawyer, T. B. (n.d.). <i>Illustration Artwork</i>. Thomas B. Sawyer. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="http://thomasbsawyer.com/illustrationartwork.html">http://thomasbsawyer.com/illustrationartwork.html</a></p><p> Solenthaler, B. (2021, November). <i>The Bart&Co.. historic clip art collection</i>. Flickr. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/bartsol/sets/72157627595663028">https://www.flickr.com/photos/bartsol/sets/72157627595663028</a>.</p><p>Smith, E. (2018, August 30). <i>The history of Clip Art: They sold it in books</i>. Tedium. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://tedium.co/2018/08/30/clip-art-history/">https://tedium.co/2018/08/30/clip-art-history/</a></p><p>Sutton, B. (2014, December 4). <i>In honor of the death of Clip Art, a brief illustrated history of Clip Art</i>. Hyperallergic. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://hyperallergic.com/166533/in-honor-of-the-death-of-clip-art-a-brief-illustrated-history-of-clip-art/">https://hyperallergic.com/166533/in-honor-of-the-death-of-clip-art-a-brief-illustrated-history-of-clip-art/</a></p><p>Tejaratchi, S. (2014). <i>Crap Hound</i> (Vol. 5). Show & Tell Press. </p><p>The Microsoft 365 Marketing Team, & Thomas, D. (2014, December 14). <i>CLIP art is now powered by Bing Images</i>. Microsoft 365 Blog. Retrieved November 15, 2022, from <a href="https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/blog/2014/12/01/clip-art-now-powered-bing-images/">https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/blog/2014/12/01/clip-art-now-powered-bing-images/</a></p><p><i>Tom Tierney Studios</i>. (n.d.). Tom Tierney Studios. Retrieved November 1, 2022, from <a href="https://www.tomtierneystudios.com/">https://www.tomtierneystudios.com/</a></p><p>Vogt, P. J., & Goldman, A. (Hosts). (2016, April 14). Bbay King (No. 61) [Audio podcast episode]. In <i>Reply all</i>. Gimlet. <a href="https://gimletmedia.com/shows/reply-all/emhwx6/61-baby-king">https://gimletmedia.com/shows/reply-all/emhwx6/61-baby-king</a></p><p>Zantal-Wiener, A. (2017, August 27). <i>Clip art through the years: A nostalgic look back</i>. HubSpot Blog. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/clip-art-history">https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/clip-art-history</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 7 Dec 2023 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Dean Kelly, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/clip-art-4VFLE8f5</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>From its origins in the 1950s from the pages of books to software like MacDraw in the 1980s to CD Roms, and finally moving online in the 1990s, Clip Art’s evolution took place along with that of graphic design. Even though clip art was mostly created by unnamed designers and illustrators and sold in packages or libraries, there are many important figures we know of whose clip art contributed to the history of graphic design. Joan Shogren, an early computer art pioneer and clip art designer; Frank Fruznya, whose iconic clip art defined an era; and Sean Tejaratchi, whose cult hit zine series Crap Hound celebrates Clip Art and visually meditates on social issues. Ultimately, clip art is a misunderstood element of graphic design that holds an essential place in its history. Clip art in many ways paved the way for stock photo and stock illustration use that is common practice among designers today.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1928 – Tom Tierney born in Beaumont, Texas <br />1928–  Dan X. Solo born<br />1932 – Joan Shogren born <br />1941 – Dover Publications founded <br />1947 – Jean Larcher born in Rennes, France <br />1949 – Tierney graduates from the University of Austin in Texas, majoring in painting and sculpture <br />1950s – Clip Art began to be produced in books for commercial sale, such as The Volk Corporation<br />1951 – Tierney serves in the US Military for 3 years<br />1952 – Frank Fruznya, prolific Clip Art illustrator, born in Illinois<br />1953 – Tierney movies to NYC to work as a fashion illustrator <br />1954 – Art Chantry born <br />1960s – Tom B. Sawyer created Clip Art for Harry Volk Jr’s Volk & Co’s “Clip Book of Line Art”series<br />1963 – Shogren designs set of rules to make the first computer art with Jim Larsen and Dr. Ralph Fessenden’s assistance at San Jose Univeristy in California <br />1963 – “Cybernation” exhibition of early computer art featuring Shogren took place at the San Jose State Partna Book Store <br />1962 – Solotype founded <br />1965 – Larcher graduates after  studying  typographic art at the Paris Chaamber of Commerce <br />1969 – Artist and illustrator Mitch O’Connell starts to freelance Clip Art illustration for Dynamic Graphics <br />1970s – Dover begins publishing Clip Art books <br />1970 – Sean Tejartchi born <br />1973 –  Larcher begins freelance design work <br />1974 –  Fruznya started to work for H&R; then was recruited to work for Dynamic Graphics <br />1976 – Tierney publishes his first paper doll book, “Thirty from the 30s” which attracted the attention of Dover <br />1979 – Peter Roizen and Heidi Roizen, brother and sister, co-found T/Maker <br />1981 –  IBM introduces the first personal computer <br />1983 –  Heidi Roizen takes over as president at T/Maker <br />1983 – ImageWriter printer released<br />1983 – VCN ExecuVision published IBM’s first Clip Art library <br />1984 – Shogren starts to work for T/Maker for ClickArt <br />1984 – T/Maker releases ClickArt Publications digital Clip Art collection <br />1984 –  Brad Fregger creates Clip Art for Activision <br />1984 –  Nova Development founded <br />1984 – MacPaint comes pre installed on Macintosh computers <br />1985 – “The Year of the Computer” mass production of personal computers helps change the world <br />1985 – LaserWriter printer is introduced<br />1986 –  Graphic Source published Clip Art Books <br />1986 – Apple introduces the Macintosh Computer <br />1986 – Mac Plus released <br />1987 – MacPaint to longer pre installed on Macintosh computers<br />1987 –  T/Maker introduced first vector Clip Art made with Adobe Illustrator <br />1988 – Adobe Systems released Adobe Illustrator <br />1989 –  Company 3G Graphics published “Images with Impact!” <br />1994 – Crap Hound first published <br />1994 – Deluxe Corp buys remaining software lines from T/Maker, including ClickArt <br />1996 – Zedcor was the first company to offer Clip Art images as part of an online subscription service<br />1996 – Microsoft began to include Clip Art in it’s built in libraries <br />1996 – Animation Factory founded <br />1998-2001 – T/Makers ClickArt library sold each year due to large mergers and acquisitions to companies like Mattel and The Learning Company<br />1998 – Crap Hound ceases publishing <br />1999 – Animation Factory sold <br />2003 – Fruznya quits Dynamic Graphics after anonymously being the Clip Art world’s star illustrator in the 80s and 90s <br />2005 – Jupitermedia purchased Creatas, now owning all of Dynamic Grapahic’s clip art library <br />2005 – Tejaratchi begins to publish Crap Hound again <br />2009 –  Jupitermedia went out of business<br />2009 –  Fruzyna moves to Paradise, Michigan with his partner to paint <br />2012 –  Solo passes away<br />2014 –  Tierney passes away <br />2014 –  Microsoft discontinues it’s Clip Art library in favor of Bing Image Search <br />2015 – Dat Boi, an Animation Factory asset, becomes an early internet meme <br />2015 – Larcher passes away </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Arntson, Amy E. (1988). <i>Graphic Design Basics.</i> Saunders College Publishing. </p><p>Borrell, J. (1988, January). Verbatim: An Interview With Heidi Roizen. <i>MacWorld</i>, 74–86. </p><p>Boudrot, T. (1989, October). New Graphics Take the Rough Edges Off Clip Art. <i>Electronic Learning</i>, <i>9</i>(2), 54–56. </p><p>Brock, D. C. (2019, October 8). <i>Slide logic: The emergence of presentation software and the Prehistory of PowerPoint</i>. Computer History Museum. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://computerhistory.org/blog/slide-logic-the-emergence-of-presentation-software-and-the-prehistory-of-powerpoint/?key=slide-logic-the-emergence-of-presentation-software-and-the-prehistory-of-powerpoint">https://computerhistory.org/blog/slide-logic-the-emergence-of-presentation-software-and-the-prehistory-of-powerpoint/?key=slide-logic-the-emergence-of-presentation-software-and-the-prehistory-of-powerpoint</a></p><p>Chantry, A., & Rochester Monica René. (2015). <i>Art Chantry Speaks: A Heretic's history of 20th-century graphic design</i>. Feral House. </p><p><i>Clip Art Images: Definition, history, examples and sources</i>. blog.icons8.com. (2020, September 7). Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://blog.icons8.com/articles/clip-art-images/">https://blog.icons8.com/articles/clip-art-images/</a></p><p>Cretan, J. (2011). Macpaint.org: Clip Art Historical Gallery. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="http://www.macpaint.org/clipart.html">http://www.macpaint.org/clipart.html</a></p><p> Devroye, L. (n.d.). <i>Dan X. Solo</i>. Luc Devroye, School of Computer Science, McGill University. <a href="http://luc.devroye.org/solo.html">http://luc.devroye.org/solo.html</a></p><p>Eskilson, S. (2019). <i>Graphic design: A New History</i>. Yale University Press. </p><p>Fregger, B. (2018, November). <i>Joan Shogren Computer Art Pioneer</i>. <a href="http://fregger.com/Joan/index.html">http://fregger.com/Joan/index.html</a></p><p>Garber, M. (2014, December 2). <i>A Eulogy to Clip Art, in Clip Art</i>. The Atlantic. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/12/a-eulogy-to-clipart-in-clipart/383322/">https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2014/12/a-eulogy-to-clipart-in-clipart/383322/</a></p><p>Grant-Marsh, S. (Ed.). (1994, September). Editors' Choice: The Best Products Featured in MacWorld. <i>MacWorld</i>, 201–221. </p><p>Heller, S. (2012, May 25). <i>Dan X. Solo, Type Revivalist, Dies</i>. PRINT Magazine. <a href="https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/dan-x-solo-type-revivalist-dies/">https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/dan-x-solo-type-revivalist-dies/</a></p><p>Heller, S. (2022, June 6). <i>The Daily Heller: Art Chantry Reconsidered in His Own Words</i>. PRINT Magazine. <a href="https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/the-daily-heller-the-real-art-chantry-reconsidered/">https://www.printmag.com/daily-heller/the-daily-heller-the-real-art-chantry-reconsidered/</a></p><p>Heid­­, J. (1987, August). Getting Started with Macintosh Graphics. <i>MacWorld</i>, 193–202. </p><p>Historic Zinesters Talking. (2009, October 24). <i>Crap Hound Zine -- Sean Tejaratchi</i>. Slide Share. <a href="https://www.slideshare.net/StaffDay/crap-hound-zine-sean-tejaratchi">https://www.slideshare.net/StaffDay/crap-hound-zine-sean-tejaratchi</a></p><p>Leifpeng. (2008, June 19). Tom Sawyer and Harry Volk. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://todaysinspiration.blogspot.com/2008/06/tom-sawyer-and-harry-volk_19.html">https://todaysinspiration.blogspot.com/2008/06/tom-sawyer-and-harry-volk_19.html</a>.</p><p>Lopez, G. (2016, May 27). <i>Dat boi, explained</i>. Vox. <a href="https://www.vox.com/2016/5/27/11789968/dat-boi-o-shit-waddup">https://www.vox.com/2016/5/27/11789968/dat-boi-o-shit-waddup</a></p><p>Mak, A. (2022, March 29). <i>A Reminder That GIFs Didn’t Always Move</i>. Slate Magazine. <a href="https://slate.com/technology/2022/03/the-history-of-gifs.html">https://slate.com/technology/2022/03/the-history-of-gifs.html</a></p><p>Manely, D. (2016, December 2). <i>History of clip art via Wikipedia</i>. OldCuts. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.oldcuts.co/blogs/news/history-of-clip-art-via-wikipedia">https://www.oldcuts.co/blogs/news/history-of-clip-art-via-wikipedia</a></p><p>Middleton, C., & Herriot, L. (2007). <i>Instant graphics: Source and remix images for professional design</i>. RotoVision. </p><p><i>Original Apple Macintosh 18 Page Brochure (Dec 1983)</i>. DigiBarn ads: Original Apple Macintosh 18 Page Brochure (Dec 1983). (1998). Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.digibarn.com/collections/ads/apple-mac/index.htm">https://www.digibarn.com/collections/ads/apple-mac/index.htm</a>.</p><p><i>Paper Doll Author Tom Tierney</i>. (2022). Dover Publications. <a href="https://www.doverpublications.com/tomtierney/">https://www.doverpublications.com/tomtierney/</a></p><p>Pot, J. (2014, December 5). <i>Clip Art is gone! here's how to find free images instead</i>. MUO. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/clip-art-gone-heres-find-free-images-instead/">https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/clip-art-gone-heres-find-free-images-instead/</a></p><p> Sandberg-Diment, E. (1985, November 26). Personal Computers; Desktop Publishing Comes of Age . <i>New York Times</i>, p. 4. </p><p>Sanders, S., & Larchuk, T. (2014, December 3). <i>Microsoft says goodbye to clip art</i>. NPR. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2014/12/02/368060012/microsoft-says-goodbye-to-clip-art">https://www.npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2014/12/02/368060012/microsoft-says-goodbye-to-clip-art</a></p><p>Sawyer, T. B. (n.d.). <i>Illustration Artwork</i>. Thomas B. Sawyer. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="http://thomasbsawyer.com/illustrationartwork.html">http://thomasbsawyer.com/illustrationartwork.html</a></p><p> Solenthaler, B. (2021, November). <i>The Bart&Co.. historic clip art collection</i>. Flickr. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/bartsol/sets/72157627595663028">https://www.flickr.com/photos/bartsol/sets/72157627595663028</a>.</p><p>Smith, E. (2018, August 30). <i>The history of Clip Art: They sold it in books</i>. Tedium. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://tedium.co/2018/08/30/clip-art-history/">https://tedium.co/2018/08/30/clip-art-history/</a></p><p>Sutton, B. (2014, December 4). <i>In honor of the death of Clip Art, a brief illustrated history of Clip Art</i>. Hyperallergic. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://hyperallergic.com/166533/in-honor-of-the-death-of-clip-art-a-brief-illustrated-history-of-clip-art/">https://hyperallergic.com/166533/in-honor-of-the-death-of-clip-art-a-brief-illustrated-history-of-clip-art/</a></p><p>Tejaratchi, S. (2014). <i>Crap Hound</i> (Vol. 5). Show & Tell Press. </p><p>The Microsoft 365 Marketing Team, & Thomas, D. (2014, December 14). <i>CLIP art is now powered by Bing Images</i>. Microsoft 365 Blog. Retrieved November 15, 2022, from <a href="https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/blog/2014/12/01/clip-art-now-powered-bing-images/">https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/blog/2014/12/01/clip-art-now-powered-bing-images/</a></p><p><i>Tom Tierney Studios</i>. (n.d.). Tom Tierney Studios. Retrieved November 1, 2022, from <a href="https://www.tomtierneystudios.com/">https://www.tomtierneystudios.com/</a></p><p>Vogt, P. J., & Goldman, A. (Hosts). (2016, April 14). Bbay King (No. 61) [Audio podcast episode]. In <i>Reply all</i>. Gimlet. <a href="https://gimletmedia.com/shows/reply-all/emhwx6/61-baby-king">https://gimletmedia.com/shows/reply-all/emhwx6/61-baby-king</a></p><p>Zantal-Wiener, A. (2017, August 27). <i>Clip art through the years: A nostalgic look back</i>. HubSpot Blog. Retrieved November 15, 2021, from <a href="https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/clip-art-history">https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/clip-art-history</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="19036548" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/f615a8b8-2ac0-4455-8e07-05fe50552619/audio/e7bcda41-1414-4084-9058-a4fc8b8420ca/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Clip Art</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Dean Kelly, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/5e896a5e-29ee-4220-bc93-70013f0d1929/3000x3000/shin-incomplet-podcast-revised12.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:19:49</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This special episode examines the history of Clip art</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This special episode examines the history of Clip art</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, illustration history, graphic design, illustration, clip art history, clip art</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>bonus</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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      <title>When Book Design Gets Weird</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Most books, not all, but most, follow conventions of book design that have been in place for literally hundreds of years. With very few exceptions, it wasn’t until the 1960s when authors began to play around with story structure that there were any books that also played with the structure of the book itself. And it was later still that graphic design started adding another layer to the storytelling in popular literature. The colors, the typography, the page layouts all came to be used in service of the story. In House of Leaves, when the story starts getting really weird, so does the page layout. In The Illuminae Files, the pages look like reports, transcriptions, and electronic messages and include diagrams and drawings. These books, and the others like them, ask something extra of the reader, but give back an experience that may delight some and infuriate others. However readers feel about this type of weird book design, these books push the boundaries of book design into new and exciting territory.</p><h2>FURTHER READING</h2><p>Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov<br />theMystery.doc by Matthew McIntosh<br />The Black Locomotive by Rian Hughes<br />Only Revolutions by Mark Z. Danielewski<br />Hopscotch by Julio Cortazar<br />Bats of the Republic by Zachary Thomas<br />The Raw Shark Texts by Steven Hall<br />City of Saints and Madmen by Jeff Vandermeer<br />Parabola by Lily Hoang<br />Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer<br />The People of Paper by Salvador Plascencia<br />Maxwell’s Demon by Steven Hall</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Aarseth, E. (1997). Cybertext: Perspectives on Ergodic Literature. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.</p><p>Abrams, J.J. & Dorst, D. (2013). S. New York: Mulholland Books.</p><p>CloudCuckooCountry. (2022, November 15). Ergodic Literature: The Weirdest Book Genre [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/tKX90LbnYd4?si=GYwECYZ4FdOzF9SO">https://youtu.be/tKX90LbnYd4?si=GYwECYZ4FdOzF9SO</a></p><p>Coe, J. (2011, October 28). Composition No. 1 by Marc Saporta - review. The Guardian. <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/oct/28/composition-no-1-saporta-review">https://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/oct/28/composition-no-1-saporta-review</a></p><p>Danielewski, M. Z. (2000). House of Leaves. New York: Pantheon Books.</p><p>Digital Humanities Initiative. (2019, March 14). Mark Z. Danielewski at SDSU Library, Standard Video [Video} YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/wwCp8Y6k_BI?si=s7zFZZOpPDuIXBrm">https://youtu.be/wwCp8Y6k_BI?si=s7zFZZOpPDuIXBrm</a></p><p>Forbidden Planet TV. (2021, July 29). Rian Hughes Stokes up the Black Locomotive [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/emge3qLMatM?si=WNWzNZgXrHwNA-mz">https://youtu.be/emge3qLMatM?si=WNWzNZgXrHwNA-mz</a></p><p>Hill. L. (2013, October 27). A Long Time Ago, in A Universe More Analog. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/28/books/j-j-abrams-and-doug-dorst-collaborate-on-a-book-s.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/28/books/j-j-abrams-and-doug-dorst-collaborate-on-a-book-s.html</a></p><p>Hughes, R. (2020). XX. New York: The Overlook Press.</p><p>Kaufman, A. & Kristof, J. (2015). Illuminae. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.</p><p>Kaufman, A. & Kristof, J. (2016). Gemina. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.</p><p>Kaufman, A. & Kristof, J. (2018). Obsidio. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.</p><p>Little Book Owl. (2015, December 15). Q&A w/ Amie Kaufman & Jay Kristof [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/jZ3_ulIEEe4?si=c6mXnEdBKTLaf5Ju">https://youtu.be/jZ3_ulIEEe4?si=c6mXnEdBKTLaf5Ju</a></p><p>Roth, G. [VMSpod]. (2023, July 12). Virtual Memories #546 - Rian Hughes [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=js0DYgMzKwQ">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=js0DYgMzKwQ</a></p><p>Roth, G. [VMSpod]. (2020, November 24). Virtual Memories #409 - Rian Hughes [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/Iw_kuUqxyjM?si=8J9cEIZa2P5ToJHq">https://youtu.be/Iw_kuUqxyjM?si=8J9cEIZa2P5ToJHq</a></p><p>Star Sessions. (2014, May 18). J.J. Abrams & Doug Dorst Delve into S: A Multi-Layered Book Experience [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/Adpb9Dn0PoM?si=lHXLynpj5Oj7fq07">https://youtu.be/Adpb9Dn0PoM?si=lHXLynpj5Oj7fq07</a></p><p>Tales of the Ravenous Reader. (2018, April 11). Interview w/ Amie Kaufman & Jay Kristof | The Illuminae Files [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/gJl4eDRDM04?si=qetFYjnb9KIx6kOh">https://youtu.be/gJl4eDRDM04?si=qetFYjnb9KIx6kOh</a></p><p>Talks at Google. (2016, August 11). The Familiar|Mark Z. Danielewski|Talks at Google [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/mw0bGiVDTMI?si=mn19emWU4ttp_CWh">https://youtu.be/mw0bGiVDTMI?si=mn19emWU4ttp_CWh</a></p><p>Tyer, B. (2014, February 20). Untangling S., Doug Dorst’s Novel Within a Novel. Texas Observer. <a href="https://www.texasobserver.org/untangling-s-doug-dorsts-novel-within-novel/">https://www.texasobserver.org/untangling-s-doug-dorsts-novel-within-novel/</a></p><p>Zambra, A. (2014). Multiple Choice. New York: Penguin Books.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 30 Nov 2023 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/when-book-design-gets-weird-0I842Y7P</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Most books, not all, but most, follow conventions of book design that have been in place for literally hundreds of years. With very few exceptions, it wasn’t until the 1960s when authors began to play around with story structure that there were any books that also played with the structure of the book itself. And it was later still that graphic design started adding another layer to the storytelling in popular literature. The colors, the typography, the page layouts all came to be used in service of the story. In House of Leaves, when the story starts getting really weird, so does the page layout. In The Illuminae Files, the pages look like reports, transcriptions, and electronic messages and include diagrams and drawings. These books, and the others like them, ask something extra of the reader, but give back an experience that may delight some and infuriate others. However readers feel about this type of weird book design, these books push the boundaries of book design into new and exciting territory.</p><h2>FURTHER READING</h2><p>Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov<br />theMystery.doc by Matthew McIntosh<br />The Black Locomotive by Rian Hughes<br />Only Revolutions by Mark Z. Danielewski<br />Hopscotch by Julio Cortazar<br />Bats of the Republic by Zachary Thomas<br />The Raw Shark Texts by Steven Hall<br />City of Saints and Madmen by Jeff Vandermeer<br />Parabola by Lily Hoang<br />Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer<br />The People of Paper by Salvador Plascencia<br />Maxwell’s Demon by Steven Hall</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Aarseth, E. (1997). Cybertext: Perspectives on Ergodic Literature. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.</p><p>Abrams, J.J. & Dorst, D. (2013). S. New York: Mulholland Books.</p><p>CloudCuckooCountry. (2022, November 15). Ergodic Literature: The Weirdest Book Genre [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/tKX90LbnYd4?si=GYwECYZ4FdOzF9SO">https://youtu.be/tKX90LbnYd4?si=GYwECYZ4FdOzF9SO</a></p><p>Coe, J. (2011, October 28). Composition No. 1 by Marc Saporta - review. The Guardian. <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/oct/28/composition-no-1-saporta-review">https://www.theguardian.com/books/2011/oct/28/composition-no-1-saporta-review</a></p><p>Danielewski, M. Z. (2000). House of Leaves. New York: Pantheon Books.</p><p>Digital Humanities Initiative. (2019, March 14). Mark Z. Danielewski at SDSU Library, Standard Video [Video} YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/wwCp8Y6k_BI?si=s7zFZZOpPDuIXBrm">https://youtu.be/wwCp8Y6k_BI?si=s7zFZZOpPDuIXBrm</a></p><p>Forbidden Planet TV. (2021, July 29). Rian Hughes Stokes up the Black Locomotive [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/emge3qLMatM?si=WNWzNZgXrHwNA-mz">https://youtu.be/emge3qLMatM?si=WNWzNZgXrHwNA-mz</a></p><p>Hill. L. (2013, October 27). A Long Time Ago, in A Universe More Analog. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/28/books/j-j-abrams-and-doug-dorst-collaborate-on-a-book-s.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/28/books/j-j-abrams-and-doug-dorst-collaborate-on-a-book-s.html</a></p><p>Hughes, R. (2020). XX. New York: The Overlook Press.</p><p>Kaufman, A. & Kristof, J. (2015). Illuminae. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.</p><p>Kaufman, A. & Kristof, J. (2016). Gemina. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.</p><p>Kaufman, A. & Kristof, J. (2018). Obsidio. New York: Alfred A. Knopf.</p><p>Little Book Owl. (2015, December 15). Q&A w/ Amie Kaufman & Jay Kristof [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/jZ3_ulIEEe4?si=c6mXnEdBKTLaf5Ju">https://youtu.be/jZ3_ulIEEe4?si=c6mXnEdBKTLaf5Ju</a></p><p>Roth, G. [VMSpod]. (2023, July 12). Virtual Memories #546 - Rian Hughes [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=js0DYgMzKwQ">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=js0DYgMzKwQ</a></p><p>Roth, G. [VMSpod]. (2020, November 24). Virtual Memories #409 - Rian Hughes [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/Iw_kuUqxyjM?si=8J9cEIZa2P5ToJHq">https://youtu.be/Iw_kuUqxyjM?si=8J9cEIZa2P5ToJHq</a></p><p>Star Sessions. (2014, May 18). J.J. Abrams & Doug Dorst Delve into S: A Multi-Layered Book Experience [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/Adpb9Dn0PoM?si=lHXLynpj5Oj7fq07">https://youtu.be/Adpb9Dn0PoM?si=lHXLynpj5Oj7fq07</a></p><p>Tales of the Ravenous Reader. (2018, April 11). Interview w/ Amie Kaufman & Jay Kristof | The Illuminae Files [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/gJl4eDRDM04?si=qetFYjnb9KIx6kOh">https://youtu.be/gJl4eDRDM04?si=qetFYjnb9KIx6kOh</a></p><p>Talks at Google. (2016, August 11). The Familiar|Mark Z. Danielewski|Talks at Google [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://youtu.be/mw0bGiVDTMI?si=mn19emWU4ttp_CWh">https://youtu.be/mw0bGiVDTMI?si=mn19emWU4ttp_CWh</a></p><p>Tyer, B. (2014, February 20). Untangling S., Doug Dorst’s Novel Within a Novel. Texas Observer. <a href="https://www.texasobserver.org/untangling-s-doug-dorsts-novel-within-novel/">https://www.texasobserver.org/untangling-s-doug-dorsts-novel-within-novel/</a></p><p>Zambra, A. (2014). Multiple Choice. New York: Penguin Books.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="20851706" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/f8b6af93-2e42-4ae8-92eb-8884e0bd2889/audio/57f1ba64-deb9-45c9-9032-70362bc88d58/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>When Book Design Gets Weird</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/658372a5-2663-44c8-baf0-179c8576ab6f/3000x3000/shin-incomplet-podcast-revised11.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:21:42</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode examines books that have considered user experience</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode examines books that have considered user experience</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, book history, graphic design, book design</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>11</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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      <guid isPermaLink="false">9925f678-51ea-478b-a603-c62c09a40a87</guid>
      <title>Tarot Decks</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The History of Tarot decks intersects with symbology, or the study of symbols as well as their history, mass production of text and images, and popular culture, all of which are fields of study in the history of graphic design, and yet this subject has not been included in mainstream histories of design. Is this a reflection of the mystical, romanticized history of the cards, and one that implies a connection to divination or fortune telling? It is also a history that connects with the history of alchemy, and science, as well as with religious studies, esoterism, and occult, and yet the cards themselves emerged from secular roots. Tarot cards are not quite viewed as art and yet not celebrated as graphic design. The cards began as a simple game in Renaissance Italy, only gaining their association with esoterism in the 1700s when they were falsely connected with Hermeticism, and instilled with a completely fabricated Egyptian heritage. This history grew to include a connection to secret societies. Some of the most well-known decks of the 20th century and beyond were illustrated by women, including Moina Mathers, Lady Freida Harris, and Pamela Colman Smith and yet they are more associated with the men who dictated their design. Tarot cards have continued to evolve, transitioning away from being viewed as a tool for fortune telling and toward a new age tool for self-reflection, introspection, and self-help.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1430s – <i>Tarochi</i> card game invented in Itlay<br />1450 – Visconti-Sforza deck made by Bonifacio Bembo<br />1491 – Sola-Busca deck made by Nicola di maestro Antonio<br />1770 – Jean Baptiste Alliette publishes  <i>A Way to Entertain Oneself With Cards</i><br />1776 – Antoine Court de Gebelin associates Tarot with esoterism and the occult<br />1781 – Antoine Court de Gebelin publishes <i>Le Monde Primitif</i> or <i>the Primeval World</i><br />1855  – Éliphas Lévi piublishes <i>Transcendental Magic</i><br />1888 – Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn founded<br />1906 – Jugendstil Tarot Deck designed by Ditha Moser <br />1907 – Images of the <i>Sola Busca deck</i> donated to the British Museum <br />1910 – Waite & Pamela Coleman Smith collaborate on the <i>Waite Colman Smith Deck</i> historically known as the <i>Rider Waite deck</i><br />1944 – Aleister Crowley writes <i>The Book of Toth</i>, cards and illustrations by Lady Frieda Harris<br />1973 – <i>The Tarot of Witches</i> deck is created by Scottish artist and illustrator Fergus Hall for the film <i>Live and Let Die</i><br />1977 – The <i>Waite Colman Smith Deck</i> goes into mass production<br />1978 – The <i>Fantod Pack,</i> a Parody deck designed by Edward Gorey is published<br />1984 – Mary K. Greer writes <i>Tarot for yourself</i><br />1984 – Salvador Dali produces his Tarot deck <br />1992 –  <i>HIV Tarot</i> produced by artist Kim Abeles</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Archetype. (2016). In J. L. Longe (Ed.), Gale Virtual Reference Library: <i>The Gale encyclopedia of psychology</i> (3rd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galegp/archetype/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galegp/archetype/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Auger, E. E. (2004). <i>Tarot and Other Meditation Decks: History, Theory, Aesthetics, Typology</i>. McFarland.</p><p>Boley, M. (2023, April 10). Oracle Decks: What They Are and How To Use Them - Mental Musings - Medium. <i>Medium</i>. <a href="https://medium.com/musings-with-meg/oracle-decks-what-they-are-and-how-to-use-them-c037251a7a84">https://medium.com/musings-with-meg/oracle-decks-what-they-are-and-how-to-use-them-c037251a7a84</a></p><p>Dummett, M. (2007). Six XV-Century Tarot Cards: Who Painted Them? <i>Artibus et Historiae</i>, 28(56), 15–26. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/20067158">http://www.jstor.org/stable/20067158</a></p><p>Farley, H. (2009). <i>A cultural history of tarot : From entertainment to esotericism</i>. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.</p><p>Farley. (2006). The evolution of the 'mother' in Tarot. <i>Hecate,</i> 32(2), 68–87.</p><p>Gerstler, A. (1994). Kim Abeles. <a href="http://www.artforum.com"><i>www.artforum.com</i></a><i>.</i> <a href="https://www.artforum.com/print/reviews/199401/kim-abeles-54441">https://www.artforum.com/print/reviews/199401/kim-abeles-54441</a></p><p>Grimoire. (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), <i>Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained</i>. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/grimoire/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/grimoire/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), <i>Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained</i>. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/hermetic_order_of_the_golden_dawn/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/hermetic_order_of_the_golden_dawn/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Hundley, J., Fiebig, J., & Kroll, M. (2020). <i>Tarot</i>. Taschen.</p><p>Maille, P. (2021). <i>The Cards: The Evolution and Power of Tarot</i>.</p><p>Parkinson, N. (2013). The Colour Reference Library, Royal College of Art, London. <i>Journal of Design History</i>. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/ept004">https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/ept004</a></p><p>Richman-Abdou, K. (2020). The spellbinding history of tarot cards, from a mainstream card game to a magical ritual. <i>My Modern Met</i>. <a href="https://mymodernmet.com/history-of-tarot-cards/">https://mymodernmet.com/history-of-tarot-cards/</a></p><p>Roya, W. (2019). Debunking common myths about playing cards - Tarot & China. <i>PlayingCardDecks.com.</i> <a href="https://playingcarddecks.com/blogs/all-in/debunking-common-myths-about-playing-cards-tarot-cards">https://playingcarddecks.com/blogs/all-in/debunking-common-myths-about-playing-cards-tarot-cards</a></p><p>Schechter. (2020). Tarot's Italian Roots: For Devotees Of This 600-Year-Old Esoteric Art, A Trip To Milan Is In The Cards. <i>National Geographic</i>, 237(2), 34.</p><p>Schneider, M. (2015, February 24). <i>Edward Gorey’s ‘anxious, irritable’ tarot card set is predictably perfect</i>. DangerousMinds. <a href="https://dangerousminds.net/comments/edward%5C_goreys%5C_tarot%5C_card%5C_set">https://dangerousminds.net/comments/edward\_goreys\_tarot\_card\_set</a></p><p>tarot. (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), <i>Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained</i>. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/tarot/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/tarot/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Waite, A(rthur) E(dward) (1857–1942). (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), <i>Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained</i>. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/waite_a_rthur_e_dward_1857_1942/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/waite_a_rthur_e_dward_1857_1942/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Wintle, S. (2022, July 17). <i>A Moorish Sheet of Playing Cards — The World of Playing Cards</i>. The World of Playing Cards. <a href="https://www.wopc.co.uk/spain/moorish/a-moorish-sheet-of-playing-cards">https://www.wopc.co.uk/spain/moorish/a-moorish-sheet-of-playing-cards</a></p><p>Wintle, S. (2023, July 19). <i>Mamluk Playing Cards — The World of Playing Cards</i>. The World of Playing Cards. <a href="https://www.wopc.co.uk/egypt/mamluk">https://www.wopc.co.uk/egypt/mamluk</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 23 Nov 2023 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Kolby Streller, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton, Dean Kelly, Taylor Hill)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/tarot-decks-2N_WYlk5</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The History of Tarot decks intersects with symbology, or the study of symbols as well as their history, mass production of text and images, and popular culture, all of which are fields of study in the history of graphic design, and yet this subject has not been included in mainstream histories of design. Is this a reflection of the mystical, romanticized history of the cards, and one that implies a connection to divination or fortune telling? It is also a history that connects with the history of alchemy, and science, as well as with religious studies, esoterism, and occult, and yet the cards themselves emerged from secular roots. Tarot cards are not quite viewed as art and yet not celebrated as graphic design. The cards began as a simple game in Renaissance Italy, only gaining their association with esoterism in the 1700s when they were falsely connected with Hermeticism, and instilled with a completely fabricated Egyptian heritage. This history grew to include a connection to secret societies. Some of the most well-known decks of the 20th century and beyond were illustrated by women, including Moina Mathers, Lady Freida Harris, and Pamela Colman Smith and yet they are more associated with the men who dictated their design. Tarot cards have continued to evolve, transitioning away from being viewed as a tool for fortune telling and toward a new age tool for self-reflection, introspection, and self-help.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1430s – <i>Tarochi</i> card game invented in Itlay<br />1450 – Visconti-Sforza deck made by Bonifacio Bembo<br />1491 – Sola-Busca deck made by Nicola di maestro Antonio<br />1770 – Jean Baptiste Alliette publishes  <i>A Way to Entertain Oneself With Cards</i><br />1776 – Antoine Court de Gebelin associates Tarot with esoterism and the occult<br />1781 – Antoine Court de Gebelin publishes <i>Le Monde Primitif</i> or <i>the Primeval World</i><br />1855  – Éliphas Lévi piublishes <i>Transcendental Magic</i><br />1888 – Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn founded<br />1906 – Jugendstil Tarot Deck designed by Ditha Moser <br />1907 – Images of the <i>Sola Busca deck</i> donated to the British Museum <br />1910 – Waite & Pamela Coleman Smith collaborate on the <i>Waite Colman Smith Deck</i> historically known as the <i>Rider Waite deck</i><br />1944 – Aleister Crowley writes <i>The Book of Toth</i>, cards and illustrations by Lady Frieda Harris<br />1973 – <i>The Tarot of Witches</i> deck is created by Scottish artist and illustrator Fergus Hall for the film <i>Live and Let Die</i><br />1977 – The <i>Waite Colman Smith Deck</i> goes into mass production<br />1978 – The <i>Fantod Pack,</i> a Parody deck designed by Edward Gorey is published<br />1984 – Mary K. Greer writes <i>Tarot for yourself</i><br />1984 – Salvador Dali produces his Tarot deck <br />1992 –  <i>HIV Tarot</i> produced by artist Kim Abeles</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Archetype. (2016). In J. L. Longe (Ed.), Gale Virtual Reference Library: <i>The Gale encyclopedia of psychology</i> (3rd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galegp/archetype/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galegp/archetype/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Auger, E. E. (2004). <i>Tarot and Other Meditation Decks: History, Theory, Aesthetics, Typology</i>. McFarland.</p><p>Boley, M. (2023, April 10). Oracle Decks: What They Are and How To Use Them - Mental Musings - Medium. <i>Medium</i>. <a href="https://medium.com/musings-with-meg/oracle-decks-what-they-are-and-how-to-use-them-c037251a7a84">https://medium.com/musings-with-meg/oracle-decks-what-they-are-and-how-to-use-them-c037251a7a84</a></p><p>Dummett, M. (2007). Six XV-Century Tarot Cards: Who Painted Them? <i>Artibus et Historiae</i>, 28(56), 15–26. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/20067158">http://www.jstor.org/stable/20067158</a></p><p>Farley, H. (2009). <i>A cultural history of tarot : From entertainment to esotericism</i>. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.</p><p>Farley. (2006). The evolution of the 'mother' in Tarot. <i>Hecate,</i> 32(2), 68–87.</p><p>Gerstler, A. (1994). Kim Abeles. <a href="http://www.artforum.com"><i>www.artforum.com</i></a><i>.</i> <a href="https://www.artforum.com/print/reviews/199401/kim-abeles-54441">https://www.artforum.com/print/reviews/199401/kim-abeles-54441</a></p><p>Grimoire. (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), <i>Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained</i>. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/grimoire/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/grimoire/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), <i>Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained</i>. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/hermetic_order_of_the_golden_dawn/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/hermetic_order_of_the_golden_dawn/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Hundley, J., Fiebig, J., & Kroll, M. (2020). <i>Tarot</i>. Taschen.</p><p>Maille, P. (2021). <i>The Cards: The Evolution and Power of Tarot</i>.</p><p>Parkinson, N. (2013). The Colour Reference Library, Royal College of Art, London. <i>Journal of Design History</i>. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/ept004">https://doi.org/10.1093/jdh/ept004</a></p><p>Richman-Abdou, K. (2020). The spellbinding history of tarot cards, from a mainstream card game to a magical ritual. <i>My Modern Met</i>. <a href="https://mymodernmet.com/history-of-tarot-cards/">https://mymodernmet.com/history-of-tarot-cards/</a></p><p>Roya, W. (2019). Debunking common myths about playing cards - Tarot & China. <i>PlayingCardDecks.com.</i> <a href="https://playingcarddecks.com/blogs/all-in/debunking-common-myths-about-playing-cards-tarot-cards">https://playingcarddecks.com/blogs/all-in/debunking-common-myths-about-playing-cards-tarot-cards</a></p><p>Schechter. (2020). Tarot's Italian Roots: For Devotees Of This 600-Year-Old Esoteric Art, A Trip To Milan Is In The Cards. <i>National Geographic</i>, 237(2), 34.</p><p>Schneider, M. (2015, February 24). <i>Edward Gorey’s ‘anxious, irritable’ tarot card set is predictably perfect</i>. DangerousMinds. <a href="https://dangerousminds.net/comments/edward%5C_goreys%5C_tarot%5C_card%5C_set">https://dangerousminds.net/comments/edward\_goreys\_tarot\_card\_set</a></p><p>tarot. (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), <i>Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained</i>. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/tarot/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/tarot/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Waite, A(rthur) E(dward) (1857–1942). (2007). In U. McGovern (Ed.), <i>Chambers Dictionary of the Unexplained</i>. Chambers Harrap. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/waite_a_rthur_e_dward_1857_1942/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/chambun/waite_a_rthur_e_dward_1857_1942/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Wintle, S. (2022, July 17). <i>A Moorish Sheet of Playing Cards — The World of Playing Cards</i>. The World of Playing Cards. <a href="https://www.wopc.co.uk/spain/moorish/a-moorish-sheet-of-playing-cards">https://www.wopc.co.uk/spain/moorish/a-moorish-sheet-of-playing-cards</a></p><p>Wintle, S. (2023, July 19). <i>Mamluk Playing Cards — The World of Playing Cards</i>. The World of Playing Cards. <a href="https://www.wopc.co.uk/egypt/mamluk">https://www.wopc.co.uk/egypt/mamluk</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Tarot Decks</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Kolby Streller, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton, Dean Kelly, Taylor Hill</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:37:01</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode examines the history of Tarot and its place in esoteric and occult history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode examines the history of Tarot and its place in esoteric and occult history.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, mass production, women illustrators, graphic design, occult history, tarot, ephemera, women designers, card games, tarot history</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>10</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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      <title>Representation</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The history of graphic design has traditionally skewed toward designers from white hegemony. Where white men (and some women) tend to fill the pages, webpages, and galleries that celebrate design. As humanity evolves, we must realize the value of making space for more diverse voices in the design world. This episode elevates Black designers who have successfully fought against the forces of white supremacy and oppression to take back control of representation. Starting with Abolitionist broadsides, this episode examines how mostly white creators of broadsides, used to support the antislavery movement, were hindered by what we now call the “White Savior Complex” and that the tone of abolitionist imagery and vocabulary was marked by the perceived superiority of the white Northern audience. Next, we look to the famous “I AM A MAN” protest signs of the Civil Rights marches. These protest signs have endured and evolved into modern iterations as a piece of living history highlighting the fight for racial equality which continues to be an inspiration for art and design practices today.  The episode also takes a deep dive into the life and work of Archie Boston. Archie Boston is a graphic designer known for creating subversive, self-aware work in the advertising and design industry. The genius of his designs is that he often appropriates and retrofits racist imagery, similar to how Black vernacular has reclaimed certain racial slurs. Rounding out the discussion is a survey of current design collectives and groups of professional creatives such as the Design Justice Network. This episode discovers insightful parallels between Black representation in the Abolition era and today, clearly demonstrating that the best advocates for Black freedom and equality are Black people. Graphic design in the hands of Black activists becomes a powerful force for positive change and strengthening communities.</p><h2>TIMELINE - ARCHIE BOSTON</h2><p>1943 – <i>b</i> Clewiston, Florida <br />1961 – started attending Chouinard Art Institute<br />1964 – interned at Carson/Roberts<br />1965 – worked at Hixson And Jorgensen Advertising<br />1966 – became art director at Botsford Ketchum<br />1967 – started Boston & Boston Design with his brother Bradford<br />1969 – left Boston & Boston and rejoined Botsford Ketchum<br />1973 – started Archie Boston Design <br />1977 – received master’s degree from the University of Southern California<br />1977 – started lecturing at California State University Long Beach (CSULB)<br />2001 – published <i>Fly in the Buttermilk: Memoirs of an African American in Advertising Design & Design Education</i><br />2009 – published <i>Lil' Colored Rascals in the Sunshine City</i></p><h2>TIMELINE - BLACK DESIGNERS FIGHTING AGAINST PREJUDICE AND SYSTEMIC OPPRESSION</h2><p>1830s – Abolitionist Broadsides, weaponized advocating to free slaves<br />1900 – WEB Du Bois and Black Data, Infographic Activism<br />1963 – March on Washington protest signs.<br />1966 – Boston and Boston advertisements, “Ku Klux Klan”, “For Sale”<br />1968 – I AM A MAN, Memphis Sanitation Strike<br />1980s – Archie Boston Graphic Design, “I don’t want to marry your daughter”<br />2016/2017 – Martin Typeface designed by Tré Seals inspired by I AM A MAN, Memphis Sanitation Strike posters<br />2021 – Black lives matter protest posters</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>Archie Boston Graphic Design files</i>. (n.d.). Online Archive of California. <a href="https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8183dtf/">https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8183dtf/</a></p><p>Archie Boston papers, 1963-2018 and undated - Archives & Manuscripts at Duke University Libraries. (n.d.). David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. <a href="https://archives.lib.duke.edu/catalog/bostonarchie">https://archives.lib.duke.edu/catalog/bostonarchie</a></p><p>Barrett, L. (2014, February 12). <i>“Am I not a man and a brother?” : The political power of the image</i>. The Black Atlantic. <a href="https://sites.duke.edu/blackatlantic/2014/02/10/am-i-not-a-man-and-a-brother-the-political-power-of-the-image/">https://sites.duke.edu/blackatlantic/2014/02/10/am-i-not-a-man-and-a-brother-the-political-power-of-the-image/</a></p><p>Barry, N. (2022, January 4). Project 3, Phase 1: - Nouria Barry - Medium. Medium. <a href="https://medium.com/@nouriabarry/project-3-phase-1-e6fe0757b57b">https://medium.com/@nouriabarry/project-3-phase-1-e6fe0757b57b</a></p><p>Black Disabled Lives Matter Riso Poster with Stickers Pack Bundle — jenwhitejohnson.com. (n.d.). <a href="https://jenwhitejohnson.com/Black-Disabled-Lives-Matter-Riso-Poster-with-Stickers-Pack-Bundle">https://jenwhitejohnson.com/Black-Disabled-Lives-Matter-Riso-Poster-with-Stickers-Pack-Bundle</a></p><p>Boston, A. (2001). <i>Fly in the buttermilk: Memoirs of an African American in Advertising, Design & Design Education</i>.</p><p>Boston, A. (2009). <i>Lil’ colored rascals in the Sunshine city.</i></p><p>Daniel, J. (2015, February 18). Four Corners – an interview with Archie Boston. <i>Design Week</i>. <a href="https://www.designweek.co.uk/issues/september-2013/four-corners-an-interview-with-archie-boston/">https://www.designweek.co.uk/issues/september-2013/four-corners-an-interview-with-archie-boston/</a></p><p>Epplett, A. (2022). Abolitionist Broadsides and Anti-Slavery Imagery — Coalition of Master’s Scholars on Material Culture. <i>Coalition of Master’s Scholars on Material Culture</i>. <a href="https://cmsmc.org/publications/abolitionist-and-anti-slavery-imagery">https://cmsmc.org/publications/abolitionist-and-anti-slavery-imagery</a></p><p><i>Frederick Douglass Project: In the Classroom: the Abolitionist Movement Packet | RBSCP.</i> (n.d.). https://rbscp.lib.rochester.edu/2890</p><p>Gaiter, C. (n.d.). S<i>trikethrough: Typography Messages of Protest for Civil Rights</i>. https://archive.bipocdesignhistory.com/. <a href="https://archive.bipocdesignhistory.com/ST-General">https://archive.bipocdesignhistory.com/ST-General</a></p><p>Hayes, J. (2021). Africobra: Messages to the people.</p><p>Hoffmitz Milken Center for Typography (HMCT). (2020, October 21). <i>Archie Boston lecture</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oe5EVDoySwc">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oe5EVDoySwc</a></p><p><i>Jan. 6, 1832: New England Anti-Slavery Society founded - Zinn Education Project. </i>(2023, January 18). Zinn Education Project. <a href="https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/anti-slavery-society/">https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/anti-slavery-society/</a></p><p>McDonald, A. (2019, September 12). <i>New Exhibit: “No One Can Suppress Archie Boston” - The Devil’s Tale</i>. Duke University Libraries. <a href="https://blogs.library.duke.edu/rubenstein/2019/09/12/new-exhibit-no-one-can-suppress-archie-boston/">https://blogs.library.duke.edu/rubenstein/2019/09/12/new-exhibit-no-one-can-suppress-archie-boston/</a></p><p>Munro, S. (2021, July 27) <i>Zoom Interview Archie Boston and the Author.</i></p><p>Rapp, A. (September 1, 2008). "Archie Boston's Design Journey". AIGA. Retrieved 2022-01-28. </p><p>Reckdahl, K., & Rabut, A. (2020, March 12). This New Orleans artist challenges the way people see things. <i>The New York Times</i>. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/09/arts/bmike-artist-new-orleans.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/09/arts/bmike-artist-new-orleans.html</a></p><p>Toppins, A. (2020, August 18). <i>Beyond the Bauhaus: I AM A MAN</i>. AIGA Design Educators Community. <a href="https://educators.aiga.org/beyond-the-bauhaus-i-am-a-man/">https://educators.aiga.org/beyond-the-bauhaus-i-am-a-man/</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 16 Nov 2023 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Kolby Streller, Taylor Hill, Mandy Horton, Dean Kelly, Spencer Gee)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/archie-boston-fighting-systemic-racism-in-design-Qq4_Itht</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The history of graphic design has traditionally skewed toward designers from white hegemony. Where white men (and some women) tend to fill the pages, webpages, and galleries that celebrate design. As humanity evolves, we must realize the value of making space for more diverse voices in the design world. This episode elevates Black designers who have successfully fought against the forces of white supremacy and oppression to take back control of representation. Starting with Abolitionist broadsides, this episode examines how mostly white creators of broadsides, used to support the antislavery movement, were hindered by what we now call the “White Savior Complex” and that the tone of abolitionist imagery and vocabulary was marked by the perceived superiority of the white Northern audience. Next, we look to the famous “I AM A MAN” protest signs of the Civil Rights marches. These protest signs have endured and evolved into modern iterations as a piece of living history highlighting the fight for racial equality which continues to be an inspiration for art and design practices today.  The episode also takes a deep dive into the life and work of Archie Boston. Archie Boston is a graphic designer known for creating subversive, self-aware work in the advertising and design industry. The genius of his designs is that he often appropriates and retrofits racist imagery, similar to how Black vernacular has reclaimed certain racial slurs. Rounding out the discussion is a survey of current design collectives and groups of professional creatives such as the Design Justice Network. This episode discovers insightful parallels between Black representation in the Abolition era and today, clearly demonstrating that the best advocates for Black freedom and equality are Black people. Graphic design in the hands of Black activists becomes a powerful force for positive change and strengthening communities.</p><h2>TIMELINE - ARCHIE BOSTON</h2><p>1943 – <i>b</i> Clewiston, Florida <br />1961 – started attending Chouinard Art Institute<br />1964 – interned at Carson/Roberts<br />1965 – worked at Hixson And Jorgensen Advertising<br />1966 – became art director at Botsford Ketchum<br />1967 – started Boston & Boston Design with his brother Bradford<br />1969 – left Boston & Boston and rejoined Botsford Ketchum<br />1973 – started Archie Boston Design <br />1977 – received master’s degree from the University of Southern California<br />1977 – started lecturing at California State University Long Beach (CSULB)<br />2001 – published <i>Fly in the Buttermilk: Memoirs of an African American in Advertising Design & Design Education</i><br />2009 – published <i>Lil' Colored Rascals in the Sunshine City</i></p><h2>TIMELINE - BLACK DESIGNERS FIGHTING AGAINST PREJUDICE AND SYSTEMIC OPPRESSION</h2><p>1830s – Abolitionist Broadsides, weaponized advocating to free slaves<br />1900 – WEB Du Bois and Black Data, Infographic Activism<br />1963 – March on Washington protest signs.<br />1966 – Boston and Boston advertisements, “Ku Klux Klan”, “For Sale”<br />1968 – I AM A MAN, Memphis Sanitation Strike<br />1980s – Archie Boston Graphic Design, “I don’t want to marry your daughter”<br />2016/2017 – Martin Typeface designed by Tré Seals inspired by I AM A MAN, Memphis Sanitation Strike posters<br />2021 – Black lives matter protest posters</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>Archie Boston Graphic Design files</i>. (n.d.). Online Archive of California. <a href="https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8183dtf/">https://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8183dtf/</a></p><p>Archie Boston papers, 1963-2018 and undated - Archives & Manuscripts at Duke University Libraries. (n.d.). David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. <a href="https://archives.lib.duke.edu/catalog/bostonarchie">https://archives.lib.duke.edu/catalog/bostonarchie</a></p><p>Barrett, L. (2014, February 12). <i>“Am I not a man and a brother?” : The political power of the image</i>. The Black Atlantic. <a href="https://sites.duke.edu/blackatlantic/2014/02/10/am-i-not-a-man-and-a-brother-the-political-power-of-the-image/">https://sites.duke.edu/blackatlantic/2014/02/10/am-i-not-a-man-and-a-brother-the-political-power-of-the-image/</a></p><p>Barry, N. (2022, January 4). Project 3, Phase 1: - Nouria Barry - Medium. Medium. <a href="https://medium.com/@nouriabarry/project-3-phase-1-e6fe0757b57b">https://medium.com/@nouriabarry/project-3-phase-1-e6fe0757b57b</a></p><p>Black Disabled Lives Matter Riso Poster with Stickers Pack Bundle — jenwhitejohnson.com. (n.d.). <a href="https://jenwhitejohnson.com/Black-Disabled-Lives-Matter-Riso-Poster-with-Stickers-Pack-Bundle">https://jenwhitejohnson.com/Black-Disabled-Lives-Matter-Riso-Poster-with-Stickers-Pack-Bundle</a></p><p>Boston, A. (2001). <i>Fly in the buttermilk: Memoirs of an African American in Advertising, Design & Design Education</i>.</p><p>Boston, A. (2009). <i>Lil’ colored rascals in the Sunshine city.</i></p><p>Daniel, J. (2015, February 18). Four Corners – an interview with Archie Boston. <i>Design Week</i>. <a href="https://www.designweek.co.uk/issues/september-2013/four-corners-an-interview-with-archie-boston/">https://www.designweek.co.uk/issues/september-2013/four-corners-an-interview-with-archie-boston/</a></p><p>Epplett, A. (2022). Abolitionist Broadsides and Anti-Slavery Imagery — Coalition of Master’s Scholars on Material Culture. <i>Coalition of Master’s Scholars on Material Culture</i>. <a href="https://cmsmc.org/publications/abolitionist-and-anti-slavery-imagery">https://cmsmc.org/publications/abolitionist-and-anti-slavery-imagery</a></p><p><i>Frederick Douglass Project: In the Classroom: the Abolitionist Movement Packet | RBSCP.</i> (n.d.). https://rbscp.lib.rochester.edu/2890</p><p>Gaiter, C. (n.d.). S<i>trikethrough: Typography Messages of Protest for Civil Rights</i>. https://archive.bipocdesignhistory.com/. <a href="https://archive.bipocdesignhistory.com/ST-General">https://archive.bipocdesignhistory.com/ST-General</a></p><p>Hayes, J. (2021). Africobra: Messages to the people.</p><p>Hoffmitz Milken Center for Typography (HMCT). (2020, October 21). <i>Archie Boston lecture</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oe5EVDoySwc">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oe5EVDoySwc</a></p><p><i>Jan. 6, 1832: New England Anti-Slavery Society founded - Zinn Education Project. </i>(2023, January 18). Zinn Education Project. <a href="https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/anti-slavery-society/">https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/anti-slavery-society/</a></p><p>McDonald, A. (2019, September 12). <i>New Exhibit: “No One Can Suppress Archie Boston” - The Devil’s Tale</i>. Duke University Libraries. <a href="https://blogs.library.duke.edu/rubenstein/2019/09/12/new-exhibit-no-one-can-suppress-archie-boston/">https://blogs.library.duke.edu/rubenstein/2019/09/12/new-exhibit-no-one-can-suppress-archie-boston/</a></p><p>Munro, S. (2021, July 27) <i>Zoom Interview Archie Boston and the Author.</i></p><p>Rapp, A. (September 1, 2008). "Archie Boston's Design Journey". AIGA. Retrieved 2022-01-28. </p><p>Reckdahl, K., & Rabut, A. (2020, March 12). This New Orleans artist challenges the way people see things. <i>The New York Times</i>. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/09/arts/bmike-artist-new-orleans.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/09/arts/bmike-artist-new-orleans.html</a></p><p>Toppins, A. (2020, August 18). <i>Beyond the Bauhaus: I AM A MAN</i>. AIGA Design Educators Community. <a href="https://educators.aiga.org/beyond-the-bauhaus-i-am-a-man/">https://educators.aiga.org/beyond-the-bauhaus-i-am-a-man/</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Representation</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Kolby Streller, Taylor Hill, Mandy Horton, Dean Kelly, Spencer Gee</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/5140c323-1dc6-438c-8079-ed9d6a70bc9e/3000x3000/shin-incomplet-podcast-revised9.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:20:34</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode is a further examination of representation, examining the history of Black designers have taken back representation from white designers/creators of content.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode is a further examination of representation, examining the history of Black designers have taken back representation from white designers/creators of content.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, graphic design, bipoc design history, design history, representation, bipoc</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>9</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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      <title>George Herriman &amp; Krazy Kat</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>George Herriman was a cartoonist, illustrator, and pioneer of the cartoon comics genre, and is perhaps most known for his long-running and wildly popular comic strip <i>Krazy Kat</i>. Woodrow Wilson, the 28th President of the United States, and  John Jacob Astor, a wealthy business tycoon, were some of the famous fans of Herriman’s comics. Astor went so far as to name his dog Ignatz for the mouse that was Krazy Kat’s constant companion. Herriman’s work was not only popular but also influential and was said to have inspired cartoonists Patrick McDonnell, the creator of the strip <i>Mutts,</i> and Bill Watterson, creator of <i>Calvin and Hobbes</i>. There are even rumors that Walt Disney was inspired by Krazy Kat in his creation of Mickey Mouse, and visual similarities between the two characters are striking. Krazy Kat wasn’t just a goofy comic strip as it also provided social commentary containing themes of spirituality, surrealism, philosophy, literary allegories, the study of phrenology, as well as veiled commentary on racism. Although subtle, his allegories about racism reflect his opinion on the absurdity of social, economic, and political discrimination based on skin color. Many of the storylines in <i>Krazy Kat</i> were in fact hidden reflections of the artist’s own struggles, as a Creole man of mixed-race heritage, passing for white even at the time of his death. Herriman knew the consequences that would ensue if anyone found out about his racial ancestry, he intended his secret to die with him and not even his own daughters knew.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1880 – <i>b</i> New Orleans, Louisiana <br />1890 – Herriman and family moved from Louisiana to LA; likely begins passing as white<br />1892 – Attended St. Vincent's Collegiate course <br />1896 – 16, Herriman joined the St. Vincent Lyceum; Excelled at Honors English, penmanship, geography, languages <br />1897 – Herriman worked at the first newspaper The Los Angeles Herald at 17 years old; Made first illustrations there. <br />1901 – Herriman first meets William Randolph Hearst & works for Evening Journal New York American. <br />1902 – Herriman married Mabel Lillian Bridge<br />1901-1922 –  Herriman moved across the country working for multiple printing agencies <br />1911 – Krazy Kat & Ignatz's 1st official appearance under The Dingbat Family comics. <br />1913 – Krazy Kat finally is a stand-alone comic strip for The Evening Journal. <br />1922 – Permanent residence in LA under different papers for William Randolph Hearst from 1922 to his death. <br />1944 – died in his sleep at the age of 64<br />1971 – Herriman’s racial identity is discovered by Arthur Berger</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Bellot, G. (2017, January 19). The gender fluidity of Krazy Kat. <i>The New Yorker</i>. <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-gender-fluidity-of-krazy-kat">https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-gender-fluidity-of-krazy-kat</a></p><p>Fikes, R. (2021, January 19). George Joseph Herriman (1880-1944) <a href="https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/herriman-george-joseph-1880-1944/">https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/herriman-george-joseph-1880-1944/</a></p><p>Tisserand, M. (2016). <i>Krazy: George Herriman, A life black and white</i>. HarperCollinsPublishers </p><p>Walker, T. (2020, February 20). Influential comic artist George Herriman. The Dream Foundry. <a href="https://dreamfoundry.org/2020/02/14/influential-comic-artist-george-herriman/">https://dreamfoundry.org/2020/02/14/influential-comic-artist-george-herriman/</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 9 Nov 2023 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (jacob Larson, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/george-herriman-krazy-kat-fwfnkvEL</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>George Herriman was a cartoonist, illustrator, and pioneer of the cartoon comics genre, and is perhaps most known for his long-running and wildly popular comic strip <i>Krazy Kat</i>. Woodrow Wilson, the 28th President of the United States, and  John Jacob Astor, a wealthy business tycoon, were some of the famous fans of Herriman’s comics. Astor went so far as to name his dog Ignatz for the mouse that was Krazy Kat’s constant companion. Herriman’s work was not only popular but also influential and was said to have inspired cartoonists Patrick McDonnell, the creator of the strip <i>Mutts,</i> and Bill Watterson, creator of <i>Calvin and Hobbes</i>. There are even rumors that Walt Disney was inspired by Krazy Kat in his creation of Mickey Mouse, and visual similarities between the two characters are striking. Krazy Kat wasn’t just a goofy comic strip as it also provided social commentary containing themes of spirituality, surrealism, philosophy, literary allegories, the study of phrenology, as well as veiled commentary on racism. Although subtle, his allegories about racism reflect his opinion on the absurdity of social, economic, and political discrimination based on skin color. Many of the storylines in <i>Krazy Kat</i> were in fact hidden reflections of the artist’s own struggles, as a Creole man of mixed-race heritage, passing for white even at the time of his death. Herriman knew the consequences that would ensue if anyone found out about his racial ancestry, he intended his secret to die with him and not even his own daughters knew.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1880 – <i>b</i> New Orleans, Louisiana <br />1890 – Herriman and family moved from Louisiana to LA; likely begins passing as white<br />1892 – Attended St. Vincent's Collegiate course <br />1896 – 16, Herriman joined the St. Vincent Lyceum; Excelled at Honors English, penmanship, geography, languages <br />1897 – Herriman worked at the first newspaper The Los Angeles Herald at 17 years old; Made first illustrations there. <br />1901 – Herriman first meets William Randolph Hearst & works for Evening Journal New York American. <br />1902 – Herriman married Mabel Lillian Bridge<br />1901-1922 –  Herriman moved across the country working for multiple printing agencies <br />1911 – Krazy Kat & Ignatz's 1st official appearance under The Dingbat Family comics. <br />1913 – Krazy Kat finally is a stand-alone comic strip for The Evening Journal. <br />1922 – Permanent residence in LA under different papers for William Randolph Hearst from 1922 to his death. <br />1944 – died in his sleep at the age of 64<br />1971 – Herriman’s racial identity is discovered by Arthur Berger</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Bellot, G. (2017, January 19). The gender fluidity of Krazy Kat. <i>The New Yorker</i>. <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-gender-fluidity-of-krazy-kat">https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-gender-fluidity-of-krazy-kat</a></p><p>Fikes, R. (2021, January 19). George Joseph Herriman (1880-1944) <a href="https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/herriman-george-joseph-1880-1944/">https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/herriman-george-joseph-1880-1944/</a></p><p>Tisserand, M. (2016). <i>Krazy: George Herriman, A life black and white</i>. HarperCollinsPublishers </p><p>Walker, T. (2020, February 20). Influential comic artist George Herriman. The Dream Foundry. <a href="https://dreamfoundry.org/2020/02/14/influential-comic-artist-george-herriman/">https://dreamfoundry.org/2020/02/14/influential-comic-artist-george-herriman/</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>George Herriman &amp; Krazy Kat</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>jacob Larson, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/b8679746-3fc3-4f52-8107-82c6d528a564/3000x3000/shin-incomplet-podcast-revised8.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:22:54</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode investigates the story of George Herriman, illustrator and cartoonist known for his long-running and popular comic strip Krazy Kat.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode investigates the story of George Herriman, illustrator and cartoonist known for his long-running and popular comic strip Krazy Kat.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, black history, illustration history, graphic design, bipoc history, illustration, krazy kat, comics, comics history, george herriman</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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      <title>T.C. Cannon</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>An indigenous cowboy-artist from small-town Oklahoma, Tommy Wayne Cannon was born to Caddo and Kiowa parents in the Fall of 1946. Growing up he attended school in Gracemont and took an interest in the arts. As an adolescent, Cannon was self-taught in the arts and entered his works in regional art competitions through the Southern Plains Indian Museum. His success in these competitions, as well as his proficiency in multiple mediums, won him a scholarship to the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico. It was here that Cannon’s passion for art was met with an environment of tools and people that allowed for further exploration and refinement of his skills. In school, Cannon adopted his moniker “T. C.” Cannon, which is how he would be known professionally once his career began. The IAIA was not accredited as a College at the time, so Cannon enrolled at the San Francisco Art Institute but was disappointed in the lack of community he had grown accustomed to at the IAIA. He dropped out of school and enlisted in the Army, serving in combat in the late-stage offensives of the Vietnam War. Upon returning he attended Central State University (now UCO) in Edmond, Oklahoma where he met his wife, Barbara. Upon graduation, he produced work for a showcase alongside one of his IAIA mentors that toured the US and Europe. In preparation for his next showcase, solo at the Arbach Gallery in NYC, Cannon spent six years in his studio creating a large body of work. Tragically, just a few months prior to his showcase in May of 1978, Cannon was killed in a car accident in Santa Fe. He was only 31 years old.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1946 — Born in Lawton Oklahoma<br />1961 — Age of 15, sold his first works to the Southern Plains Indian Museum<br />1964 — Enrolled in the Institute of American Indian Arts<br />1965 — The Voting Rights Act assured Native Americans right to vote<br />1967 — Begins tour of Vietnam under the 101st Airborne; While away, Rosemary Ellison included him in a traveling exhibition<br />1968 — Returns from war<br />1972 — Finishes his degree at Central State University in Edmond, Oklahoma, graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts<br />1972 — Included in, and toured with, a Smithsonian exhibit. Over the next six years he would go on to produce a large body of work in anticipation of his solo showcase.<br />1975 — Became Artist-in-Residence at Dartmouth.<br />1978 — Died in a car crash in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Aged 31 years old.<br />1978 — His showcase is posthumously  opened at the Arbach Gallery in New York<br />1988 — Inducted into the National Hall of Fame for Famous American Indians</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><br /> </p><p><i>101st Airborne Division - Army Unit Directory. </i>(n.d.). Together We Served. <a href="https://army.togetherweserved.com/army/servlet/tws.webapp.WebApp?cmd=PublicUnit&type=Unit&ID=231#membersinthisunit">https://army.togetherweserved.com/army/servlet/tws.webapp.WebApp?cmd=PublicUnit&type=Unit&ID=231#membersinthisunit</a></p><p><i>101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) :: FORT CAMPBELL.</i> (n.d.). US Army. <a href="https://home.army.mil/campbell/index.php/101st">https://home.army.mil/campbell/index.php/101st</a></p><p><i>Action Painting & Gestural Painting | IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined</i>. (n.d.). IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined. <a href="https://abstraction.iaia.edu/exhibition/action-gestural/?page=3">https://abstraction.iaia.edu/exhibition/action-gestural/?page=3</a></p><p>Color Field Painting movement Overview. (n.d.). The Art Story. <a href="https://www.theartstory.org/movement/color-field-painting/">https://www.theartstory.org/movement/color-field-painting/</a></p><p>Fauntleroy, G. (2018, July 16). <i>Perspective: T.C. Cannon [1946–1978]</i>. Western Art & Architecture. <a href="https://westernartandarchitecture.com/august-september-2018/perspective-t-c-cannon-1946-1978">https://westernartandarchitecture.com/august-september-2018/perspective-t-c-cannon-1946-1978</a></p><p><i>Fritz Scholder | Biography</i>. (n.d.). Fritz Scholder official Website. <a href="http://www.fritzscholder.com/biography.php">http://www.fritzscholder.com/biography.php</a></p><p>Kapplow, H., & Kapplow, H. (2018). The Bold Yet Too-Brief Art Career of T.C. Cannon. <i>Hyperallergic</i>. <a href="https://hyperallergic.com/446024/tc-cannon-peabody-essex-museum/">https://hyperallergic.com/446024/tc-cannon-peabody-essex-museum/</a></p><p>Krutak, L. (2018, January 23). <i>Treasures Of The Iacb: T.C. Cannon, Who Shot The Arrow, Who Killed The Sparrow (1970)</i>. U.S. Department of The Interior. <a href="https://www.doi.gov/iacb/treasures-iacb-tc-cannon-who-shot-arrow-who-killed-sparrow-1970">https://www.doi.gov/iacb/treasures-iacb-tc-cannon-who-shot-arrow-who-killed-sparrow-1970</a></p><p>Levy, M. (n.d.). <i>TC Cannon</i>. Medic in the Green Time. <a href="http://medicinthegreentime.com/tc-cannon/">http://medicinthegreentime.com/tc-cannon/</a></p><p><i>Making History: Celebrating 60 years of IAIA and 50 years of MOCNA</i>. (2022). Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA). <a href="https://iaia.edu/making-history-celebrating-60-years-of-iaia-and-50-years-of-mocna/">https://iaia.edu/making-history-celebrating-60-years-of-iaia-and-50-years-of-mocna/</a></p><p><i>New Mexico Red : T. C. Cannon : Color Field Paintings | IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined.</i> (n.d.). IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined. <a href="https://abstraction.iaia.edu/exhibition/color-field/detail.php?artwork=t-c-cannon--new-mexico-red-1967">https://abstraction.iaia.edu/exhibition/color-field/detail.php?artwork=t-c-cannon--new-mexico-red-1967</a></p><p><i>On Drinking Beer In Vietnam in 1967 , Edition 6-100 </i>| Cannon, T. C. (Caddo/Kiowa). (n.d.). New Mexico Digital Collections. <a href="https://nmdigital.unm.edu/digital/collection/mcna/id/1154/">https://nmdigital.unm.edu/digital/collection/mcna/id/1154/</a></p><p>Pallant, C. (2015, March 4). <i>The Essence of Forever.</i> This Land Press - Made by You and Me. <a href="https://thislandpress.com/2015/03/04/the-essence-of-forever/">https://thislandpress.com/2015/03/04/the-essence-of-forever/</a></p><p>Purvis, R. (n.d.). SFAI and IAIA. ORBITS. <a href="https://matrix277.org/Object-61">https://matrix277.org/Object-61</a></p><p>Schjeldahl, P. (2019, April 8). T. C. Cannon’s Blazing Promise. The New Yorker. <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/04/15/t-c-cannons-blazing-promise-peter-schjeldahl">https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/04/15/t-c-cannons-blazing-promise-peter-schjeldahl</a></p><p><i>T.C. Cannon</i>. (n.d.). Pierson Gallery, American Fine Art & Antiques – Tulsa, OK. <a href="https://piersongallery.com/t-c-cannon.html">https://piersongallery.com/t-c-cannon.html</a></p><p><i>TC Cannon.</i> (n.d.). Windsor Betts. <a href="https://windsorbetts.com/artist/tc-cannon">https://windsorbetts.com/artist/tc-cannon</a></p><p><i>T.C Cannon: At The Edge of America | PEM Native American Art</i>. (n.d.). PEM | Peabody Essex Musuem. <a href="https://www.pem.org/exhibitions/t-c-cannon-at-the-edge-of-america">https://www.pem.org/exhibitions/t-c-cannon-at-the-edge-of-america</a></p><p>Watson, M. J. (n.d.). <i>Cannon, Tommy Wayne</i>. Oklahoma Historical Society | OHS. <a href="https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry?entry=CA044">https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry?entry=CA044</a></p><p><i>Waiting for the Bus (Anadarko Princess) by T.C. Cannon.</i></p><p> (n.d.). Oklahoma Arts Council. </p><p><a href="https://www.arts.ok.gov/art_at_the_capitol/State_Art_Collection.php?c=sac&awid=177">https://www.arts.ok.gov/art_at_the_capitol/State_Art_Collection.php?c=sac&awid=177</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 2 Nov 2023 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Kolby Streller, Spencer Gee, Dean Kelly, Mandy Horton, Taylor Hill)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/tc-cannon-dKY2wg_U</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>An indigenous cowboy-artist from small-town Oklahoma, Tommy Wayne Cannon was born to Caddo and Kiowa parents in the Fall of 1946. Growing up he attended school in Gracemont and took an interest in the arts. As an adolescent, Cannon was self-taught in the arts and entered his works in regional art competitions through the Southern Plains Indian Museum. His success in these competitions, as well as his proficiency in multiple mediums, won him a scholarship to the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico. It was here that Cannon’s passion for art was met with an environment of tools and people that allowed for further exploration and refinement of his skills. In school, Cannon adopted his moniker “T. C.” Cannon, which is how he would be known professionally once his career began. The IAIA was not accredited as a College at the time, so Cannon enrolled at the San Francisco Art Institute but was disappointed in the lack of community he had grown accustomed to at the IAIA. He dropped out of school and enlisted in the Army, serving in combat in the late-stage offensives of the Vietnam War. Upon returning he attended Central State University (now UCO) in Edmond, Oklahoma where he met his wife, Barbara. Upon graduation, he produced work for a showcase alongside one of his IAIA mentors that toured the US and Europe. In preparation for his next showcase, solo at the Arbach Gallery in NYC, Cannon spent six years in his studio creating a large body of work. Tragically, just a few months prior to his showcase in May of 1978, Cannon was killed in a car accident in Santa Fe. He was only 31 years old.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1946 — Born in Lawton Oklahoma<br />1961 — Age of 15, sold his first works to the Southern Plains Indian Museum<br />1964 — Enrolled in the Institute of American Indian Arts<br />1965 — The Voting Rights Act assured Native Americans right to vote<br />1967 — Begins tour of Vietnam under the 101st Airborne; While away, Rosemary Ellison included him in a traveling exhibition<br />1968 — Returns from war<br />1972 — Finishes his degree at Central State University in Edmond, Oklahoma, graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts<br />1972 — Included in, and toured with, a Smithsonian exhibit. Over the next six years he would go on to produce a large body of work in anticipation of his solo showcase.<br />1975 — Became Artist-in-Residence at Dartmouth.<br />1978 — Died in a car crash in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Aged 31 years old.<br />1978 — His showcase is posthumously  opened at the Arbach Gallery in New York<br />1988 — Inducted into the National Hall of Fame for Famous American Indians</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><br /> </p><p><i>101st Airborne Division - Army Unit Directory. </i>(n.d.). Together We Served. <a href="https://army.togetherweserved.com/army/servlet/tws.webapp.WebApp?cmd=PublicUnit&type=Unit&ID=231#membersinthisunit">https://army.togetherweserved.com/army/servlet/tws.webapp.WebApp?cmd=PublicUnit&type=Unit&ID=231#membersinthisunit</a></p><p><i>101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) :: FORT CAMPBELL.</i> (n.d.). US Army. <a href="https://home.army.mil/campbell/index.php/101st">https://home.army.mil/campbell/index.php/101st</a></p><p><i>Action Painting & Gestural Painting | IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined</i>. (n.d.). IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined. <a href="https://abstraction.iaia.edu/exhibition/action-gestural/?page=3">https://abstraction.iaia.edu/exhibition/action-gestural/?page=3</a></p><p>Color Field Painting movement Overview. (n.d.). The Art Story. <a href="https://www.theartstory.org/movement/color-field-painting/">https://www.theartstory.org/movement/color-field-painting/</a></p><p>Fauntleroy, G. (2018, July 16). <i>Perspective: T.C. Cannon [1946–1978]</i>. Western Art & Architecture. <a href="https://westernartandarchitecture.com/august-september-2018/perspective-t-c-cannon-1946-1978">https://westernartandarchitecture.com/august-september-2018/perspective-t-c-cannon-1946-1978</a></p><p><i>Fritz Scholder | Biography</i>. (n.d.). Fritz Scholder official Website. <a href="http://www.fritzscholder.com/biography.php">http://www.fritzscholder.com/biography.php</a></p><p>Kapplow, H., & Kapplow, H. (2018). The Bold Yet Too-Brief Art Career of T.C. Cannon. <i>Hyperallergic</i>. <a href="https://hyperallergic.com/446024/tc-cannon-peabody-essex-museum/">https://hyperallergic.com/446024/tc-cannon-peabody-essex-museum/</a></p><p>Krutak, L. (2018, January 23). <i>Treasures Of The Iacb: T.C. Cannon, Who Shot The Arrow, Who Killed The Sparrow (1970)</i>. U.S. Department of The Interior. <a href="https://www.doi.gov/iacb/treasures-iacb-tc-cannon-who-shot-arrow-who-killed-sparrow-1970">https://www.doi.gov/iacb/treasures-iacb-tc-cannon-who-shot-arrow-who-killed-sparrow-1970</a></p><p>Levy, M. (n.d.). <i>TC Cannon</i>. Medic in the Green Time. <a href="http://medicinthegreentime.com/tc-cannon/">http://medicinthegreentime.com/tc-cannon/</a></p><p><i>Making History: Celebrating 60 years of IAIA and 50 years of MOCNA</i>. (2022). Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA). <a href="https://iaia.edu/making-history-celebrating-60-years-of-iaia-and-50-years-of-mocna/">https://iaia.edu/making-history-celebrating-60-years-of-iaia-and-50-years-of-mocna/</a></p><p><i>New Mexico Red : T. C. Cannon : Color Field Paintings | IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined.</i> (n.d.). IAIA - Action/Abstraction Redefined. <a href="https://abstraction.iaia.edu/exhibition/color-field/detail.php?artwork=t-c-cannon--new-mexico-red-1967">https://abstraction.iaia.edu/exhibition/color-field/detail.php?artwork=t-c-cannon--new-mexico-red-1967</a></p><p><i>On Drinking Beer In Vietnam in 1967 , Edition 6-100 </i>| Cannon, T. C. (Caddo/Kiowa). (n.d.). New Mexico Digital Collections. <a href="https://nmdigital.unm.edu/digital/collection/mcna/id/1154/">https://nmdigital.unm.edu/digital/collection/mcna/id/1154/</a></p><p>Pallant, C. (2015, March 4). <i>The Essence of Forever.</i> This Land Press - Made by You and Me. <a href="https://thislandpress.com/2015/03/04/the-essence-of-forever/">https://thislandpress.com/2015/03/04/the-essence-of-forever/</a></p><p>Purvis, R. (n.d.). SFAI and IAIA. ORBITS. <a href="https://matrix277.org/Object-61">https://matrix277.org/Object-61</a></p><p>Schjeldahl, P. (2019, April 8). T. C. Cannon’s Blazing Promise. The New Yorker. <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/04/15/t-c-cannons-blazing-promise-peter-schjeldahl">https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2019/04/15/t-c-cannons-blazing-promise-peter-schjeldahl</a></p><p><i>T.C. Cannon</i>. (n.d.). Pierson Gallery, American Fine Art & Antiques – Tulsa, OK. <a href="https://piersongallery.com/t-c-cannon.html">https://piersongallery.com/t-c-cannon.html</a></p><p><i>TC Cannon.</i> (n.d.). Windsor Betts. <a href="https://windsorbetts.com/artist/tc-cannon">https://windsorbetts.com/artist/tc-cannon</a></p><p><i>T.C Cannon: At The Edge of America | PEM Native American Art</i>. (n.d.). PEM | Peabody Essex Musuem. <a href="https://www.pem.org/exhibitions/t-c-cannon-at-the-edge-of-america">https://www.pem.org/exhibitions/t-c-cannon-at-the-edge-of-america</a></p><p>Watson, M. J. (n.d.). <i>Cannon, Tommy Wayne</i>. Oklahoma Historical Society | OHS. <a href="https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry?entry=CA044">https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry?entry=CA044</a></p><p><i>Waiting for the Bus (Anadarko Princess) by T.C. Cannon.</i></p><p> (n.d.). Oklahoma Arts Council. </p><p><a href="https://www.arts.ok.gov/art_at_the_capitol/State_Art_Collection.php?c=sac&awid=177">https://www.arts.ok.gov/art_at_the_capitol/State_Art_Collection.php?c=sac&awid=177</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="21451847" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/0ced3583-f77d-45a9-8921-b58eed602dec/audio/e99fb561-850d-444c-b09b-861cecbff9b2/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>T.C. Cannon</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Kolby Streller, Spencer Gee, Dean Kelly, Mandy Horton, Taylor Hill</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/91ccfca6-bfa4-4442-b6a4-682e4e369cfc/3000x3000/shin-incomplet-podcast-revised7.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:22:19</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode investigates the influence of Indigenous artist T.C. Cannon on design history</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode investigates the influence of Indigenous artist T.C. Cannon on design history</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>indigenous art history, graphic design history, graphic design, art history, printmaking, tc cannon, indigenous design history, indigenous art, indigenous, indigenous design</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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      <title>Women in Book Design</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Women have long been a part of bookmaking, design, and publishing, dating as far back as handmade illuminated manuscripts, created before the printing press. In the 18th and 19th centuries, women were known to run some very successful book binderies, including Jane Steel, Katherine Waghorn, Jane Aitken, and Lorina Watkins. Most often women took over when their husbands or fathers died. Other women supported their husbands' work by setting type, such as Bertha Goudy, wife of noted book and type designer Frederic Goudy. Women also became very successful book designers following the era of book reform known as the Arts & Crafts period which resulted in the Private Press Movement. The Private Press movement was concerned with making high-quality books that were beautiful expressions of book design and a departure from the low-quality mass-produced books emerging from the industrial age and the Victorian era. Women were gaining entry into the design world as part of the Arts & Crafts movement, schools associated with the movement were cropping up all over Europe and in the United States as well, and women were enrolling in these schools in numbers not seen before. Historians note the high number of women who matriculated from the Glasgow Arts & Crafts school surpassed the number of men. As such it makes sense that we would find women designers in the history of the Private Press movement. Designers such as Margaret Armstrong and Amy Sacker designed book covers and interior pages during the era. Primarily ignored in many histories of art and design is the history of bookbinding. However, this history is also tied to the Arts & Crafts and the Private Press movement, bookbinding was another avenue of paid labor for women.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>10th Century – Ende, Spanish Illuminator of Manuscripts signs her work<br />18th Century –  women begin owning and operating bookbinderies; women and girls were also employed in large numbers folding and stitching pages<br />1839 – Jane Burden (Morris), born <br />1859 – Jane Burden (Morris), marries William Morris<br />1863 – Alice Cordelia Morse, born <br />1867 – Margaret Armstrong, born <br />1867 – Amy Sacker, born<br />1879 – Alice Cordelia Morse attends the Cooper Union (segregated school for girls)<br />1880-1890 – Designing book covers becomes a professional practice<br />1885-1889 – Alice Cordelia Morse works for Tiffany & Co. designing stained glass; in 1889 she leaves Tiffany to begin a freelance career designing book covers<br />1889 – Jane Burden (Morris) designed the cover for Wilfrid Scawen Blunt’s <i>In Vinculis</i><br />1890 – Armstrong’s first book cover design was for Sweet William by Marguerite Bouvet<br />1890-1940  – Margaret Armstrong's career as a book designer, produced some 270 book designs<br />1891 – Kelmscott Press founded by William Morris and Emery Walker<br />1901 – Amy Sacker received awarded a medal for designs at the Pan-American exposition<br />1893 – Morse chaired the Sub-Committee on Book-Covers, Wood Engraving, and Illustration of the Board of Women Managers for the Woman’s Building at the World’s Columbian Exposition<br />1897 – Society of Arts & Crafts in Boston founded, active members included Amy Sacker, Sarah Wyman Whitman, Julia DeWolf Addison, and Mary Crease Sears<br />1910 – Women begin to dominate the modern decorative movement<br />1914 – Jane Burden (Morris), dies<br />1918 – Le Corbusier and Amédée Ozenfant, announce a hierarchy of art and craft with women and craft at the bottom<br />1923 – Alice Cordelia Morse donates her book cover designs to the Metropolitan Museum Library <br />1937 – <i>Bookmaking on the Distaff Side</i>, a book published by women printers<br />1944 – Margaret Armstrong, dies<br />1961 – Alice Cordelia Morse, dies<br />1965 – Amy Sacker, dies</p><h2>WOMEN IN BOOK DESIGN & BOOKBINDING HISTORY</h2><p>This should not be considered a complete list of women in book design & bookbinding history, this is just a list of names uncovered for the research of this episode and intended to show that there is a wealth of names that could be included in histories of graphic design. This list focuses on women from the past, there is also a wealth of women designers who have worked more recently in book design, this too could become a future episode.</p><ul><li><i>Sarah Wyman Whitman (1842-1904)</i></li><li><i>Helena de Kay (1848-1916)</i></li><li><i>Katherine Adams (1862-1952)</i></li><li><i>Alice Cordelia Morse (1863 – 1961)</i></li><li><i>Margaret Armstrong (1867–1944)</i></li><li><i>Elizabeth Corbet Yeats (1868-1940)</i></li><li><i>Bertha Goudy (1869-1935)</i></li><li><i>Bertha Stuart (1869-1953)</i></li><li><i>Anna Simons (1871-1951)</i></li><li><i>Amy Sacker (1872-1965)</i></li><li><i>Annie French (1872-1965)</i></li><li><i>Emma Redington Lee Thayer (1874-1973)</i></li><li><i>Jessie Marion King (1875-1949)</i></li><li><i>Anna Sipkena (1877-1933)</i></li><li><i>Vanessa Bell (1879-1961)</i></li><li><i>Magdalena Koll (1879-1962?)</i></li><li><i>Wilhelmina Drupsteen (1880-1966)</i></li><li><i>Marion Louise Peabody (1881-1937)</i></li><li><i>Olga Rosanowa (1886-1918)</i></li><li><i>Rie Cramer (1887-1977)</i></li><li><i>Alice Greinwald-Clarus (1887-1925)</i></li><li><i>Ljubow Popowa (1889-1924)</i></li><li><i>Jo Daemen (1891-1944)</i></li><li><i>Galina Tschitschagowa/Chichagowa (1891-1967)</i></li><li><i>Olga Tschitschagowa/Chichagowa (1892-1956)</i></li><li><i>Antonia Sofronowa (1892-1966)</i></li><li><i>Nina Brodinsky (1892-1978)</i></li><li><i>Olga Brodinsky (unknown, sister to Nina Brodinsky)</i></li><li><i>Freda Lingstrom (1893-1989)</i></li><li><i>Lou Loeber (1894-1983)</i></li><li><i>Vavara Stepanova (1894-1958)</i></li><li><i>Amy Richards (1896 - 1918)</i></li><li><i>Eva Aschoff (1899-1969)</i></li><li><i>Erika Giovanna Klien (1900-1957)</i></li><li><i>Margarete Leins (1900-1995)</i></li><li><i>Fré (Frederika Cohen (1903-1943)</i></li><li><i>Grete Stern (1904-1999)</i></li><li><i>Louise E. Jefferson (1908-2002)</i></li><li><i>Jane Bissell Grabhorn (1911-1973)</i></li><li><i>Muriel Cooper (1925 -1994)</i></li><li><i>Elaine Lustig Cohen (1927-2016)</i></li><li><i>Bea Feitler (1938-1982)</i></li></ul><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Battershill, C. (2022). <i>Women and Letterpress Printing 1920-2020: Gendered Impressions</i>. Cambridge University Press.</p><p>Breuer, G., & Meer, J. (2012). <i>Women in Graphic Design 1890-2012</i>. Jovis Verlag.</p><p>Dubansky, M., Frelinghuysen, A. C., & Dunn, J. M. (2008). <i>The Proper Decoration of Book Covers: The Life and Work of Alice C. Morse</i>.</p><p>Dubansky, M. (2009, May). <i>Alice Cordelia Morse (1863–1961)</i>. The Met’s Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. <a href="https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/mors/hd_mors.htm">https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/mors/hd_mors.htm</a></p><p><i>Edna Beilenson, 71, graphic arts expert and book publisher</i>. (1981, Mar 04). New York Times (1923-) Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/historical-newspapers/edna-beilenson-71-graphic-arts-expert-book/docview/121888575/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/historical-newspapers/edna-beilenson-71-graphic-arts-expert-book/docview/121888575/se-2</a></p><p>Ethel Reed, Artist. (1896). <i>Bradley, His Book</i>, 1(3), 74–76. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/20443160">http://www.jstor.org/stable/20443160</a></p><p>Fanni, Fanni, Maryam, Flodmark, Matilda, Kaaman, Sara, Walkup, Kathy, Börjel, Ida, Baines, Jess, Wikander, Ulla, Humlesjö, Inger, Waaranperä, Ingegärd, Cartmail, Gail, Dobney, Megan, & Josefsson, Kira. (2020). <i>Natural enemies of books</i>.</p><p>Garrett, M., & Thomas, Z. (2019). <i>Suffrage and the Arts: Visual Culture, Politics and Enterprise</i>. Bloomsbury Publishing.</p><p>Goudy, F. (1939). <i>Bertha M. Goudy: Recollections by one who knew her best.</i> The Village Press.</p><p>Harlan, R. D. (1975). Review Article: Oral Histories of San Francisco Printing [Review of Book Printing with the Handpress; Brother Antoninus: Poet, Printer, and Religious; Artist and Printer; Comments on Some Bay Area Fine Printers; Recollections of the Grabhorn Press; The Colt Press; Fine Printing and the Grabhorn Press; The Grabhorn Press and the Grace Hoper Press; Fine Printers of the San Francisco Bay Area; Two San Francisco Bookmen; Recollections of San Francisco Printers; A Life in Printing; Literary San Francisco; Bookselling and Creating Books; Photoengraving, 1910-1969; The Schmidt Lithography Company; San Francisco Printers, 1925-1965; A Printed Word Has Its Own Measure; Untitled Interview; Printing and Book Design, by L. Allan, Dorothy Allan, Brother Antoninus (William Everson), Malette Dean, F. P. Farquhar, Edwin Grabhorn, Jane Grabhorn, Robert Grabhorn, Katherine Grover, Sherwood Grover, J. D. Hart, Warren R. Howell, Haywood Hunt, Lawton Kennedy, O. Lewis, D. Magee, Walter Mann, Max Schmidt, Jr., Herman Diedrichs, … A. Wilson]. The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy, 45(2), 202–205. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/4306509">http://www.jstor.org/stable/4306509</a></p><p><i>In Full Bloom: Margaret Armstrong’s Decorated Publishers’ Bindings Revisited</i>. (n.d.). metmuseum.org. Retrieved January 5, 2023, from <a href="https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2022/in-full-bloom">https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2022/in-full-bloom</a></p><p>Jaudon, & Kozloff, J. (1977). Art Hysterical Nations of Progress and Culture. <i>Heresies</i>, 4, 38.</p><p>Kirkham, P. (2002). <i>Women Designers in the USA, 1900-2000: Diversity and Difference </i>(2d Printing). Yale University Press.</p><p>Pankow, D. (n.d.). Fields of Gold | American Decorated Trade Bindings and Their Designers, 1890–1915 | Cary Graphic Arts Collection. RIT. <a href="https://www.rit.edu/carycollection/fields-gold">https://www.rit.edu/carycollection/fields-gold</a></p><p>Tidcombe, M. (1996). <i>Women Bookbinders, 1880-1920</i>. Amsterdam University Press.</p><p><i>Women’s work.</i> (n.d.). Brooklyn Museum. <a href="https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/dinner_party/womens_work">https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/dinner_party/womens_work</a></p><p>Zonis, K. (2021, November 16). <i>The Book-Cover Designs of Alice C. Morse</i> | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. <a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2014/03/26/the-book-cover-designs-of-alice-c-morse/">https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2014/03/26/the-book-cover-designs-of-alice-c-morse/</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 26 Oct 2023 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Kolby Streller, Dean Kelly, Taylor Hill, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/women-in-book-design-zoBjtQAY</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Women have long been a part of bookmaking, design, and publishing, dating as far back as handmade illuminated manuscripts, created before the printing press. In the 18th and 19th centuries, women were known to run some very successful book binderies, including Jane Steel, Katherine Waghorn, Jane Aitken, and Lorina Watkins. Most often women took over when their husbands or fathers died. Other women supported their husbands' work by setting type, such as Bertha Goudy, wife of noted book and type designer Frederic Goudy. Women also became very successful book designers following the era of book reform known as the Arts & Crafts period which resulted in the Private Press Movement. The Private Press movement was concerned with making high-quality books that were beautiful expressions of book design and a departure from the low-quality mass-produced books emerging from the industrial age and the Victorian era. Women were gaining entry into the design world as part of the Arts & Crafts movement, schools associated with the movement were cropping up all over Europe and in the United States as well, and women were enrolling in these schools in numbers not seen before. Historians note the high number of women who matriculated from the Glasgow Arts & Crafts school surpassed the number of men. As such it makes sense that we would find women designers in the history of the Private Press movement. Designers such as Margaret Armstrong and Amy Sacker designed book covers and interior pages during the era. Primarily ignored in many histories of art and design is the history of bookbinding. However, this history is also tied to the Arts & Crafts and the Private Press movement, bookbinding was another avenue of paid labor for women.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>10th Century – Ende, Spanish Illuminator of Manuscripts signs her work<br />18th Century –  women begin owning and operating bookbinderies; women and girls were also employed in large numbers folding and stitching pages<br />1839 – Jane Burden (Morris), born <br />1859 – Jane Burden (Morris), marries William Morris<br />1863 – Alice Cordelia Morse, born <br />1867 – Margaret Armstrong, born <br />1867 – Amy Sacker, born<br />1879 – Alice Cordelia Morse attends the Cooper Union (segregated school for girls)<br />1880-1890 – Designing book covers becomes a professional practice<br />1885-1889 – Alice Cordelia Morse works for Tiffany & Co. designing stained glass; in 1889 she leaves Tiffany to begin a freelance career designing book covers<br />1889 – Jane Burden (Morris) designed the cover for Wilfrid Scawen Blunt’s <i>In Vinculis</i><br />1890 – Armstrong’s first book cover design was for Sweet William by Marguerite Bouvet<br />1890-1940  – Margaret Armstrong's career as a book designer, produced some 270 book designs<br />1891 – Kelmscott Press founded by William Morris and Emery Walker<br />1901 – Amy Sacker received awarded a medal for designs at the Pan-American exposition<br />1893 – Morse chaired the Sub-Committee on Book-Covers, Wood Engraving, and Illustration of the Board of Women Managers for the Woman’s Building at the World’s Columbian Exposition<br />1897 – Society of Arts & Crafts in Boston founded, active members included Amy Sacker, Sarah Wyman Whitman, Julia DeWolf Addison, and Mary Crease Sears<br />1910 – Women begin to dominate the modern decorative movement<br />1914 – Jane Burden (Morris), dies<br />1918 – Le Corbusier and Amédée Ozenfant, announce a hierarchy of art and craft with women and craft at the bottom<br />1923 – Alice Cordelia Morse donates her book cover designs to the Metropolitan Museum Library <br />1937 – <i>Bookmaking on the Distaff Side</i>, a book published by women printers<br />1944 – Margaret Armstrong, dies<br />1961 – Alice Cordelia Morse, dies<br />1965 – Amy Sacker, dies</p><h2>WOMEN IN BOOK DESIGN & BOOKBINDING HISTORY</h2><p>This should not be considered a complete list of women in book design & bookbinding history, this is just a list of names uncovered for the research of this episode and intended to show that there is a wealth of names that could be included in histories of graphic design. This list focuses on women from the past, there is also a wealth of women designers who have worked more recently in book design, this too could become a future episode.</p><ul><li><i>Sarah Wyman Whitman (1842-1904)</i></li><li><i>Helena de Kay (1848-1916)</i></li><li><i>Katherine Adams (1862-1952)</i></li><li><i>Alice Cordelia Morse (1863 – 1961)</i></li><li><i>Margaret Armstrong (1867–1944)</i></li><li><i>Elizabeth Corbet Yeats (1868-1940)</i></li><li><i>Bertha Goudy (1869-1935)</i></li><li><i>Bertha Stuart (1869-1953)</i></li><li><i>Anna Simons (1871-1951)</i></li><li><i>Amy Sacker (1872-1965)</i></li><li><i>Annie French (1872-1965)</i></li><li><i>Emma Redington Lee Thayer (1874-1973)</i></li><li><i>Jessie Marion King (1875-1949)</i></li><li><i>Anna Sipkena (1877-1933)</i></li><li><i>Vanessa Bell (1879-1961)</i></li><li><i>Magdalena Koll (1879-1962?)</i></li><li><i>Wilhelmina Drupsteen (1880-1966)</i></li><li><i>Marion Louise Peabody (1881-1937)</i></li><li><i>Olga Rosanowa (1886-1918)</i></li><li><i>Rie Cramer (1887-1977)</i></li><li><i>Alice Greinwald-Clarus (1887-1925)</i></li><li><i>Ljubow Popowa (1889-1924)</i></li><li><i>Jo Daemen (1891-1944)</i></li><li><i>Galina Tschitschagowa/Chichagowa (1891-1967)</i></li><li><i>Olga Tschitschagowa/Chichagowa (1892-1956)</i></li><li><i>Antonia Sofronowa (1892-1966)</i></li><li><i>Nina Brodinsky (1892-1978)</i></li><li><i>Olga Brodinsky (unknown, sister to Nina Brodinsky)</i></li><li><i>Freda Lingstrom (1893-1989)</i></li><li><i>Lou Loeber (1894-1983)</i></li><li><i>Vavara Stepanova (1894-1958)</i></li><li><i>Amy Richards (1896 - 1918)</i></li><li><i>Eva Aschoff (1899-1969)</i></li><li><i>Erika Giovanna Klien (1900-1957)</i></li><li><i>Margarete Leins (1900-1995)</i></li><li><i>Fré (Frederika Cohen (1903-1943)</i></li><li><i>Grete Stern (1904-1999)</i></li><li><i>Louise E. Jefferson (1908-2002)</i></li><li><i>Jane Bissell Grabhorn (1911-1973)</i></li><li><i>Muriel Cooper (1925 -1994)</i></li><li><i>Elaine Lustig Cohen (1927-2016)</i></li><li><i>Bea Feitler (1938-1982)</i></li></ul><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Battershill, C. (2022). <i>Women and Letterpress Printing 1920-2020: Gendered Impressions</i>. Cambridge University Press.</p><p>Breuer, G., & Meer, J. (2012). <i>Women in Graphic Design 1890-2012</i>. Jovis Verlag.</p><p>Dubansky, M., Frelinghuysen, A. C., & Dunn, J. M. (2008). <i>The Proper Decoration of Book Covers: The Life and Work of Alice C. Morse</i>.</p><p>Dubansky, M. (2009, May). <i>Alice Cordelia Morse (1863–1961)</i>. The Met’s Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. <a href="https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/mors/hd_mors.htm">https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/mors/hd_mors.htm</a></p><p><i>Edna Beilenson, 71, graphic arts expert and book publisher</i>. (1981, Mar 04). New York Times (1923-) Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/historical-newspapers/edna-beilenson-71-graphic-arts-expert-book/docview/121888575/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/historical-newspapers/edna-beilenson-71-graphic-arts-expert-book/docview/121888575/se-2</a></p><p>Ethel Reed, Artist. (1896). <i>Bradley, His Book</i>, 1(3), 74–76. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/20443160">http://www.jstor.org/stable/20443160</a></p><p>Fanni, Fanni, Maryam, Flodmark, Matilda, Kaaman, Sara, Walkup, Kathy, Börjel, Ida, Baines, Jess, Wikander, Ulla, Humlesjö, Inger, Waaranperä, Ingegärd, Cartmail, Gail, Dobney, Megan, & Josefsson, Kira. (2020). <i>Natural enemies of books</i>.</p><p>Garrett, M., & Thomas, Z. (2019). <i>Suffrage and the Arts: Visual Culture, Politics and Enterprise</i>. Bloomsbury Publishing.</p><p>Goudy, F. (1939). <i>Bertha M. Goudy: Recollections by one who knew her best.</i> The Village Press.</p><p>Harlan, R. D. (1975). Review Article: Oral Histories of San Francisco Printing [Review of Book Printing with the Handpress; Brother Antoninus: Poet, Printer, and Religious; Artist and Printer; Comments on Some Bay Area Fine Printers; Recollections of the Grabhorn Press; The Colt Press; Fine Printing and the Grabhorn Press; The Grabhorn Press and the Grace Hoper Press; Fine Printers of the San Francisco Bay Area; Two San Francisco Bookmen; Recollections of San Francisco Printers; A Life in Printing; Literary San Francisco; Bookselling and Creating Books; Photoengraving, 1910-1969; The Schmidt Lithography Company; San Francisco Printers, 1925-1965; A Printed Word Has Its Own Measure; Untitled Interview; Printing and Book Design, by L. Allan, Dorothy Allan, Brother Antoninus (William Everson), Malette Dean, F. P. Farquhar, Edwin Grabhorn, Jane Grabhorn, Robert Grabhorn, Katherine Grover, Sherwood Grover, J. D. Hart, Warren R. Howell, Haywood Hunt, Lawton Kennedy, O. Lewis, D. Magee, Walter Mann, Max Schmidt, Jr., Herman Diedrichs, … A. Wilson]. The Library Quarterly: Information, Community, Policy, 45(2), 202–205. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/4306509">http://www.jstor.org/stable/4306509</a></p><p><i>In Full Bloom: Margaret Armstrong’s Decorated Publishers’ Bindings Revisited</i>. (n.d.). metmuseum.org. Retrieved January 5, 2023, from <a href="https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2022/in-full-bloom">https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2022/in-full-bloom</a></p><p>Jaudon, & Kozloff, J. (1977). Art Hysterical Nations of Progress and Culture. <i>Heresies</i>, 4, 38.</p><p>Kirkham, P. (2002). <i>Women Designers in the USA, 1900-2000: Diversity and Difference </i>(2d Printing). Yale University Press.</p><p>Pankow, D. (n.d.). Fields of Gold | American Decorated Trade Bindings and Their Designers, 1890–1915 | Cary Graphic Arts Collection. RIT. <a href="https://www.rit.edu/carycollection/fields-gold">https://www.rit.edu/carycollection/fields-gold</a></p><p>Tidcombe, M. (1996). <i>Women Bookbinders, 1880-1920</i>. Amsterdam University Press.</p><p><i>Women’s work.</i> (n.d.). Brooklyn Museum. <a href="https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/dinner_party/womens_work">https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/eascfa/dinner_party/womens_work</a></p><p>Zonis, K. (2021, November 16). <i>The Book-Cover Designs of Alice C. Morse</i> | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. <a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2014/03/26/the-book-cover-designs-of-alice-c-morse/">https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2014/03/26/the-book-cover-designs-of-alice-c-morse/</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Women in Book Design</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Kolby Streller, Dean Kelly, Taylor Hill, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/ed678879-01ba-48af-a703-843ce7faee09/3000x3000/shin-incomplet-podcast-revised6.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:28:51</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>Explores women in Book Design, Printing and Production</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>Explores women in Book Design, Printing and Production</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, graphic design, printing history, book design history, bookbinding, women designers, printing, book design</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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      <title>Underground Comix Part 2</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>If it seems like the underground comix scene was a raucous and raunchy boys club, that’s fairly accurate. However, there were plenty of women artists who reacted against the sexist depictions of women in comix, of which there was plenty. Their complaints about how women were being portrayed was seen to be just more censorship heaped on the male comix artists. Rather than just be quiet and go away, women like Trina Robbins, Willy Mendes, Linda Barry, Mary Fleener, and many others started drawing, bringing their own voices into the underground comix scene. Their experience in comix wasn’t all smooth sailing either. The women creating comix also insisted on absolute artistic freedom and the space to explore difficult topics, but it came at a price just like it did for the male comix artists. Undercover police, raids, and lawsuits while not necessarily the norm, seemed to be always looming. While some comix titles managed to run longer than others, the heyday of comix was all but over by the mid 1970s. However, the influence of underground comix is evident in the comics and graphic novels being published today that are willing to have serious discussions about equally serious topics.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1880s  – Comics began publication in American newspapers <br />1895   – The Yellow Kid by Richard Outcault first published<br />1914   – Krazy Kat by Geroge Herriman first published <br />1920s   – Tijuana Bibles began to be published <br />1930s   – Comic book began in America <br />1931   – Alice Schenker (born Alice Olsen) born in Racine, WI <br />1933   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created Superman<br />1936-1939   – The comic magazine format became popular<br />1936  – Victor Moscoso born in Spain <br />1937  – Frank Stack born in Houston, TX<br />1938  – Gary Arlington born in San Jose, CA <br />1938  – Trina Robbins born in Brooklyn, NY <br />1939   – “She Saw The World’s Fair” published by Wesley Morse <br />1939   – Harvey Pekar born in Cleveland, OH <br />1939  – Richard “Grass” Green born in Fort Wayne, IN<br />1940-1950s   – Comic burnings became common in America <br />1940  – Gilbert Shelton born in Houston, TX <br />1940  – Manuel “Spain” Reodriguez born in Buffalo, NY <br />1941  – Vaughn Bodé born in Utica, NY <br />1941  – S. Clay Wilson (Steven Clay Wilson) born in Lincoln, Nebraska <br />1941  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson born in Texas <br />1942   – Rand Holmes born in Nova Scotia <br />1942  – Dan O’Neil born <br />1943   – Joel Beck born in Ross, CA <br />1943  – Robert Williaams born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1944   – George Herriman dies <br />1944  – Howard Cruse is born in Birmingham, AL <br />1943  – Robert Crumb born in Philadelphia, PA <br />1944  – Rick Griffin born in California <br />1944   – Bill Griffith born <br />1944   – Kim Deitch born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1944   – Max Gaines establishes Educational Comics<br />1944   – Mervyn “Skip” Williamson born in San Antonio, TX <br />1945  – Lee Mars born <br />1947   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster sued in NY Supreme Court to regain their rights to Superman; they lose the case and their jobs at DC Comics<br />1947   – Jay Lynch born in Orange, NJ <br />1947   – Max Gaines dies in a boat crash; son William Gaines takes over EC Comics<br />1948   – Art Spiegelman born in Stockholm, Sweden <br />1948  – Barbara “Willy” Mendes born <br />1948  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb born in Long Beach, NY<br />1949  – Marry Wings born Mary Geller in Chicago, IL <br />1950s   – Student Press Movement starts <br />1950   – Educational Comics becomes Entertaining Comics under William Gaines <br />1950  – Gary Panter born in Durant, OK <br />1951  – Mary Fleener born<br />1952-1956   – Harvey Kurtzman is the editor of MAD Magazine <br />1953  – Roberta Gregory born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1954   – “Seduction of the Innocent” by psychiatrist Frederick Werthan published  <br />1954   – Comics Code Authority established <br />1954  – Victor Moscoso starts at Cooper Union Art School in Manhattan <br />1955   – William Gaines starts humor magazine, MAD Magazine <br />1955  – Charles Burns born <br />1956   – After being cited by the CCA, EC comics diverts resources to new title MAD Magazine <br />1956  – Ralph Bakshi starts animating at Terrytoons <br />1956   – Alice and Don Schenker marry <br />1956  – Lynda Barry born in Richland Center, WI <br />1957   – Harvey Kurtzmaan’s Trump magazine published<br />1957  – Peter Baagge born in New York <br />1957-1960  – Spain Rodriguez studies at Silvermine Guild School of Art in New Canaan, CT <br />1958   – Moe Moskowitz moves to Bay Are and opens bookstore <br />1958  – Robert Crumb and his brother Charles publish satire magazine “Foo” <br />1958-1962   – Frank Stack and Gilbert Shelton edit University of Texas at Austin’s newspaper, The Texas Ranger  <br />1959  – Victor Moscoso moves to San Francisco, CA <br />1960s   – Underground comix movement started <br />1960   – MAD Magazine had circulation of 1.4 million <br />1960  – Rick Griffin met filmmaker John Severson at screening of Surf Fever movie <br />1960   – Harvey Kurtzman starts Help! Magazine <br />1960  – Phoebe Gloeckner born in Philadelphia, PA <br />1960  – Alison Bechdel born in Beech Creek, PA <br />1961   – Skip Williamson sells first comic to Help! Magazine <br />1961  – Daniel Clowes born in Chicaago, IL <br />1963   – In mainstream comics, Dell, DC and Marvel were the major publishers <br />1963  – Rick Griffin starts working at Surfer Magazine as a cartoonist, debuting “Murphy” <br />1963  – Rick Griffin is seriously injured as a passenger in a drunk driving accident <br />1963  – Spain Rodriguez starts work at the Western Electric Company Plant<br />1963   – Jay Lynch moves to Chicago to become a cartoonist <br />1956   – America gets involved in the Vietnam War <br />1963   – March On Washington <br />1963   – President John F. Kennedy assassinated <br />1963  – Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique” is published<br />1964   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “God Nose” <br />1964  – After being promoted to director of cartoons at Terrytown, Ralph Bakshi left to run animation at Paramount Pictures <br />1962   – Frank Stack  publishes “The Adventures of Jesus” <br />1962   – Harvey Pekar and Robert Crumb meet in Cleveland, OH and become friends and collaborators <br />1965   – Birth of the Underground Press <br />1965  – Rick Griffin picks up “Murphy” comics in Surfer after a pause <br />1965   – Schenkers launch Print Mint inside of Moskowitz’s bookstore <br />1965  – Spain Rodriguez spends summer in NYC creating cartoons for The Militant paper and joined anarchist group Resurgence Youth Movement <br />1965  – Robert Williams starts working as Art Director for Ed “Big Daddy” Roth <br />1965  – Robert Crumb starts taking LSD <br />1965  – Julie Doucet born in Saint-Lambert Quebec, Canada <br />1965-1966   – Mario Savia’s Free Speech Movement impacts Berkely’s campus <br />1966  – After graduating from San Francisco Art Institute, Victor Moscoso joins faculty <br />1966   – Art Spiegelman is Topps Bubblegum’s star artist <br />1966  – Spain Rodriguez has his first cover in paper East Village Other <br />1966  – Trina Robbins moved back to NYC from LA and worked for East Village Other as advisor and illustrator <br />1966  – Rick Griffin joins Jook Savages and designs posters for their art shows in San Francisco<br />1966   – Kim Deitch moves to NYC and gets “Sunshine Girl” published in The East Village Other <br />1966   – Joel Beck publishes “Lenny of Laredo”, “Marching Marvin” and “The Profit” <br />1966   – Print Mint publishes their first comix, a reprint of Beck’s “Lenny of Laredo” <br />1966  – NOW, of the National Organization for Women, was formed <br />1966   – Underground Press Syndicate established by East Village Other editor Walter Bowart <br />1966   – Weekly & monthly underground papers regularly publish Underground Comix <br />1967  – Robert Crumb leaves Cleveland, OH, his job at Americana Greetings, and wife Dana to move to San Francisco, CA <br />1967  – Gilbert Shelton’s “Wonder Wart Hog” published by Pete Millar <br />1967  – Victor Moscoso and RIck Griffin begin to collaborate on posters and Zap Comics covers <br />1967  – Rick Griffin commissioned for “Pow-Wow, a Gathering of the Tribes for a Human Be-In” held in Golden Gate Park’s polo grounds <br />1967  – Art Spiegelman comes up with the idea for Wacky Packs working for Topps Bubblegum <br />1967  – “Summer of Love” takes place in San Francisco for 9 months <br />1967   – Bijou Funnies, initially The Chicago Mirror, founded by Skip WIlliamson and Jay Lynch in Chigaco, IL <br />1967   – Art Spiegelman moves to San Francisco, CA <br />1967  – “Cavalier” Magazine serializes Robert Crumb’s “Fritz the Cat” <br />1967  – First drawings of Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers appear on a flier for short student film “The Texas Hippies March on the Capitol” <br />1967-1973   – Jay Lynch’s “‘Nard ‘n’ Pat” comic publication years <br />1968   – Rand Holmes moves to Vancouver, Canada and works for Georgia Straight a weekly underground tabloid and starts “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” <br />1968  – S. Clay Wilson moves to San Francisco and becomes friends with Robert Crumb, starts to contribute to Zap Comics <br />1968  – First issue of Zap Comix by Robert Crumb released<br />1968  – “Keep on Truckin’” one page comix published in Zap Comix by Robert Crumb <br />1968  – Robert Crumb sends for his wife Dana to join him in San Francisco <br />1968  – Robert Crumb first sees S. Clay Wilson’s comix work <br />1968  – Gary Arlington opens his comic book store in the Mission District in San Francisco, CA <br />1968  – Spain Rodriguez’s cover for Feb 2nd issue of East Village Other creates legal issues over depiction of a sexual act <br />1968   – Robert Crumb publishes “Zap” <br />1968   – Skip Williamson’s “Snappy Sammy Smoot (1968-1996) makes its debut in Bijou Funnies <br />1968  – Robert William’s controversial painting “Appetite for Destruction” is used as album art for the Guns ‘N’ Roses album of the same name <br />1968  – “Yellow Dog” comix anthology started by Joel Beck and John Thompson <br />1968-1973   – Skip Williamson’s Sammy Smoot character is played by Carl Reiner on the comedy TV show “Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In” <br />1968-1975   – Considered the boom years of Underground Comix <br />1968   – Apex Novelties ran by Don Donaahue starts publishing comix <br />1968  – US Government outlaws LSD <br />1968  – Robert Crumb starts “Snatch Comix” published by Apex Novelties <br />1969   – Neil Armstrong lands on the moon<br />1969-1970  – “Odd Bodkins” by Dan O’Neil is published in the San Francisco Oracle <br />1969  – Whitney Museum Exhibition “Human Concern/Personal Torment: The Grotesque in American Art” showed some of Robert Crumb’s work <br />1969  – Roger Brand at the first comic convention panel for Underground Comix artists, declined to invite Trina Robbins <br />1969   – Rip Off Press founded by Gilbert Shelton, Jack “Jaxon” Jackson, Dave Moriarty and Fred Todd <br />1969   – Kim Deitch and Trinaa Robbins start dating <br />1969  – Bill Griffith and Jay Kinney meet and start idea for “Young Lust” <br />1969   – Vaughn Bode briefly edits “Gothic Blimp Works”; Kim Deitch begins to edit “Gothic Blimp Works” <br />1969  – Print Mint is raided by police over “Zap Comix” fourth issue (featured “Joe Blow” incest comic by Robert Crumb) <br />1969  – Schenkers arrested over violation of California Penal Code Section 311.2 (illegal distribution of pornography) due to publishing “Zap Comics” fourth issue <br />1969  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Jiz Comics” under pseudonym Howard Crankwood <br />1970s   – Graphic Novel format began<br />1970s  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates historical narrative comix like “Comanche Moon”, “Los Tejanos”<br />1970  – Ed “Big Daddy” Roth’s shop closes and Robert Williams ends his tenure as Art Director <br />1970  – Chris Kirkpatrick, owner of New Yorker Book Store that sold Zap Comix, convicted <br />1970   – Bill Griffith moves to San Francisco, CA<br />1970  – Trina Robbins and Kim Deitch’s daughter Casey born <br />1970  – “It Ain’t Me Babe” the first women’s liberation newspaper, was published in Berkley <br />1970   – Kitchen Sink Press ran by Denis Kitchen founded <br />1970  – “Skull” published by Rip Off Press <br />1970  – Many Underground Comix artists met and created The Cartoon Workers Union<br />1970  – Robert William released collected “Coochy Cooty Men’s Comics” published by Print Mint <br />1970   – Last Gasp Eco Funnies ran by Ron Turner founded <br />1970  – “Young Lust” by Bill Griffith and Jaay Kinney published by Company & Sons <br />1970  – Robert Crumb meets with Ralph Bakshi and Steve Kraantz about making a movie out of his popular character Fritz the Cat  <br />1970  – “Abortion Eve” comic produced by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely <br />1970  – Spain Rodriguez releases “Zodiac Mindwarp” (East Village Other) and “Subert” (Rip Off Press) <br />1970  – Kim Deitch and Trina Robbins end their relationship<br />1971  – Gilbert Shelton’s Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers first released<br />1971  – Roberta Gregory attend CSU Long Beach and contributes “Feminist Funnies” to their newspaper <br />1971  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Bent” (Print Mint) <br />1971  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb grates with degree in fine art from University of Arizona <br />1971  – “Ms Magazine” founded by Gloria Steinem and art directed by Bea Feitler <br />1971   – Bill Griffith’s “Zippy the Pinhead” debuts in Real Pulp Comics #1 by Print Mint <br />1971  – Dan O’Neil and the Air Pirates (Bobby London, Shary Flenniken, Gary Hallgren, and Ted Richards) create “Air Pirate Funnies” published by Last Gasp <br />1971  – Lee Marr’s “Pudge” & “Girl Blimp” published <br />1971  – Roberta Gregory sells her first comic to “Wimmen’s Comix” <br />1971  – Disney filed suit in Northern District of California against the comic artists from the “Air Pirate Funnies” <br />1971   – Rip Off Press moves from Mowry’s Opera House to 17th Street <br />1971   – After moving back to NYC, Art Spiegelman once again returns to San Francisco, CA<br />1972   – “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” released in first collected volume, the second volume out the following year<br />1972  – “Tits ‘n’ Clits” All women comix anthology by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely published first issue (Nanny Goat Productions) <br />1972  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb has comix debut in “Wimmen’s Comix” #1 with “Goldie a Neurotic Woman” <br />1972  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb meet at a San Francisco party <br />1972  – “Fritz the Cat” movie directed by Ralph Bakshi released <br />1972  – 2 all women’s comix anthologies started “Wimmen’s Comix” (Trina Robbins, Last Gasp) and “Tit’s &  Clits” (Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevelyl, Nanny Goat Productions)<br />1972  – Disney granted it’s injunction against Dan O’Neil and the other comic artists from “Air Pirate Funnies”; found guilty of copyright infringement and trade disparagement <br />1972  – “Bizzare Sex” started published by Denis Kitchen of Kitchen Sink Press <br />1972  – Print Mint hits 1 million issues of “Zap Comix” sold <br />1973   – Rand Holmes travels to San Francisco, CA to get the second volume of “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” published by Last Gasp <br />1973  – Bill Griffith’s “A Sour Look at the Comix Scene, or Out of the Inkwell and Into the Toilet” runs in The San Francisco Phoenix <br />1973  – Undercover cop buys first issue of “Tits ‘n’ Clits” at San Francisco Bookstore Fahrenheit 451; owners charged with selling pornography and Farmer and Cheverly are forced to hide from law enforcement for 2 years <br />1973  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves onto Robert Crumb’s farm property as his girlfriend <br />1973  – “Come Out Comix” by Mary Wings self-published <br />1973  –  Year of the Crash of Comix <br />1973  – Rick Griffin is a born again Christian <br />1973  – Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brother’s comics had sold 400,000 copies; eventually selling 45 million copies to date in 16 different languages <br />1972   – Haavery Pekar’s first story “Brilliant American Maniacs Series No. 1 Crazy Ed” published in “People’s Comics” with art by Robert Crumb <br />1972   – Justin Green publishes “Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary” <br />1972   – Art Spiegelman publishes first 3 pages of Maus <br />1973  –Supreme Court’s  Miller v. California decision  rules that vendors can be jailed and retroactively fined for selling obscene materials, cannot plead ignorance to contents <br />1974   – Jay Lynch has a one week tenure as editor at Hustler Magazine<br />1974  – Lynda Barry attends Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA <br />1974   – Art Spiegelman self publishes “Ace Hole” and “Midget Detective” <br />1974  – Marvel releases “Comix Book” <br />1974  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Pork” (Co-Op Press) <br />1974  – “The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat” directed by Ralph Bakshi released <br />1975   – The Schenkers working partnership with Bob and Peggy Rita dissolves and Print Mint slows down production and distribution <br />1975  – “Felch Comics” by Keith Green<br />1975  – Vietnam War ends, American troops withdraw from Saigon <br />1975  – Victor Moscoso starts attending Yale <br />1975  – Bill Griffith and Art Spiegelman create “Arcade” comix anthology <br />1975   –  Vaughn Bodé dies at age 33 <br />1976   – Harvey Pekar self publishes “How I Quit Collecting Records and Put Out a Comic Book with the Money I Saved” with art by Robert Crumb <br />1976  – “Wet Satin” erotic satirical all-women’s comics anthology published by Kitchen Sink Press <br />1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves off of the Crumb farm commune <br />1976  – Mary Wing’s “Dyke Shorts” is self-published <br />1976  – Roberta Gregory creates “Dynamite Damsels” (Self-published) <br />1976  – Copyright Act becomes law <br />1976  – Lee Marrs “The Further Fattening Adventures of Pudge, Girl Blimp” featured the first openly bisexual character in comics <br />1967  – Larry Fuller creates “Gay Heartthrobs” <br />1976   – Harvey Pekar’s “American Splendor #1” published <br />1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb and Diane Noomin start “Twisted Sisters” <br />1976-1077  – Punk scene emerges<br />1971  – Howard Cruse’s “Barefootz” first published <br />1977   – Kitchen Sink Press reprints Joel Becks comics under title “Joel Beck’s Comics & Stories” <br />1977  – Gary Panter moves to Los Angeles, CA <br />1977  – S. Clay Wilson releases comix with his most popular character “The Checkered Demon” (Last Gasp) <br />1977  – Gilbert Shelton’s character Fat Freddy’s cat from “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” gets its own spin off comic <br />1977  – Robert Crumb divorces Dana<br />1978  – Gilbert Shelton moves to San Francisco, CA from Austin, TX <br />1978  – First graphic novel “A Contract With God” by Will Eisner is published by Baronet Press <br />1978  – Dan O’Neils appeal in the case of Dismney and the Air Pirates does not rule in O’Neil’s favor <br />1978  – Gilbert Shelton makes “Shakedown Street” album cover for The Grateful Dead <br />1978  – Paul Mavrides starts to collaborate on “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” <br />1979  – Gilbert Shelton and wife/agent Lora move to Europe <br />1979  – The Supreme Court declines to take Dan O’Neil’s appeal case against Disney <br />1979  – Robert William publishes “The Lowbrow Art of Robt. Williams” <br />1979  – Mary Wings creates drug awareness book “Are Your Highs Getting You Down?” with a California Arts Council Grant <br />1979  – Denis Kitchen approaches Howaard Cruse about making “Gay Comix”<br />1979  – Rip Off Press ends<br />1979  – Art Spiegelman starts to teach at the School of Visual Arts in NY<br />1980  – First issue of “Gay Comix” (Kitchen SInk Press) released, edited by Howard Cruse <br />1980  – “Raw” comics anthology created by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly <br />1980-1991   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman serialized <br />1981  – “Wimmen’s Comix” takes a 6 year hiatus <br />1981  – Daniel Clowes and his friends create “Psycho Comics” <br />1981  – Robert Crumb starts comix magazine “Weirdo” published by Last Gasp <br />1981  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb’s daughter Sophie is born; they move to Southern France<br />1982  – Last issue of “Bizzare Sex” released <br />1982  – Gilbert and Jamie Hernandez create “Love and Rockets” published by Fantagraphics <br />1983  – “Dykes to Watch Out For” by Alison Bechdel first published <br />1984  – Mary Fleener self publishes her first comic “Hoodoo” <br />1984  – Robert Crumb passes editorship of “Weirdo” to Peter Bagge <br />1985   – Print Mint, since renamed Reprint Mint, is sold by the Schenkers <br />1985  – Mary Wings “She Came Too Late” lesbian detective novel published <br />1985  – Topps Bubbglegum starts Garbage Pail Kids cards <br />1986   – Doubleday publishes the first of it’s two collected volumes of Harvye Pekar’s “American Splendor” with the next coming out the following year <br />1986  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “Illustrated History of Ranching in Texas” <br />1986  – Peter Bagge resigns as editor at “Weirdo”; Aline Kominsky-Crumb takes over <br />1987  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb marry <br />1988  – “Dirty Plotte” by Julie Doucet was first self-published <br />1988  – Roberta Gregory self publishes “Winging It” and “Sheila and the Unicorn” <br />1989   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackon publishes “Rip Off Pres: The Golden Era #21” <br />1989  – Daniel Clowes first issue of “Eightball” <br />1989  – Roberta Gregory moves to Seattle and begins to work at Fantagraphics Books <br />1990   – Art Spiegelman receives a Guggenheim Fellowship to work on Maus’ second volume <br />1990  – Peter Bagge first publishes “Hate” (Fantagraaphics) <br />1991   – American Splendor’s once a year regular release stops with issue fifteen <br />1991  – Rick Griffin dies after motorcycle accident <br />1991  – Roberta Gregory’s “Naughty Bits” issue one self published <br />1991  – “Dirty Plotte” published by Drawn & Quarterly <br />1991  – Julie Doucet moves to NYC for one year and makes “My New York Diary” <br />1992   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman wins a Pulitzer Prize <br />1992  – “Wimmen’s Comix” publishes it’s last issue <br />1993   – Don Schenkers dies<br />1994  – Robert Williams first published “Juxtapoz Arts & Culture” Magazine<br />1995  – “Stuck Rubber Baby” by Howard Cruse published <br />1995  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns first published by Fantagraphics <br />1995  – “Crumb” documentary about Robert Crumb by Terry Zwigoff is released <br />1996  – Mary Fleener’s “Life of the Party” released  <br />1998  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates “Lost Cause” <br />1999   – Joel Beck dies <br />2001-2003  – Roberta Gregory’s popular character Bitchy Bitch from “Naughty Bits” starred in the animated cartoon “Life’s a Bitch” on Comedy Network (Canada) and Oxygen Network (US) <br />2001  – Daniel Clowes “Eightball” story “Ghost World” is made into a movie of the same name <br />2002   – Rand Holmes dies <br />2002  – Phoebe Gloeckner’s “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” published by Frog Books <br />2003   – “American Splendor” the award winning movie about Harvey Pekar’s life starring Paul Giamatti is released <br />2005  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns released as graphic novel by Fantagraphics <br />2006  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson dies <br />2006  – “Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic” by Alison Bechdel published <br />2010   – Harvey Pekar dies <br />2015  – “Fun Home” the Broadway Musical wins a Tony for best musical <br />2015  – “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” by Phoebe Glockner made into a movie with the same name <br />2017   – Skip Williamson and Jay Lynch die within a week and a half of each other <br />2019  – Howard Cruse dies <br />2020   – Alice Schnker dies <br />2021  – Streaming channel Tubi releases 8 episode show “The Freak Brothers” based on Gilbert Shelton’s “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” <br />2021  – Spain Rodriguez dies <br />2021  – S. Clay Wilson dies <br />2022  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb dies </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>About. Robert Williams Official Site.</i> (2022). Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.robtwilliamsstudio.com/about">https://www.robtwilliamsstudio.com/about</a></p><p>Beat Staff. (2016, May 11). Interview: Roberta Gregory on Mother Mountain, wimmen's comix, & bitchy bitch. <i>Comics Beat.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-roberta-gregory-on-mother-mountain-wimmens-comix-bitchy-bitch/">https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-roberta-gregory-on-mother-mountain-wimmens-comix-bitchy-bitch/</a></p><p>Bernsau, T. (2021, January 20). Car Toons for car guys. <i>MotorTrend.</i> Retrieved December 29, 2022, from <a href="https://www.motortrend.com/features/0908rc-the-car-toons-of-pete-millar/">https://www.motortrend.com/features/0908rc-the-car-toons-of-pete-millar/</a></p><p>Chakraborty, P. (2021). "Sex and the Aesthetics of the Vulgar: Reading the Creative Paradox in the Works of Robert Crumb." Sanglap: <i>Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry,</i> 07(02), 120–148. <a href="https://doi.org/10.35684/jlci.2021.7206">https://doi.org/10.35684/jlci.2021.7206</a></p><p>Chute, H. (2006, season-04). Decoding Comics. <i>Modern Fiction Studies,</i> 52(4), 1014–1027. <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/26286682">https://www.jstor.org/stable/26286682</a></p><p>Chute, H. (2019). <i>Why Comics?: From Underground to Everywhere</i> (Reprint). Harper Perennial.</p><p>Costello, B., & Gremins, B. (2021). <i>The Other 1980s: Reframing Comics’ Crucial Decade.</i> Louisiana State University Press.</p><p>Dalzell, T. (2020, February 20). <i>Remembering Alice Schenker, whose Print Mint on Telegraph Avenue sparked the 1960s poster revolution. Berkeleyside.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.berkeleyside.org/2020/02/20/remembering-alice-schenker-whose-print-mint-on-telegraph-avenue-sparked-the-1960s-poster-revolution">https://www.berkeleyside.org/2020/02/20/remembering-alice-schenker-whose-print-mint-on-telegraph-avenue-sparked-the-1960s-poster-revolution</a></p><p>Danky, J. P., & Kitchen, D. (2009). <i>Underground classics: The transformation of comics into Comix.</i> Abrams.</p><p>Dauber, J. (2022). <i>American Comics: A History.</i> W. W. Norton & Company.</p><p>Doherty , B.  (2023). <i>Dirty pictures: How an underground network of nerds, feminists, misfits, geniuses, bikers,... Potheads, printers, intellectuals, and art school.</i> Harry N. Abraams.</p><p>Ebert, R. (2005, November 20). Crumb Movie Review & Film Summary (1995): <i>Roger Ebert. Crumb movie review & film summary</i> (1995) | Roger Ebert. Retrieved December 22, 2022, from <a href="https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-crumb-1994">https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-crumb-1994</a></p><p>Elam, E. (2013, February 15). Gilbert Shelton in Conversation. T_he Comics Journal ._ Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.tcj.com/gilbert-shelton-in-conversation/">https://www.tcj.com/gilbert-shelton-in-conversation/</a></p><p>Estren, M. J. (2012). <i>A History of Underground Comics.</i> Ronin Publishing, Inc.</p><p>Frank, P. (2018, June 19). Mary Wings just wanted an orgasm when she created the First Lesbian Comic Book. <i>HuffPost.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mary-wings-created-first-lesbian-comic-book%5C_n%5C_5b23d937e4b0d4fc01fdd783">https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mary-wings-created-first-lesbian-comic-book\_n\_5b23d937e4b0d4fc01fdd783</a></p><p>Freeman, J. (2017, November 3). Exclusive: Gilbert Shelton reveals some Fabulous furry freak brothers secrets, new collection extracts_! downthetubes.net._ Retrieved December 21, 2022, from <a href="https://downthetubes.net/exclusive-gilbert-shelton-reveals-some-fabulous-furry-freak-brothers-secrets-new-collection-extracts/">https://downthetubes.net/exclusive-gilbert-shelton-reveals-some-fabulous-furry-freak-brothers-secrets-new-collection-extracts/</a></p><p>Gabilliet, J., Beaty, B., & Nguyen, N. (2013). <i>Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books(Illustrated).</i> University Press of Mississippi.</p><p>Garcia, E. (2017). <i>The Hernandez Brothers: Love, Rockets, and Alternative Comics (Latinx and Latin American Profiles)</i>(1st ed.). University of Pittsburgh Press.</p><p>Gary Panter. Lambiek <i>Comiclopedia .</i> (2022, July 22). Retrieved December 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/panter.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/panter.htm</a></p><p>Gomez, B. (2017, March 29). She changed comics: Roberta Gregory interview. <i>Comic Book Legal Defense Fund.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://cbldf.org/2017/03/she-changed-comics-roberta-gregory-interview/">https://cbldf.org/2017/03/she-changed-comics-roberta-gregory-interview/</a></p><p>Gregory, R. (2009). My Creative History. <i>Roberta Gregory .</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.robertagregory.com/Robertagregory/Robertas%5C_History.html">http://www.robertagregory.com/Robertagregory/Robertas\_History.html</a></p><p>Griffith, B. (2002). A Bill Griffith Bibliography: (Out of Print & Hard to Find) Covers & Contents . <i>A Bill Griffith bibliography.</i> Retrieved December 5, 2022, from <a href="https://www.zippythepinhead.com/pages/biblio.html">https://www.zippythepinhead.com/pages/biblio.html</a></p><p>Griffith, B. (2003). Still asking the unanswerable question, 'are we having fun yet?'. <i>Still Asking the Unanswerable Question, ‘Are We Having Fun Yet?’</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://imagetextjournal.com/still-asking-the-unanswerable-question-are-we-having-fun-yet/">https://imagetextjournal.com/still-asking-the-unanswerable-question-are-we-having-fun-yet/</a></p><p>Groth, G. (2011, February 9). An interview with Victor Moscoso. <i>The Comics Journal.</i> Retrieved December 12, 2022, from <a href="https://www.tcj.com/an-interview-with-victor-moscoso/">https://www.tcj.com/an-interview-with-victor-moscoso/</a></p><p>Hatfield, C., & Beaty, B. (2020). <i>Comics studies: A guidebook</i>. Rutgers University Press.</p><p>Hatfield, C. (2005, August 2). <i>Alternative Comics: An Emerging Literature (Illustrated)</i>. University Press of Mississippi.</p><p>Jean-Paul, J., & Cruse, H. (2021). <i>Stuck Rubber Baby.</i> CASTERMAN.</p><p>Jennings, J., Duffy, D., Woods, A. A., Wimberly, R., Greene, S., Richardson, A., Love, J., Love, R., & Knight, K. (2020, March 31). <i>Black Comix Returns</i>. Magnetic Press.</p><p>Julie Doucet. _Lambiek Comiclopedia. (_2022, June 20). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/doucet.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/doucet.htm</a></p><p>Kaplan, A. (2010). <i>From Krakow to Krypton: Jews and Comic Books.</i> Jewish Publication Society.</p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, October 4)<i>. Jay Lynch. Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/l/lynch.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/l/lynch.htm</a></p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, September 27). Robert Williams. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williams%5C_r.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williams\_r.htm</a></p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, September 27). Skip Williamson. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia</i> . Retrieved December 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williamson%5C_skip.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williamson\_skip.htm</a></p><p>Lambiek. (2022, January 20). Joel Beck. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 19, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/b/beck%5C_joel.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/b/beck\_joel.htm</a></p><p>Mary Fleener. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, February 13). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/f/fleener%5C_mary.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/f/fleener\_mary.htm</a></p><p>Mietkiewicz, H. (2011, June 11). Holmes, Rand (1942-2002). <i>THE JOE SHUSTER AWARDS Canadian Comics Awards, News & Links</i>. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://joeshusterawards.com/hof/hof-rand-holmes-1942-2002/">https://joeshusterawards.com/hof/hof-rand-holmes-1942-2002/</a></p><p>Milligan, M. (2021, October 19). Tubi grooves into Adult Toons with debut original 'The Freak Brothers'. <i>Animation Magazine.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.animationmagazine.net/2021/10/tubi-grooves-into-adult-toons-with-debut-original-the-freak-brothers/">https://www.animationmagazine.net/2021/10/tubi-grooves-into-adult-toons-with-debut-original-the-freak-brothers/</a></p><p>Fox, M. S. (2013). Zap Comix. <i>Underground Comix Joint.</i> Retrieved December 29, 2022, from <a href="https://comixjoint.com/zapcomix.html">https://comixjoint.com/zapcomix.html</a></p><p>Of the Golden Age comics houses, EC was the greatest; Weird! Incredible! Mad! (2020, September 23). <i>The Economist.</i> <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A681897193/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=cd9e73a6">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A681897193/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=cd9e73a6</a></p><p>Olsza, M. (2020). Feminist (and/as) alternative media practices in women's underground comix in the 1970s 1. <i>Polish Journal for American Studies, 14, 21-37,139.</i> Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/feminist-as-alternative-media-practices-womens/docview/2473439187/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/feminist-as-alternative-media-practices-womens/docview/2473439187/se-2</a></p><p>Pagano, K. (2012, August 18). Mary Fleener lives art on the edge. <i>North Coast Current.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.northcoastcurrent.com/north-coast-beat/2012/08/mary-fleener-lives-art-on-the-edge/">https://www.northcoastcurrent.com/north-coast-beat/2012/08/mary-fleener-lives-art-on-the-edge/</a></p><p>Panter, G. (2007). Biography . <i>Gary Panter.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.garypanter.com/site/index.php/about/biography/">http://www.garypanter.com/site/index.php/about/biography/</a></p><p>Pencil, S. (2020). <i>Rated Savx: The Savage Pencil Skratchbook.</i> Strange Attractor Press.</p><p>Pilcher, T., & Kannenberg Jr., G. (2008). <i>Erotic comics : a graphic history from Tijuana bibles to underground comix.</i> The Ilex Press Limited.</p><p>Prescott, G. (2017, March 21). About: Life of the Party: An Interview with Mary Fleener. <i>Art & Illustration by Mary Fleener.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.maryfleener.com/about/">http://www.maryfleener.com/about/</a></p><p>Rand Holmes. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, January 16). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/h/holmes%5C_rand.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/h/holmes\_rand.htm</a></p><p>Roberta Gregory. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, January 1). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/g/gregory.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/g/gregory.htm</a></p><p>Robbins, T. (1999). <i>From girls to grrrlz : a history of [women’s] comics from teens to zines</i>. Chronicle Books.</p><p>Rosenkranz, P. (2008, May 20). <i>Rebel Visions: The Underground Comix Revolution 1963 - 1975</i> (Reprint). Fantagraphics Books.</p><p>Sabin, R. (2001). <i>Comics, Comix & Graphic Novels (Revised ed.).</i> Phaidon Press.</p><p>Seigal, B. (1997, January 8). Life of the party : Cartoonist Mary Fleener draws on a zest for life and an appreciation for the world's everyday zaniness. <i>Los Angeles Times.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-01-08-ls-16304-story.html">https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-01-08-ls-16304-story.html</a></p><p>Seves, P. R. (2018). <i>Eric Stanton & the History of the Bizarre Underground (1st ed.).</i> Schiffer.</p><p>Smith, H. (2021, February 10). S. Clay Wilson, who helped launch the underground comix movement, dies at 79. <i>The Washington Post Online.</i></p><p>Szasz, F. M. (2013, September 15). <i>Atomic Comics: Cartoonists Confront the Nuclear World (1st ed.).</i> University of Nevada Press.</p><p>Underground and Independent Comics, Comix, and Graphic Novels. (2011). Reference Reviews; Harlow, 25(6), 52–53.</p><p>Wanzo, R. (2018, June 1). The Normative Broken: Melinda Gebbie, Feminist Comix, and Child Sexuality Temporalities. <i>American Literature</i>, 90(2), 347–375. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1215/00029831-4564334">https://doi.org/10.1215/00029831-4564334</a></p><p>Wiggins, R. (2010, March 3). <i>Me and Gilbert Shelton: A Memoir [web log].</i> Retrieved December 14, 2022, from <a href="http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/ramsey-wiggins-me-and-gilbert-shelton.html">http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/ramsey-wiggins-me-and-gilbert-shelton.html</a>.</p><p>Williams, P. 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      <pubDate>Thu, 19 Oct 2023 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Kolby Streller, Spencer Gee, Dean Kelly, Taylor Hill, Mandy Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/underground-comix-part-2-tYxhxXRz</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>If it seems like the underground comix scene was a raucous and raunchy boys club, that’s fairly accurate. However, there were plenty of women artists who reacted against the sexist depictions of women in comix, of which there was plenty. Their complaints about how women were being portrayed was seen to be just more censorship heaped on the male comix artists. Rather than just be quiet and go away, women like Trina Robbins, Willy Mendes, Linda Barry, Mary Fleener, and many others started drawing, bringing their own voices into the underground comix scene. Their experience in comix wasn’t all smooth sailing either. The women creating comix also insisted on absolute artistic freedom and the space to explore difficult topics, but it came at a price just like it did for the male comix artists. Undercover police, raids, and lawsuits while not necessarily the norm, seemed to be always looming. While some comix titles managed to run longer than others, the heyday of comix was all but over by the mid 1970s. However, the influence of underground comix is evident in the comics and graphic novels being published today that are willing to have serious discussions about equally serious topics.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1880s  – Comics began publication in American newspapers <br />1895   – The Yellow Kid by Richard Outcault first published<br />1914   – Krazy Kat by Geroge Herriman first published <br />1920s   – Tijuana Bibles began to be published <br />1930s   – Comic book began in America <br />1931   – Alice Schenker (born Alice Olsen) born in Racine, WI <br />1933   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created Superman<br />1936-1939   – The comic magazine format became popular<br />1936  – Victor Moscoso born in Spain <br />1937  – Frank Stack born in Houston, TX<br />1938  – Gary Arlington born in San Jose, CA <br />1938  – Trina Robbins born in Brooklyn, NY <br />1939   – “She Saw The World’s Fair” published by Wesley Morse <br />1939   – Harvey Pekar born in Cleveland, OH <br />1939  – Richard “Grass” Green born in Fort Wayne, IN<br />1940-1950s   – Comic burnings became common in America <br />1940  – Gilbert Shelton born in Houston, TX <br />1940  – Manuel “Spain” Reodriguez born in Buffalo, NY <br />1941  – Vaughn Bodé born in Utica, NY <br />1941  – S. Clay Wilson (Steven Clay Wilson) born in Lincoln, Nebraska <br />1941  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson born in Texas <br />1942   – Rand Holmes born in Nova Scotia <br />1942  – Dan O’Neil born <br />1943   – Joel Beck born in Ross, CA <br />1943  – Robert Williaams born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1944   – George Herriman dies <br />1944  – Howard Cruse is born in Birmingham, AL <br />1943  – Robert Crumb born in Philadelphia, PA <br />1944  – Rick Griffin born in California <br />1944   – Bill Griffith born <br />1944   – Kim Deitch born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1944   – Max Gaines establishes Educational Comics<br />1944   – Mervyn “Skip” Williamson born in San Antonio, TX <br />1945  – Lee Mars born <br />1947   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster sued in NY Supreme Court to regain their rights to Superman; they lose the case and their jobs at DC Comics<br />1947   – Jay Lynch born in Orange, NJ <br />1947   – Max Gaines dies in a boat crash; son William Gaines takes over EC Comics<br />1948   – Art Spiegelman born in Stockholm, Sweden <br />1948  – Barbara “Willy” Mendes born <br />1948  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb born in Long Beach, NY<br />1949  – Marry Wings born Mary Geller in Chicago, IL <br />1950s   – Student Press Movement starts <br />1950   – Educational Comics becomes Entertaining Comics under William Gaines <br />1950  – Gary Panter born in Durant, OK <br />1951  – Mary Fleener born<br />1952-1956   – Harvey Kurtzman is the editor of MAD Magazine <br />1953  – Roberta Gregory born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1954   – “Seduction of the Innocent” by psychiatrist Frederick Werthan published  <br />1954   – Comics Code Authority established <br />1954  – Victor Moscoso starts at Cooper Union Art School in Manhattan <br />1955   – William Gaines starts humor magazine, MAD Magazine <br />1955  – Charles Burns born <br />1956   – After being cited by the CCA, EC comics diverts resources to new title MAD Magazine <br />1956  – Ralph Bakshi starts animating at Terrytoons <br />1956   – Alice and Don Schenker marry <br />1956  – Lynda Barry born in Richland Center, WI <br />1957   – Harvey Kurtzmaan’s Trump magazine published<br />1957  – Peter Baagge born in New York <br />1957-1960  – Spain Rodriguez studies at Silvermine Guild School of Art in New Canaan, CT <br />1958   – Moe Moskowitz moves to Bay Are and opens bookstore <br />1958  – Robert Crumb and his brother Charles publish satire magazine “Foo” <br />1958-1962   – Frank Stack and Gilbert Shelton edit University of Texas at Austin’s newspaper, The Texas Ranger  <br />1959  – Victor Moscoso moves to San Francisco, CA <br />1960s   – Underground comix movement started <br />1960   – MAD Magazine had circulation of 1.4 million <br />1960  – Rick Griffin met filmmaker John Severson at screening of Surf Fever movie <br />1960   – Harvey Kurtzman starts Help! Magazine <br />1960  – Phoebe Gloeckner born in Philadelphia, PA <br />1960  – Alison Bechdel born in Beech Creek, PA <br />1961   – Skip Williamson sells first comic to Help! Magazine <br />1961  – Daniel Clowes born in Chicaago, IL <br />1963   – In mainstream comics, Dell, DC and Marvel were the major publishers <br />1963  – Rick Griffin starts working at Surfer Magazine as a cartoonist, debuting “Murphy” <br />1963  – Rick Griffin is seriously injured as a passenger in a drunk driving accident <br />1963  – Spain Rodriguez starts work at the Western Electric Company Plant<br />1963   – Jay Lynch moves to Chicago to become a cartoonist <br />1956   – America gets involved in the Vietnam War <br />1963   – March On Washington <br />1963   – President John F. Kennedy assassinated <br />1963  – Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique” is published<br />1964   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “God Nose” <br />1964  – After being promoted to director of cartoons at Terrytown, Ralph Bakshi left to run animation at Paramount Pictures <br />1962   – Frank Stack  publishes “The Adventures of Jesus” <br />1962   – Harvey Pekar and Robert Crumb meet in Cleveland, OH and become friends and collaborators <br />1965   – Birth of the Underground Press <br />1965  – Rick Griffin picks up “Murphy” comics in Surfer after a pause <br />1965   – Schenkers launch Print Mint inside of Moskowitz’s bookstore <br />1965  – Spain Rodriguez spends summer in NYC creating cartoons for The Militant paper and joined anarchist group Resurgence Youth Movement <br />1965  – Robert Williams starts working as Art Director for Ed “Big Daddy” Roth <br />1965  – Robert Crumb starts taking LSD <br />1965  – Julie Doucet born in Saint-Lambert Quebec, Canada <br />1965-1966   – Mario Savia’s Free Speech Movement impacts Berkely’s campus <br />1966  – After graduating from San Francisco Art Institute, Victor Moscoso joins faculty <br />1966   – Art Spiegelman is Topps Bubblegum’s star artist <br />1966  – Spain Rodriguez has his first cover in paper East Village Other <br />1966  – Trina Robbins moved back to NYC from LA and worked for East Village Other as advisor and illustrator <br />1966  – Rick Griffin joins Jook Savages and designs posters for their art shows in San Francisco<br />1966   – Kim Deitch moves to NYC and gets “Sunshine Girl” published in The East Village Other <br />1966   – Joel Beck publishes “Lenny of Laredo”, “Marching Marvin” and “The Profit” <br />1966   – Print Mint publishes their first comix, a reprint of Beck’s “Lenny of Laredo” <br />1966  – NOW, of the National Organization for Women, was formed <br />1966   – Underground Press Syndicate established by East Village Other editor Walter Bowart <br />1966   – Weekly & monthly underground papers regularly publish Underground Comix <br />1967  – Robert Crumb leaves Cleveland, OH, his job at Americana Greetings, and wife Dana to move to San Francisco, CA <br />1967  – Gilbert Shelton’s “Wonder Wart Hog” published by Pete Millar <br />1967  – Victor Moscoso and RIck Griffin begin to collaborate on posters and Zap Comics covers <br />1967  – Rick Griffin commissioned for “Pow-Wow, a Gathering of the Tribes for a Human Be-In” held in Golden Gate Park’s polo grounds <br />1967  – Art Spiegelman comes up with the idea for Wacky Packs working for Topps Bubblegum <br />1967  – “Summer of Love” takes place in San Francisco for 9 months <br />1967   – Bijou Funnies, initially The Chicago Mirror, founded by Skip WIlliamson and Jay Lynch in Chigaco, IL <br />1967   – Art Spiegelman moves to San Francisco, CA <br />1967  – “Cavalier” Magazine serializes Robert Crumb’s “Fritz the Cat” <br />1967  – First drawings of Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers appear on a flier for short student film “The Texas Hippies March on the Capitol” <br />1967-1973   – Jay Lynch’s “‘Nard ‘n’ Pat” comic publication years <br />1968   – Rand Holmes moves to Vancouver, Canada and works for Georgia Straight a weekly underground tabloid and starts “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” <br />1968  – S. Clay Wilson moves to San Francisco and becomes friends with Robert Crumb, starts to contribute to Zap Comics <br />1968  – First issue of Zap Comix by Robert Crumb released<br />1968  – “Keep on Truckin’” one page comix published in Zap Comix by Robert Crumb <br />1968  – Robert Crumb sends for his wife Dana to join him in San Francisco <br />1968  – Robert Crumb first sees S. Clay Wilson’s comix work <br />1968  – Gary Arlington opens his comic book store in the Mission District in San Francisco, CA <br />1968  – Spain Rodriguez’s cover for Feb 2nd issue of East Village Other creates legal issues over depiction of a sexual act <br />1968   – Robert Crumb publishes “Zap” <br />1968   – Skip Williamson’s “Snappy Sammy Smoot (1968-1996) makes its debut in Bijou Funnies <br />1968  – Robert William’s controversial painting “Appetite for Destruction” is used as album art for the Guns ‘N’ Roses album of the same name <br />1968  – “Yellow Dog” comix anthology started by Joel Beck and John Thompson <br />1968-1973   – Skip Williamson’s Sammy Smoot character is played by Carl Reiner on the comedy TV show “Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In” <br />1968-1975   – Considered the boom years of Underground Comix <br />1968   – Apex Novelties ran by Don Donaahue starts publishing comix <br />1968  – US Government outlaws LSD <br />1968  – Robert Crumb starts “Snatch Comix” published by Apex Novelties <br />1969   – Neil Armstrong lands on the moon<br />1969-1970  – “Odd Bodkins” by Dan O’Neil is published in the San Francisco Oracle <br />1969  – Whitney Museum Exhibition “Human Concern/Personal Torment: The Grotesque in American Art” showed some of Robert Crumb’s work <br />1969  – Roger Brand at the first comic convention panel for Underground Comix artists, declined to invite Trina Robbins <br />1969   – Rip Off Press founded by Gilbert Shelton, Jack “Jaxon” Jackson, Dave Moriarty and Fred Todd <br />1969   – Kim Deitch and Trinaa Robbins start dating <br />1969  – Bill Griffith and Jay Kinney meet and start idea for “Young Lust” <br />1969   – Vaughn Bode briefly edits “Gothic Blimp Works”; Kim Deitch begins to edit “Gothic Blimp Works” <br />1969  – Print Mint is raided by police over “Zap Comix” fourth issue (featured “Joe Blow” incest comic by Robert Crumb) <br />1969  – Schenkers arrested over violation of California Penal Code Section 311.2 (illegal distribution of pornography) due to publishing “Zap Comics” fourth issue <br />1969  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Jiz Comics” under pseudonym Howard Crankwood <br />1970s   – Graphic Novel format began<br />1970s  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates historical narrative comix like “Comanche Moon”, “Los Tejanos”<br />1970  – Ed “Big Daddy” Roth’s shop closes and Robert Williams ends his tenure as Art Director <br />1970  – Chris Kirkpatrick, owner of New Yorker Book Store that sold Zap Comix, convicted <br />1970   – Bill Griffith moves to San Francisco, CA<br />1970  – Trina Robbins and Kim Deitch’s daughter Casey born <br />1970  – “It Ain’t Me Babe” the first women’s liberation newspaper, was published in Berkley <br />1970   – Kitchen Sink Press ran by Denis Kitchen founded <br />1970  – “Skull” published by Rip Off Press <br />1970  – Many Underground Comix artists met and created The Cartoon Workers Union<br />1970  – Robert William released collected “Coochy Cooty Men’s Comics” published by Print Mint <br />1970   – Last Gasp Eco Funnies ran by Ron Turner founded <br />1970  – “Young Lust” by Bill Griffith and Jaay Kinney published by Company & Sons <br />1970  – Robert Crumb meets with Ralph Bakshi and Steve Kraantz about making a movie out of his popular character Fritz the Cat  <br />1970  – “Abortion Eve” comic produced by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely <br />1970  – Spain Rodriguez releases “Zodiac Mindwarp” (East Village Other) and “Subert” (Rip Off Press) <br />1970  – Kim Deitch and Trina Robbins end their relationship<br />1971  – Gilbert Shelton’s Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers first released<br />1971  – Roberta Gregory attend CSU Long Beach and contributes “Feminist Funnies” to their newspaper <br />1971  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Bent” (Print Mint) <br />1971  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb grates with degree in fine art from University of Arizona <br />1971  – “Ms Magazine” founded by Gloria Steinem and art directed by Bea Feitler <br />1971   – Bill Griffith’s “Zippy the Pinhead” debuts in Real Pulp Comics #1 by Print Mint <br />1971  – Dan O’Neil and the Air Pirates (Bobby London, Shary Flenniken, Gary Hallgren, and Ted Richards) create “Air Pirate Funnies” published by Last Gasp <br />1971  – Lee Marr’s “Pudge” & “Girl Blimp” published <br />1971  – Roberta Gregory sells her first comic to “Wimmen’s Comix” <br />1971  – Disney filed suit in Northern District of California against the comic artists from the “Air Pirate Funnies” <br />1971   – Rip Off Press moves from Mowry’s Opera House to 17th Street <br />1971   – After moving back to NYC, Art Spiegelman once again returns to San Francisco, CA<br />1972   – “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” released in first collected volume, the second volume out the following year<br />1972  – “Tits ‘n’ Clits” All women comix anthology by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely published first issue (Nanny Goat Productions) <br />1972  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb has comix debut in “Wimmen’s Comix” #1 with “Goldie a Neurotic Woman” <br />1972  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb meet at a San Francisco party <br />1972  – “Fritz the Cat” movie directed by Ralph Bakshi released <br />1972  – 2 all women’s comix anthologies started “Wimmen’s Comix” (Trina Robbins, Last Gasp) and “Tit’s &  Clits” (Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevelyl, Nanny Goat Productions)<br />1972  – Disney granted it’s injunction against Dan O’Neil and the other comic artists from “Air Pirate Funnies”; found guilty of copyright infringement and trade disparagement <br />1972  – “Bizzare Sex” started published by Denis Kitchen of Kitchen Sink Press <br />1972  – Print Mint hits 1 million issues of “Zap Comix” sold <br />1973   – Rand Holmes travels to San Francisco, CA to get the second volume of “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” published by Last Gasp <br />1973  – Bill Griffith’s “A Sour Look at the Comix Scene, or Out of the Inkwell and Into the Toilet” runs in The San Francisco Phoenix <br />1973  – Undercover cop buys first issue of “Tits ‘n’ Clits” at San Francisco Bookstore Fahrenheit 451; owners charged with selling pornography and Farmer and Cheverly are forced to hide from law enforcement for 2 years <br />1973  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves onto Robert Crumb’s farm property as his girlfriend <br />1973  – “Come Out Comix” by Mary Wings self-published <br />1973  –  Year of the Crash of Comix <br />1973  – Rick Griffin is a born again Christian <br />1973  – Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brother’s comics had sold 400,000 copies; eventually selling 45 million copies to date in 16 different languages <br />1972   – Haavery Pekar’s first story “Brilliant American Maniacs Series No. 1 Crazy Ed” published in “People’s Comics” with art by Robert Crumb <br />1972   – Justin Green publishes “Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary” <br />1972   – Art Spiegelman publishes first 3 pages of Maus <br />1973  –Supreme Court’s  Miller v. California decision  rules that vendors can be jailed and retroactively fined for selling obscene materials, cannot plead ignorance to contents <br />1974   – Jay Lynch has a one week tenure as editor at Hustler Magazine<br />1974  – Lynda Barry attends Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA <br />1974   – Art Spiegelman self publishes “Ace Hole” and “Midget Detective” <br />1974  – Marvel releases “Comix Book” <br />1974  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Pork” (Co-Op Press) <br />1974  – “The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat” directed by Ralph Bakshi released <br />1975   – The Schenkers working partnership with Bob and Peggy Rita dissolves and Print Mint slows down production and distribution <br />1975  – “Felch Comics” by Keith Green<br />1975  – Vietnam War ends, American troops withdraw from Saigon <br />1975  – Victor Moscoso starts attending Yale <br />1975  – Bill Griffith and Art Spiegelman create “Arcade” comix anthology <br />1975   –  Vaughn Bodé dies at age 33 <br />1976   – Harvey Pekar self publishes “How I Quit Collecting Records and Put Out a Comic Book with the Money I Saved” with art by Robert Crumb <br />1976  – “Wet Satin” erotic satirical all-women’s comics anthology published by Kitchen Sink Press <br />1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves off of the Crumb farm commune <br />1976  – Mary Wing’s “Dyke Shorts” is self-published <br />1976  – Roberta Gregory creates “Dynamite Damsels” (Self-published) <br />1976  – Copyright Act becomes law <br />1976  – Lee Marrs “The Further Fattening Adventures of Pudge, Girl Blimp” featured the first openly bisexual character in comics <br />1967  – Larry Fuller creates “Gay Heartthrobs” <br />1976   – Harvey Pekar’s “American Splendor #1” published <br />1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb and Diane Noomin start “Twisted Sisters” <br />1976-1077  – Punk scene emerges<br />1971  – Howard Cruse’s “Barefootz” first published <br />1977   – Kitchen Sink Press reprints Joel Becks comics under title “Joel Beck’s Comics & Stories” <br />1977  – Gary Panter moves to Los Angeles, CA <br />1977  – S. Clay Wilson releases comix with his most popular character “The Checkered Demon” (Last Gasp) <br />1977  – Gilbert Shelton’s character Fat Freddy’s cat from “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” gets its own spin off comic <br />1977  – Robert Crumb divorces Dana<br />1978  – Gilbert Shelton moves to San Francisco, CA from Austin, TX <br />1978  – First graphic novel “A Contract With God” by Will Eisner is published by Baronet Press <br />1978  – Dan O’Neils appeal in the case of Dismney and the Air Pirates does not rule in O’Neil’s favor <br />1978  – Gilbert Shelton makes “Shakedown Street” album cover for The Grateful Dead <br />1978  – Paul Mavrides starts to collaborate on “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” <br />1979  – Gilbert Shelton and wife/agent Lora move to Europe <br />1979  – The Supreme Court declines to take Dan O’Neil’s appeal case against Disney <br />1979  – Robert William publishes “The Lowbrow Art of Robt. Williams” <br />1979  – Mary Wings creates drug awareness book “Are Your Highs Getting You Down?” with a California Arts Council Grant <br />1979  – Denis Kitchen approaches Howaard Cruse about making “Gay Comix”<br />1979  – Rip Off Press ends<br />1979  – Art Spiegelman starts to teach at the School of Visual Arts in NY<br />1980  – First issue of “Gay Comix” (Kitchen SInk Press) released, edited by Howard Cruse <br />1980  – “Raw” comics anthology created by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly <br />1980-1991   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman serialized <br />1981  – “Wimmen’s Comix” takes a 6 year hiatus <br />1981  – Daniel Clowes and his friends create “Psycho Comics” <br />1981  – Robert Crumb starts comix magazine “Weirdo” published by Last Gasp <br />1981  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb’s daughter Sophie is born; they move to Southern France<br />1982  – Last issue of “Bizzare Sex” released <br />1982  – Gilbert and Jamie Hernandez create “Love and Rockets” published by Fantagraphics <br />1983  – “Dykes to Watch Out For” by Alison Bechdel first published <br />1984  – Mary Fleener self publishes her first comic “Hoodoo” <br />1984  – Robert Crumb passes editorship of “Weirdo” to Peter Bagge <br />1985   – Print Mint, since renamed Reprint Mint, is sold by the Schenkers <br />1985  – Mary Wings “She Came Too Late” lesbian detective novel published <br />1985  – Topps Bubbglegum starts Garbage Pail Kids cards <br />1986   – Doubleday publishes the first of it’s two collected volumes of Harvye Pekar’s “American Splendor” with the next coming out the following year <br />1986  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “Illustrated History of Ranching in Texas” <br />1986  – Peter Bagge resigns as editor at “Weirdo”; Aline Kominsky-Crumb takes over <br />1987  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb marry <br />1988  – “Dirty Plotte” by Julie Doucet was first self-published <br />1988  – Roberta Gregory self publishes “Winging It” and “Sheila and the Unicorn” <br />1989   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackon publishes “Rip Off Pres: The Golden Era #21” <br />1989  – Daniel Clowes first issue of “Eightball” <br />1989  – Roberta Gregory moves to Seattle and begins to work at Fantagraphics Books <br />1990   – Art Spiegelman receives a Guggenheim Fellowship to work on Maus’ second volume <br />1990  – Peter Bagge first publishes “Hate” (Fantagraaphics) <br />1991   – American Splendor’s once a year regular release stops with issue fifteen <br />1991  – Rick Griffin dies after motorcycle accident <br />1991  – Roberta Gregory’s “Naughty Bits” issue one self published <br />1991  – “Dirty Plotte” published by Drawn & Quarterly <br />1991  – Julie Doucet moves to NYC for one year and makes “My New York Diary” <br />1992   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman wins a Pulitzer Prize <br />1992  – “Wimmen’s Comix” publishes it’s last issue <br />1993   – Don Schenkers dies<br />1994  – Robert Williams first published “Juxtapoz Arts & Culture” Magazine<br />1995  – “Stuck Rubber Baby” by Howard Cruse published <br />1995  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns first published by Fantagraphics <br />1995  – “Crumb” documentary about Robert Crumb by Terry Zwigoff is released <br />1996  – Mary Fleener’s “Life of the Party” released  <br />1998  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates “Lost Cause” <br />1999   – Joel Beck dies <br />2001-2003  – Roberta Gregory’s popular character Bitchy Bitch from “Naughty Bits” starred in the animated cartoon “Life’s a Bitch” on Comedy Network (Canada) and Oxygen Network (US) <br />2001  – Daniel Clowes “Eightball” story “Ghost World” is made into a movie of the same name <br />2002   – Rand Holmes dies <br />2002  – Phoebe Gloeckner’s “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” published by Frog Books <br />2003   – “American Splendor” the award winning movie about Harvey Pekar’s life starring Paul Giamatti is released <br />2005  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns released as graphic novel by Fantagraphics <br />2006  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson dies <br />2006  – “Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic” by Alison Bechdel published <br />2010   – Harvey Pekar dies <br />2015  – “Fun Home” the Broadway Musical wins a Tony for best musical <br />2015  – “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” by Phoebe Glockner made into a movie with the same name <br />2017   – Skip Williamson and Jay Lynch die within a week and a half of each other <br />2019  – Howard Cruse dies <br />2020   – Alice Schnker dies <br />2021  – Streaming channel Tubi releases 8 episode show “The Freak Brothers” based on Gilbert Shelton’s “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” <br />2021  – Spain Rodriguez dies <br />2021  – S. Clay Wilson dies <br />2022  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb dies </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>About. Robert Williams Official Site.</i> (2022). Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.robtwilliamsstudio.com/about">https://www.robtwilliamsstudio.com/about</a></p><p>Beat Staff. (2016, May 11). Interview: Roberta Gregory on Mother Mountain, wimmen's comix, & bitchy bitch. <i>Comics Beat.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-roberta-gregory-on-mother-mountain-wimmens-comix-bitchy-bitch/">https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-roberta-gregory-on-mother-mountain-wimmens-comix-bitchy-bitch/</a></p><p>Bernsau, T. (2021, January 20). Car Toons for car guys. <i>MotorTrend.</i> Retrieved December 29, 2022, from <a href="https://www.motortrend.com/features/0908rc-the-car-toons-of-pete-millar/">https://www.motortrend.com/features/0908rc-the-car-toons-of-pete-millar/</a></p><p>Chakraborty, P. (2021). "Sex and the Aesthetics of the Vulgar: Reading the Creative Paradox in the Works of Robert Crumb." Sanglap: <i>Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry,</i> 07(02), 120–148. <a href="https://doi.org/10.35684/jlci.2021.7206">https://doi.org/10.35684/jlci.2021.7206</a></p><p>Chute, H. (2006, season-04). Decoding Comics. <i>Modern Fiction Studies,</i> 52(4), 1014–1027. <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/26286682">https://www.jstor.org/stable/26286682</a></p><p>Chute, H. (2019). <i>Why Comics?: From Underground to Everywhere</i> (Reprint). Harper Perennial.</p><p>Costello, B., & Gremins, B. (2021). <i>The Other 1980s: Reframing Comics’ Crucial Decade.</i> Louisiana State University Press.</p><p>Dalzell, T. (2020, February 20). <i>Remembering Alice Schenker, whose Print Mint on Telegraph Avenue sparked the 1960s poster revolution. Berkeleyside.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.berkeleyside.org/2020/02/20/remembering-alice-schenker-whose-print-mint-on-telegraph-avenue-sparked-the-1960s-poster-revolution">https://www.berkeleyside.org/2020/02/20/remembering-alice-schenker-whose-print-mint-on-telegraph-avenue-sparked-the-1960s-poster-revolution</a></p><p>Danky, J. P., & Kitchen, D. (2009). <i>Underground classics: The transformation of comics into Comix.</i> Abrams.</p><p>Dauber, J. (2022). <i>American Comics: A History.</i> W. W. Norton & Company.</p><p>Doherty , B.  (2023). <i>Dirty pictures: How an underground network of nerds, feminists, misfits, geniuses, bikers,... Potheads, printers, intellectuals, and art school.</i> Harry N. Abraams.</p><p>Ebert, R. (2005, November 20). Crumb Movie Review & Film Summary (1995): <i>Roger Ebert. Crumb movie review & film summary</i> (1995) | Roger Ebert. Retrieved December 22, 2022, from <a href="https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-crumb-1994">https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-crumb-1994</a></p><p>Elam, E. (2013, February 15). Gilbert Shelton in Conversation. T_he Comics Journal ._ Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.tcj.com/gilbert-shelton-in-conversation/">https://www.tcj.com/gilbert-shelton-in-conversation/</a></p><p>Estren, M. J. (2012). <i>A History of Underground Comics.</i> Ronin Publishing, Inc.</p><p>Frank, P. (2018, June 19). Mary Wings just wanted an orgasm when she created the First Lesbian Comic Book. <i>HuffPost.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mary-wings-created-first-lesbian-comic-book%5C_n%5C_5b23d937e4b0d4fc01fdd783">https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mary-wings-created-first-lesbian-comic-book\_n\_5b23d937e4b0d4fc01fdd783</a></p><p>Freeman, J. (2017, November 3). Exclusive: Gilbert Shelton reveals some Fabulous furry freak brothers secrets, new collection extracts_! downthetubes.net._ Retrieved December 21, 2022, from <a href="https://downthetubes.net/exclusive-gilbert-shelton-reveals-some-fabulous-furry-freak-brothers-secrets-new-collection-extracts/">https://downthetubes.net/exclusive-gilbert-shelton-reveals-some-fabulous-furry-freak-brothers-secrets-new-collection-extracts/</a></p><p>Gabilliet, J., Beaty, B., & Nguyen, N. (2013). <i>Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books(Illustrated).</i> University Press of Mississippi.</p><p>Garcia, E. (2017). <i>The Hernandez Brothers: Love, Rockets, and Alternative Comics (Latinx and Latin American Profiles)</i>(1st ed.). University of Pittsburgh Press.</p><p>Gary Panter. Lambiek <i>Comiclopedia .</i> (2022, July 22). Retrieved December 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/panter.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/panter.htm</a></p><p>Gomez, B. (2017, March 29). She changed comics: Roberta Gregory interview. <i>Comic Book Legal Defense Fund.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://cbldf.org/2017/03/she-changed-comics-roberta-gregory-interview/">https://cbldf.org/2017/03/she-changed-comics-roberta-gregory-interview/</a></p><p>Gregory, R. (2009). My Creative History. <i>Roberta Gregory .</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.robertagregory.com/Robertagregory/Robertas%5C_History.html">http://www.robertagregory.com/Robertagregory/Robertas\_History.html</a></p><p>Griffith, B. (2002). A Bill Griffith Bibliography: (Out of Print & Hard to Find) Covers & Contents . <i>A Bill Griffith bibliography.</i> Retrieved December 5, 2022, from <a href="https://www.zippythepinhead.com/pages/biblio.html">https://www.zippythepinhead.com/pages/biblio.html</a></p><p>Griffith, B. (2003). Still asking the unanswerable question, 'are we having fun yet?'. <i>Still Asking the Unanswerable Question, ‘Are We Having Fun Yet?’</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://imagetextjournal.com/still-asking-the-unanswerable-question-are-we-having-fun-yet/">https://imagetextjournal.com/still-asking-the-unanswerable-question-are-we-having-fun-yet/</a></p><p>Groth, G. (2011, February 9). An interview with Victor Moscoso. <i>The Comics Journal.</i> Retrieved December 12, 2022, from <a href="https://www.tcj.com/an-interview-with-victor-moscoso/">https://www.tcj.com/an-interview-with-victor-moscoso/</a></p><p>Hatfield, C., & Beaty, B. (2020). <i>Comics studies: A guidebook</i>. Rutgers University Press.</p><p>Hatfield, C. (2005, August 2). <i>Alternative Comics: An Emerging Literature (Illustrated)</i>. University Press of Mississippi.</p><p>Jean-Paul, J., & Cruse, H. (2021). <i>Stuck Rubber Baby.</i> CASTERMAN.</p><p>Jennings, J., Duffy, D., Woods, A. A., Wimberly, R., Greene, S., Richardson, A., Love, J., Love, R., & Knight, K. (2020, March 31). <i>Black Comix Returns</i>. Magnetic Press.</p><p>Julie Doucet. _Lambiek Comiclopedia. (_2022, June 20). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/doucet.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/doucet.htm</a></p><p>Kaplan, A. (2010). <i>From Krakow to Krypton: Jews and Comic Books.</i> Jewish Publication Society.</p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, October 4)<i>. Jay Lynch. Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/l/lynch.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/l/lynch.htm</a></p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, September 27). Robert Williams. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williams%5C_r.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williams\_r.htm</a></p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, September 27). Skip Williamson. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia</i> . Retrieved December 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williamson%5C_skip.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williamson\_skip.htm</a></p><p>Lambiek. (2022, January 20). Joel Beck. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 19, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/b/beck%5C_joel.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/b/beck\_joel.htm</a></p><p>Mary Fleener. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, February 13). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/f/fleener%5C_mary.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/f/fleener\_mary.htm</a></p><p>Mietkiewicz, H. (2011, June 11). Holmes, Rand (1942-2002). <i>THE JOE SHUSTER AWARDS Canadian Comics Awards, News & Links</i>. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://joeshusterawards.com/hof/hof-rand-holmes-1942-2002/">https://joeshusterawards.com/hof/hof-rand-holmes-1942-2002/</a></p><p>Milligan, M. (2021, October 19). Tubi grooves into Adult Toons with debut original 'The Freak Brothers'. <i>Animation Magazine.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.animationmagazine.net/2021/10/tubi-grooves-into-adult-toons-with-debut-original-the-freak-brothers/">https://www.animationmagazine.net/2021/10/tubi-grooves-into-adult-toons-with-debut-original-the-freak-brothers/</a></p><p>Fox, M. S. (2013). Zap Comix. <i>Underground Comix Joint.</i> Retrieved December 29, 2022, from <a href="https://comixjoint.com/zapcomix.html">https://comixjoint.com/zapcomix.html</a></p><p>Of the Golden Age comics houses, EC was the greatest; Weird! Incredible! Mad! (2020, September 23). <i>The Economist.</i> <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A681897193/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=cd9e73a6">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A681897193/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=cd9e73a6</a></p><p>Olsza, M. (2020). Feminist (and/as) alternative media practices in women's underground comix in the 1970s 1. <i>Polish Journal for American Studies, 14, 21-37,139.</i> Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/feminist-as-alternative-media-practices-womens/docview/2473439187/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/feminist-as-alternative-media-practices-womens/docview/2473439187/se-2</a></p><p>Pagano, K. (2012, August 18). Mary Fleener lives art on the edge. <i>North Coast Current.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.northcoastcurrent.com/north-coast-beat/2012/08/mary-fleener-lives-art-on-the-edge/">https://www.northcoastcurrent.com/north-coast-beat/2012/08/mary-fleener-lives-art-on-the-edge/</a></p><p>Panter, G. (2007). Biography . <i>Gary Panter.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.garypanter.com/site/index.php/about/biography/">http://www.garypanter.com/site/index.php/about/biography/</a></p><p>Pencil, S. (2020). <i>Rated Savx: The Savage Pencil Skratchbook.</i> Strange Attractor Press.</p><p>Pilcher, T., & Kannenberg Jr., G. (2008). <i>Erotic comics : a graphic history from Tijuana bibles to underground comix.</i> The Ilex Press Limited.</p><p>Prescott, G. (2017, March 21). About: Life of the Party: An Interview with Mary Fleener. <i>Art & Illustration by Mary Fleener.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.maryfleener.com/about/">http://www.maryfleener.com/about/</a></p><p>Rand Holmes. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, January 16). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/h/holmes%5C_rand.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/h/holmes\_rand.htm</a></p><p>Roberta Gregory. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, January 1). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/g/gregory.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/g/gregory.htm</a></p><p>Robbins, T. (1999). <i>From girls to grrrlz : a history of [women’s] comics from teens to zines</i>. Chronicle Books.</p><p>Rosenkranz, P. (2008, May 20). <i>Rebel Visions: The Underground Comix Revolution 1963 - 1975</i> (Reprint). Fantagraphics Books.</p><p>Sabin, R. (2001). <i>Comics, Comix & Graphic Novels (Revised ed.).</i> Phaidon Press.</p><p>Seigal, B. (1997, January 8). Life of the party : Cartoonist Mary Fleener draws on a zest for life and an appreciation for the world's everyday zaniness. <i>Los Angeles Times.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-01-08-ls-16304-story.html">https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-01-08-ls-16304-story.html</a></p><p>Seves, P. R. (2018). <i>Eric Stanton & the History of the Bizarre Underground (1st ed.).</i> Schiffer.</p><p>Smith, H. (2021, February 10). S. Clay Wilson, who helped launch the underground comix movement, dies at 79. <i>The Washington Post Online.</i></p><p>Szasz, F. M. (2013, September 15). <i>Atomic Comics: Cartoonists Confront the Nuclear World (1st ed.).</i> University of Nevada Press.</p><p>Underground and Independent Comics, Comix, and Graphic Novels. (2011). Reference Reviews; Harlow, 25(6), 52–53.</p><p>Wanzo, R. (2018, June 1). The Normative Broken: Melinda Gebbie, Feminist Comix, and Child Sexuality Temporalities. <i>American Literature</i>, 90(2), 347–375. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1215/00029831-4564334">https://doi.org/10.1215/00029831-4564334</a></p><p>Wiggins, R. (2010, March 3). <i>Me and Gilbert Shelton: A Memoir [web log].</i> Retrieved December 14, 2022, from <a href="http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/ramsey-wiggins-me-and-gilbert-shelton.html">http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/ramsey-wiggins-me-and-gilbert-shelton.html</a>.</p><p>Williams, P. (2020, January 17). <i>Dreaming the Graphic Novel: The Novelization of Comics (None).</i> Rutgers University Press.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="28189521" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/b448a028-13a0-4b2a-b4c4-964bc1c411a0/audio/ca0ef2f3-4d39-46b0-ab51-4ec2aacfedcb/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Underground Comix Part 2</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Kolby Streller, Spencer Gee, Dean Kelly, Taylor Hill, Mandy Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/62b5a8bf-efa3-467f-8d67-298fa3e157d5/3000x3000/shin-incomplet-podcast-revised5.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:29:21</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode is part 2 of Underground Comix and explores the history of women in underground comics as well as a queer history of underground comix and the transition to alternative comics.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode is part 2 of Underground Comix and explores the history of women in underground comics as well as a queer history of underground comix and the transition to alternative comics.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, illustration history, graphic design, illustration, underground comix, comix, design history, comics history</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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      <title>Underground Comix Part 1</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Comix, spelled with an x at the end instead of c, is a uniquely American movement and brings to mind eccentric, explicit, and subversive comics aimed at an adult audience. Having roots in the explicit Tijuana Bibles of the 1920, the lurid horror comics produced by EC, and the later wackiness of MAD Magazine, Comix creators defied censorship laws and American moral standards to create their unique artistic visions and thrived as a part of the Counterculture movement of the 1960s. In some respects, comix were a reaction against what the artists saw as the over-sanitized mainstream comics that did nothing innovative or interesting. While comix creators came from all over the US, the hotbed for comix innovation happened in San Francisco. Many cite the first issue of Robert Crumb’s anthology “Zap” as the birth of underground comix as a movement and the number of comix grew rapidly after that. The complete artistic freedom comix artists insisted on came at a price as they pushed up against censorship with their themes of sexism, racism, violence, and questionable morality. Comix artists, publishers and the shops selling comix titles faced police raids and lawsuits, some of which lasted for years. Pushing up against censorship (and good taste) comix proved that comics could be more than just superheroes saving the day.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1880s  – Comics began publication in American newspapers <br />1895   – The Yellow Kid by Richard Outcault first published<br />1914   – Krazy Kat by Geroge Herriman first published <br />1920s   – Tijuana Bibles began to be published <br />1930s   – Comic book began in America <br />1931   – Alice Schenker (born Alice Olsen) born in Racine, WI <br />1933   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created Superman<br />1936-1939   – The comic magazine format became popular<br />1936  – Victor Moscoso born in Spain <br />1937  – Frank Stack born in Houston, TX<br />1938  – Gary Arlington born in San Jose, CA <br />1938  – Trina Robbins born in Brooklyn, NY <br />1939   – “She Saw The World’s Fair” published by Wesley Morse <br />1939   – Harvey Pekar born in Cleveland, OH <br />1939  – Richard “Grass” Green born in Fort Wayne, IN<br />1940-1950s   – Comic burnings became common in America <br />1940  – Gilbert Shelton born in Houston, TX <br />1940  – Manuel “Spain” Reodriguez born in Buffalo, NY <br />1941  – Vaughn Bodé born in Utica, NY <br />1941  – S. Clay Wilson (Steven Clay Wilson) born in Lincoln, Nebraska <br />1941  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson born in Texas <br />1942   – Rand Holmes born in Nova Scotia <br />1942  – Dan O’Neil born <br />1943   – Joel Beck born in Ross, CA <br />1943  – Robert Williaams born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1944   – George Herriman dies <br />1944  – Howard Cruse is born in Birmingham, AL <br />1943  – Robert Crumb born in Philadelphia, PA <br />1944  – Rick Griffin born in California <br />1944   – Bill Griffith born <br />1944   – Kim Deitch born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1944   – Max Gaines establishes Educational Comics<br />1944   – Mervyn “Skip” Williamson born in San Antonio, TX <br />1945  – Lee Mars born <br />1947   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster sued in NY Supreme Court to regain their rights to Superman; they lose the case and their jobs at DC Comics<br />1947   – Jay Lynch born in Orange, NJ <br />1947   – Max Gaines dies in a boat crash; son William Gaines takes over EC Comics<br />1948   – Art Spiegelman born in Stockholm, Sweden <br />1948  – Barbara “Willy” Mendes born <br />1948  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb born in Long Beach, NY<br />1949  – Marry Wings born Mary Geller in Chicago, IL <br />1950s   – Student Press Movement starts <br />1950   – Educational Comics becomes Entertaining Comics under William Gaines <br />1950  – Gary Panter born in Durant, OK <br />1951  – Mary Fleener born<br />1952-1956   – Harvey Kurtzman is the editor of MAD Magazine <br />1953  – Roberta Gregory born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1954   – “Seduction of the Innocent” by psychiatrist Frederick Werthan published  <br />1954   – Comics Code Authority established <br />1954  – Victor Moscoso starts at Cooper Union Art School in Manhattan <br />1955   – William Gaines starts humor magazine, MAD Magazine <br />1955  – Charles Burns born <br />1956   – After being cited by the CCA, EC comics diverts resources to new title MAD Magazine <br />1956  – Ralph Bakshi starts animating at Terrytoons <br />1956   – Alice and Don Schenker marry <br />1956  – Lynda Barry born in Richland Center, WI <br />1957   – Harvey Kurtzmaan’s Trump magazine published<br />1957  – Peter Baagge born in New York <br />1957-1960  – Spain Rodriguez studies at Silvermine Guild School of Art in New Canaan, CT <br />1958   – Moe Moskowitz moves to Bay Are and opens bookstore <br />1958  – Robert Crumb and his brother Charles publish satire magazine “Foo” <br />1958-1962   – Frank Stack and Gilbert Shelton edit University of Texas at Austin’s newspaper, The Texas Ranger  <br />1959  – Victor Moscoso moves to San Francisco, CA <br />1960s   – Underground comix movement started <br />1960   – MAD Magazine had circulation of 1.4 million <br />1960  – Rick Griffin met filmmaker John Severson at screening of Surf Fever movie <br />1960   – Harvey Kurtzman starts Help! Magazine <br />1960  – Phoebe Gloeckner born in Philadelphia, PA <br />1960  – Alison Bechdel born in Beech Creek, PA <br />1961   – Skip Williamson sells first comic to Help! Magazine <br />1961  – Daniel Clowes born in Chicaago, IL <br />1963   – In mainstream comics, Dell, DC and Marvel were the major publishers <br />1963  – Rick Griffin starts working at Surfer Magazine as a cartoonist, debuting “Murphy” <br />1963  – Rick Griffin is seriously injured as a passenger in a drunk driving accident <br />1963  – Spain Rodriguez starts work at the Western Electric Company Plant<br />1963   – Jay Lynch moves to Chicago to become a cartoonist <br />1956   – America gets involved in the Vietnam War <br />1963   – March On Washington <br />1963   – President John F. Kennedy assassinated <br />1963  – Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique” is published<br />1964   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “God Nose” <br />1964  – After being promoted to director of cartoons at Terrytown, Ralph Bakshi left to run animation at Paramount Pictures <br />1962   – Frank Stack  publishes “The Adventures of Jesus” <br />1962   – Harvey Pekar and Robert Crumb meet in Cleveland, OH and become friends and collaborators <br />1965   – Birth of the Underground Press <br />1965  – Rick Griffin picks up “Murphy” comics in Surfer after a pause <br />1965   – Schenkers launch Print Mint inside of Moskowitz’s bookstore <br />1965  – Spain Rodriguez spends summer in NYC creating cartoons for The Militant paper and joined anarchist group Resurgence Youth Movement <br />1965  – Robert Williams starts working as Art Director for Ed “Big Daddy” Roth <br />1965  – Robert Crumb starts taking LSD <br />1965  – Julie Doucet born in Saint-Lambert Quebec, Canada <br />1965-1966   – Mario Savia’s Free Speech Movement impacts Berkely’s campus <br />1966  – After graduating from San Francisco Art Institute, Victor Moscoso joins faculty <br />1966   – Art Spiegelman is Topps Bubblegum’s star artist <br />1966  – Spain Rodriguez has his first cover in paper East Village Other <br />1966  – Trina Robbins moved back to NYC from LA and worked for East Village Other as advisor and illustrator <br />1966  – Rick Griffin joins Jook Savages and designs posters for their art shows in San Francisco<br />1966   – Kim Deitch moves to NYC and gets “Sunshine Girl” published in The East Village Other <br />1966   – Joel Beck publishes “Lenny of Laredo”, “Marching Marvin” and “The Profit” <br />1966   – Print Mint publishes their first comix, a reprint of Beck’s “Lenny of Laredo” <br />1966  – NOW, of the National Organization for Women, was formed <br />1966   – Underground Press Syndicate established by East Village Other editor Walter Bowart <br />1966   – Weekly & monthly underground papers regularly publish Underground Comix <br />1967  – Robert Crumb leaves Cleveland, OH, his job at Americana Greetings, and wife Dana to move to San Francisco, CA <br />1967  – Gilbert Shelton’s “Wonder Wart Hog” published by Pete Millar <br />1967  – Victor Moscoso and RIck Griffin begin to collaborate on posters and Zap Comics covers <br />1967  – Rick Griffin commissioned for “Pow-Wow, a Gathering of the Tribes for a Human Be-In” held in Golden Gate Park’s polo grounds <br />1967  – Art Spiegelman comes up with the idea for Wacky Packs working for Topps Bubblegum <br />1967  – “Summer of Love” takes place in San Francisco for 9 months <br />1967   – Bijou Funnies, initially The Chicago Mirror, founded by Skip WIlliamson and Jay Lynch in Chigaco, IL <br />1967   – Art Spiegelman moves to San Francisco, CA <br />1967  – “Cavalier” Magazine serializes Robert Crumb’s “Fritz the Cat” <br />1967  – First drawings of Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers appear on a flier for short student film “The Texas Hippies March on the Capitol” <br />1967-1973   – Jay Lynch’s “‘Nard ‘n’ Pat” comic publication years <br />1968   – Rand Holmes moves to Vancouver, Canada and works for Georgia Straight a weekly underground tabloid and starts “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” <br />1968  – S. Clay Wilson moves to San Francisco and becomes friends with Robert Crumb, starts to contribute to Zap Comics <br />1968  – First issue of Zap Comix by Robert Crumb released<br />1968  – “Keep on Truckin’” one page comix published in Zap Comix by Robert Crumb <br />1968  – Robert Crumb sends for his wife Dana to join him in San Francisco <br />1968  – Robert Crumb first sees S. Clay Wilson’s comix work <br />1968  – Gary Arlington opens his comic book store in the Mission District in San Francisco, CA <br />1968  – Spain Rodriguez’s cover for Feb 2nd issue of East Village Other creates legal issues over depiction of a sexual act <br />1968   – Robert Crumb publishes “Zap” <br />1968   – Skip Williamson’s “Snappy Sammy Smoot (1968-1996) makes its debut in Bijou Funnies <br />1968  – Robert William’s controversial painting “Appetite for Destruction” is used as album art for the Guns ‘N’ Roses album of the same name <br />1968  – “Yellow Dog” comix anthology started by Joel Beck and John Thompson <br />1968-1973   – Skip Williamson’s Sammy Smoot character is played by Carl Reiner on the comedy TV show “Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In” <br />1968-1975   – Considered the boom years of Underground Comix <br />1968   – Apex Novelties ran by Don Donaahue starts publishing comix <br />1968  – US Government outlaws LSD <br />1968  – Robert Crumb starts “Snatch Comix” published by Apex Novelties <br />1969   – Neil Armstrong lands on the moon<br />1969-1970  – “Odd Bodkins” by Dan O’Neil is published in the San Francisco Oracle <br />1969  – Whitney Museum Exhibition “Human Concern/Personal Torment: The Grotesque in American Art” showed some of Robert Crumb’s work <br />1969  – Roger Brand at the first comic convention panel for Underground Comix artists, declined to invite Trina Robbins <br />1969   – Rip Off Press founded by Gilbert Shelton, Jack “Jaxon” Jackson, Dave Moriarty and Fred Todd <br />1969   – Kim Deitch and Trinaa Robbins start dating <br />1969  – Bill Griffith and Jay Kinney meet and start idea for “Young Lust” <br />1969   – Vaughn Bode briefly edits “Gothic Blimp Works”; Kim Deitch begins to edit “Gothic Blimp Works” <br />1969  – Print Mint is raided by police over “Zap Comix” fourth issue (featured “Joe Blow” incest comic by Robert Crumb) <br />1969  – Schenkers arrested over violation of California Penal Code Section 311.2 (illegal distribution of pornography) due to publishing “Zap Comics” fourth issue <br />1969  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Jiz Comics” under pseudonym Howard Crankwood <br />1970s   – Graphic Novel format began<br />1970s  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates historical narrative comix like “Comanche Moon”, “Los Tejanos”<br />1970  – Ed “Big Daddy” Roth’s shop closes and Robert Williams ends his tenure as Art Director <br />1970  – Chris Kirkpatrick, owner of New Yorker Book Store that sold Zap Comix, convicted <br />1970   – Bill Griffith moves to San Francisco, CA<br />1970  – Trina Robbins and Kim Deitch’s daughter Casey born <br />1970  – “It Ain’t Me Babe” the first women’s liberation newspaper, was published in Berkley <br />1970   – Kitchen Sink Press ran by Denis Kitchen founded <br />1970  – “Skull” published by Rip Off Press <br />1970  – Many Underground Comix artists met and created The Cartoon Workers Union<br />1970  – Robert William released collected “Coochy Cooty Men’s Comics” published by Print Mint <br />1970   – Last Gasp Eco Funnies ran by Ron Turner founded <br />1970  – “Young Lust” by Bill Griffith and Jaay Kinney published by Company & Sons <br />1970  – Robert Crumb meets with Ralph Bakshi and Steve Kraantz about making a movie out of his popular character Fritz the Cat  <br />1970  – “Abortion Eve” comic produced by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely <br />1970  – Spain Rodriguez releases “Zodiac Mindwarp” (East Village Other) and “Subert” (Rip Off Press) <br />1970  – Kim Deitch and Trina Robbins end their relationship<br />1971  – Gilbert Shelton’s Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers first released<br />1971  – Roberta Gregory attend CSU Long Beach and contributes “Feminist Funnies” to their newspaper <br />1971  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Bent” (Print Mint) <br />1971  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb grates with degree in fine art from University of Arizona <br />1971  – “Ms Magazine” founded by Gloria Steinem and art directed by Bea Feitler <br />1971   – Bill Griffith’s “Zippy the Pinhead” debuts in Real Pulp Comics #1 by Print Mint <br />1971  – Dan O’Neil and the Air Pirates (Bobby London, Shary Flenniken, Gary Hallgren, and Ted Richards) create “Air Pirate Funnies” published by Last Gasp <br />1971  – Lee Marr’s “Pudge” & “Girl Blimp” published <br />1971  – Roberta Gregory sells her first comic to “Wimmen’s Comix” <br />1971  – Disney filed suit in Northern District of California against the comic artists from the “Air Pirate Funnies” <br />1971   – Rip Off Press moves from Mowry’s Opera House to 17th Street <br />1971   – After moving back to NYC, Art Spiegelman once again returns to San Francisco, CA<br />1972   – “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” released in first collected volume, the second volume out the following year<br />1972  – “Tits ‘n’ Clits” All women comix anthology by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely published first issue (Nanny Goat Productions) <br />1972  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb has comix debut in “Wimmen’s Comix” #1 with “Goldie a Neurotic Woman” <br />1972  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb meet at a San Francisco party <br />1972  – “Fritz the Cat” movie directed by Ralph Bakshi released <br />1972  – 2 all women’s comix anthologies started “Wimmen’s Comix” (Trina Robbins, Last Gasp) and “Tit’s &  Clits” (Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevelyl, Nanny Goat Productions)<br />1972  – Disney granted it’s injunction against Dan O’Neil and the other comic artists from “Air Pirate Funnies”; found guilty of copyright infringement and trade disparagement <br />1972  – “Bizzare Sex” started published by Denis Kitchen of Kitchen Sink Press <br />1972  – Print Mint hits 1 million issues of “Zap Comix” sold <br />1973   – Rand Holmes travels to San Francisco, CA to get the second volume of “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” published by Last Gasp <br />1973  – Bill Griffith’s “A Sour Look at the Comix Scene, or Out of the Inkwell and Into the Toilet” runs in The San Francisco Phoenix <br />1973  – Undercover cop buys first issue of “Tits ‘n’ Clits” at San Francisco Bookstore Fahrenheit 451; owners charged with selling pornography and Farmer and Cheverly are forced to hide from law enforcement for 2 years <br />1973  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves onto Robert Crumb’s farm property as his girlfriend <br />1973  – “Come Out Comix” by Mary Wings self-published <br />1973  –  Year of the Crash of Comix <br />1973  – Rick Griffin is a born again Christian <br />1973  – Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brother’s comics had sold 400,000 copies; eventually selling 45 million copies to date in 16 different languages <br />1972   – Haavery Pekar’s first story “Brilliant American Maniacs Series No. 1 Crazy Ed” published in “People’s Comics” with art by Robert Crumb <br />1972   – Justin Green publishes “Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary” <br />1972   – Art Spiegelman publishes first 3 pages of Maus <br />1973  –Supreme Court’s  Miller v. California decision  rules that vendors can be jailed and retroactively fined for selling obscene materials, cannot plead ignorance to contents <br />1974   – Jay Lynch has a one week tenure as editor at Hustler Magazine<br />1974  – Lynda Barry attends Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA <br />1974   – Art Spiegelman self publishes “Ace Hole” and “Midget Detective” <br />1974  – Marvel releases “Comix Book” <br />1974  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Pork” (Co-Op Press) <br />1974  – “The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat” directed by Ralph Bakshi released <br />1975   – The Schenkers working partnership with Bob and Peggy Rita dissolves and Print Mint slows down production and distribution <br />1975  – “Felch Comics” by Keith Green<br />1975  – Vietnam War ends, American troops withdraw from Saigon <br />1975  – Victor Moscoso starts attending Yale <br />1975  – Bill Griffith and Art Spiegelman create “Arcade” comix anthology <br />1975   –  Vaughn Bodé dies at age 33 <br />1976   – Harvey Pekar self publishes “How I Quit Collecting Records and Put Out a Comic Book with the Money I Saved” with art by Robert Crumb <br />1976  – “Wet Satin” erotic satirical all-women’s comics anthology published by Kitchen Sink Press <br />1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves off of the Crumb farm commune <br />1976  – Mary Wing’s “Dyke Shorts” is self-published <br />1976  – Roberta Gregory creates “Dynamite Damsels” (Self-published) <br />1976  – Copyright Act becomes law <br />1976  – Lee Marrs “The Further Fattening Adventures of Pudge, Girl Blimp” featured the first openly bisexual character in comics <br />1967  – Larry Fuller creates “Gay Heartthrobs” <br />1976   – Harvey Pekar’s “American Splendor #1” published <br />1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb and Diane Noomin start “Twisted Sisters” <br />1976-1077  – Punk scene emerges<br />1971  – Howard Cruse’s “Barefootz” first published <br />1977   – Kitchen Sink Press reprints Joel Becks comics under title “Joel Beck’s Comics & Stories” <br />1977  – Gary Panter moves to Los Angeles, CA <br />1977  – S. Clay Wilson releases comix with his most popular character “The Checkered Demon” (Last Gasp) <br />1977  – Gilbert Shelton’s character Fat Freddy’s cat from “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” gets its own spin off comic <br />1977  – Robert Crumb divorces Dana<br />1978  – Gilbert Shelton moves to San Francisco, CA from Austin, TX <br />1978  – First graphic novel “A Contract With God” by Will Eisner is published by Baronet Press <br />1978  – Dan O’Neils appeal in the case of Dismney and the Air Pirates does not rule in O’Neil’s favor <br />1978  – Gilbert Shelton makes “Shakedown Street” album cover for The Grateful Dead <br />1978  – Paul Mavrides starts to collaborate on “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” <br />1979  – Gilbert Shelton and wife/agent Lora move to Europe <br />1979  – The Supreme Court declines to take Dan O’Neil’s appeal case against Disney <br />1979  – Robert William publishes “The Lowbrow Art of Robt. Williams” <br />1979  – Mary Wings creates drug awareness book “Are Your Highs Getting You Down?” with a California Arts Council Grant <br />1979  – Denis Kitchen approaches Howaard Cruse about making “Gay Comix”<br />1979  – Rip Off Press ends<br />1979  – Art Spiegelman starts to teach at the School of Visual Arts in NY<br />1980  – First issue of “Gay Comix” (Kitchen SInk Press) released, edited by Howard Cruse <br />1980  – “Raw” comics anthology created by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly <br />1980-1991   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman serialized <br />1981  – “Wimmen’s Comix” takes a 6 year hiatus <br />1981  – Daniel Clowes and his friends create “Psycho Comics” <br />1981  – Robert Crumb starts comix magazine “Weirdo” published by Last Gasp <br />1981  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb’s daughter Sophie is born; they move to Southern France<br />1982  – Last issue of “Bizzare Sex” released <br />1982  – Gilbert and Jamie Hernandez create “Love and Rockets” published by Fantagraphics <br />1983  – “Dykes to Watch Out For” by Alison Bechdel first published <br />1984  – Mary Fleener self publishes her first comic “Hoodoo” <br />1984  – Robert Crumb passes editorship of “Weirdo” to Peter Bagge <br />1985   – Print Mint, since renamed Reprint Mint, is sold by the Schenkers <br />1985  – Mary Wings “She Came Too Late” lesbian detective novel published <br />1985  – Topps Bubbglegum starts Garbage Pail Kids cards <br />1986   – Doubleday publishes the first of it’s two collected volumes of Harvye Pekar’s “American Splendor” with the next coming out the following year <br />1986  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “Illustrated History of Ranching in Texas” <br />1986  – Peter Bagge resigns as editor at “Weirdo”; Aline Kominsky-Crumb takes over <br />1987  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb marry <br />1988  – “Dirty Plotte” by Julie Doucet was first self-published <br />1988  – Roberta Gregory self publishes “Winging It” and “Sheila and the Unicorn” <br />1989   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackon publishes “Rip Off Pres: The Golden Era #21” <br />1989  – Daniel Clowes first issue of “Eightball” <br />1989  – Roberta Gregory moves to Seattle and begins to work at Fantagraphics Books <br />1990   – Art Spiegelman receives a Guggenheim Fellowship to work on Maus’ second volume <br />1990  – Peter Bagge first publishes “Hate” (Fantagraaphics) <br />1991   – American Splendor’s once a year regular release stops with issue fifteen <br />1991  – Rick Griffin dies after motorcycle accident <br />1991  – Roberta Gregory’s “Naughty Bits” issue one self published <br />1991  – “Dirty Plotte” published by Drawn & Quarterly <br />1991  – Julie Doucet moves to NYC for one year and makes “My New York Diary” <br />1992   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman wins a Pulitzer Prize <br />1992  – “Wimmen’s Comix” publishes it’s last issue <br />1993   – Don Schenkers dies<br />1994  – Robert Williams first published “Juxtapoz Arts & Culture” Magazine<br />1995  – “Stuck Rubber Baby” by Howard Cruse published <br />1995  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns first published by Fantagraphics <br />1995  – “Crumb” documentary about Robert Crumb by Terry Zwigoff is released <br />1996  – Mary Fleener’s “Life of the Party” released  <br />1998  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates “Lost Cause” <br />1999   – Joel Beck dies <br />2001-2003  – Roberta Gregory’s popular character Bitchy Bitch from “Naughty Bits” starred in the animated cartoon “Life’s a Bitch” on Comedy Network (Canada) and Oxygen Network (US) <br />2001  – Daniel Clowes “Eightball” story “Ghost World” is made into a movie of the same name <br />2002   – Rand Holmes dies <br />2002  – Phoebe Gloeckner’s “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” published by Frog Books <br />2003   – “American Splendor” the award winning movie about Harvey Pekar’s life starring Paul Giamatti is released <br />2005  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns released as graphic novel by Fantagraphics <br />2006  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson dies <br />2006  – “Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic” by Alison Bechdel published <br />2010   – Harvey Pekar dies <br />2015  – “Fun Home” the Broadway Musical wins a Tony for best musical <br />2015  – “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” by Phoebe Glockner made into a movie with the same name <br />2017   – Skip Williamson and Jay Lynch die within a week and a half of each other <br />2019  – Howard Cruse dies <br />2020   – Alice Schnker dies <br />2021  – Streaming channel Tubi releases 8 episode show “The Freak Brothers” based on Gilbert Shelton’s “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” <br />2021  – Spain Rodriguez dies <br />2021  – S. Clay Wilson dies <br />2022  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb dies </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>About. Robert Williams Official Site.</i> (2022). Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.robtwilliamsstudio.com/about">https://www.robtwilliamsstudio.com/about</a></p><p>Beat Staff. (2016, May 11). Interview: Roberta Gregory on Mother Mountain, wimmen's comix, & bitchy bitch. <i>Comics Beat.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-roberta-gregory-on-mother-mountain-wimmens-comix-bitchy-bitch/">https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-roberta-gregory-on-mother-mountain-wimmens-comix-bitchy-bitch/</a></p><p>Bernsau, T. (2021, January 20). Car Toons for car guys. <i>MotorTrend.</i> Retrieved December 29, 2022, from <a href="https://www.motortrend.com/features/0908rc-the-car-toons-of-pete-millar/">https://www.motortrend.com/features/0908rc-the-car-toons-of-pete-millar/</a></p><p>Chakraborty, P. (2021). "Sex and the Aesthetics of the Vulgar: Reading the Creative Paradox in the Works of Robert Crumb." Sanglap: <i>Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry,</i> 07(02), 120–148. <a href="https://doi.org/10.35684/jlci.2021.7206">https://doi.org/10.35684/jlci.2021.7206</a></p><p>Chute, H. (2006, season-04). Decoding Comics. <i>Modern Fiction Studies,</i> 52(4), 1014–1027. <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/26286682">https://www.jstor.org/stable/26286682</a></p><p>Chute, H. (2019). <i>Why Comics?: From Underground to Everywhere</i> (Reprint). Harper Perennial.</p><p>Costello, B., & Gremins, B. (2021). <i>The Other 1980s: Reframing Comics’ Crucial Decade.</i> Louisiana State University Press.</p><p>Dalzell, T. (2020, February 20). <i>Remembering Alice Schenker, whose Print Mint on Telegraph Avenue sparked the 1960s poster revolution. Berkeleyside.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.berkeleyside.org/2020/02/20/remembering-alice-schenker-whose-print-mint-on-telegraph-avenue-sparked-the-1960s-poster-revolution">https://www.berkeleyside.org/2020/02/20/remembering-alice-schenker-whose-print-mint-on-telegraph-avenue-sparked-the-1960s-poster-revolution</a></p><p>Danky, J. P., & Kitchen, D. (2009). <i>Underground classics: The transformation of comics into Comix.</i> Abrams.</p><p>Dauber, J. (2022). <i>American Comics: A History.</i> W. W. Norton & Company.</p><p>Doherty , B.  (2023). <i>Dirty pictures: How an underground network of nerds, feminists, misfits, geniuses, bikers,... Potheads, printers, intellectuals, and art school.</i> Harry N. Abraams.</p><p>Ebert, R. (2005, November 20). Crumb Movie Review & Film Summary (1995): <i>Roger Ebert. Crumb movie review & film summary</i> (1995) | Roger Ebert. Retrieved December 22, 2022, from <a href="https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-crumb-1994">https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-crumb-1994</a></p><p>Elam, E. (2013, February 15). Gilbert Shelton in Conversation. T_he Comics Journal ._ Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.tcj.com/gilbert-shelton-in-conversation/">https://www.tcj.com/gilbert-shelton-in-conversation/</a></p><p>Estren, M. J. (2012). <i>A History of Underground Comics.</i> Ronin Publishing, Inc.</p><p>Frank, P. (2018, June 19). Mary Wings just wanted an orgasm when she created the First Lesbian Comic Book. <i>HuffPost.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mary-wings-created-first-lesbian-comic-book%5C_n%5C_5b23d937e4b0d4fc01fdd783">https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mary-wings-created-first-lesbian-comic-book\_n\_5b23d937e4b0d4fc01fdd783</a></p><p>Freeman, J. (2017, November 3). Exclusive: Gilbert Shelton reveals some Fabulous furry freak brothers secrets, new collection extracts_! downthetubes.net._ Retrieved December 21, 2022, from <a href="https://downthetubes.net/exclusive-gilbert-shelton-reveals-some-fabulous-furry-freak-brothers-secrets-new-collection-extracts/">https://downthetubes.net/exclusive-gilbert-shelton-reveals-some-fabulous-furry-freak-brothers-secrets-new-collection-extracts/</a></p><p>Gabilliet, J., Beaty, B., & Nguyen, N. (2013). <i>Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books(Illustrated).</i> University Press of Mississippi.</p><p>Garcia, E. (2017). <i>The Hernandez Brothers: Love, Rockets, and Alternative Comics (Latinx and Latin American Profiles)</i>(1st ed.). University of Pittsburgh Press.</p><p>Gary Panter. Lambiek <i>Comiclopedia .</i> (2022, July 22). Retrieved December 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/panter.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/panter.htm</a></p><p>Gomez, B. (2017, March 29). She changed comics: Roberta Gregory interview. <i>Comic Book Legal Defense Fund.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://cbldf.org/2017/03/she-changed-comics-roberta-gregory-interview/">https://cbldf.org/2017/03/she-changed-comics-roberta-gregory-interview/</a></p><p>Gregory, R. (2009). My Creative History. <i>Roberta Gregory .</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.robertagregory.com/Robertagregory/Robertas%5C_History.html">http://www.robertagregory.com/Robertagregory/Robertas\_History.html</a></p><p>Griffith, B. (2002). A Bill Griffith Bibliography: (Out of Print & Hard to Find) Covers & Contents . <i>A Bill Griffith bibliography.</i> Retrieved December 5, 2022, from <a href="https://www.zippythepinhead.com/pages/biblio.html">https://www.zippythepinhead.com/pages/biblio.html</a></p><p>Griffith, B. (2003). Still asking the unanswerable question, 'are we having fun yet?'. <i>Still Asking the Unanswerable Question, ‘Are We Having Fun Yet?’</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://imagetextjournal.com/still-asking-the-unanswerable-question-are-we-having-fun-yet/">https://imagetextjournal.com/still-asking-the-unanswerable-question-are-we-having-fun-yet/</a></p><p>Groth, G. (2011, February 9). An interview with Victor Moscoso. <i>The Comics Journal.</i> Retrieved December 12, 2022, from <a href="https://www.tcj.com/an-interview-with-victor-moscoso/">https://www.tcj.com/an-interview-with-victor-moscoso/</a></p><p>Hatfield, C., & Beaty, B. (2020). <i>Comics studies: A guidebook</i>. Rutgers University Press.</p><p>Hatfield, C. (2005, August 2). <i>Alternative Comics: An Emerging Literature (Illustrated)</i>. University Press of Mississippi.</p><p>Jean-Paul, J., & Cruse, H. (2021). <i>Stuck Rubber Baby.</i> CASTERMAN.</p><p>Jennings, J., Duffy, D., Woods, A. A., Wimberly, R., Greene, S., Richardson, A., Love, J., Love, R., & Knight, K. (2020, March 31). <i>Black Comix Returns</i>. Magnetic Press.</p><p>Julie Doucet. _Lambiek Comiclopedia. (_2022, June 20). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/doucet.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/doucet.htm</a></p><p>Kaplan, A. (2010). <i>From Krakow to Krypton: Jews and Comic Books.</i> Jewish Publication Society.</p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, October 4)<i>. Jay Lynch. Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/l/lynch.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/l/lynch.htm</a></p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, September 27). Robert Williams. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williams%5C_r.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williams\_r.htm</a></p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, September 27). Skip Williamson. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia</i> . Retrieved December 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williamson%5C_skip.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williamson\_skip.htm</a></p><p>Lambiek. (2022, January 20). Joel Beck. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 19, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/b/beck%5C_joel.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/b/beck\_joel.htm</a></p><p>Mary Fleener. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, February 13). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/f/fleener%5C_mary.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/f/fleener\_mary.htm</a></p><p>Mietkiewicz, H. (2011, June 11). Holmes, Rand (1942-2002). <i>THE JOE SHUSTER AWARDS Canadian Comics Awards, News & Links</i>. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://joeshusterawards.com/hof/hof-rand-holmes-1942-2002/">https://joeshusterawards.com/hof/hof-rand-holmes-1942-2002/</a></p><p>Milligan, M. (2021, October 19). Tubi grooves into Adult Toons with debut original 'The Freak Brothers'. <i>Animation Magazine.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.animationmagazine.net/2021/10/tubi-grooves-into-adult-toons-with-debut-original-the-freak-brothers/">https://www.animationmagazine.net/2021/10/tubi-grooves-into-adult-toons-with-debut-original-the-freak-brothers/</a></p><p>Fox, M. S. (2013). Zap Comix. <i>Underground Comix Joint.</i> Retrieved December 29, 2022, from <a href="https://comixjoint.com/zapcomix.html">https://comixjoint.com/zapcomix.html</a></p><p>Of the Golden Age comics houses, EC was the greatest; Weird! Incredible! Mad! (2020, September 23). <i>The Economist.</i> <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A681897193/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=cd9e73a6">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A681897193/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=cd9e73a6</a></p><p>Olsza, M. (2020). Feminist (and/as) alternative media practices in women's underground comix in the 1970s 1. <i>Polish Journal for American Studies, 14, 21-37,139.</i> Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/feminist-as-alternative-media-practices-womens/docview/2473439187/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/feminist-as-alternative-media-practices-womens/docview/2473439187/se-2</a></p><p>Pagano, K. (2012, August 18). Mary Fleener lives art on the edge. <i>North Coast Current.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.northcoastcurrent.com/north-coast-beat/2012/08/mary-fleener-lives-art-on-the-edge/">https://www.northcoastcurrent.com/north-coast-beat/2012/08/mary-fleener-lives-art-on-the-edge/</a></p><p>Panter, G. (2007). Biography . <i>Gary Panter.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.garypanter.com/site/index.php/about/biography/">http://www.garypanter.com/site/index.php/about/biography/</a></p><p>Pencil, S. (2020). <i>Rated Savx: The Savage Pencil Skratchbook.</i> Strange Attractor Press.</p><p>Pilcher, T., & Kannenberg Jr., G. (2008). <i>Erotic comics : a graphic history from Tijuana bibles to underground comix.</i> The Ilex Press Limited.</p><p>Prescott, G. (2017, March 21). About: Life of the Party: An Interview with Mary Fleener. <i>Art & Illustration by Mary Fleener.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.maryfleener.com/about/">http://www.maryfleener.com/about/</a></p><p>Rand Holmes. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, January 16). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/h/holmes%5C_rand.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/h/holmes\_rand.htm</a></p><p>Roberta Gregory. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, January 1). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/g/gregory.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/g/gregory.htm</a></p><p>Robbins, T. (1999). <i>From girls to grrrlz : a history of [women’s] comics from teens to zines</i>. Chronicle Books.</p><p>Rosenkranz, P. (2008, May 20). <i>Rebel Visions: The Underground Comix Revolution 1963 - 1975</i> (Reprint). Fantagraphics Books.</p><p>Sabin, R. (2001). <i>Comics, Comix & Graphic Novels (Revised ed.).</i> Phaidon Press.</p><p>Seigal, B. (1997, January 8). Life of the party : Cartoonist Mary Fleener draws on a zest for life and an appreciation for the world's everyday zaniness. <i>Los Angeles Times.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-01-08-ls-16304-story.html">https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-01-08-ls-16304-story.html</a></p><p>Seves, P. R. (2018). <i>Eric Stanton & the History of the Bizarre Underground (1st ed.).</i> Schiffer.</p><p>Smith, H. (2021, February 10). S. Clay Wilson, who helped launch the underground comix movement, dies at 79. <i>The Washington Post Online.</i></p><p>Szasz, F. M. (2013, September 15). <i>Atomic Comics: Cartoonists Confront the Nuclear World (1st ed.).</i> University of Nevada Press.</p><p>Underground and Independent Comics, Comix, and Graphic Novels. (2011). Reference Reviews; Harlow, 25(6), 52–53.</p><p>Wanzo, R. (2018, June 1). The Normative Broken: Melinda Gebbie, Feminist Comix, and Child Sexuality Temporalities. <i>American Literature</i>, 90(2), 347–375. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1215/00029831-4564334">https://doi.org/10.1215/00029831-4564334</a></p><p>Wiggins, R. (2010, March 3). <i>Me and Gilbert Shelton: A Memoir [web log].</i> Retrieved December 14, 2022, from <a href="http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/ramsey-wiggins-me-and-gilbert-shelton.html">http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/ramsey-wiggins-me-and-gilbert-shelton.html</a>.</p><p>Williams, P. (2020, January 17). <i>Dreaming the Graphic Novel: The Novelization of Comics (None).</i> Rutgers University Press.</p>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 12 Oct 2023 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Dean Kelly, Taylor Hill, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton, Kolby Streller)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/underground-comix-part-1-iksNFG9l</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Comix, spelled with an x at the end instead of c, is a uniquely American movement and brings to mind eccentric, explicit, and subversive comics aimed at an adult audience. Having roots in the explicit Tijuana Bibles of the 1920, the lurid horror comics produced by EC, and the later wackiness of MAD Magazine, Comix creators defied censorship laws and American moral standards to create their unique artistic visions and thrived as a part of the Counterculture movement of the 1960s. In some respects, comix were a reaction against what the artists saw as the over-sanitized mainstream comics that did nothing innovative or interesting. While comix creators came from all over the US, the hotbed for comix innovation happened in San Francisco. Many cite the first issue of Robert Crumb’s anthology “Zap” as the birth of underground comix as a movement and the number of comix grew rapidly after that. The complete artistic freedom comix artists insisted on came at a price as they pushed up against censorship with their themes of sexism, racism, violence, and questionable morality. Comix artists, publishers and the shops selling comix titles faced police raids and lawsuits, some of which lasted for years. Pushing up against censorship (and good taste) comix proved that comics could be more than just superheroes saving the day.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1880s  – Comics began publication in American newspapers <br />1895   – The Yellow Kid by Richard Outcault first published<br />1914   – Krazy Kat by Geroge Herriman first published <br />1920s   – Tijuana Bibles began to be published <br />1930s   – Comic book began in America <br />1931   – Alice Schenker (born Alice Olsen) born in Racine, WI <br />1933   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster created Superman<br />1936-1939   – The comic magazine format became popular<br />1936  – Victor Moscoso born in Spain <br />1937  – Frank Stack born in Houston, TX<br />1938  – Gary Arlington born in San Jose, CA <br />1938  – Trina Robbins born in Brooklyn, NY <br />1939   – “She Saw The World’s Fair” published by Wesley Morse <br />1939   – Harvey Pekar born in Cleveland, OH <br />1939  – Richard “Grass” Green born in Fort Wayne, IN<br />1940-1950s   – Comic burnings became common in America <br />1940  – Gilbert Shelton born in Houston, TX <br />1940  – Manuel “Spain” Reodriguez born in Buffalo, NY <br />1941  – Vaughn Bodé born in Utica, NY <br />1941  – S. Clay Wilson (Steven Clay Wilson) born in Lincoln, Nebraska <br />1941  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson born in Texas <br />1942   – Rand Holmes born in Nova Scotia <br />1942  – Dan O’Neil born <br />1943   – Joel Beck born in Ross, CA <br />1943  – Robert Williaams born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1944   – George Herriman dies <br />1944  – Howard Cruse is born in Birmingham, AL <br />1943  – Robert Crumb born in Philadelphia, PA <br />1944  – Rick Griffin born in California <br />1944   – Bill Griffith born <br />1944   – Kim Deitch born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1944   – Max Gaines establishes Educational Comics<br />1944   – Mervyn “Skip” Williamson born in San Antonio, TX <br />1945  – Lee Mars born <br />1947   – Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster sued in NY Supreme Court to regain their rights to Superman; they lose the case and their jobs at DC Comics<br />1947   – Jay Lynch born in Orange, NJ <br />1947   – Max Gaines dies in a boat crash; son William Gaines takes over EC Comics<br />1948   – Art Spiegelman born in Stockholm, Sweden <br />1948  – Barbara “Willy” Mendes born <br />1948  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb born in Long Beach, NY<br />1949  – Marry Wings born Mary Geller in Chicago, IL <br />1950s   – Student Press Movement starts <br />1950   – Educational Comics becomes Entertaining Comics under William Gaines <br />1950  – Gary Panter born in Durant, OK <br />1951  – Mary Fleener born<br />1952-1956   – Harvey Kurtzman is the editor of MAD Magazine <br />1953  – Roberta Gregory born in Los Angeles, CA <br />1954   – “Seduction of the Innocent” by psychiatrist Frederick Werthan published  <br />1954   – Comics Code Authority established <br />1954  – Victor Moscoso starts at Cooper Union Art School in Manhattan <br />1955   – William Gaines starts humor magazine, MAD Magazine <br />1955  – Charles Burns born <br />1956   – After being cited by the CCA, EC comics diverts resources to new title MAD Magazine <br />1956  – Ralph Bakshi starts animating at Terrytoons <br />1956   – Alice and Don Schenker marry <br />1956  – Lynda Barry born in Richland Center, WI <br />1957   – Harvey Kurtzmaan’s Trump magazine published<br />1957  – Peter Baagge born in New York <br />1957-1960  – Spain Rodriguez studies at Silvermine Guild School of Art in New Canaan, CT <br />1958   – Moe Moskowitz moves to Bay Are and opens bookstore <br />1958  – Robert Crumb and his brother Charles publish satire magazine “Foo” <br />1958-1962   – Frank Stack and Gilbert Shelton edit University of Texas at Austin’s newspaper, The Texas Ranger  <br />1959  – Victor Moscoso moves to San Francisco, CA <br />1960s   – Underground comix movement started <br />1960   – MAD Magazine had circulation of 1.4 million <br />1960  – Rick Griffin met filmmaker John Severson at screening of Surf Fever movie <br />1960   – Harvey Kurtzman starts Help! Magazine <br />1960  – Phoebe Gloeckner born in Philadelphia, PA <br />1960  – Alison Bechdel born in Beech Creek, PA <br />1961   – Skip Williamson sells first comic to Help! Magazine <br />1961  – Daniel Clowes born in Chicaago, IL <br />1963   – In mainstream comics, Dell, DC and Marvel were the major publishers <br />1963  – Rick Griffin starts working at Surfer Magazine as a cartoonist, debuting “Murphy” <br />1963  – Rick Griffin is seriously injured as a passenger in a drunk driving accident <br />1963  – Spain Rodriguez starts work at the Western Electric Company Plant<br />1963   – Jay Lynch moves to Chicago to become a cartoonist <br />1956   – America gets involved in the Vietnam War <br />1963   – March On Washington <br />1963   – President John F. Kennedy assassinated <br />1963  – Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique” is published<br />1964   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “God Nose” <br />1964  – After being promoted to director of cartoons at Terrytown, Ralph Bakshi left to run animation at Paramount Pictures <br />1962   – Frank Stack  publishes “The Adventures of Jesus” <br />1962   – Harvey Pekar and Robert Crumb meet in Cleveland, OH and become friends and collaborators <br />1965   – Birth of the Underground Press <br />1965  – Rick Griffin picks up “Murphy” comics in Surfer after a pause <br />1965   – Schenkers launch Print Mint inside of Moskowitz’s bookstore <br />1965  – Spain Rodriguez spends summer in NYC creating cartoons for The Militant paper and joined anarchist group Resurgence Youth Movement <br />1965  – Robert Williams starts working as Art Director for Ed “Big Daddy” Roth <br />1965  – Robert Crumb starts taking LSD <br />1965  – Julie Doucet born in Saint-Lambert Quebec, Canada <br />1965-1966   – Mario Savia’s Free Speech Movement impacts Berkely’s campus <br />1966  – After graduating from San Francisco Art Institute, Victor Moscoso joins faculty <br />1966   – Art Spiegelman is Topps Bubblegum’s star artist <br />1966  – Spain Rodriguez has his first cover in paper East Village Other <br />1966  – Trina Robbins moved back to NYC from LA and worked for East Village Other as advisor and illustrator <br />1966  – Rick Griffin joins Jook Savages and designs posters for their art shows in San Francisco<br />1966   – Kim Deitch moves to NYC and gets “Sunshine Girl” published in The East Village Other <br />1966   – Joel Beck publishes “Lenny of Laredo”, “Marching Marvin” and “The Profit” <br />1966   – Print Mint publishes their first comix, a reprint of Beck’s “Lenny of Laredo” <br />1966  – NOW, of the National Organization for Women, was formed <br />1966   – Underground Press Syndicate established by East Village Other editor Walter Bowart <br />1966   – Weekly & monthly underground papers regularly publish Underground Comix <br />1967  – Robert Crumb leaves Cleveland, OH, his job at Americana Greetings, and wife Dana to move to San Francisco, CA <br />1967  – Gilbert Shelton’s “Wonder Wart Hog” published by Pete Millar <br />1967  – Victor Moscoso and RIck Griffin begin to collaborate on posters and Zap Comics covers <br />1967  – Rick Griffin commissioned for “Pow-Wow, a Gathering of the Tribes for a Human Be-In” held in Golden Gate Park’s polo grounds <br />1967  – Art Spiegelman comes up with the idea for Wacky Packs working for Topps Bubblegum <br />1967  – “Summer of Love” takes place in San Francisco for 9 months <br />1967   – Bijou Funnies, initially The Chicago Mirror, founded by Skip WIlliamson and Jay Lynch in Chigaco, IL <br />1967   – Art Spiegelman moves to San Francisco, CA <br />1967  – “Cavalier” Magazine serializes Robert Crumb’s “Fritz the Cat” <br />1967  – First drawings of Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers appear on a flier for short student film “The Texas Hippies March on the Capitol” <br />1967-1973   – Jay Lynch’s “‘Nard ‘n’ Pat” comic publication years <br />1968   – Rand Holmes moves to Vancouver, Canada and works for Georgia Straight a weekly underground tabloid and starts “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” <br />1968  – S. Clay Wilson moves to San Francisco and becomes friends with Robert Crumb, starts to contribute to Zap Comics <br />1968  – First issue of Zap Comix by Robert Crumb released<br />1968  – “Keep on Truckin’” one page comix published in Zap Comix by Robert Crumb <br />1968  – Robert Crumb sends for his wife Dana to join him in San Francisco <br />1968  – Robert Crumb first sees S. Clay Wilson’s comix work <br />1968  – Gary Arlington opens his comic book store in the Mission District in San Francisco, CA <br />1968  – Spain Rodriguez’s cover for Feb 2nd issue of East Village Other creates legal issues over depiction of a sexual act <br />1968   – Robert Crumb publishes “Zap” <br />1968   – Skip Williamson’s “Snappy Sammy Smoot (1968-1996) makes its debut in Bijou Funnies <br />1968  – Robert William’s controversial painting “Appetite for Destruction” is used as album art for the Guns ‘N’ Roses album of the same name <br />1968  – “Yellow Dog” comix anthology started by Joel Beck and John Thompson <br />1968-1973   – Skip Williamson’s Sammy Smoot character is played by Carl Reiner on the comedy TV show “Rowan and Martin’s Laugh-In” <br />1968-1975   – Considered the boom years of Underground Comix <br />1968   – Apex Novelties ran by Don Donaahue starts publishing comix <br />1968  – US Government outlaws LSD <br />1968  – Robert Crumb starts “Snatch Comix” published by Apex Novelties <br />1969   – Neil Armstrong lands on the moon<br />1969-1970  – “Odd Bodkins” by Dan O’Neil is published in the San Francisco Oracle <br />1969  – Whitney Museum Exhibition “Human Concern/Personal Torment: The Grotesque in American Art” showed some of Robert Crumb’s work <br />1969  – Roger Brand at the first comic convention panel for Underground Comix artists, declined to invite Trina Robbins <br />1969   – Rip Off Press founded by Gilbert Shelton, Jack “Jaxon” Jackson, Dave Moriarty and Fred Todd <br />1969   – Kim Deitch and Trinaa Robbins start dating <br />1969  – Bill Griffith and Jay Kinney meet and start idea for “Young Lust” <br />1969   – Vaughn Bode briefly edits “Gothic Blimp Works”; Kim Deitch begins to edit “Gothic Blimp Works” <br />1969  – Print Mint is raided by police over “Zap Comix” fourth issue (featured “Joe Blow” incest comic by Robert Crumb) <br />1969  – Schenkers arrested over violation of California Penal Code Section 311.2 (illegal distribution of pornography) due to publishing “Zap Comics” fourth issue <br />1969  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Jiz Comics” under pseudonym Howard Crankwood <br />1970s   – Graphic Novel format began<br />1970s  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates historical narrative comix like “Comanche Moon”, “Los Tejanos”<br />1970  – Ed “Big Daddy” Roth’s shop closes and Robert Williams ends his tenure as Art Director <br />1970  – Chris Kirkpatrick, owner of New Yorker Book Store that sold Zap Comix, convicted <br />1970   – Bill Griffith moves to San Francisco, CA<br />1970  – Trina Robbins and Kim Deitch’s daughter Casey born <br />1970  – “It Ain’t Me Babe” the first women’s liberation newspaper, was published in Berkley <br />1970   – Kitchen Sink Press ran by Denis Kitchen founded <br />1970  – “Skull” published by Rip Off Press <br />1970  – Many Underground Comix artists met and created The Cartoon Workers Union<br />1970  – Robert William released collected “Coochy Cooty Men’s Comics” published by Print Mint <br />1970   – Last Gasp Eco Funnies ran by Ron Turner founded <br />1970  – “Young Lust” by Bill Griffith and Jaay Kinney published by Company & Sons <br />1970  – Robert Crumb meets with Ralph Bakshi and Steve Kraantz about making a movie out of his popular character Fritz the Cat  <br />1970  – “Abortion Eve” comic produced by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely <br />1970  – Spain Rodriguez releases “Zodiac Mindwarp” (East Village Other) and “Subert” (Rip Off Press) <br />1970  – Kim Deitch and Trina Robbins end their relationship<br />1971  – Gilbert Shelton’s Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers first released<br />1971  – Roberta Gregory attend CSU Long Beach and contributes “Feminist Funnies” to their newspaper <br />1971  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Bent” (Print Mint) <br />1971  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb grates with degree in fine art from University of Arizona <br />1971  – “Ms Magazine” founded by Gloria Steinem and art directed by Bea Feitler <br />1971   – Bill Griffith’s “Zippy the Pinhead” debuts in Real Pulp Comics #1 by Print Mint <br />1971  – Dan O’Neil and the Air Pirates (Bobby London, Shary Flenniken, Gary Hallgren, and Ted Richards) create “Air Pirate Funnies” published by Last Gasp <br />1971  – Lee Marr’s “Pudge” & “Girl Blimp” published <br />1971  – Roberta Gregory sells her first comic to “Wimmen’s Comix” <br />1971  – Disney filed suit in Northern District of California against the comic artists from the “Air Pirate Funnies” <br />1971   – Rip Off Press moves from Mowry’s Opera House to 17th Street <br />1971   – After moving back to NYC, Art Spiegelman once again returns to San Francisco, CA<br />1972   – “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” released in first collected volume, the second volume out the following year<br />1972  – “Tits ‘n’ Clits” All women comix anthology by Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevely published first issue (Nanny Goat Productions) <br />1972  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb has comix debut in “Wimmen’s Comix” #1 with “Goldie a Neurotic Woman” <br />1972  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb meet at a San Francisco party <br />1972  – “Fritz the Cat” movie directed by Ralph Bakshi released <br />1972  – 2 all women’s comix anthologies started “Wimmen’s Comix” (Trina Robbins, Last Gasp) and “Tit’s &  Clits” (Joyce Farmer and Lyn Chevelyl, Nanny Goat Productions)<br />1972  – Disney granted it’s injunction against Dan O’Neil and the other comic artists from “Air Pirate Funnies”; found guilty of copyright infringement and trade disparagement <br />1972  – “Bizzare Sex” started published by Denis Kitchen of Kitchen Sink Press <br />1972  – Print Mint hits 1 million issues of “Zap Comix” sold <br />1973   – Rand Holmes travels to San Francisco, CA to get the second volume of “The Adventures of Harold Hedd” published by Last Gasp <br />1973  – Bill Griffith’s “A Sour Look at the Comix Scene, or Out of the Inkwell and Into the Toilet” runs in The San Francisco Phoenix <br />1973  – Undercover cop buys first issue of “Tits ‘n’ Clits” at San Francisco Bookstore Fahrenheit 451; owners charged with selling pornography and Farmer and Cheverly are forced to hide from law enforcement for 2 years <br />1973  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves onto Robert Crumb’s farm property as his girlfriend <br />1973  – “Come Out Comix” by Mary Wings self-published <br />1973  –  Year of the Crash of Comix <br />1973  – Rick Griffin is a born again Christian <br />1973  – Gilbert Shelton’s The Fabulous Furry Freak Brother’s comics had sold 400,000 copies; eventually selling 45 million copies to date in 16 different languages <br />1972   – Haavery Pekar’s first story “Brilliant American Maniacs Series No. 1 Crazy Ed” published in “People’s Comics” with art by Robert Crumb <br />1972   – Justin Green publishes “Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary” <br />1972   – Art Spiegelman publishes first 3 pages of Maus <br />1973  –Supreme Court’s  Miller v. California decision  rules that vendors can be jailed and retroactively fined for selling obscene materials, cannot plead ignorance to contents <br />1974   – Jay Lynch has a one week tenure as editor at Hustler Magazine<br />1974  – Lynda Barry attends Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA <br />1974   – Art Spiegelman self publishes “Ace Hole” and “Midget Detective” <br />1974  – Marvel releases “Comix Book” <br />1974  – S. Clay Wilson contributes to “Pork” (Co-Op Press) <br />1974  – “The Nine Lives of Fritz the Cat” directed by Ralph Bakshi released <br />1975   – The Schenkers working partnership with Bob and Peggy Rita dissolves and Print Mint slows down production and distribution <br />1975  – “Felch Comics” by Keith Green<br />1975  – Vietnam War ends, American troops withdraw from Saigon <br />1975  – Victor Moscoso starts attending Yale <br />1975  – Bill Griffith and Art Spiegelman create “Arcade” comix anthology <br />1975   –  Vaughn Bodé dies at age 33 <br />1976   – Harvey Pekar self publishes “How I Quit Collecting Records and Put Out a Comic Book with the Money I Saved” with art by Robert Crumb <br />1976  – “Wet Satin” erotic satirical all-women’s comics anthology published by Kitchen Sink Press <br />1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb moves off of the Crumb farm commune <br />1976  – Mary Wing’s “Dyke Shorts” is self-published <br />1976  – Roberta Gregory creates “Dynamite Damsels” (Self-published) <br />1976  – Copyright Act becomes law <br />1976  – Lee Marrs “The Further Fattening Adventures of Pudge, Girl Blimp” featured the first openly bisexual character in comics <br />1967  – Larry Fuller creates “Gay Heartthrobs” <br />1976   – Harvey Pekar’s “American Splendor #1” published <br />1976  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb and Diane Noomin start “Twisted Sisters” <br />1976-1077  – Punk scene emerges<br />1971  – Howard Cruse’s “Barefootz” first published <br />1977   – Kitchen Sink Press reprints Joel Becks comics under title “Joel Beck’s Comics & Stories” <br />1977  – Gary Panter moves to Los Angeles, CA <br />1977  – S. Clay Wilson releases comix with his most popular character “The Checkered Demon” (Last Gasp) <br />1977  – Gilbert Shelton’s character Fat Freddy’s cat from “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” gets its own spin off comic <br />1977  – Robert Crumb divorces Dana<br />1978  – Gilbert Shelton moves to San Francisco, CA from Austin, TX <br />1978  – First graphic novel “A Contract With God” by Will Eisner is published by Baronet Press <br />1978  – Dan O’Neils appeal in the case of Dismney and the Air Pirates does not rule in O’Neil’s favor <br />1978  – Gilbert Shelton makes “Shakedown Street” album cover for The Grateful Dead <br />1978  – Paul Mavrides starts to collaborate on “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” <br />1979  – Gilbert Shelton and wife/agent Lora move to Europe <br />1979  – The Supreme Court declines to take Dan O’Neil’s appeal case against Disney <br />1979  – Robert William publishes “The Lowbrow Art of Robt. Williams” <br />1979  – Mary Wings creates drug awareness book “Are Your Highs Getting You Down?” with a California Arts Council Grant <br />1979  – Denis Kitchen approaches Howaard Cruse about making “Gay Comix”<br />1979  – Rip Off Press ends<br />1979  – Art Spiegelman starts to teach at the School of Visual Arts in NY<br />1980  – First issue of “Gay Comix” (Kitchen SInk Press) released, edited by Howard Cruse <br />1980  – “Raw” comics anthology created by Art Spiegelman and Francoise Mouly <br />1980-1991   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman serialized <br />1981  – “Wimmen’s Comix” takes a 6 year hiatus <br />1981  – Daniel Clowes and his friends create “Psycho Comics” <br />1981  – Robert Crumb starts comix magazine “Weirdo” published by Last Gasp <br />1981  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb’s daughter Sophie is born; they move to Southern France<br />1982  – Last issue of “Bizzare Sex” released <br />1982  – Gilbert and Jamie Hernandez create “Love and Rockets” published by Fantagraphics <br />1983  – “Dykes to Watch Out For” by Alison Bechdel first published <br />1984  – Mary Fleener self publishes her first comic “Hoodoo” <br />1984  – Robert Crumb passes editorship of “Weirdo” to Peter Bagge <br />1985   – Print Mint, since renamed Reprint Mint, is sold by the Schenkers <br />1985  – Mary Wings “She Came Too Late” lesbian detective novel published <br />1985  – Topps Bubbglegum starts Garbage Pail Kids cards <br />1986   – Doubleday publishes the first of it’s two collected volumes of Harvye Pekar’s “American Splendor” with the next coming out the following year <br />1986  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson publishes “Illustrated History of Ranching in Texas” <br />1986  – Peter Bagge resigns as editor at “Weirdo”; Aline Kominsky-Crumb takes over <br />1987  – Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky-Crumb marry <br />1988  – “Dirty Plotte” by Julie Doucet was first self-published <br />1988  – Roberta Gregory self publishes “Winging It” and “Sheila and the Unicorn” <br />1989   – Jack “Jaxon” Jackon publishes “Rip Off Pres: The Golden Era #21” <br />1989  – Daniel Clowes first issue of “Eightball” <br />1989  – Roberta Gregory moves to Seattle and begins to work at Fantagraphics Books <br />1990   – Art Spiegelman receives a Guggenheim Fellowship to work on Maus’ second volume <br />1990  – Peter Bagge first publishes “Hate” (Fantagraaphics) <br />1991   – American Splendor’s once a year regular release stops with issue fifteen <br />1991  – Rick Griffin dies after motorcycle accident <br />1991  – Roberta Gregory’s “Naughty Bits” issue one self published <br />1991  – “Dirty Plotte” published by Drawn & Quarterly <br />1991  – Julie Doucet moves to NYC for one year and makes “My New York Diary” <br />1992   – Maus: A Survivor’s Tale by Art Spiegelman wins a Pulitzer Prize <br />1992  – “Wimmen’s Comix” publishes it’s last issue <br />1993   – Don Schenkers dies<br />1994  – Robert Williams first published “Juxtapoz Arts & Culture” Magazine<br />1995  – “Stuck Rubber Baby” by Howard Cruse published <br />1995  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns first published by Fantagraphics <br />1995  – “Crumb” documentary about Robert Crumb by Terry Zwigoff is released <br />1996  – Mary Fleener’s “Life of the Party” released  <br />1998  – Jack “Jaxon” Jackson creates “Lost Cause” <br />1999   – Joel Beck dies <br />2001-2003  – Roberta Gregory’s popular character Bitchy Bitch from “Naughty Bits” starred in the animated cartoon “Life’s a Bitch” on Comedy Network (Canada) and Oxygen Network (US) <br />2001  – Daniel Clowes “Eightball” story “Ghost World” is made into a movie of the same name <br />2002   – Rand Holmes dies <br />2002  – Phoebe Gloeckner’s “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” published by Frog Books <br />2003   – “American Splendor” the award winning movie about Harvey Pekar’s life starring Paul Giamatti is released <br />2005  – “Black Hole” by Charles Burns released as graphic novel by Fantagraphics <br />2006  –Jack “Jaxon” Jackson dies <br />2006  – “Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic” by Alison Bechdel published <br />2010   – Harvey Pekar dies <br />2015  – “Fun Home” the Broadway Musical wins a Tony for best musical <br />2015  – “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” by Phoebe Glockner made into a movie with the same name <br />2017   – Skip Williamson and Jay Lynch die within a week and a half of each other <br />2019  – Howard Cruse dies <br />2020   – Alice Schnker dies <br />2021  – Streaming channel Tubi releases 8 episode show “The Freak Brothers” based on Gilbert Shelton’s “The Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers” <br />2021  – Spain Rodriguez dies <br />2021  – S. Clay Wilson dies <br />2022  – Aline Kominsky-Crumb dies </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>About. Robert Williams Official Site.</i> (2022). Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.robtwilliamsstudio.com/about">https://www.robtwilliamsstudio.com/about</a></p><p>Beat Staff. (2016, May 11). Interview: Roberta Gregory on Mother Mountain, wimmen's comix, & bitchy bitch. <i>Comics Beat.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-roberta-gregory-on-mother-mountain-wimmens-comix-bitchy-bitch/">https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-roberta-gregory-on-mother-mountain-wimmens-comix-bitchy-bitch/</a></p><p>Bernsau, T. (2021, January 20). Car Toons for car guys. <i>MotorTrend.</i> Retrieved December 29, 2022, from <a href="https://www.motortrend.com/features/0908rc-the-car-toons-of-pete-millar/">https://www.motortrend.com/features/0908rc-the-car-toons-of-pete-millar/</a></p><p>Chakraborty, P. (2021). "Sex and the Aesthetics of the Vulgar: Reading the Creative Paradox in the Works of Robert Crumb." Sanglap: <i>Journal of Literary and Cultural Inquiry,</i> 07(02), 120–148. <a href="https://doi.org/10.35684/jlci.2021.7206">https://doi.org/10.35684/jlci.2021.7206</a></p><p>Chute, H. (2006, season-04). Decoding Comics. <i>Modern Fiction Studies,</i> 52(4), 1014–1027. <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/26286682">https://www.jstor.org/stable/26286682</a></p><p>Chute, H. (2019). <i>Why Comics?: From Underground to Everywhere</i> (Reprint). Harper Perennial.</p><p>Costello, B., & Gremins, B. (2021). <i>The Other 1980s: Reframing Comics’ Crucial Decade.</i> Louisiana State University Press.</p><p>Dalzell, T. (2020, February 20). <i>Remembering Alice Schenker, whose Print Mint on Telegraph Avenue sparked the 1960s poster revolution. Berkeleyside.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.berkeleyside.org/2020/02/20/remembering-alice-schenker-whose-print-mint-on-telegraph-avenue-sparked-the-1960s-poster-revolution">https://www.berkeleyside.org/2020/02/20/remembering-alice-schenker-whose-print-mint-on-telegraph-avenue-sparked-the-1960s-poster-revolution</a></p><p>Danky, J. P., & Kitchen, D. (2009). <i>Underground classics: The transformation of comics into Comix.</i> Abrams.</p><p>Dauber, J. (2022). <i>American Comics: A History.</i> W. W. Norton & Company.</p><p>Doherty , B.  (2023). <i>Dirty pictures: How an underground network of nerds, feminists, misfits, geniuses, bikers,... Potheads, printers, intellectuals, and art school.</i> Harry N. Abraams.</p><p>Ebert, R. (2005, November 20). Crumb Movie Review & Film Summary (1995): <i>Roger Ebert. Crumb movie review & film summary</i> (1995) | Roger Ebert. Retrieved December 22, 2022, from <a href="https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-crumb-1994">https://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/great-movie-crumb-1994</a></p><p>Elam, E. (2013, February 15). Gilbert Shelton in Conversation. T_he Comics Journal ._ Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.tcj.com/gilbert-shelton-in-conversation/">https://www.tcj.com/gilbert-shelton-in-conversation/</a></p><p>Estren, M. J. (2012). <i>A History of Underground Comics.</i> Ronin Publishing, Inc.</p><p>Frank, P. (2018, June 19). Mary Wings just wanted an orgasm when she created the First Lesbian Comic Book. <i>HuffPost.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mary-wings-created-first-lesbian-comic-book%5C_n%5C_5b23d937e4b0d4fc01fdd783">https://www.huffpost.com/entry/mary-wings-created-first-lesbian-comic-book\_n\_5b23d937e4b0d4fc01fdd783</a></p><p>Freeman, J. (2017, November 3). Exclusive: Gilbert Shelton reveals some Fabulous furry freak brothers secrets, new collection extracts_! downthetubes.net._ Retrieved December 21, 2022, from <a href="https://downthetubes.net/exclusive-gilbert-shelton-reveals-some-fabulous-furry-freak-brothers-secrets-new-collection-extracts/">https://downthetubes.net/exclusive-gilbert-shelton-reveals-some-fabulous-furry-freak-brothers-secrets-new-collection-extracts/</a></p><p>Gabilliet, J., Beaty, B., & Nguyen, N. (2013). <i>Of Comics and Men: A Cultural History of American Comic Books(Illustrated).</i> University Press of Mississippi.</p><p>Garcia, E. (2017). <i>The Hernandez Brothers: Love, Rockets, and Alternative Comics (Latinx and Latin American Profiles)</i>(1st ed.). University of Pittsburgh Press.</p><p>Gary Panter. Lambiek <i>Comiclopedia .</i> (2022, July 22). Retrieved December 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/panter.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/p/panter.htm</a></p><p>Gomez, B. (2017, March 29). She changed comics: Roberta Gregory interview. <i>Comic Book Legal Defense Fund.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://cbldf.org/2017/03/she-changed-comics-roberta-gregory-interview/">https://cbldf.org/2017/03/she-changed-comics-roberta-gregory-interview/</a></p><p>Gregory, R. (2009). My Creative History. <i>Roberta Gregory .</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.robertagregory.com/Robertagregory/Robertas%5C_History.html">http://www.robertagregory.com/Robertagregory/Robertas\_History.html</a></p><p>Griffith, B. (2002). A Bill Griffith Bibliography: (Out of Print & Hard to Find) Covers & Contents . <i>A Bill Griffith bibliography.</i> Retrieved December 5, 2022, from <a href="https://www.zippythepinhead.com/pages/biblio.html">https://www.zippythepinhead.com/pages/biblio.html</a></p><p>Griffith, B. (2003). Still asking the unanswerable question, 'are we having fun yet?'. <i>Still Asking the Unanswerable Question, ‘Are We Having Fun Yet?’</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://imagetextjournal.com/still-asking-the-unanswerable-question-are-we-having-fun-yet/">https://imagetextjournal.com/still-asking-the-unanswerable-question-are-we-having-fun-yet/</a></p><p>Groth, G. (2011, February 9). An interview with Victor Moscoso. <i>The Comics Journal.</i> Retrieved December 12, 2022, from <a href="https://www.tcj.com/an-interview-with-victor-moscoso/">https://www.tcj.com/an-interview-with-victor-moscoso/</a></p><p>Hatfield, C., & Beaty, B. (2020). <i>Comics studies: A guidebook</i>. Rutgers University Press.</p><p>Hatfield, C. (2005, August 2). <i>Alternative Comics: An Emerging Literature (Illustrated)</i>. University Press of Mississippi.</p><p>Jean-Paul, J., & Cruse, H. (2021). <i>Stuck Rubber Baby.</i> CASTERMAN.</p><p>Jennings, J., Duffy, D., Woods, A. A., Wimberly, R., Greene, S., Richardson, A., Love, J., Love, R., & Knight, K. (2020, March 31). <i>Black Comix Returns</i>. Magnetic Press.</p><p>Julie Doucet. _Lambiek Comiclopedia. (_2022, June 20). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/doucet.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/d/doucet.htm</a></p><p>Kaplan, A. (2010). <i>From Krakow to Krypton: Jews and Comic Books.</i> Jewish Publication Society.</p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, October 4)<i>. Jay Lynch. Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/l/lynch.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/l/lynch.htm</a></p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, September 27). Robert Williams. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 27, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williams%5C_r.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williams\_r.htm</a></p><p>Knuddle, K. (2022, September 27). Skip Williamson. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia</i> . Retrieved December 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williamson%5C_skip.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/w/williamson\_skip.htm</a></p><p>Lambiek. (2022, January 20). Joel Beck. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> Retrieved December 19, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/b/beck%5C_joel.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/b/beck\_joel.htm</a></p><p>Mary Fleener. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, February 13). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/f/fleener%5C_mary.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/f/fleener\_mary.htm</a></p><p>Mietkiewicz, H. (2011, June 11). Holmes, Rand (1942-2002). <i>THE JOE SHUSTER AWARDS Canadian Comics Awards, News & Links</i>. Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://joeshusterawards.com/hof/hof-rand-holmes-1942-2002/">https://joeshusterawards.com/hof/hof-rand-holmes-1942-2002/</a></p><p>Milligan, M. (2021, October 19). Tubi grooves into Adult Toons with debut original 'The Freak Brothers'. <i>Animation Magazine.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.animationmagazine.net/2021/10/tubi-grooves-into-adult-toons-with-debut-original-the-freak-brothers/">https://www.animationmagazine.net/2021/10/tubi-grooves-into-adult-toons-with-debut-original-the-freak-brothers/</a></p><p>Fox, M. S. (2013). Zap Comix. <i>Underground Comix Joint.</i> Retrieved December 29, 2022, from <a href="https://comixjoint.com/zapcomix.html">https://comixjoint.com/zapcomix.html</a></p><p>Of the Golden Age comics houses, EC was the greatest; Weird! Incredible! Mad! (2020, September 23). <i>The Economist.</i> <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A681897193/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=cd9e73a6">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A681897193/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=cd9e73a6</a></p><p>Olsza, M. (2020). Feminist (and/as) alternative media practices in women's underground comix in the 1970s 1. <i>Polish Journal for American Studies, 14, 21-37,139.</i> Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/feminist-as-alternative-media-practices-womens/docview/2473439187/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/feminist-as-alternative-media-practices-womens/docview/2473439187/se-2</a></p><p>Pagano, K. (2012, August 18). Mary Fleener lives art on the edge. <i>North Coast Current.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.northcoastcurrent.com/north-coast-beat/2012/08/mary-fleener-lives-art-on-the-edge/">https://www.northcoastcurrent.com/north-coast-beat/2012/08/mary-fleener-lives-art-on-the-edge/</a></p><p>Panter, G. (2007). Biography . <i>Gary Panter.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.garypanter.com/site/index.php/about/biography/">http://www.garypanter.com/site/index.php/about/biography/</a></p><p>Pencil, S. (2020). <i>Rated Savx: The Savage Pencil Skratchbook.</i> Strange Attractor Press.</p><p>Pilcher, T., & Kannenberg Jr., G. (2008). <i>Erotic comics : a graphic history from Tijuana bibles to underground comix.</i> The Ilex Press Limited.</p><p>Prescott, G. (2017, March 21). About: Life of the Party: An Interview with Mary Fleener. <i>Art & Illustration by Mary Fleener.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="http://www.maryfleener.com/about/">http://www.maryfleener.com/about/</a></p><p>Rand Holmes. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, January 16). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/h/holmes%5C_rand.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/h/holmes\_rand.htm</a></p><p>Roberta Gregory. <i>Lambiek Comiclopedia.</i> (2021, January 1). Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lambiek.net/artists/g/gregory.htm">https://www.lambiek.net/artists/g/gregory.htm</a></p><p>Robbins, T. (1999). <i>From girls to grrrlz : a history of [women’s] comics from teens to zines</i>. Chronicle Books.</p><p>Rosenkranz, P. (2008, May 20). <i>Rebel Visions: The Underground Comix Revolution 1963 - 1975</i> (Reprint). Fantagraphics Books.</p><p>Sabin, R. (2001). <i>Comics, Comix & Graphic Novels (Revised ed.).</i> Phaidon Press.</p><p>Seigal, B. (1997, January 8). Life of the party : Cartoonist Mary Fleener draws on a zest for life and an appreciation for the world's everyday zaniness. <i>Los Angeles Times.</i> Retrieved December 26, 2022, from <a href="https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-01-08-ls-16304-story.html">https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1997-01-08-ls-16304-story.html</a></p><p>Seves, P. R. (2018). <i>Eric Stanton & the History of the Bizarre Underground (1st ed.).</i> Schiffer.</p><p>Smith, H. (2021, February 10). S. Clay Wilson, who helped launch the underground comix movement, dies at 79. <i>The Washington Post Online.</i></p><p>Szasz, F. M. (2013, September 15). <i>Atomic Comics: Cartoonists Confront the Nuclear World (1st ed.).</i> University of Nevada Press.</p><p>Underground and Independent Comics, Comix, and Graphic Novels. (2011). Reference Reviews; Harlow, 25(6), 52–53.</p><p>Wanzo, R. (2018, June 1). The Normative Broken: Melinda Gebbie, Feminist Comix, and Child Sexuality Temporalities. <i>American Literature</i>, 90(2), 347–375. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1215/00029831-4564334">https://doi.org/10.1215/00029831-4564334</a></p><p>Wiggins, R. (2010, March 3). <i>Me and Gilbert Shelton: A Memoir [web log].</i> Retrieved December 14, 2022, from <a href="http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/ramsey-wiggins-me-and-gilbert-shelton.html">http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2010/03/ramsey-wiggins-me-and-gilbert-shelton.html</a>.</p><p>Williams, P. (2020, January 17). <i>Dreaming the Graphic Novel: The Novelization of Comics (None).</i> Rutgers University Press.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Underground Comix Part 1</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Dean Kelly, Taylor Hill, Spencer Gee, Mandy Horton, Kolby Streller</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/6b3ce822-e118-45e9-b862-3da9e19e28d7/3000x3000/shin-incomplet-podcast-revised4.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:35:14</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode examines the history of underground comix, this is a two-part episode.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode examines the history of underground comix, this is a two-part episode.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, illustration history, illustration, underground comix, comix, design history, comics history</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>true</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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      <title>Yolanda Margarita López</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>During the 1960s, the Chicano Movement or "El Movimiento" gave way for Chicano artists, designers, and printmakers to emerge. The Chicano Movement united Chicanos, Americans of Mexican heritage who chose that label, in a new shared identity to fight for social and political empowerment. One of the creatives that made their mark in support of this movement was Yolanda Margarita López, a feminist painter, printmaker, educator, and film producer. She was best known for her works focusing on the experiences of Mexican-American and Chicana women, often challenging the harmful ethnic stereotypes associated with them. López is most known for the Guadalupe series, where she reimagines Our Lady of Guadalupe in the image of the everyday Chicana woman. López was essential to the case of Los Siete de La Raza, or The Seven of the Hispanic Community. In this case, seven Latino youths were falsely accused of killing police officer Joseph Brodnick in San Francisco on May 1st, 1969. The political art and design work she produced in support of the seven falsely accused helped rally the San Francisco community together in support and led to the acquitting of the seven youths. López, through her activism, challenged stereotypes of Chicana women and advocated for the Latino community as well as other marginalized communities over the course of her creative career.  </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1942 – Born on November 1 in San Diego, CA<br />1968 – Third World Liberation Strikes<br />1969 – Los Siete de La Raza<br />1971 – Enrolled at San Diego State University<br />1975 – Graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in painting and drawing<br />1977 – <i>¿A Donde Vas, Chicana?</i><br />1978 – Start of Guadalupe Series<br />1979 – University of California, San Diego, receiving a Master of Fine Arts<br />2021 – Yolanda dies of complications from Liver Cancer </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Daly, C.-S. (2021) <i>Yolanda López, artist who painted the iconic Virgen de Guadalupe series, dies at 79</i>, <i>Mission Local</i>. Available at: <a href="https://missionlocal.org/2021/09/yolanda-lopez-artist-who-painted-the-iconic-virgen-de-guadalupe-series-dies-at-79/">https://missionlocal.org/2021/09/yolanda-lopez-artist-who-painted-the-iconic-virgen-de-guadalupe-series-dies-at-79/</a> (Accessed: November 27, 2022). </p><p>Davalos, K.M. (2008) <i>Yolanda M. López</i>. Los Angeles, CA: UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center Press. </p><p>Duke Human Rights Center at the Franklin Humanities Institute (no date) <i>Chavez, the UFW and the "wetback" problem</i>, <i>News RSS</i>. Available at: <a href="https://humanrights.fhi.duke.edu/chavez-ufw-and-wetback-problem/">https://humanrights.fhi.duke.edu/chavez-ufw-and-wetback-problem/</a> (Accessed: November 27, 2022). </p><p><i>Genial generating engagement and new initiatives for ... - exploratorium</i> (no date). Available at: <a href="https://www.exploratorium.edu/sites/default/files/Genial%5C_2017%5C_Terms%5C_of%5C_Usage.pdf">https://www.exploratorium.edu/sites/default/files/Genial\_2017\_Terms\_of\_Usage.pdf</a> (Accessed: November 28, 2022). </p><p>Seth Combs Oct. 10, 2021 5:15 A.M.P.T.F.T.S.more sharing optionsS.C.extra sharing options F.T.L.I.E.C.L.U.R.L.C.P. (2021) <i>The art and activism of Yolanda López</i>, <i>Tribune</i>. Available at: <a href="https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/entertainment/story/2021-10-10/the-art-and-activism-of-yolanda-lopez">https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/entertainment/story/2021-10-10/the-art-and-activism-of-yolanda-lopez</a> (Accessed: November 27, 2022). </p><p><i>¡Printing the revolution!: The rise and impact of Chicano graphics, 1965 to now</i> (no date) <i>¡Printing the Revolution!: The Rise and Impact of Chicano Graphics, 1965 to Now | Amon Carter Museum of American Art</i>. Available at: <a href="https://www.cartermuseum.org/exhibitions/printing-revolution-rise-and-impact-chicano-graphics-1965-now">https://www.cartermuseum.org/exhibitions/printing-revolution-rise-and-impact-chicano-graphics-1965-now</a> (Accessed: November 27, 2022).</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 5 Oct 2023 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Esther Velasco, Mandy Horton, Spencer Gee)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/yolanda-margarita-lopez-8ZSLKa6f</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>During the 1960s, the Chicano Movement or "El Movimiento" gave way for Chicano artists, designers, and printmakers to emerge. The Chicano Movement united Chicanos, Americans of Mexican heritage who chose that label, in a new shared identity to fight for social and political empowerment. One of the creatives that made their mark in support of this movement was Yolanda Margarita López, a feminist painter, printmaker, educator, and film producer. She was best known for her works focusing on the experiences of Mexican-American and Chicana women, often challenging the harmful ethnic stereotypes associated with them. López is most known for the Guadalupe series, where she reimagines Our Lady of Guadalupe in the image of the everyday Chicana woman. López was essential to the case of Los Siete de La Raza, or The Seven of the Hispanic Community. In this case, seven Latino youths were falsely accused of killing police officer Joseph Brodnick in San Francisco on May 1st, 1969. The political art and design work she produced in support of the seven falsely accused helped rally the San Francisco community together in support and led to the acquitting of the seven youths. López, through her activism, challenged stereotypes of Chicana women and advocated for the Latino community as well as other marginalized communities over the course of her creative career.  </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1942 – Born on November 1 in San Diego, CA<br />1968 – Third World Liberation Strikes<br />1969 – Los Siete de La Raza<br />1971 – Enrolled at San Diego State University<br />1975 – Graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in painting and drawing<br />1977 – <i>¿A Donde Vas, Chicana?</i><br />1978 – Start of Guadalupe Series<br />1979 – University of California, San Diego, receiving a Master of Fine Arts<br />2021 – Yolanda dies of complications from Liver Cancer </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Daly, C.-S. (2021) <i>Yolanda López, artist who painted the iconic Virgen de Guadalupe series, dies at 79</i>, <i>Mission Local</i>. Available at: <a href="https://missionlocal.org/2021/09/yolanda-lopez-artist-who-painted-the-iconic-virgen-de-guadalupe-series-dies-at-79/">https://missionlocal.org/2021/09/yolanda-lopez-artist-who-painted-the-iconic-virgen-de-guadalupe-series-dies-at-79/</a> (Accessed: November 27, 2022). </p><p>Davalos, K.M. (2008) <i>Yolanda M. López</i>. Los Angeles, CA: UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center Press. </p><p>Duke Human Rights Center at the Franklin Humanities Institute (no date) <i>Chavez, the UFW and the "wetback" problem</i>, <i>News RSS</i>. Available at: <a href="https://humanrights.fhi.duke.edu/chavez-ufw-and-wetback-problem/">https://humanrights.fhi.duke.edu/chavez-ufw-and-wetback-problem/</a> (Accessed: November 27, 2022). </p><p><i>Genial generating engagement and new initiatives for ... - exploratorium</i> (no date). Available at: <a href="https://www.exploratorium.edu/sites/default/files/Genial%5C_2017%5C_Terms%5C_of%5C_Usage.pdf">https://www.exploratorium.edu/sites/default/files/Genial\_2017\_Terms\_of\_Usage.pdf</a> (Accessed: November 28, 2022). </p><p>Seth Combs Oct. 10, 2021 5:15 A.M.P.T.F.T.S.more sharing optionsS.C.extra sharing options F.T.L.I.E.C.L.U.R.L.C.P. (2021) <i>The art and activism of Yolanda López</i>, <i>Tribune</i>. Available at: <a href="https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/entertainment/story/2021-10-10/the-art-and-activism-of-yolanda-lopez">https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/entertainment/story/2021-10-10/the-art-and-activism-of-yolanda-lopez</a> (Accessed: November 27, 2022). </p><p><i>¡Printing the revolution!: The rise and impact of Chicano graphics, 1965 to now</i> (no date) <i>¡Printing the Revolution!: The Rise and Impact of Chicano Graphics, 1965 to Now | Amon Carter Museum of American Art</i>. Available at: <a href="https://www.cartermuseum.org/exhibitions/printing-revolution-rise-and-impact-chicano-graphics-1965-now">https://www.cartermuseum.org/exhibitions/printing-revolution-rise-and-impact-chicano-graphics-1965-now</a> (Accessed: November 27, 2022).</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="21240661" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/56ed4b57-f225-41dd-a48e-3a840b70ae49/audio/6531731c-cf1d-4dff-b832-01ede7067d16/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Yolanda Margarita López</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Esther Velasco, Mandy Horton, Spencer Gee</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/7edf1282-3595-42eb-a0c1-960343fdb7db/3000x3000/shin-incomplet-podcast-revised3.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:22:06</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode examines the life and design career of Yolanda Margarita López.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode examines the life and design career of Yolanda Margarita López.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, printmaker, chicano movement, political art, graphic design, el movimiento, yolanda margarita lópez</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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      <guid isPermaLink="false">7cd95232-3d3c-402d-aac4-b2e8c027f22a</guid>
      <title>Black Film Posters</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>There is a rich history of Black films and filmmaking in the United States that stems from the history of segregation, which created a need for separate films for separate audiences. Since mainstream Hollywood ignored Black audiences, Black filmmakers took the lead in making all Black or “colored” cast films for their audiences. These films have become known as race films. The goal was to shoot films for and about Black folks that were positive and uplifting, to counteract the stereotyped portrayals of mainstream movies. The era of race films dates from roughly 1912-1950 when following World War II movie theaters began to desegregate, Black culture began to be subsumed by white culture, and Black music, dancing, and other performances began to be seen as profitable by Hollywood studios.  Much like mainstream white movies, Black films were advertised and marketed to Black audiences through film posters. In many cases where the original films were not well preserved, all that remains as evidence of these films are posters.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1912-1950 – Race films were made by Black filmmakers and producers with “All colored cast”<br />1915 – Deeply racist film, <i>The Birth of a Nation</i> is screened, protests of which leads to the formation of the NAACP<br />1919 – <i>The Homesteader,</i> first film written by Black Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux<br />1923  – The Bull-dogger is filmed in Oklahoma by the Norman Manufacturing Company staring Black rodeo performer Bill Pickett<br />1943 – Some of the first mainstream Hollywood films for Black audiences include <i>Stormy Weather</i> and <i>Cabin in the Sky</i><br />1948 – <i>The Betrayal,</i> last film written by Black Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux<br />1953 – Movie theaters desegregated, resulting from a U.S. Supreme court ruling to desegregate restaurants, though many southern states would hold out for at least another decade. <br />1971 – <i>Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song</i>, the first Blaxploitation film premieres, written and directed by Black filmmaker Melvin Van Peebles<br />1984 – Art Sims designs film poster for Steven Speilberg’s <i>The Color Purple</i><br />1992 – John Duke Kisch published a book on his collection of Black film posters called <i>A Separate Cinema</i><br />1995 – Art Sims designs controversial film poster for Spike Lee’s <i>Clockers</i><br />1995 – Edward Mapp donates a substantial collection of Black film posters to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences collection in the Margaret Herrick Library<br />2000 – Art Sims designs a controversial film poster for Spike Lee’s <i>Bamboozled</i>, depicting racist stereotypes, which audiences pushed back on, until they realized that designer and filmmaker were Black and the stereotypes were intentionally satirical.<br />2000-2011  – The Mapp Collection, donated to Indiana University by Dr. Edward Mapp of New York City, consists of two series: Film Publicity, 1930-2002 and Films, 1934-2004.<br />2005 –  Portions of Mapp's collection of Black-cast film posters toured the country with the Smithsonian’s Traveling Exhibition Service as <i>Close Up in Black: African American Film Posters</i>.<br />2020 – John Kisch’s Collection was purchased by The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Art Sims visionary designer of spike lee's movie posters gets NY honor at the AIGA national design center May 19th. (2010, May 17). <i>PR Newswire</i> <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/wire-feeds/art-sims-visionary-designer-spike-lees-movie/docview/288129084/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/wire-feeds/art-sims-visionary-designer-spike-lees-movie/docview/288129084/se-2</a></p><p>Caro, M. (1995, Sep 13). `CLOCKERS' AD CAMPAIGN GETTING A NEW LOOK: [NORTH SPORTS FINAL, CN EDITION]. <i>Chicago Tribune</i> (Pre-1997 Fulltext) Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/clockers-ad-campaign-getting-new-look/docview/283992830/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/clockers-ad-campaign-getting-new-look/docview/283992830/se-2</a></p><p>Collins, S. (1996, Feb 08). Leaving a paper trail; african americans spent many years at the periphery of hollywood in films with all-black casts. some posters the academy recently acquired are the only surviving chronicle of much of this history.: [home edition]. <i>Los Angeles Times</i> (Pre-1997 Fulltext) Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/leaving-paper-trail-african-americans-spent-many/docview/293272302/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/leaving-paper-trail-african-americans-spent-many/docview/293272302/se-2</a></p><p>Cripps, M. T. &. (2022, October 19). <i>Close-Up in Black: African-American Films Posters from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences</i> (Apparent First Edition). Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.</p><p><i>Edward Mapp Collection, 1937-2011 - Archives online at Indiana University.</i> (n.d.). <a href="https://archives.iu.edu/catalog/VAC1069">https://archives.iu.edu/catalog/VAC1069</a></p><p>Kisch, J., Nourmand, T., Lee, S., Gates, H. L., & Doggett, P. (2014, September 18). <i>Separate Cinema: The First 100 Years of Black Poster Art</i> (First Edition). Reel Art Press.</p><p>Laski, B. (1995, September 18). U switches ‘Clockers’ art after ‘Anatomy’ lesson. <i>Variety</i>. <a href="https://variety.com/1995/scene/markets-festivals/u-switches-clockers-art-after-anatomy-lesson-99130142/">https://variety.com/1995/scene/markets-festivals/u-switches-clockers-art-after-anatomy-lesson-99130142/</a></p><p>McCluskey, A. T. (2003). Director’s Notes: Imaging Blackness, 1915-2002: Exhibit Documents Black Hollywood through Film Posters. <i>Black Camera</i>, 18(2), 1–2. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/27761620">http://www.jstor.org/stable/27761620</a></p><p>Machemer, T. (2020, January 16). George Lucas' New Museum Acquires Major Archive of African American Film History. <i>Smithsonian Magazine</i>. <a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/george-lucas-museum-acquires-huge-archive-african-american-cinema-180973999/">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/george-lucas-museum-acquires-huge-archive-african-american-cinema-180973999/</a></p><p>Mapp, E., & McCluskey, A. T. (2003). An Interview with Dr. Edward Mapp: A Passion for Collecting Black Film. Black Camera, 18(2), 1–10. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/27761621">http://www.jstor.org/stable/27761621</a></p><p>Martin, M.. (2018). GALLERY: Poster Art as Cultural Labor in the Cinematic Archive of Claire Denis. <i>Black Camera</i>, <i>10</i>(1), 144–155. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2979/blackcamera.10.1.08">https://doi.org/10.2979/blackcamera.10.1.08</a></p><p>Octane, & Octane. (2021). Celebrating America’s Pioneer Black Graphic Designers: Art Sims (1954 – Present) | Octane Design Studios. <i>Octane Design Studios | #MoreThanGraphics</i>. <a href="https://lexoctane.com/?p=15067">https://lexoctane.com/?p=15067</a></p><p>Pearce-Doughlin, S., Goldsmith, A., & Hamilton, D. (2013). Colorism. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of race and racism</i> (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/colorism/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/colorism/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>PrintMag. (2013, December 11). Spike Lee’s Other Poster Design Bamboozle: Saul Bass. PRINT Magazine. <a href="https://www.printmag.com/graphic-design/spike-lee-s-other-poster-design-bamboozle-saul-bass/">https://www.printmag.com/graphic-design/spike-lee-s-other-poster-design-bamboozle-saul-bass/</a></p><p>Reid, M. A. (2005, March 17). <i>Black Lenses, Black Voices: African American Film Now</i> (Genre and Beyond: A Film Studies Series) (Edition Unstated). Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.</p><p>Richburg, C. (2016, March 27). Art Sims Talks Creating Iconic ‘New Jack City’ Movie Poster, Film’s 25th Anniversary. <i>EURweb</i>. <a href="https://eurweb.com/2016/03/27/art-sims-talks-creating-new-jack-city-movie-poster/">https://eurweb.com/2016/03/27/art-sims-talks-creating-new-jack-city-movie-poster/</a></p><p>Schaefer, S. (1995, September 8). Poster Imposter. <i>EW.com</i>. <a href="https://ew.com/article/1995/09/08/poster-imposter/">https://ew.com/article/1995/09/08/poster-imposter/</a></p><p>Shivers, K. (2000, Mar 22). Sims shows how a picture is worth a box office hit. <i>Los Angeles Sentinel</i>. Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/sims-shows-how-picture-is-worth-box-office-hit/docview/369327904/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/sims-shows-how-picture-is-worth-box-office-hit/docview/369327904/se-2</a></p><p>Smith, I. H. (2018, October 3). <i>Selling the Movie: The Art of the Film Poster</i>. University of Texas Press.</p><p>Stevens, I_._ (2020, June 3) <i>I turn my back on you: black movie poster art | The pictures | Sight & Sound</i>. British Film Institute. <a href="https://www2.bfi.org.uk/explore-film-tv/sight-sound-magazine/sight-sound-articles/features/pictures/i-turn-my-back-you-black">https://www2.bfi.org.uk/explore-film-tv/sight-sound-magazine/sight-sound-articles/features/pictures/i-turn-my-back-you-black</a></p><p>Type Directors Club. (2020, December 2).<i> Kelly Walters - Ain’t dat a shame</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8sLYAFnCdE">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8sLYAFnCdE</a></p><p>Web Editor. (2022, February 2). <i>The Activists who Desegregated Arlington’s Movie Theaters</i>. <a href="https://library.arlingtonva.us/2022/02/02/the-activists-who-desegregated-arlingtons-movie-theaters/#:~:text=Finally%2C%20in%201953%2C%20a%20U.S.,to%20local%20theaters%20as%20well">https://library.arlingtonva.us/2022/02/02/the-activists-who-desegregated-arlingtons-movie-theaters/#:~:text=Finally%2C%20in%201953%2C%20a%20U.S.,to%20local%20theaters%20as%20well</a>.</p><p>Wilson, M., & Benson, O. (2014). Colorism. In S. Thompson (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of diversity and social justice</i>. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/rowmandasj/colorism/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/rowmandasj/colorism/0?institutionId=1845</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 28 Sep 2023 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Dean Kelly, Kolby Streller, Taylor Hill, Mandy Horton, Spencer Gee)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/black-film-posters-0L1BeReh</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There is a rich history of Black films and filmmaking in the United States that stems from the history of segregation, which created a need for separate films for separate audiences. Since mainstream Hollywood ignored Black audiences, Black filmmakers took the lead in making all Black or “colored” cast films for their audiences. These films have become known as race films. The goal was to shoot films for and about Black folks that were positive and uplifting, to counteract the stereotyped portrayals of mainstream movies. The era of race films dates from roughly 1912-1950 when following World War II movie theaters began to desegregate, Black culture began to be subsumed by white culture, and Black music, dancing, and other performances began to be seen as profitable by Hollywood studios.  Much like mainstream white movies, Black films were advertised and marketed to Black audiences through film posters. In many cases where the original films were not well preserved, all that remains as evidence of these films are posters.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1912-1950 – Race films were made by Black filmmakers and producers with “All colored cast”<br />1915 – Deeply racist film, <i>The Birth of a Nation</i> is screened, protests of which leads to the formation of the NAACP<br />1919 – <i>The Homesteader,</i> first film written by Black Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux<br />1923  – The Bull-dogger is filmed in Oklahoma by the Norman Manufacturing Company staring Black rodeo performer Bill Pickett<br />1943 – Some of the first mainstream Hollywood films for Black audiences include <i>Stormy Weather</i> and <i>Cabin in the Sky</i><br />1948 – <i>The Betrayal,</i> last film written by Black Filmmaker Oscar Micheaux<br />1953 – Movie theaters desegregated, resulting from a U.S. Supreme court ruling to desegregate restaurants, though many southern states would hold out for at least another decade. <br />1971 – <i>Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song</i>, the first Blaxploitation film premieres, written and directed by Black filmmaker Melvin Van Peebles<br />1984 – Art Sims designs film poster for Steven Speilberg’s <i>The Color Purple</i><br />1992 – John Duke Kisch published a book on his collection of Black film posters called <i>A Separate Cinema</i><br />1995 – Art Sims designs controversial film poster for Spike Lee’s <i>Clockers</i><br />1995 – Edward Mapp donates a substantial collection of Black film posters to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences collection in the Margaret Herrick Library<br />2000 – Art Sims designs a controversial film poster for Spike Lee’s <i>Bamboozled</i>, depicting racist stereotypes, which audiences pushed back on, until they realized that designer and filmmaker were Black and the stereotypes were intentionally satirical.<br />2000-2011  – The Mapp Collection, donated to Indiana University by Dr. Edward Mapp of New York City, consists of two series: Film Publicity, 1930-2002 and Films, 1934-2004.<br />2005 –  Portions of Mapp's collection of Black-cast film posters toured the country with the Smithsonian’s Traveling Exhibition Service as <i>Close Up in Black: African American Film Posters</i>.<br />2020 – John Kisch’s Collection was purchased by The Lucas Museum of Narrative Art </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Art Sims visionary designer of spike lee's movie posters gets NY honor at the AIGA national design center May 19th. (2010, May 17). <i>PR Newswire</i> <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/wire-feeds/art-sims-visionary-designer-spike-lees-movie/docview/288129084/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/wire-feeds/art-sims-visionary-designer-spike-lees-movie/docview/288129084/se-2</a></p><p>Caro, M. (1995, Sep 13). `CLOCKERS' AD CAMPAIGN GETTING A NEW LOOK: [NORTH SPORTS FINAL, CN EDITION]. <i>Chicago Tribune</i> (Pre-1997 Fulltext) Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/clockers-ad-campaign-getting-new-look/docview/283992830/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/clockers-ad-campaign-getting-new-look/docview/283992830/se-2</a></p><p>Collins, S. (1996, Feb 08). Leaving a paper trail; african americans spent many years at the periphery of hollywood in films with all-black casts. some posters the academy recently acquired are the only surviving chronicle of much of this history.: [home edition]. <i>Los Angeles Times</i> (Pre-1997 Fulltext) Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/leaving-paper-trail-african-americans-spent-many/docview/293272302/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/leaving-paper-trail-african-americans-spent-many/docview/293272302/se-2</a></p><p>Cripps, M. T. &. (2022, October 19). <i>Close-Up in Black: African-American Films Posters from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences</i> (Apparent First Edition). Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.</p><p><i>Edward Mapp Collection, 1937-2011 - Archives online at Indiana University.</i> (n.d.). <a href="https://archives.iu.edu/catalog/VAC1069">https://archives.iu.edu/catalog/VAC1069</a></p><p>Kisch, J., Nourmand, T., Lee, S., Gates, H. L., & Doggett, P. (2014, September 18). <i>Separate Cinema: The First 100 Years of Black Poster Art</i> (First Edition). Reel Art Press.</p><p>Laski, B. (1995, September 18). U switches ‘Clockers’ art after ‘Anatomy’ lesson. <i>Variety</i>. <a href="https://variety.com/1995/scene/markets-festivals/u-switches-clockers-art-after-anatomy-lesson-99130142/">https://variety.com/1995/scene/markets-festivals/u-switches-clockers-art-after-anatomy-lesson-99130142/</a></p><p>McCluskey, A. T. (2003). Director’s Notes: Imaging Blackness, 1915-2002: Exhibit Documents Black Hollywood through Film Posters. <i>Black Camera</i>, 18(2), 1–2. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/27761620">http://www.jstor.org/stable/27761620</a></p><p>Machemer, T. (2020, January 16). George Lucas' New Museum Acquires Major Archive of African American Film History. <i>Smithsonian Magazine</i>. <a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/george-lucas-museum-acquires-huge-archive-african-american-cinema-180973999/">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/george-lucas-museum-acquires-huge-archive-african-american-cinema-180973999/</a></p><p>Mapp, E., & McCluskey, A. T. (2003). An Interview with Dr. Edward Mapp: A Passion for Collecting Black Film. Black Camera, 18(2), 1–10. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/27761621">http://www.jstor.org/stable/27761621</a></p><p>Martin, M.. (2018). GALLERY: Poster Art as Cultural Labor in the Cinematic Archive of Claire Denis. <i>Black Camera</i>, <i>10</i>(1), 144–155. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2979/blackcamera.10.1.08">https://doi.org/10.2979/blackcamera.10.1.08</a></p><p>Octane, & Octane. (2021). Celebrating America’s Pioneer Black Graphic Designers: Art Sims (1954 – Present) | Octane Design Studios. <i>Octane Design Studios | #MoreThanGraphics</i>. <a href="https://lexoctane.com/?p=15067">https://lexoctane.com/?p=15067</a></p><p>Pearce-Doughlin, S., Goldsmith, A., & Hamilton, D. (2013). Colorism. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of race and racism</i> (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/colorism/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/colorism/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>PrintMag. (2013, December 11). Spike Lee’s Other Poster Design Bamboozle: Saul Bass. PRINT Magazine. <a href="https://www.printmag.com/graphic-design/spike-lee-s-other-poster-design-bamboozle-saul-bass/">https://www.printmag.com/graphic-design/spike-lee-s-other-poster-design-bamboozle-saul-bass/</a></p><p>Reid, M. A. (2005, March 17). <i>Black Lenses, Black Voices: African American Film Now</i> (Genre and Beyond: A Film Studies Series) (Edition Unstated). Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.</p><p>Richburg, C. (2016, March 27). Art Sims Talks Creating Iconic ‘New Jack City’ Movie Poster, Film’s 25th Anniversary. <i>EURweb</i>. <a href="https://eurweb.com/2016/03/27/art-sims-talks-creating-new-jack-city-movie-poster/">https://eurweb.com/2016/03/27/art-sims-talks-creating-new-jack-city-movie-poster/</a></p><p>Schaefer, S. (1995, September 8). Poster Imposter. <i>EW.com</i>. <a href="https://ew.com/article/1995/09/08/poster-imposter/">https://ew.com/article/1995/09/08/poster-imposter/</a></p><p>Shivers, K. (2000, Mar 22). Sims shows how a picture is worth a box office hit. <i>Los Angeles Sentinel</i>. Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/sims-shows-how-picture-is-worth-box-office-hit/docview/369327904/se-2">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/sims-shows-how-picture-is-worth-box-office-hit/docview/369327904/se-2</a></p><p>Smith, I. H. (2018, October 3). <i>Selling the Movie: The Art of the Film Poster</i>. University of Texas Press.</p><p>Stevens, I_._ (2020, June 3) <i>I turn my back on you: black movie poster art | The pictures | Sight & Sound</i>. British Film Institute. <a href="https://www2.bfi.org.uk/explore-film-tv/sight-sound-magazine/sight-sound-articles/features/pictures/i-turn-my-back-you-black">https://www2.bfi.org.uk/explore-film-tv/sight-sound-magazine/sight-sound-articles/features/pictures/i-turn-my-back-you-black</a></p><p>Type Directors Club. (2020, December 2).<i> Kelly Walters - Ain’t dat a shame</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8sLYAFnCdE">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q8sLYAFnCdE</a></p><p>Web Editor. (2022, February 2). <i>The Activists who Desegregated Arlington’s Movie Theaters</i>. <a href="https://library.arlingtonva.us/2022/02/02/the-activists-who-desegregated-arlingtons-movie-theaters/#:~:text=Finally%2C%20in%201953%2C%20a%20U.S.,to%20local%20theaters%20as%20well">https://library.arlingtonva.us/2022/02/02/the-activists-who-desegregated-arlingtons-movie-theaters/#:~:text=Finally%2C%20in%201953%2C%20a%20U.S.,to%20local%20theaters%20as%20well</a>.</p><p>Wilson, M., & Benson, O. (2014). Colorism. In S. Thompson (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of diversity and social justice</i>. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/rowmandasj/colorism/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/rowmandasj/colorism/0?institutionId=1845</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="26194486" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/8b745b98-e82d-4313-a388-b592553755e2/audio/e7cc08ee-a19a-4ed3-b885-886d2f6ad181/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Black Film Posters</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Dean Kelly, Kolby Streller, Taylor Hill, Mandy Horton, Spencer Gee</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/38bb3e6f-34f8-44d9-b3fd-d537d394d96d/3000x3000/shin-incomplet-podcast-revised2.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:27:16</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode explores the history of Black film posters.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode explores the history of Black film posters.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, black film posters, graphic design, poster history, film poster history, black film, art sims</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">d3106116-d1ae-43cc-a258-4297cedb3a4c</guid>
      <title>Edward Gorey</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Edward Gorey was probably best known as an author and illustrator of more than 100 books in his lifetime. Collector's items today, his books have become icons in and of themselves, darkly humorous and humorously dark. The books defied genres and publishers sometimes had a hard time determining how to market them. They were illustrated yes, but the dark and sometimes gruesome tales certainly weren’t children's books. This contribution was undoubtedly significant, but this was not the limit of his career, which included designing book covers, sets, and costumes for theater and ballet (including the Tony award-winning designs for Dracula in 1977), and the illustrations for animations for the PBS <i>Mystery! </i>series, a shortened version of which can still be seen today. Gorey’s book cover designs are often identifiable by his hand-lettered titles, which he claims he did because he didn’t know much about type. Additionally, Gorey was an icon of fashion in the New York scene, he and his extensive collection of fur coats were the subjects of multiple articles on the New York Fashion scene. Yet despite his numerous contributions, he is not mentioned in design or illustration history books, is his absence from the design history canon a result of gatekeeping? Was it because he mostly designed book covers for inexpensive paperback books rather than glamorous hardcovers? Or Possibly because his own work was described by critics as “macabre”, “gothic”, or even “campy”. Or was it because of his association with the LGBT community? Many have speculated about his sexual orientation, even though Gorey was not “out” and he preferred ambiguity only going so far as to admit to an interviewer that he supposed he was gay, but didn’t “identify with it much”.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1925 – <i>b</i> Chicago, Illinois, as Edward St. John Gorey<br />1942 – was accepted to Harvard<br />1942 – Drafted into the Army, served stateside during WWII at the Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah, deferred college entrance<br />1946 – Begins at Harvard, education is paid for by the G.I. Bill, majoring in French Literature<br />1953– Hired at Anchor /Doubleday as a book cover designer, moves to NYC<br />1953 – Publishes first book of his own, <i>The Unstrung Harp</i><br />1962 – Founds the Fantod Press to publish his own books<br />1962-63 – Hired as an art director at Bobbs-Merrill, publisher<br />1963 – Begins working as a Freelance book designer and illustrator, begins living part-time at the cape<br />1963 – Publishes abecedary, <i>The Gashlycrumb Tinies</i>, along with <i>The Insect God</i> and <i>The West Wing</i><br />1977 – Designs sets and costumes for Broadway revival of Dracula, wins a Tony award for both<br />1980 – Creates illustrations for animated introduction to PBS <i>Mystery!</i><br />1983 – Resolves to leave the city (NYC), moves permanently and full-time to the Cape<br />2000 – <i>d</i> Gorey dies at age 75<br />2002 – Edward Gorey’s home at the cape becomes a museum, <i>The Edward Gorey House</i></p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Borrelli-Persson, L. (2021, October 30). <i>Celebrating Edward Gorey, Style Icon</i>. Vogue. <a href="https://www.vogue.com/article/celebrating-edward-gorey-style-icon">https://www.vogue.com/article/celebrating-edward-gorey-style-icon</a></p><p>Brottman, M. (2005) <i>High theory/low culture</i>. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.</p><p>Curwen, T. (2004, Jul 18). ART; light from a dark star; before the current rise of graphic novels, there was Edward Gorey, whose tales and drawings still baffle -- and attract -- new fans.: [HOME EDITION]. <i>Los Angeles Times</i> Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/art-light-dark-star-before-current-rise-graphic/docview/422042911/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/art-light-dark-star-before-current-rise-graphic/docview/422042911/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Dery, M. (2018). <i>Born to Be Posthumous: The Eccentric Life and Mysterious Genius of Edward Gorey</i> (Illustrated ed.). Little, Brown and Company.</p><p>Dery, M. (2020, January-February). Edward Gorey's Gothic Nonsense. <i>The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide</i>, 27(1), 18+. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A616752005/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=f73cab8e">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A616752005/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=f73cab8e</a></p><p>Devers, A. N. (2011, January 5). The Coats of Edward Gorey. <i>The Paris Review</i>. <a href="https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2011/01/04/the-coats-of-edward-gorey/">https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2011/01/04/the-coats-of-edward-gorey/</a></p><p>Dubner, S. (2022, May 20). The University of Impossible-to-Get-Into. <i>Freakonomics</i>. <a href="https://freakonomics.com/podcast/the-university-of-impossible-to-get-into/">https://freakonomics.com/podcast/the-university-of-impossible-to-get-into/</a></p><p>Gottlieb, R. (2018, December 31). Superb Oddities: Robert Gottlieb Reviews a Biography of Edward Gorey. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/31/books/review/edward-gorey-mark-dery-born-to-be-posthumous.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/31/books/review/edward-gorey-mark-dery-born-to-be-posthumous.html</a></p><p>Green, J. (2020, April 1). The Gay History of America’s Classic Children’s Books. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/07/t-magazine/gay-children-book-authors.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/07/t-magazine/gay-children-book-authors.html</a></p><p>Gussow, M. (2000, April 17). Edward Gorey, Artist and Author Who Turned the Macabre Into a Career, Dies at 75. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2000/04/17/arts/edward-gorey-artist-and-author-who-turned-the-macabre-into-a-career-dies-at-75.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2000/04/17/arts/edward-gorey-artist-and-author-who-turned-the-macabre-into-a-career-dies-at-75.html</a></p><p>Heller. (1999). “Book Covers, Edward Gorey”. <i>Design Literacy (continued) : understanding graphic design</i>.</p><p>Heller, S. (1999, Jan 06). Edward Gorey's cover story: [toronto edition]. <i>National Post</i> Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/edward-goreys-cover-story/docview/329355783/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/edward-goreys-cover-story/docview/329355783/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Kurutz, S. (2018, November 1). The Granddaddy of Goth. New York Times, D1(L). <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A560663228/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=4e2ba0c0">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A560663228/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=4e2ba0c0</a></p><p>Myers, Q. (2020, March 30). <i>Why Did We Grow Up Thinking a Piercing in the Right Ear Was Gay?</i> MEL Magazine. <a href="https://melmagazine.com/en-us/story/gay-piercing-right-ear-left-ear-history">https://melmagazine.com/en-us/story/gay-piercing-right-ear-left-ear-history</a></p><p>Nadel, A. (2019). The Lavender Scare. <i>The Journal of American History</i> (Bloomington, Ind.), 106(3), 845–847. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1093/jahist/jaz663">https://doi.org/10.1093/jahist/jaz663</a></p><p>Petermann, E. (2018). The child's death as punishment or nonsense? Edward Gorey's "The Gashlycrumb Tinies" (1963) and the cautionary verse tradition. <i>Bookbird, 56</i>(4), 22. doi:<a href="https://doi.org/10.1353/bkb.2018.0062">https://doi.org/10.1353/bkb.2018.0062</a></p><p>Schneider, R. (2020). Start of a Decade: "Camp Leaders" <i>The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide</i>, <i>27</i>(1), 4–4.</p><p>Seufert, C. [Christopher Seufert]. (2020, May 8). <i>Dick Cavett Interviews Edward Gorey, Nov. 30, 1977</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cng3K8FGj28">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cng3K8FGj28</a></p><p>Sontag, S. (2018). <i>Notes on Camp</i>. Penguin Classics.</p><p>Sontag, S. (2018). One Culture and The New Sensibility. In <i>Notes On Camp</i> (pp. 34–55). Penguin Classics.</p><p>Spark Admissions. (2021, June 8). <i>Exploring Ivy League Acceptance Rates</i>. <a href="https://www.sparkadmissions.com/blog/ivy-league-acceptance-rates-just-how-hard-is-it-to-get-in/">https://www.sparkadmissions.com/blog/ivy-league-acceptance-rates-just-how-hard-is-it-to-get-in/</a></p><p>Stonewall UK. (2022, July 19). <i>Convictions and cautions for gross indecency</i>. Stonewall. </p><p><a href="https://www.stonewall.org.uk/help-advice/information-and-resources/criminal-law/convictions-and-cautions-gross-indecency#:%7E:text=The%20Criminal%20Justice%20and%20Public,were%20deleted%20from%20the%20statutes">https://www.stonewall.org.uk/help-advice/information-and-resources/criminal-law/convictions-and-cautions-gross-indecency#:%7E:text=The%20Criminal%20Justice%20and%20Public,were%20deleted%20from%20the%20statutes</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 21 Sep 2023 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Kolby Streller, Taylor Hill, Spencer Gee, Dean Kelly, Mandy Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/edward-gorey-rvP8SJGF</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Edward Gorey was probably best known as an author and illustrator of more than 100 books in his lifetime. Collector's items today, his books have become icons in and of themselves, darkly humorous and humorously dark. The books defied genres and publishers sometimes had a hard time determining how to market them. They were illustrated yes, but the dark and sometimes gruesome tales certainly weren’t children's books. This contribution was undoubtedly significant, but this was not the limit of his career, which included designing book covers, sets, and costumes for theater and ballet (including the Tony award-winning designs for Dracula in 1977), and the illustrations for animations for the PBS <i>Mystery! </i>series, a shortened version of which can still be seen today. Gorey’s book cover designs are often identifiable by his hand-lettered titles, which he claims he did because he didn’t know much about type. Additionally, Gorey was an icon of fashion in the New York scene, he and his extensive collection of fur coats were the subjects of multiple articles on the New York Fashion scene. Yet despite his numerous contributions, he is not mentioned in design or illustration history books, is his absence from the design history canon a result of gatekeeping? Was it because he mostly designed book covers for inexpensive paperback books rather than glamorous hardcovers? Or Possibly because his own work was described by critics as “macabre”, “gothic”, or even “campy”. Or was it because of his association with the LGBT community? Many have speculated about his sexual orientation, even though Gorey was not “out” and he preferred ambiguity only going so far as to admit to an interviewer that he supposed he was gay, but didn’t “identify with it much”.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1925 – <i>b</i> Chicago, Illinois, as Edward St. John Gorey<br />1942 – was accepted to Harvard<br />1942 – Drafted into the Army, served stateside during WWII at the Dugway Proving Grounds in Utah, deferred college entrance<br />1946 – Begins at Harvard, education is paid for by the G.I. Bill, majoring in French Literature<br />1953– Hired at Anchor /Doubleday as a book cover designer, moves to NYC<br />1953 – Publishes first book of his own, <i>The Unstrung Harp</i><br />1962 – Founds the Fantod Press to publish his own books<br />1962-63 – Hired as an art director at Bobbs-Merrill, publisher<br />1963 – Begins working as a Freelance book designer and illustrator, begins living part-time at the cape<br />1963 – Publishes abecedary, <i>The Gashlycrumb Tinies</i>, along with <i>The Insect God</i> and <i>The West Wing</i><br />1977 – Designs sets and costumes for Broadway revival of Dracula, wins a Tony award for both<br />1980 – Creates illustrations for animated introduction to PBS <i>Mystery!</i><br />1983 – Resolves to leave the city (NYC), moves permanently and full-time to the Cape<br />2000 – <i>d</i> Gorey dies at age 75<br />2002 – Edward Gorey’s home at the cape becomes a museum, <i>The Edward Gorey House</i></p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Borrelli-Persson, L. (2021, October 30). <i>Celebrating Edward Gorey, Style Icon</i>. Vogue. <a href="https://www.vogue.com/article/celebrating-edward-gorey-style-icon">https://www.vogue.com/article/celebrating-edward-gorey-style-icon</a></p><p>Brottman, M. (2005) <i>High theory/low culture</i>. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.</p><p>Curwen, T. (2004, Jul 18). ART; light from a dark star; before the current rise of graphic novels, there was Edward Gorey, whose tales and drawings still baffle -- and attract -- new fans.: [HOME EDITION]. <i>Los Angeles Times</i> Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/art-light-dark-star-before-current-rise-graphic/docview/422042911/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/newspapers/art-light-dark-star-before-current-rise-graphic/docview/422042911/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Dery, M. (2018). <i>Born to Be Posthumous: The Eccentric Life and Mysterious Genius of Edward Gorey</i> (Illustrated ed.). Little, Brown and Company.</p><p>Dery, M. (2020, January-February). Edward Gorey's Gothic Nonsense. <i>The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide</i>, 27(1), 18+. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A616752005/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=f73cab8e">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A616752005/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=f73cab8e</a></p><p>Devers, A. N. (2011, January 5). The Coats of Edward Gorey. <i>The Paris Review</i>. <a href="https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2011/01/04/the-coats-of-edward-gorey/">https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2011/01/04/the-coats-of-edward-gorey/</a></p><p>Dubner, S. (2022, May 20). The University of Impossible-to-Get-Into. <i>Freakonomics</i>. <a href="https://freakonomics.com/podcast/the-university-of-impossible-to-get-into/">https://freakonomics.com/podcast/the-university-of-impossible-to-get-into/</a></p><p>Gottlieb, R. (2018, December 31). Superb Oddities: Robert Gottlieb Reviews a Biography of Edward Gorey. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/31/books/review/edward-gorey-mark-dery-born-to-be-posthumous.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/31/books/review/edward-gorey-mark-dery-born-to-be-posthumous.html</a></p><p>Green, J. (2020, April 1). The Gay History of America’s Classic Children’s Books. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/07/t-magazine/gay-children-book-authors.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/07/t-magazine/gay-children-book-authors.html</a></p><p>Gussow, M. (2000, April 17). Edward Gorey, Artist and Author Who Turned the Macabre Into a Career, Dies at 75. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2000/04/17/arts/edward-gorey-artist-and-author-who-turned-the-macabre-into-a-career-dies-at-75.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2000/04/17/arts/edward-gorey-artist-and-author-who-turned-the-macabre-into-a-career-dies-at-75.html</a></p><p>Heller. (1999). “Book Covers, Edward Gorey”. <i>Design Literacy (continued) : understanding graphic design</i>.</p><p>Heller, S. (1999, Jan 06). Edward Gorey's cover story: [toronto edition]. <i>National Post</i> Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/edward-goreys-cover-story/docview/329355783/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/edward-goreys-cover-story/docview/329355783/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Kurutz, S. (2018, November 1). The Granddaddy of Goth. New York Times, D1(L). <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A560663228/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=4e2ba0c0">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A560663228/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=4e2ba0c0</a></p><p>Myers, Q. (2020, March 30). <i>Why Did We Grow Up Thinking a Piercing in the Right Ear Was Gay?</i> MEL Magazine. <a href="https://melmagazine.com/en-us/story/gay-piercing-right-ear-left-ear-history">https://melmagazine.com/en-us/story/gay-piercing-right-ear-left-ear-history</a></p><p>Nadel, A. (2019). The Lavender Scare. <i>The Journal of American History</i> (Bloomington, Ind.), 106(3), 845–847. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1093/jahist/jaz663">https://doi.org/10.1093/jahist/jaz663</a></p><p>Petermann, E. (2018). The child's death as punishment or nonsense? Edward Gorey's "The Gashlycrumb Tinies" (1963) and the cautionary verse tradition. <i>Bookbird, 56</i>(4), 22. doi:<a href="https://doi.org/10.1353/bkb.2018.0062">https://doi.org/10.1353/bkb.2018.0062</a></p><p>Schneider, R. (2020). Start of a Decade: "Camp Leaders" <i>The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide</i>, <i>27</i>(1), 4–4.</p><p>Seufert, C. [Christopher Seufert]. (2020, May 8). <i>Dick Cavett Interviews Edward Gorey, Nov. 30, 1977</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cng3K8FGj28">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cng3K8FGj28</a></p><p>Sontag, S. (2018). <i>Notes on Camp</i>. Penguin Classics.</p><p>Sontag, S. (2018). One Culture and The New Sensibility. In <i>Notes On Camp</i> (pp. 34–55). Penguin Classics.</p><p>Spark Admissions. (2021, June 8). <i>Exploring Ivy League Acceptance Rates</i>. <a href="https://www.sparkadmissions.com/blog/ivy-league-acceptance-rates-just-how-hard-is-it-to-get-in/">https://www.sparkadmissions.com/blog/ivy-league-acceptance-rates-just-how-hard-is-it-to-get-in/</a></p><p>Stonewall UK. (2022, July 19). <i>Convictions and cautions for gross indecency</i>. Stonewall. </p><p><a href="https://www.stonewall.org.uk/help-advice/information-and-resources/criminal-law/convictions-and-cautions-gross-indecency#:%7E:text=The%20Criminal%20Justice%20and%20Public,were%20deleted%20from%20the%20statutes">https://www.stonewall.org.uk/help-advice/information-and-resources/criminal-law/convictions-and-cautions-gross-indecency#:%7E:text=The%20Criminal%20Justice%20and%20Public,were%20deleted%20from%20the%20statutes</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="30597535" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/b6efb5ed-6d24-418b-9c23-e96ff6fcb527/audio/7e3f7e5e-bc94-4fee-94c9-82ce987970d6/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Edward Gorey</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Kolby Streller, Taylor Hill, Spencer Gee, Dean Kelly, Mandy Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/d5e27730-cb17-4708-b6ee-89838aba38d8/3000x3000/shin-incomplet-podcast-revised.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:31:51</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode explores the enigmatic life and work of designer, illustrator, and author Edward Gorey</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode explores the enigmatic life and work of designer, illustrator, and author Edward Gorey</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>queer history, graphic design history, literature, edward gorey, illustration history, graphic design, illustration, book design</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>3</itunes:season>
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      <title>Black Panther Newsletter</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense was founded in 1966 in Oakland, California by Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale. The Black Panther Party was founded during the turbulent times of the sixties that saw many changes in America. Newton at first led the party with an ideology called their Ten Point Program, and with the idea that arming Black communities was essential for their protection and survival. Through community assistance programs and armed community patrols to prevent police brutality, the Black Panther Party sought to protect and uplift their communities, stepping in where the government had failed them.  In order to promote their party’s ideals, generate revenue, and recruit new members, the Party began publishing the Black Panther newspaper. It grew from 4 pages to 32, adding color and better design under the direction of Emory Douglas who was the Black Panthers’ Minister of Culture and the paper’s editor. Douglas’s skills as a graphic designer and illustrator produced the imagery that would define not only the Black Panther Party but the entire Black Power movement. The success of the paper grew, had distribution across the United States, and later reached other countries as well. Internal strife among leadership and members, as well as extensive government interference, led to the crumbling of the Black Panther Party. With it went their iconic newspaper that for over a decade was a visual record of the Black Panther Party, the Black Power movement, and the struggle for civil rights.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1827 – <i>Freedom’s Journal</i> first published<br />1936 – Robert George Seale was born in Liberty, Texas<br />1942 – Huey Percy Newton is born in Monroe, Louisiana <br />1943 – Emory Douglas was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan<br />1960 – Emory Douglas started studying Graphic Design at City College of San Francisco <br />1963 – Martin Luther King Jr delivers “I Have A Dream” speech<br />1965 – Lowndes County Freedom Organization was founded by Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Alabama<br />1966 – Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale met in Oakland, CA, and founded The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense<br />1966 – BPP developed survival programs <br />1967 – California Governor Ronald Regan signed Mulford Act <br />1967 – Sale and Newton established the BPP first headquarters in Oakland, CA<br />1967 – Black Panther Intercommunal News Service<br />1967 – Newton was shot and jailed after a standoff with a police officer<br />1967 – Emory Douglas met Newton and Seale and joins the BPP<br />1967 – David Hilliard, BPP chief of staff, first arrested for selling the Newspaper<br />1968 – Kerner Commission publishes findings on potential race war; faults white institutions<br />1968 – Martin Luther King Jr assassinated, race riots erupt across USA <br />1968 – Newton was convicted of manslaughter for killing a police officer <br />1970 – FBI memo says circulation for BPP Newspaper was 139,000 a week<br />1970 – Newton was released due to his conviction being overturned on appeal<br />1971 – Newton shifts BPP focus to community programs, leadership is challenged by other part members <br />1971 – Newton expels 21 members, the “panther 21” over rumors of kidnapping and fratricide; also expels Eldridge Cleaver over suspicions of assassination through letters<br />1971 – Cleaver’s followers tied up Sam Napier in NY distribution office for the BPP newspaper and shot him, set fire to office<br />1974 – Netwon fled to Cuba on accusations of murdering a prostitute, Elaine Brown takes over as leader of BPP<br />1974 – End of BPP<br />1977 – Newton returns to California to stand trial for the murder of a prostitute<br />1978 – Jonina Abron takes over as editor of BPP Newspaper <br />1980 – Last year BPP Newspaper is published </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Alkebulan, P. (2012). <i>Survival pending revolution: The history of the Black Panther Party</i>. The University of Alabama Press. </p><p>Berry, A. H., Collie, K., Laker, P. A., Noel, L.-A., Rittner, J., & Walters, K. (2022). <i>The black experience in design: Identity, Expression & Reflection</i>. Allworth Press. </p><p>bperki8. (n.d.). <i>R/communism - A complete archive of the Black Panther Party's newspapers from beginning to end.</i> reddit ; r/communism. Retrieved June 2, 2016, from <a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/communism/comments/4m7axa/a%5C_complete%5C_archive%5C_of%5C_the%5C_black%5C_panther%5C_partys/">https://www.reddit.com/r/communism/comments/4m7axa/a\_complete\_archive\_of\_the\_black\_panther\_partys/</a></p><p>Carroll, F. (2017). <i>Race News: Black journalists and the fight for racial justice in the Twentieth Century</i>. University of Illinois Press. </p><p>Carroll, F. J. (2011). <i>Race News: How black reporters and readers shaped the fight for racial justice, 1877-1978</i> (thesis). Fred Carroll, Ann Arbor, MI. </p><p>Duncan, M. (2016). Emory Douglas and the art of the black panther party. <i>Spectrum: A Journal on Black Men</i>, <i>5</i>(1), 117–135. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2979/spectrum.5.1.06">https://doi.org/10.2979/spectrum.5.1.06</a></p><p>Fagan, B. (2018). <i>The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation</i>. The University of Georgia Press. </p><p>FEARNLEY, A. M. (2018). The Black Panther Party's publishing strategies and the financial underpinnings of activism, 1968–1975. <i>The Historical Journal</i>, <i>62</i>(1), 195–217. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x18000201">https://doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x18000201</a></p><p>Freedom Archives (n.d.). <i>Black Panther Party Community News Service</i>. Freedom Archives Search Engine. Retrieved April 7, 2022, from <a href="https://search.freedomarchives.org/search.php?view%5C_collection=90&page=1">https://search.freedomarchives.org/search.php?view\_collection=90&page=1</a></p><p>G., L. B. H. (1974). <i>Perspectives of the Black Press, 1974</i>. Mercer House Press. </p><p>Harris, J. C. (2000). Revolutionary black nationalism: The Black Panther Party. <i>The Journal of Negro History</i> , <i>85</i>(3), 162–174. </p><p>Hilliard, D. (2008). <i>The Black Panther Party: Service to the people programs</i>. University of New Mexico Press. </p><p>Hilliard, D. (2007). <i>The black panther: Intercommunal News Service</i>. Atria Books. </p><p>Hilliard, D. (2002). <i>This side of glory: The autobiography of David Hilliard and the story of the Black Panther Party</i>. Chicago Review Press. </p><p>Jackson, T. (2016). <i>Pioneering cartoonists of color</i>. University Press of Mississippi. </p><p>Jeffries, J. L. (2011). <i>On the ground</i>. Univ. Press of Mississippi. </p><p>Jennings, B. X. (2019, May 22). <i>Remembering the Black Panther Party newspaper, April 25, 1967- September 1980</i>. San Francisco Bay View. Retrieved April 7, 2022, from <a href="http://sfbayview.com/2015/05/remembering-the-black-panther-party-newspaper-april-25-1967-september-1980/">http://sfbayview.com/2015/05/remembering-the-black-panther-party-newspaper-april-25-1967-september-1980/</a></p><p>Kifner, J. (1998, May 2). Eldridge Cleaver, Black Panther Who Became G.O.P. Conservative, Is Dead at 62. <i>New York Times</i>, pp. 8–8. </p><p>Michaeli, E. (2018). <i>The defender how the legendary Black Newspaper Changed America: From the age of the pullman porters to the age of obama</i>. Mariner Books/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. </p><p>Morgan, J.-A. (2020). <i>The Black Arts Movement and the Black Panther Party in American Visual culture</i>. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. </p><p>Ng, D. (2007, October 18). Art; So you want a revolution? Check out Emory Douglas' art for the Black Panthers. <i>LA Times</i>.</p><p>Ongiri, A. A. (2010). <i>Spectacular blackness the cultural politics of the Black Power movement and the search for a black aesthetic</i>. University of Virginia Press. </p><p>Psaltis, A.-A. (2018). ARTPOLITICAL environment: Richard Bell and Emory Douglas’s Burnett Lane mural. <i>Electronic Melbourne Art Journal</i>, (10). <a href="https://doi.org/10.38030/emaj.2018.10.1">https://doi.org/10.38030/emaj.2018.10.1</a></p><p>Scott, V. H. F. (2021). <i>Art, global maoism and the Chinese Cultural Revolution</i>. (J. Galimberti & N. De Haro Garcia, Eds.). MANCHESTER UNIV PRESS. </p><p>Shames, S., & Seale, B. (2016). <i>Power to the people: The world of the black panthers</i>. Abrams. </p><p>Smethurst, J. E. (2006). <i>The Black Arts Movement: Literary nationalism in the 1960s and 1970s</i>. The University of North Carolina Press. </p><p>Suggs, H. L. (1983). <i>The Black Press in the South, 1865-1979</i>. Greenwood Press.</p><p>Thornton, B., & Cassidy, W. P. (2008). Black newspapers in 1968 offer Panthers Little Support. <i>Newspaper Research Journal</i>, <i>29</i>(1), 6–20. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1177/073953290802900102">https://doi.org/10.1177/073953290802900102</a>  </p><p>Waters, E. P. (1987). <i>American Diary: A personal history of the Black Press</i>. Path Press.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 1 Dec 2022 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/black-panther-newsletter-QM9Sm8aP</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense was founded in 1966 in Oakland, California by Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale. The Black Panther Party was founded during the turbulent times of the sixties that saw many changes in America. Newton at first led the party with an ideology called their Ten Point Program, and with the idea that arming Black communities was essential for their protection and survival. Through community assistance programs and armed community patrols to prevent police brutality, the Black Panther Party sought to protect and uplift their communities, stepping in where the government had failed them.  In order to promote their party’s ideals, generate revenue, and recruit new members, the Party began publishing the Black Panther newspaper. It grew from 4 pages to 32, adding color and better design under the direction of Emory Douglas who was the Black Panthers’ Minister of Culture and the paper’s editor. Douglas’s skills as a graphic designer and illustrator produced the imagery that would define not only the Black Panther Party but the entire Black Power movement. The success of the paper grew, had distribution across the United States, and later reached other countries as well. Internal strife among leadership and members, as well as extensive government interference, led to the crumbling of the Black Panther Party. With it went their iconic newspaper that for over a decade was a visual record of the Black Panther Party, the Black Power movement, and the struggle for civil rights.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1827 – <i>Freedom’s Journal</i> first published<br />1936 – Robert George Seale was born in Liberty, Texas<br />1942 – Huey Percy Newton is born in Monroe, Louisiana <br />1943 – Emory Douglas was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan<br />1960 – Emory Douglas started studying Graphic Design at City College of San Francisco <br />1963 – Martin Luther King Jr delivers “I Have A Dream” speech<br />1965 – Lowndes County Freedom Organization was founded by Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Alabama<br />1966 – Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale met in Oakland, CA, and founded The Black Panther Party for Self-Defense<br />1966 – BPP developed survival programs <br />1967 – California Governor Ronald Regan signed Mulford Act <br />1967 – Sale and Newton established the BPP first headquarters in Oakland, CA<br />1967 – Black Panther Intercommunal News Service<br />1967 – Newton was shot and jailed after a standoff with a police officer<br />1967 – Emory Douglas met Newton and Seale and joins the BPP<br />1967 – David Hilliard, BPP chief of staff, first arrested for selling the Newspaper<br />1968 – Kerner Commission publishes findings on potential race war; faults white institutions<br />1968 – Martin Luther King Jr assassinated, race riots erupt across USA <br />1968 – Newton was convicted of manslaughter for killing a police officer <br />1970 – FBI memo says circulation for BPP Newspaper was 139,000 a week<br />1970 – Newton was released due to his conviction being overturned on appeal<br />1971 – Newton shifts BPP focus to community programs, leadership is challenged by other part members <br />1971 – Newton expels 21 members, the “panther 21” over rumors of kidnapping and fratricide; also expels Eldridge Cleaver over suspicions of assassination through letters<br />1971 – Cleaver’s followers tied up Sam Napier in NY distribution office for the BPP newspaper and shot him, set fire to office<br />1974 – Netwon fled to Cuba on accusations of murdering a prostitute, Elaine Brown takes over as leader of BPP<br />1974 – End of BPP<br />1977 – Newton returns to California to stand trial for the murder of a prostitute<br />1978 – Jonina Abron takes over as editor of BPP Newspaper <br />1980 – Last year BPP Newspaper is published </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Alkebulan, P. (2012). <i>Survival pending revolution: The history of the Black Panther Party</i>. The University of Alabama Press. </p><p>Berry, A. H., Collie, K., Laker, P. A., Noel, L.-A., Rittner, J., & Walters, K. (2022). <i>The black experience in design: Identity, Expression & Reflection</i>. Allworth Press. </p><p>bperki8. (n.d.). <i>R/communism - A complete archive of the Black Panther Party's newspapers from beginning to end.</i> reddit ; r/communism. Retrieved June 2, 2016, from <a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/communism/comments/4m7axa/a%5C_complete%5C_archive%5C_of%5C_the%5C_black%5C_panther%5C_partys/">https://www.reddit.com/r/communism/comments/4m7axa/a\_complete\_archive\_of\_the\_black\_panther\_partys/</a></p><p>Carroll, F. (2017). <i>Race News: Black journalists and the fight for racial justice in the Twentieth Century</i>. University of Illinois Press. </p><p>Carroll, F. J. (2011). <i>Race News: How black reporters and readers shaped the fight for racial justice, 1877-1978</i> (thesis). Fred Carroll, Ann Arbor, MI. </p><p>Duncan, M. (2016). Emory Douglas and the art of the black panther party. <i>Spectrum: A Journal on Black Men</i>, <i>5</i>(1), 117–135. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2979/spectrum.5.1.06">https://doi.org/10.2979/spectrum.5.1.06</a></p><p>Fagan, B. (2018). <i>The Black Newspaper and the Chosen Nation</i>. The University of Georgia Press. </p><p>FEARNLEY, A. M. (2018). The Black Panther Party's publishing strategies and the financial underpinnings of activism, 1968–1975. <i>The Historical Journal</i>, <i>62</i>(1), 195–217. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x18000201">https://doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x18000201</a></p><p>Freedom Archives (n.d.). <i>Black Panther Party Community News Service</i>. Freedom Archives Search Engine. Retrieved April 7, 2022, from <a href="https://search.freedomarchives.org/search.php?view%5C_collection=90&page=1">https://search.freedomarchives.org/search.php?view\_collection=90&page=1</a></p><p>G., L. B. H. (1974). <i>Perspectives of the Black Press, 1974</i>. Mercer House Press. </p><p>Harris, J. C. (2000). Revolutionary black nationalism: The Black Panther Party. <i>The Journal of Negro History</i> , <i>85</i>(3), 162–174. </p><p>Hilliard, D. (2008). <i>The Black Panther Party: Service to the people programs</i>. University of New Mexico Press. </p><p>Hilliard, D. (2007). <i>The black panther: Intercommunal News Service</i>. Atria Books. </p><p>Hilliard, D. (2002). <i>This side of glory: The autobiography of David Hilliard and the story of the Black Panther Party</i>. Chicago Review Press. </p><p>Jackson, T. (2016). <i>Pioneering cartoonists of color</i>. University Press of Mississippi. </p><p>Jeffries, J. L. (2011). <i>On the ground</i>. Univ. Press of Mississippi. </p><p>Jennings, B. X. (2019, May 22). <i>Remembering the Black Panther Party newspaper, April 25, 1967- September 1980</i>. San Francisco Bay View. Retrieved April 7, 2022, from <a href="http://sfbayview.com/2015/05/remembering-the-black-panther-party-newspaper-april-25-1967-september-1980/">http://sfbayview.com/2015/05/remembering-the-black-panther-party-newspaper-april-25-1967-september-1980/</a></p><p>Kifner, J. (1998, May 2). Eldridge Cleaver, Black Panther Who Became G.O.P. Conservative, Is Dead at 62. <i>New York Times</i>, pp. 8–8. </p><p>Michaeli, E. (2018). <i>The defender how the legendary Black Newspaper Changed America: From the age of the pullman porters to the age of obama</i>. Mariner Books/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. </p><p>Morgan, J.-A. (2020). <i>The Black Arts Movement and the Black Panther Party in American Visual culture</i>. Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. </p><p>Ng, D. (2007, October 18). Art; So you want a revolution? Check out Emory Douglas' art for the Black Panthers. <i>LA Times</i>.</p><p>Ongiri, A. A. (2010). <i>Spectacular blackness the cultural politics of the Black Power movement and the search for a black aesthetic</i>. University of Virginia Press. </p><p>Psaltis, A.-A. (2018). ARTPOLITICAL environment: Richard Bell and Emory Douglas’s Burnett Lane mural. <i>Electronic Melbourne Art Journal</i>, (10). <a href="https://doi.org/10.38030/emaj.2018.10.1">https://doi.org/10.38030/emaj.2018.10.1</a></p><p>Scott, V. H. F. (2021). <i>Art, global maoism and the Chinese Cultural Revolution</i>. (J. Galimberti & N. De Haro Garcia, Eds.). MANCHESTER UNIV PRESS. </p><p>Shames, S., & Seale, B. (2016). <i>Power to the people: The world of the black panthers</i>. Abrams. </p><p>Smethurst, J. E. (2006). <i>The Black Arts Movement: Literary nationalism in the 1960s and 1970s</i>. The University of North Carolina Press. </p><p>Suggs, H. L. (1983). <i>The Black Press in the South, 1865-1979</i>. Greenwood Press.</p><p>Thornton, B., & Cassidy, W. P. (2008). Black newspapers in 1968 offer Panthers Little Support. <i>Newspaper Research Journal</i>, <i>29</i>(1), 6–20. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1177/073953290802900102">https://doi.org/10.1177/073953290802900102</a>  </p><p>Waters, E. P. (1987). <i>American Diary: A personal history of the Black Press</i>. Path Press.</p>
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      <itunes:title>Black Panther Newsletter</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>This episode investigates the history of the Black Panther Newsletter and its place in graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
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      <title>Harmon Foundation</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>In 1922 William Harmon, a white real estate mogul from Ohio, started the Harmon foundation which, among other things, supported Black artists. His hope for the foundation was that it would help these artists gain recognition and help them to sell their work, regardless of their skin color. The foundation organized exhibitions and awards for Black artists, all with the explicit intent to stimulate their success. Despite its good intentions, the foundation met with criticism from the Black community. The work the foundation did was seen as patriarchal and fulfilling a “white savior” complex rather than effecting real change and achieving equity. While it can be argued that the Harmon Foundation did a lot to support Black artists, one of the main criticisms is its role in maintaining the segregation of Black artists. Harmon Foundation exhibits featured Black artists alongside other Black artists, instead of integrating with white artists. The foundation's awards were also juried by white judges who selected winners based on a white ideal of excellence rather than understanding the work and its value or role in Black culture. While the Harmon Foundation’s efforts weren’t always welcome, it still spent 45 years promoting Black artists, helping them gain well-deserved attention and recognition.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1862 – <i>b</i> Ohio, William E. Harmon<br />1887 – Founds Harmon National Real Estate Company<br />1922 – Harmon Foundation is founded<br />1925 – Harmon Foundation begins issuing cash awards for distinguished achievement in a number of fields, including fine arts<br />1925 – Harmon Foundation supports the Religious Motion Picture foundation<br />1928 – William Harmon dies<br />1928-33 – Harmon Foundation recognized as first to give national recognition to achievements of African Americans<br />1933-36 – Harmon Foundation supports films: “The Negro and Art” and “We Are All Artists”<br />1935 – Artist Romare Beardon accused the foundation of “coddling artists and lowering artistic standards”<br />1935 – The Harlem Artists Guild founded, to support artists and to pressure the Federal Arts Project to accept more African-American participants<br />1935 – Harmon National Real Estate Company becomes one of the largest real estate companies in the world<br />1936 – Harmon Foundation sponsors films: “What Africa Is”, “How Africa Lives”, and “From Fetishes to Faith”.<br />1938-41 – Harmon Foundation supports film series: “The African Motion Picture Project”<br />1969 – ‘Harlem on My Mind, 1900-1968’ exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, opens to criticism for absence of Black curators or consulting the Harlem community<br />1967 – Harmon Foundation ceases operations</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Baum, K., Robles, M., & Yount, S. (2021, February 17). “Harlem on Whose Mind?”: The Met and Civil Rights. The Met. Retrieved June 23, 2022, from <a href="https://www.metmuseum.org/blogs/now-at-the-met/2021/harlem-on-my-mind">https://www.metmuseum.org/blogs/now-at-the-met/2021/harlem-on-my-mind</a></p><p>Brown, A. C., III. (2015, January 20). James A. Porter: The Father of African American Art History. The Baltimore Renaissance. Retrieved June 23, 2022, from <a href="https://thelyfe.wordpress.com/2015/01/20/james-a-porter-the-father-of-african-american-art-history/#:%7E:text=Porter%3A%20The%20Father%20of%20African%20American%20Art%20History,-Professor%20James%20A&text=James%20Amos%20Porter%20was%20born,of%20Science%20degree%20in%20art">https://thelyfe.wordpress.com/2015/01/20/james-a-porter-the-father-of-african-american-art-history/#:%7E:text=Porter%3A%20The%20Father%20of%20African%20American%20Art%20History,-Professor%20James%20A&text=James%20Amos%20Porter%20was%20born,of%20Science%20degree%20in%20art</a>.</p><p>Harmon Foundation, I. Harmon Foundation, inc., records. [Manuscript/Mixed Material] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/mm78051615">https://lccn.loc.gov/mm78051615</a>.</p><p>Malan, N. E. (1973). Photographs in the Harmon Foundation Collection. <i>African Arts</i>, 6(2), 33–32. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2307/3334777">https://doi.org/10.2307/3334777</a></p><p>Williams, G. (2013, February 22). African American art and the Harmon Foundation. Smithsonian Libraries / Unbound. <a href="https://blog.library.si.edu/blog/2013/02/22/african-american-art-and-the-harmon-foundation/#.YfQ3AljMJ4G">https://blog.library.si.edu/blog/2013/02/22/african-american-art-and-the-harmon-foundation/#.YfQ3AljMJ4G</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 24 Nov 2022 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/harmon-foundation-6TETav5X</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In 1922 William Harmon, a white real estate mogul from Ohio, started the Harmon foundation which, among other things, supported Black artists. His hope for the foundation was that it would help these artists gain recognition and help them to sell their work, regardless of their skin color. The foundation organized exhibitions and awards for Black artists, all with the explicit intent to stimulate their success. Despite its good intentions, the foundation met with criticism from the Black community. The work the foundation did was seen as patriarchal and fulfilling a “white savior” complex rather than effecting real change and achieving equity. While it can be argued that the Harmon Foundation did a lot to support Black artists, one of the main criticisms is its role in maintaining the segregation of Black artists. Harmon Foundation exhibits featured Black artists alongside other Black artists, instead of integrating with white artists. The foundation's awards were also juried by white judges who selected winners based on a white ideal of excellence rather than understanding the work and its value or role in Black culture. While the Harmon Foundation’s efforts weren’t always welcome, it still spent 45 years promoting Black artists, helping them gain well-deserved attention and recognition.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1862 – <i>b</i> Ohio, William E. Harmon<br />1887 – Founds Harmon National Real Estate Company<br />1922 – Harmon Foundation is founded<br />1925 – Harmon Foundation begins issuing cash awards for distinguished achievement in a number of fields, including fine arts<br />1925 – Harmon Foundation supports the Religious Motion Picture foundation<br />1928 – William Harmon dies<br />1928-33 – Harmon Foundation recognized as first to give national recognition to achievements of African Americans<br />1933-36 – Harmon Foundation supports films: “The Negro and Art” and “We Are All Artists”<br />1935 – Artist Romare Beardon accused the foundation of “coddling artists and lowering artistic standards”<br />1935 – The Harlem Artists Guild founded, to support artists and to pressure the Federal Arts Project to accept more African-American participants<br />1935 – Harmon National Real Estate Company becomes one of the largest real estate companies in the world<br />1936 – Harmon Foundation sponsors films: “What Africa Is”, “How Africa Lives”, and “From Fetishes to Faith”.<br />1938-41 – Harmon Foundation supports film series: “The African Motion Picture Project”<br />1969 – ‘Harlem on My Mind, 1900-1968’ exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, opens to criticism for absence of Black curators or consulting the Harlem community<br />1967 – Harmon Foundation ceases operations</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Baum, K., Robles, M., & Yount, S. (2021, February 17). “Harlem on Whose Mind?”: The Met and Civil Rights. The Met. Retrieved June 23, 2022, from <a href="https://www.metmuseum.org/blogs/now-at-the-met/2021/harlem-on-my-mind">https://www.metmuseum.org/blogs/now-at-the-met/2021/harlem-on-my-mind</a></p><p>Brown, A. C., III. (2015, January 20). James A. Porter: The Father of African American Art History. The Baltimore Renaissance. Retrieved June 23, 2022, from <a href="https://thelyfe.wordpress.com/2015/01/20/james-a-porter-the-father-of-african-american-art-history/#:%7E:text=Porter%3A%20The%20Father%20of%20African%20American%20Art%20History,-Professor%20James%20A&text=James%20Amos%20Porter%20was%20born,of%20Science%20degree%20in%20art">https://thelyfe.wordpress.com/2015/01/20/james-a-porter-the-father-of-african-american-art-history/#:%7E:text=Porter%3A%20The%20Father%20of%20African%20American%20Art%20History,-Professor%20James%20A&text=James%20Amos%20Porter%20was%20born,of%20Science%20degree%20in%20art</a>.</p><p>Harmon Foundation, I. Harmon Foundation, inc., records. [Manuscript/Mixed Material] Retrieved from the Library of Congress, <a href="https://lccn.loc.gov/mm78051615">https://lccn.loc.gov/mm78051615</a>.</p><p>Malan, N. E. (1973). Photographs in the Harmon Foundation Collection. <i>African Arts</i>, 6(2), 33–32. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2307/3334777">https://doi.org/10.2307/3334777</a></p><p>Williams, G. (2013, February 22). African American art and the Harmon Foundation. Smithsonian Libraries / Unbound. <a href="https://blog.library.si.edu/blog/2013/02/22/african-american-art-and-the-harmon-foundation/#.YfQ3AljMJ4G">https://blog.library.si.edu/blog/2013/02/22/african-american-art-and-the-harmon-foundation/#.YfQ3AljMJ4G</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Harmon Foundation</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:17:50</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode examines the history of the Harmon foundation and its ties to art and design histories.</itunes:summary>
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      <title>Poster Design of the Islamic Revolution</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Posters as political tools are nothing new. In the Middle East, two revolutionary movements led to some of the most potent and vibrant posters in design history. The Iranian Revolution and the expulsion of Palestinians due to civil war and the continued fight to reclaim Palestinian homelands from Israel. These posters effectively gave voice to the struggles of ordinary people resisting the influence and meddling of various Western powers. For Iran, that meant keeping the dream of an Islamic state free and independent from Western countries that had been trying for decades to install a democratic government. And once so much of Palestine had been taken over by Israel, the Palestinian resistance fought back with ideas as well as guns. Using powerful graphic imagery common to each of their respective cultures, like calligraphy, Islamic iconography, and the colors red, black, white, and green, resistance posters of both movements kept the fire of resistance burning brightly. The Iranian Revolution effectively concluded once the Shah of Iran was overthrown and power consolidated under the rule of Ayatollah Khomeini in 1979. Palestine wasn’t so lucky. While their resistance began much earlier than Iran’s, their fight still isn’t over and their resistance posters have continued, spilling over into the digital domain in a continued effort to reclaim their native homeland.</p><p> </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1908 – Prince Yusuf Kamal founded the School of Fine Arts in Cairo, Egypt<br />1917 – Britain made Balfour Declaration to establish Palestine as a place for Jewish people<br />1921 – Hashemite Kingdom of Iraq declared independence from Britain<br />1922 – Egypt declared independence from Britain<br />1934 – University of Tehran Founded in Iran<br />1941 – Syria declared independence from France<br />1943 – Lebanon declared independence from France<br />1945 – End of WW II; Britain hands matter of Palestine to the USA<br />1948 – 750,000 Palestinians were forced to leave their homes due to Israeli takeover<br />1947 – United Nations Partition of Palestine, followed by Civil War in Palestine (Arab-Israeli War)<br />1948 – British completely withdrew from Palestine, and Israeli statehood declared<br />1949 – Syria's president Husni al-Za’im overthrown by a military coup<br /> 1950-54 – Designer & Artist Ismail Shammout attends the University of Cairo <br />1950s – Saqqakhana Group formed <br />1951 – Libya declared independence from France<br />1952 – Egyptian Monarchy overthrown by Free Officers Coup<br />1953 – USA and UK leaders helped to install Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi (overthrew Democratically elected Prime Minister Mossadegh) <br />1956 – Sudan declares independence from France, Israel attacked Egypt (Six Days War) <br />1958 – Iraq Monarchy overthrown, Shammout studies in a private graphic design workshop in Berlin, Egypt and Syria form the United Arab Republic<br />1959 – Yasser Arafat founded The Palestinian National Liberation Movement<br />1963 – Algeria declares independence from France<br />1965 – The Peoples Mojahedin Iranian organization was founded at the University of Tehran<br />1967 – Palestine National Liberation Movement joins the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) <br />1977- Iranian Revolution begins; Mostafa Khomeini, eldest son of Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini, dies of an unknown cause at age 47; Protest & violent, repressive response cycles begin in dozens of Iranian cities. <br />1978 – Cinema Rex Fire in Tehran; 477 Iranians killed in fire. <br />1978 – Black Friday, where government tanks and helicopters opened fire on 1,000+ protestos in Tehran<br />1979 –  On Jan. 16, Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi fled Iran ; On Feb. 1st,  Ayatollah Khomeini started The Islamic Republic of Iran as its leader. <br />1982 –  PLO expelled from Lebanon, Israeli invasion of Lebanon<br />1988 –  Palestinian Declaration of Independence</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Abedini, R., & Wolbers, H. (2006). <i>New Visual Culture Of Modern Iran</i>. BIS Publishers. </p><p>Adamova, A. T., & Bayani, M. (2015). <i>Persian Painting: The Arts Of The Book And Portraiture</i> . Thames & Hudson. </p><p>Bloom, J. M., & Blair, S. S. (2019). <i>Islamic art: Past, present, future</i>. Yale University Press. </p><p>Charles River Editors. (2014). <i>The Iranian Revolution: The islamic revolution that reshaped the Middle East</i>. CreateSpace. </p><p>Chelkowski, P. (2002, December 15). GRAPHIC ARTS. <i>Encyclopedia Iranica</i> . Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="https://iranicaonline.org/articles/graphic-arts">https://iranicaonline.org/articles/graphic-arts</a></p><p>Eigner, S. (2015). <i>Art of the Middle East: Modern and contemporary art of the Arab world and Iran</i>. Merrell. </p><p>Fotouhi, S. (2015). <i>The literature of the Iranian diaspora: Meaning and identity since the Islamic Revolution</i>. I.B. Tauris. </p><p>The genius of Iranian graphic design. Graphéine - Agence de communication Paris Lyon. (2022, February 1). Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.grapheine.com/en/graphic-design-en/graphic-design-in-iran-persian-heritage-and-modernity">https://www.grapheine.com/en/graphic-design-en/graphic-design-in-iran-persian-heritage-and-modernity</a></p><p>Guity, N. (2012, January 7). Modern Communication Design in Iran. <i>The History of Graphic Design in Iran</i>. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="http://gdiran.blogspot.com/2012/01/this-being-human-is-guest-house.html?view=snapshot">http://gdiran.blogspot.com/2012/01/this-being-human-is-guest-house.html?view=snapshot</a></p><p>Gumpert, L., & Balaghi, S. (2003). <i>Picturing Iran: Art, society and revolution</i>. I.B. Tauris. </p><p>Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center. (n.d.). <i>Guide to the Middle Eastern Posters Collection 1970s-1990s</i>. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.MEPOSTERS&q=iranian+posters">https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.MEPOSTERS&q=iranian+posters</a></p><p>Louis, W. R. (2012). <i>The 1967 arab-israeli war: Origins and consequences</i>. Cambridge University Press. </p><p>Nazar Research and Cultural Institute. (2007). Iranian typography: 50 years of calligraphy and typography in iranian graphic design. </p><p>Osborn, J. R. (2017). <i>Letters of light: Arabic script in calligraphy, print, and Digital Design</i>. Harvard University Press. </p><p>Pappe, I. L. A. N. (2022). <i>History of modern palestine</i>. Cambridge University Press.</p><p>Parsons, A. (1984). The pride and the fall: Iran, 1974-1979. J. Cape. </p><p>Pearlman, W. (2014). <i>Violence, nonviolence, and the Palestinian National Movement</i>. Cambridge University Press. </p><p>Qumsiyeh, M. B. (2011). <i>Popular resistance in Palestine a history of hope and empowerment</i>. Pluto Press. </p><p>Rauh, E. (2013, November 26). “Posters and history of the Iranian Revolution”. <i>Graphic Art News</i>. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.graphicart-news.com/posters-and-history-of-the-iranian-revolution-in-history/">https://www.graphicart-news.com/posters-and-history-of-the-iranian-revolution-in-history/</a></p><p>ROUTLEDGE. (2019). Rethinking place in South Asian and Islamic art, 1500-present. </p><p>Saikal, A. (2021). <i>Rise and fall of the shah</i>. Princeton University Press. </p><p>Shehab, B., & Nawar, H. (2020). <i>A history of Arab graphic design</i>. The American University in Cairo Press. </p><p>Sheikh Zadegan, A., & Meier, A. (2017). <i>Beyond the islamic revolution perceptions of modernity and tradition in Iran before and after 1979</i>. De Gruyter. </p><p>The University of Chicago Library: The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center. (2011, October 15). The Graphics of Revolution and War: Iranian Poster Arts . The Graphics of Revolution and War - The University of Chicago Library. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/collex/exhibits/graphics-revolution-and-war-iranian-poster-arts/">https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/collex/exhibits/graphics-revolution-and-war-iranian-poster-arts/</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 17 Nov 2022 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/poster-design-of-the-islamic-revolution-zhztTxkT</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Posters as political tools are nothing new. In the Middle East, two revolutionary movements led to some of the most potent and vibrant posters in design history. The Iranian Revolution and the expulsion of Palestinians due to civil war and the continued fight to reclaim Palestinian homelands from Israel. These posters effectively gave voice to the struggles of ordinary people resisting the influence and meddling of various Western powers. For Iran, that meant keeping the dream of an Islamic state free and independent from Western countries that had been trying for decades to install a democratic government. And once so much of Palestine had been taken over by Israel, the Palestinian resistance fought back with ideas as well as guns. Using powerful graphic imagery common to each of their respective cultures, like calligraphy, Islamic iconography, and the colors red, black, white, and green, resistance posters of both movements kept the fire of resistance burning brightly. The Iranian Revolution effectively concluded once the Shah of Iran was overthrown and power consolidated under the rule of Ayatollah Khomeini in 1979. Palestine wasn’t so lucky. While their resistance began much earlier than Iran’s, their fight still isn’t over and their resistance posters have continued, spilling over into the digital domain in a continued effort to reclaim their native homeland.</p><p> </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1908 – Prince Yusuf Kamal founded the School of Fine Arts in Cairo, Egypt<br />1917 – Britain made Balfour Declaration to establish Palestine as a place for Jewish people<br />1921 – Hashemite Kingdom of Iraq declared independence from Britain<br />1922 – Egypt declared independence from Britain<br />1934 – University of Tehran Founded in Iran<br />1941 – Syria declared independence from France<br />1943 – Lebanon declared independence from France<br />1945 – End of WW II; Britain hands matter of Palestine to the USA<br />1948 – 750,000 Palestinians were forced to leave their homes due to Israeli takeover<br />1947 – United Nations Partition of Palestine, followed by Civil War in Palestine (Arab-Israeli War)<br />1948 – British completely withdrew from Palestine, and Israeli statehood declared<br />1949 – Syria's president Husni al-Za’im overthrown by a military coup<br /> 1950-54 – Designer & Artist Ismail Shammout attends the University of Cairo <br />1950s – Saqqakhana Group formed <br />1951 – Libya declared independence from France<br />1952 – Egyptian Monarchy overthrown by Free Officers Coup<br />1953 – USA and UK leaders helped to install Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi (overthrew Democratically elected Prime Minister Mossadegh) <br />1956 – Sudan declares independence from France, Israel attacked Egypt (Six Days War) <br />1958 – Iraq Monarchy overthrown, Shammout studies in a private graphic design workshop in Berlin, Egypt and Syria form the United Arab Republic<br />1959 – Yasser Arafat founded The Palestinian National Liberation Movement<br />1963 – Algeria declares independence from France<br />1965 – The Peoples Mojahedin Iranian organization was founded at the University of Tehran<br />1967 – Palestine National Liberation Movement joins the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) <br />1977- Iranian Revolution begins; Mostafa Khomeini, eldest son of Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini, dies of an unknown cause at age 47; Protest & violent, repressive response cycles begin in dozens of Iranian cities. <br />1978 – Cinema Rex Fire in Tehran; 477 Iranians killed in fire. <br />1978 – Black Friday, where government tanks and helicopters opened fire on 1,000+ protestos in Tehran<br />1979 –  On Jan. 16, Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi fled Iran ; On Feb. 1st,  Ayatollah Khomeini started The Islamic Republic of Iran as its leader. <br />1982 –  PLO expelled from Lebanon, Israeli invasion of Lebanon<br />1988 –  Palestinian Declaration of Independence</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Abedini, R., & Wolbers, H. (2006). <i>New Visual Culture Of Modern Iran</i>. BIS Publishers. </p><p>Adamova, A. T., & Bayani, M. (2015). <i>Persian Painting: The Arts Of The Book And Portraiture</i> . Thames & Hudson. </p><p>Bloom, J. M., & Blair, S. S. (2019). <i>Islamic art: Past, present, future</i>. Yale University Press. </p><p>Charles River Editors. (2014). <i>The Iranian Revolution: The islamic revolution that reshaped the Middle East</i>. CreateSpace. </p><p>Chelkowski, P. (2002, December 15). GRAPHIC ARTS. <i>Encyclopedia Iranica</i> . Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="https://iranicaonline.org/articles/graphic-arts">https://iranicaonline.org/articles/graphic-arts</a></p><p>Eigner, S. (2015). <i>Art of the Middle East: Modern and contemporary art of the Arab world and Iran</i>. Merrell. </p><p>Fotouhi, S. (2015). <i>The literature of the Iranian diaspora: Meaning and identity since the Islamic Revolution</i>. I.B. Tauris. </p><p>The genius of Iranian graphic design. Graphéine - Agence de communication Paris Lyon. (2022, February 1). Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.grapheine.com/en/graphic-design-en/graphic-design-in-iran-persian-heritage-and-modernity">https://www.grapheine.com/en/graphic-design-en/graphic-design-in-iran-persian-heritage-and-modernity</a></p><p>Guity, N. (2012, January 7). Modern Communication Design in Iran. <i>The History of Graphic Design in Iran</i>. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="http://gdiran.blogspot.com/2012/01/this-being-human-is-guest-house.html?view=snapshot">http://gdiran.blogspot.com/2012/01/this-being-human-is-guest-house.html?view=snapshot</a></p><p>Gumpert, L., & Balaghi, S. (2003). <i>Picturing Iran: Art, society and revolution</i>. I.B. Tauris. </p><p>Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center. (n.d.). <i>Guide to the Middle Eastern Posters Collection 1970s-1990s</i>. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.MEPOSTERS&q=iranian+posters">https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/scrc/findingaids/view.php?eadid=ICU.SPCL.MEPOSTERS&q=iranian+posters</a></p><p>Louis, W. R. (2012). <i>The 1967 arab-israeli war: Origins and consequences</i>. Cambridge University Press. </p><p>Nazar Research and Cultural Institute. (2007). Iranian typography: 50 years of calligraphy and typography in iranian graphic design. </p><p>Osborn, J. R. (2017). <i>Letters of light: Arabic script in calligraphy, print, and Digital Design</i>. Harvard University Press. </p><p>Pappe, I. L. A. N. (2022). <i>History of modern palestine</i>. Cambridge University Press.</p><p>Parsons, A. (1984). The pride and the fall: Iran, 1974-1979. J. Cape. </p><p>Pearlman, W. (2014). <i>Violence, nonviolence, and the Palestinian National Movement</i>. Cambridge University Press. </p><p>Qumsiyeh, M. B. (2011). <i>Popular resistance in Palestine a history of hope and empowerment</i>. Pluto Press. </p><p>Rauh, E. (2013, November 26). “Posters and history of the Iranian Revolution”. <i>Graphic Art News</i>. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.graphicart-news.com/posters-and-history-of-the-iranian-revolution-in-history/">https://www.graphicart-news.com/posters-and-history-of-the-iranian-revolution-in-history/</a></p><p>ROUTLEDGE. (2019). Rethinking place in South Asian and Islamic art, 1500-present. </p><p>Saikal, A. (2021). <i>Rise and fall of the shah</i>. Princeton University Press. </p><p>Shehab, B., & Nawar, H. (2020). <i>A history of Arab graphic design</i>. The American University in Cairo Press. </p><p>Sheikh Zadegan, A., & Meier, A. (2017). <i>Beyond the islamic revolution perceptions of modernity and tradition in Iran before and after 1979</i>. De Gruyter. </p><p>The University of Chicago Library: The Hanna Holborn Gray Special Collections Research Center. (2011, October 15). The Graphics of Revolution and War: Iranian Poster Arts . The Graphics of Revolution and War - The University of Chicago Library. Retrieved February 3, 2022, from <a href="https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/collex/exhibits/graphics-revolution-and-war-iranian-poster-arts/">https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/collex/exhibits/graphics-revolution-and-war-iranian-poster-arts/</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Poster Design of the Islamic Revolution</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:29:05</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode investigates the history of poster design during the Islamic Revolution in Iran, and draws connections to poster design of the Palestinian Resistance.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode investigates the history of poster design during the Islamic Revolution in Iran, and draws connections to poster design of the Palestinian Resistance.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Sylvia Harris</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Sylvia Harris has been described as a public designer, her own words, and a citizen designer, but whatever you want to call it, Harris was dedicated to designing for the good of the people. She was committed to creating designs that helped people to navigate their world. Harris grew up in Richmond, Virginia where she experienced the desegregation of her school, which likely had a significant impact on her entire life.  As a Black designer who was educated and entrenched in modernist design practices, created by western and European “elite” designers, she sought to discover what the Black aesthetic in America was for herself, and she shared her findings with the world. Her work ranges from the redesign of the US Census in 2000, which succeeded in creating a design that resulted in a larger number of responses that were more complete and accurate, to the design for the ACLU’s initial brand design. Sylvia Harris is a designer who can teach us a lot about what it is to be a Black designer in America, where to possibly look for Black designers in graphic design history, as well as what it means to create design for good. </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1953 – <i>b</i> Richmond, Virginia<br />1959 – State of Virginia is officially desegregated, the state continued to fight desegregation and was not fully desegregated until 1970<br />1971 - Entered Design school<br />1975 - Graduates from Virginia Commonwealth University where she was a student of Philip Meggs<br />1975 - Works for WGBH design department in Boston alongside, Chris Pullman, an AIGA Medalist <br />1980 - Graduates from Yale with MFA in design<br />1980 - Founds 212 Associates with David Gibson & Juanita Dugale<br />1993 - Hired to redesign the Census (design released in 2000)<br />1994-1997 - Serves on AIGA board of directors<br />1994 - Leaves 212 to found her own company Sylvia Harris, LLC<br />1996 - Publishes What is it? Searching for the Black Aesthetic in American graphic design<br />2000 - Design census released<br />2011 - Rebrands her company to focus on “Citizen Research & Design”<br />2011 - Untimely death, complications due to heart failure she was 57<br />2014 - posthumously awarded AIGA Medal</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>AIGA. (n.d.). <i>2014 AIGA Medalist: Sylvia Harris</i>. AIGA. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.aiga.org/inspiration/talks/sylvia-harris-2014-aiga-medalist-sylvia-harris">https://www.aiga.org/inspiration/talks/sylvia-harris-2014-aiga-medalist-sylvia-harris</a></p><p>Allbrittin, D. (2021, December 14). <i>Richmond Schools today: RPS still fighting to improve segregation, 51 years after busing</i>. ABC 8 News. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.wric.com/news/local-news/richmond/richmond-schools-today-rps-still-fighting-to-improve-segregation-51-years-after-busing/">https://www.wric.com/news/local-news/richmond/richmond-schools-today-rps-still-fighting-to-improve-segregation-51-years-after-busing/</a></p><p>Daugherity, B. J. (n.d.). <i>Desegregation in Public Schools – Encyclopedia Virginia</i>. Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/desegregation-in-public-schools/#:%7E:text=Desegregation%20began%20in%20Virginia%20on,in%20the%20spring%20of%201956">https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/desegregation-in-public-schools/#:%7E:text=Desegregation%20began%20in%20Virginia%20on,in%20the%20spring%20of%201956</a></p><p>Citizen Research & Design. (n.d.). <i>About The Company | Citizen Research & Design</i>. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20110806102912/http://citizenrd.com/about">https://web.archive.org/web/20110806102912/http://citizenrd.com/about</a></p><p>Citizen Research & Design. (n.d.-b). <i>U.S. Census 2000 | Citizen Research & Design</i>. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20111007192600/http://citizenrd.com/projects/us-census-2000">https://web.archive.org/web/20111007192600/http://citizenrd.com/projects/us-census-2000</a></p><p>Gibson, D. (n.d.). <i>Sylvia Harris | SEGD</i>. SEGD. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://segd.org/sylvia-harris">https://segd.org/sylvia-harris</a></p><p>Harris, S. (1996). What It Is? Searching for a Black Aesthetic in American Graphic Design. <i>The International Review of African American Art</i>, <i>13</i>(1), 38–38.</p><p>Helfand, J. (11–07-25). <i>Remembering Sylvia Harris</i>. Design Observer. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://designobserver.com/feature/remembering-sylvia-harris/29118">https://designobserver.com/feature/remembering-sylvia-harris/29118</a></p><p>House, L. (n.d.). <i>Sylvia Harris Biography</i>. AIGA. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20111004035114/http://www.aiga.org/design-journeys-sylvia-harris/">https://web.archive.org/web/20111004035114/http://www.aiga.org/design-journeys-sylvia-harris/</a></p><p>Two Twelve. (2014, May 14). <i>Sylvia Harris Receives 2014 AIGA Medal - Voice - Two Twelve</i>. Two Twelve Voice. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="http://www.twotwelve.com/voice/sylvia-harris-receives-2014-aiga-medal.html">http://www.twotwelve.com/voice/sylvia-harris-receives-2014-aiga-medal.html</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 10 Nov 2022 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Mandy Horton, Ebony Sayles, Dean Kelly, Spencer Gee)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/sylvia-harris-4UFKfTK2</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sylvia Harris has been described as a public designer, her own words, and a citizen designer, but whatever you want to call it, Harris was dedicated to designing for the good of the people. She was committed to creating designs that helped people to navigate their world. Harris grew up in Richmond, Virginia where she experienced the desegregation of her school, which likely had a significant impact on her entire life.  As a Black designer who was educated and entrenched in modernist design practices, created by western and European “elite” designers, she sought to discover what the Black aesthetic in America was for herself, and she shared her findings with the world. Her work ranges from the redesign of the US Census in 2000, which succeeded in creating a design that resulted in a larger number of responses that were more complete and accurate, to the design for the ACLU’s initial brand design. Sylvia Harris is a designer who can teach us a lot about what it is to be a Black designer in America, where to possibly look for Black designers in graphic design history, as well as what it means to create design for good. </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1953 – <i>b</i> Richmond, Virginia<br />1959 – State of Virginia is officially desegregated, the state continued to fight desegregation and was not fully desegregated until 1970<br />1971 - Entered Design school<br />1975 - Graduates from Virginia Commonwealth University where she was a student of Philip Meggs<br />1975 - Works for WGBH design department in Boston alongside, Chris Pullman, an AIGA Medalist <br />1980 - Graduates from Yale with MFA in design<br />1980 - Founds 212 Associates with David Gibson & Juanita Dugale<br />1993 - Hired to redesign the Census (design released in 2000)<br />1994-1997 - Serves on AIGA board of directors<br />1994 - Leaves 212 to found her own company Sylvia Harris, LLC<br />1996 - Publishes What is it? Searching for the Black Aesthetic in American graphic design<br />2000 - Design census released<br />2011 - Rebrands her company to focus on “Citizen Research & Design”<br />2011 - Untimely death, complications due to heart failure she was 57<br />2014 - posthumously awarded AIGA Medal</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>AIGA. (n.d.). <i>2014 AIGA Medalist: Sylvia Harris</i>. AIGA. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.aiga.org/inspiration/talks/sylvia-harris-2014-aiga-medalist-sylvia-harris">https://www.aiga.org/inspiration/talks/sylvia-harris-2014-aiga-medalist-sylvia-harris</a></p><p>Allbrittin, D. (2021, December 14). <i>Richmond Schools today: RPS still fighting to improve segregation, 51 years after busing</i>. ABC 8 News. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.wric.com/news/local-news/richmond/richmond-schools-today-rps-still-fighting-to-improve-segregation-51-years-after-busing/">https://www.wric.com/news/local-news/richmond/richmond-schools-today-rps-still-fighting-to-improve-segregation-51-years-after-busing/</a></p><p>Daugherity, B. J. (n.d.). <i>Desegregation in Public Schools – Encyclopedia Virginia</i>. Encyclopedia Virginia. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/desegregation-in-public-schools/#:%7E:text=Desegregation%20began%20in%20Virginia%20on,in%20the%20spring%20of%201956">https://encyclopediavirginia.org/entries/desegregation-in-public-schools/#:%7E:text=Desegregation%20began%20in%20Virginia%20on,in%20the%20spring%20of%201956</a></p><p>Citizen Research & Design. (n.d.). <i>About The Company | Citizen Research & Design</i>. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20110806102912/http://citizenrd.com/about">https://web.archive.org/web/20110806102912/http://citizenrd.com/about</a></p><p>Citizen Research & Design. (n.d.-b). <i>U.S. Census 2000 | Citizen Research & Design</i>. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20111007192600/http://citizenrd.com/projects/us-census-2000">https://web.archive.org/web/20111007192600/http://citizenrd.com/projects/us-census-2000</a></p><p>Gibson, D. (n.d.). <i>Sylvia Harris | SEGD</i>. SEGD. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://segd.org/sylvia-harris">https://segd.org/sylvia-harris</a></p><p>Harris, S. (1996). What It Is? Searching for a Black Aesthetic in American Graphic Design. <i>The International Review of African American Art</i>, <i>13</i>(1), 38–38.</p><p>Helfand, J. (11–07-25). <i>Remembering Sylvia Harris</i>. Design Observer. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://designobserver.com/feature/remembering-sylvia-harris/29118">https://designobserver.com/feature/remembering-sylvia-harris/29118</a></p><p>House, L. (n.d.). <i>Sylvia Harris Biography</i>. AIGA. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20111004035114/http://www.aiga.org/design-journeys-sylvia-harris/">https://web.archive.org/web/20111004035114/http://www.aiga.org/design-journeys-sylvia-harris/</a></p><p>Two Twelve. (2014, May 14). <i>Sylvia Harris Receives 2014 AIGA Medal - Voice - Two Twelve</i>. Two Twelve Voice. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="http://www.twotwelve.com/voice/sylvia-harris-receives-2014-aiga-medal.html">http://www.twotwelve.com/voice/sylvia-harris-receives-2014-aiga-medal.html</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Sylvia Harris</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Mandy Horton, Ebony Sayles, Dean Kelly, Spencer Gee</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>This episode investigates the life and career of designer Sylvia Harris</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode investigates the life and career of designer Sylvia Harris</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>BIPOC Racial Caricatures in Branding &amp; Design</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>There is a long history of racism behind famous brands, characters, and design that often goes unnoticed. Blatantly racist caricatures began with minstrel shows and the use of blackface, where white actors would use black makeup and overdrawn lips to depict Black people. These drove stereotypes that would be used in film, television, and branding. White actors depicted other minorities in an ill manner. From Mickey Rooney playing a Japanese man, Mr. Yunioshi, to Claudia Cardinale playing Indian Princess Dala, actors continued to manipulate their physical features to display the American audience’s ideas of these different ethnicities. Cartoons like Disney’s Peter Pan used Indigenous stereotypes for its character Tiger Lily and her tribe of Piccaninny, along with the song “What Makes the Red Man Red?” Big production companies such as Disney and Warner Bros. are guilty of distributing offensive caricatures that poorly reflect Black, Asian, Indigenous, and other ethnic groups. Brand mascots like Aunt Jemima were created to uphold the mammy stereotype, a Black woman who is subservient to white people and their children. She was meant to contain white anxieties about increasing the mobility of Black people within spaces of mass production and consumption post-emancipation. At this time other brand mascots like Rastus for Cream of Wheat and Uncle Ben’s Rice similarly demeaned Black men. Ethnic mascots are also very popular in sports, primarily mascots of Indigenous American men who are shown as savages. It’s only been since 2020 that brands have started to shift away from these racist images but the damage of BIPOC caricatures lingers.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1833 – One of the first examples of blackface, in Bowery Theatre, New York, Thomas Darmouth Rice played the caricature Jim Crow<br />1889 – Aunt Jemima brand was first introduced and featured mascot/character as a stereotype of a  mammy<br />1893 – Cream of Wheat launched using a mascot named Rastus,  a term used for Black men who were depicted as simple-minded<br />1904  – first US stage production of <i>Peter Pan</i> features white actress, Margaret Gordon as Tiger Lily <br />1927 – posters of advertising performances of Joesphine Baker by Paul Colin: ‘La Revue Negre, feature racist stereotypes: Black figures with large red lips and overly sexualized depictions of Baker<br />1928 – Land O’Lakes butter premieres with a sexualized mascot/character of a Indegnous women called Mia<br />1935-36 – Shirley Temple appears in blackface and clothing which depict the ‘mammy’ caricature in The Littlest Rebel’ and dances on a stage with two men in blackface in ‘Dimples’<br />1940 – Tom and Jerry cartoon introduces a character named Mammy Two Shoes, a heavyset Black woman who was responsible for taking care of the house<br />1947 – Florida State adopted the name Seminoles <br />1953 – Disney version of <i>Peter Pan</i> , the tribe of Piccaninny are designed to play the exotic and savage trope and performs the song, “What Makes the Red Man Red?”<br />1961 – white actor Mickey Rooney plays a Japanese man, Mr. Yunioshi, in <i>Breakfast at Tiffany’s</i><br />1978 –  FSU Seminoles began a new tradition: At home football games a Seminole warrior would ride a horse onto the field, known as Chief Osceola and Renegade<br />2013– Daniel Synder, owner of the football team The Washington Redskins, vowed to never alter the name or imagery<br />2019 – the Cleveland Indians  and MLB made the decision to remove native caricature Chief Wahoo from their brand<br />2020 – Aunt Jemima is retires and the company rebrands to become Pearl Milling Company<br />2020 – B&G Foods announced they were removing the Rastus character from Cream of Wheat<br />2020 – during a rebrand Mia is removed from Land O’Lakes packaging<br />2020 – Washington Redskins announced name change and logo retirement</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Walters, K. (n.d.). Blackface and Minstrelsy Tradition. BIPOC Design History. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://bipocdesignhistory.com/V1-overview">https://bipocdesignhistory.com/V1-overview</a></p><p>Carter, K. (2019). Confronting racial stereotypes in graphic design history. In J. Kaufmann-Butler,<br />V. Pass, & C. Wilson (Eds.), Design history beyond the canon. Bloomsbury.</p><p>Smith, C. J. (2013). The creolization of American culture : William Sidney Mount and the roots of blackface minstrelsy. University of Illinois Press.</p><p>Razack. (2016). Sexualized Violence and Colonialism: Reflections on the Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. Canadian Journal of Women and the Law, 28(2), i–iv. <a href="https://doi.org/10.3138/cjwl.28.2.i">https://doi.org/10.3138/cjwl.28.2.i</a></p><p>Luske, H., Geronimi, C. & Jackson, W. (Directors). (1953). Peter Pan [Film]. Walt Disney.</p><p>Elias-De Jesus, A. (2017, June 30). Jay Z’s New Music Video Uses America’s Long History of Racist Cartoons to Deliver a Haunting Message. Slate Magazine. <a href="https://slate.com/culture/2017/06/jay-zs-the-story-of-o-j-music-video-takes-on-racist-cartoons.html#:%7E:text=Jay%20Z%E2%80%99s%20New%20Music%20Video,to%20Deliver%20a%20Haunting%20Message&text=The%20video%20for%20%E2%80%9CThe%20Story,.%2C%20Disney%2C%20and%20others">https://slate.com/culture/2017/06/jay-zs-the-story-of-o-j-music-video-takes-on-racist-cartoons.html#:%7E:text=Jay%20Z’s%20New%20Music%20Video,to%20Deliver%20a%20Haunting%20Message&text=The%20video%20for%20%E2%80%9CThe%20Story,.%2C%20Disney%2C%20and%20others</a>.</p><p>Jay-Z & Romanek, M. (Directors). (2017). The Story of OJ [Film]. Carter Enterprises. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RM7lw0Ovzq0&t=252s">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RM7lw0Ovzq0&t=252s</a></p><p>Reappropriate. (2014, February 12). Remembering Shirley Temple requires us to remember her legacy of Blackface cinema. <a href="http://reappropriate.co/2014/02/remembering-shirley-temple-requires-us-to-remember-her-perpetuation-of-blackface-cinema/">http://reappropriate.co/2014/02/remembering-shirley-temple-requires-us-to-remember-her-perpetuation-of-blackface-cinema/</a></p><p>Biography.com Editors. (2021, October 27). Bill “Bojangles” Robinson. Biography. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.biography.com/performer/bill-bojangles-robinson">https://www.biography.com/performer/bill-bojangles-robinson</a></p><p>MARRAKECH RIAD. (2017, December 4). Josephine Baker and La Revue Nègre | Marrakech Riad. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.marrakech-riad.co.uk/2017/12/josephine-baker-and-la-revue-negre/">https://www.marrakech-riad.co.uk/2017/12/josephine-baker-and-la-revue-negre/</a></p><p>Jolley, L. (2021, April 13). Josephine Baker. SHSMO Historic Missourians. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://historicmissourians.shsmo.org/josephine-baker">https://historicmissourians.shsmo.org/josephine-baker</a></p><p>Jones, C. (2020, July 12). For faces behind Aunt Jemima, Uncle Ben’s and Cream of Wheat, life transcended stereotype. USA TODAY. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://eu.usatoday.com/story/money/2020/07/10/real-people-behind-aunt-jemima-uncle-ben-cream-of-wheat/3285054001/">https://eu.usatoday.com/story/money/2020/07/10/real-people-behind-aunt-jemima-uncle-ben-cream-of-wheat/3285054001/</a></p><p>Pearl Milling Co. (n.d.). Brand origins. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.pearlmillingcompany.com/our-history">https://www.pearlmillingcompany.com/our-history</a></p><p>Wu, K. J. (2020, April 28). Land O'Lakes Drops the Iconic Logo of an Indigenous Woman From Its Branding. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/mia-land-olakes-iconic-indigenous-woman-departs-packaging-mixed-reactions-180974760/">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/mia-land-olakes-iconic-indigenous-woman-departs-packaging-mixed-reactions-180974760/</a></p><p>Shapira, I. (2016, May 19). A brief history of the word ‘redskin’ and how it became a source of controversy. Washington Post. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/a-brief-history-of-the-word-redskin-and-how-it-became-a-source-of-controversy/2016/05/19/062cd618-187f-11e6-9e16-2e5a123aac62_story.html">https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/a-brief-history-of-the-word-redskin-and-how-it-became-a-source-of-controversy/2016/05/19/062cd618-187f-11e6-9e16-2e5a123aac62_story.html</a></p><p>Laskow, S. (2014, December 2). The Racist History of Peter Pan's Indian Tribe. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/racist-history-peter-pan-indian-tribe-180953500/">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/racist-history-peter-pan-indian-tribe-180953500/</a></p><p>UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LIBRARY. (n.d.). Great Native American Chiefs | Osceola · Online Exhibits. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://apps.lib.umich.edu/online-exhibits/exhibits/show/great-native-american-chiefs/group-of-native-american-chief/osceola">https://apps.lib.umich.edu/online-exhibits/exhibits/show/great-native-american-chiefs/group-of-native-american-chief/osceola</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 3 Nov 2022 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/bipoc-racial-caricatures-in-branding-design-kbqO4w_i</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There is a long history of racism behind famous brands, characters, and design that often goes unnoticed. Blatantly racist caricatures began with minstrel shows and the use of blackface, where white actors would use black makeup and overdrawn lips to depict Black people. These drove stereotypes that would be used in film, television, and branding. White actors depicted other minorities in an ill manner. From Mickey Rooney playing a Japanese man, Mr. Yunioshi, to Claudia Cardinale playing Indian Princess Dala, actors continued to manipulate their physical features to display the American audience’s ideas of these different ethnicities. Cartoons like Disney’s Peter Pan used Indigenous stereotypes for its character Tiger Lily and her tribe of Piccaninny, along with the song “What Makes the Red Man Red?” Big production companies such as Disney and Warner Bros. are guilty of distributing offensive caricatures that poorly reflect Black, Asian, Indigenous, and other ethnic groups. Brand mascots like Aunt Jemima were created to uphold the mammy stereotype, a Black woman who is subservient to white people and their children. She was meant to contain white anxieties about increasing the mobility of Black people within spaces of mass production and consumption post-emancipation. At this time other brand mascots like Rastus for Cream of Wheat and Uncle Ben’s Rice similarly demeaned Black men. Ethnic mascots are also very popular in sports, primarily mascots of Indigenous American men who are shown as savages. It’s only been since 2020 that brands have started to shift away from these racist images but the damage of BIPOC caricatures lingers.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1833 – One of the first examples of blackface, in Bowery Theatre, New York, Thomas Darmouth Rice played the caricature Jim Crow<br />1889 – Aunt Jemima brand was first introduced and featured mascot/character as a stereotype of a  mammy<br />1893 – Cream of Wheat launched using a mascot named Rastus,  a term used for Black men who were depicted as simple-minded<br />1904  – first US stage production of <i>Peter Pan</i> features white actress, Margaret Gordon as Tiger Lily <br />1927 – posters of advertising performances of Joesphine Baker by Paul Colin: ‘La Revue Negre, feature racist stereotypes: Black figures with large red lips and overly sexualized depictions of Baker<br />1928 – Land O’Lakes butter premieres with a sexualized mascot/character of a Indegnous women called Mia<br />1935-36 – Shirley Temple appears in blackface and clothing which depict the ‘mammy’ caricature in The Littlest Rebel’ and dances on a stage with two men in blackface in ‘Dimples’<br />1940 – Tom and Jerry cartoon introduces a character named Mammy Two Shoes, a heavyset Black woman who was responsible for taking care of the house<br />1947 – Florida State adopted the name Seminoles <br />1953 – Disney version of <i>Peter Pan</i> , the tribe of Piccaninny are designed to play the exotic and savage trope and performs the song, “What Makes the Red Man Red?”<br />1961 – white actor Mickey Rooney plays a Japanese man, Mr. Yunioshi, in <i>Breakfast at Tiffany’s</i><br />1978 –  FSU Seminoles began a new tradition: At home football games a Seminole warrior would ride a horse onto the field, known as Chief Osceola and Renegade<br />2013– Daniel Synder, owner of the football team The Washington Redskins, vowed to never alter the name or imagery<br />2019 – the Cleveland Indians  and MLB made the decision to remove native caricature Chief Wahoo from their brand<br />2020 – Aunt Jemima is retires and the company rebrands to become Pearl Milling Company<br />2020 – B&G Foods announced they were removing the Rastus character from Cream of Wheat<br />2020 – during a rebrand Mia is removed from Land O’Lakes packaging<br />2020 – Washington Redskins announced name change and logo retirement</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Walters, K. (n.d.). Blackface and Minstrelsy Tradition. BIPOC Design History. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://bipocdesignhistory.com/V1-overview">https://bipocdesignhistory.com/V1-overview</a></p><p>Carter, K. (2019). Confronting racial stereotypes in graphic design history. In J. Kaufmann-Butler,<br />V. Pass, & C. Wilson (Eds.), Design history beyond the canon. Bloomsbury.</p><p>Smith, C. J. (2013). The creolization of American culture : William Sidney Mount and the roots of blackface minstrelsy. University of Illinois Press.</p><p>Razack. (2016). Sexualized Violence and Colonialism: Reflections on the Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. Canadian Journal of Women and the Law, 28(2), i–iv. <a href="https://doi.org/10.3138/cjwl.28.2.i">https://doi.org/10.3138/cjwl.28.2.i</a></p><p>Luske, H., Geronimi, C. & Jackson, W. (Directors). (1953). Peter Pan [Film]. Walt Disney.</p><p>Elias-De Jesus, A. (2017, June 30). Jay Z’s New Music Video Uses America’s Long History of Racist Cartoons to Deliver a Haunting Message. Slate Magazine. <a href="https://slate.com/culture/2017/06/jay-zs-the-story-of-o-j-music-video-takes-on-racist-cartoons.html#:%7E:text=Jay%20Z%E2%80%99s%20New%20Music%20Video,to%20Deliver%20a%20Haunting%20Message&text=The%20video%20for%20%E2%80%9CThe%20Story,.%2C%20Disney%2C%20and%20others">https://slate.com/culture/2017/06/jay-zs-the-story-of-o-j-music-video-takes-on-racist-cartoons.html#:%7E:text=Jay%20Z’s%20New%20Music%20Video,to%20Deliver%20a%20Haunting%20Message&text=The%20video%20for%20%E2%80%9CThe%20Story,.%2C%20Disney%2C%20and%20others</a>.</p><p>Jay-Z & Romanek, M. (Directors). (2017). The Story of OJ [Film]. Carter Enterprises. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RM7lw0Ovzq0&t=252s">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RM7lw0Ovzq0&t=252s</a></p><p>Reappropriate. (2014, February 12). Remembering Shirley Temple requires us to remember her legacy of Blackface cinema. <a href="http://reappropriate.co/2014/02/remembering-shirley-temple-requires-us-to-remember-her-perpetuation-of-blackface-cinema/">http://reappropriate.co/2014/02/remembering-shirley-temple-requires-us-to-remember-her-perpetuation-of-blackface-cinema/</a></p><p>Biography.com Editors. (2021, October 27). Bill “Bojangles” Robinson. Biography. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.biography.com/performer/bill-bojangles-robinson">https://www.biography.com/performer/bill-bojangles-robinson</a></p><p>MARRAKECH RIAD. (2017, December 4). Josephine Baker and La Revue Nègre | Marrakech Riad. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.marrakech-riad.co.uk/2017/12/josephine-baker-and-la-revue-negre/">https://www.marrakech-riad.co.uk/2017/12/josephine-baker-and-la-revue-negre/</a></p><p>Jolley, L. (2021, April 13). Josephine Baker. SHSMO Historic Missourians. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://historicmissourians.shsmo.org/josephine-baker">https://historicmissourians.shsmo.org/josephine-baker</a></p><p>Jones, C. (2020, July 12). For faces behind Aunt Jemima, Uncle Ben’s and Cream of Wheat, life transcended stereotype. USA TODAY. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://eu.usatoday.com/story/money/2020/07/10/real-people-behind-aunt-jemima-uncle-ben-cream-of-wheat/3285054001/">https://eu.usatoday.com/story/money/2020/07/10/real-people-behind-aunt-jemima-uncle-ben-cream-of-wheat/3285054001/</a></p><p>Pearl Milling Co. (n.d.). Brand origins. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.pearlmillingcompany.com/our-history">https://www.pearlmillingcompany.com/our-history</a></p><p>Wu, K. J. (2020, April 28). Land O'Lakes Drops the Iconic Logo of an Indigenous Woman From Its Branding. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/mia-land-olakes-iconic-indigenous-woman-departs-packaging-mixed-reactions-180974760/">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/mia-land-olakes-iconic-indigenous-woman-departs-packaging-mixed-reactions-180974760/</a></p><p>Shapira, I. (2016, May 19). A brief history of the word ‘redskin’ and how it became a source of controversy. Washington Post. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/a-brief-history-of-the-word-redskin-and-how-it-became-a-source-of-controversy/2016/05/19/062cd618-187f-11e6-9e16-2e5a123aac62_story.html">https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/a-brief-history-of-the-word-redskin-and-how-it-became-a-source-of-controversy/2016/05/19/062cd618-187f-11e6-9e16-2e5a123aac62_story.html</a></p><p>Laskow, S. (2014, December 2). The Racist History of Peter Pan's Indian Tribe. Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/racist-history-peter-pan-indian-tribe-180953500/">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/racist-history-peter-pan-indian-tribe-180953500/</a></p><p>UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LIBRARY. (n.d.). Great Native American Chiefs | Osceola · Online Exhibits. Retrieved June 16, 2022, from <a href="https://apps.lib.umich.edu/online-exhibits/exhibits/show/great-native-american-chiefs/group-of-native-american-chief/osceola">https://apps.lib.umich.edu/online-exhibits/exhibits/show/great-native-american-chiefs/group-of-native-american-chief/osceola</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="22790226" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/b0c80418-e44c-4dd6-9ebb-796ae2af6394/audio/0b6f62c0-c797-47fa-bd00-34d6c1c46ef0/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>BIPOC Racial Caricatures in Branding &amp; Design</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/a189dd19-6e1a-4ff2-a764-107b72d14aa7/3000x3000/huynh-incomplet-podcast-revised25.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:23:43</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks at the history of stereotypes and caricatures, their ties to minstrel acts, and use in Branding and graphic design.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks at the history of stereotypes and caricatures, their ties to minstrel acts, and use in Branding and graphic design.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
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      <title>Abolitionist Newspapers</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>The birth of the Black newspaper in America took place in the form of abolitionist newspapers that spoke out against enslavement. These papers were an essential part of the Abolitionist movement in America, and many of them gave the Black community an important voice on issues that directly affected them and their communities. These newspapers spread Enlightenment-era ideas of equality and the rights of Black Americans and fought back against the negative and disparaging news that was regularly published about Black Americans in white-owned newspapers. Freedom’s Journal, The Liberator, The Colored American, and The North Star were all either operated and published by African American men or were supported by monetary contributions and printed regular articles from them. All of these newspapers built the momentum of the Abolitionist Movement and paved the way for the Civil Rights Movement to come. They were a vitally important way for Black people to speak out, circulate news and assistance to their communities, and change the way Black Americans were viewed.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1688  – the first known recorded anti-slavery incident, Quakers protested the act of slaveholding</p><p>1713-1773 –  America annually imports roughly 15,000 enslaved people</p><p>1714 – 59,000 enslaved persons in America</p><p>1758 – Abolitionist movement begins in America</p><p>1780-1789 – Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and New York outlaw slavery</p><p>1804 – every northern state had some form of emancipation in their legislation</p><p>1808 –  the import of enslaved persons were abolished in all states except South Carolina</p><p>1816 –  American Colonization Society (ACS )founded </p><p>1827 – Freedom’s Journal founded, the first African American owned and operated newspaper in the USA</p><p>1831 – The Liberator founded by William Lloyd Garrison</p><p>1833 – the militant abolitionist group called the American Anti-Slavery Society is formed</p><p>1837 – Phillip A. Bell published the first issue of his weekly newspaper called “Weekly Advocate”, later renamed “The Colored American”</p><p>1842 – James Forten, financial backer and contributor to The Liberator, dies at age 75</p><p>1847-1851 – The North Star runs, founded by Fredrick Douglass</p><p>1850 – Fugitive Slave Act, made it possible to reclaim runaway formerly enslaved persons </p><p>1865 – The Liberator ceases publication, ending with the ratification of the 13th amendment </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Abruzzo, M. (2011). <i>Polemic Pain: Slavery, Cruelty, and the Rise of Humanitarianism</i>. Johns Hopkins University Press. </p><p>African American Newspapers Collection: Parts I-XIV. (n.d.). Retrieved January 4, 2022, from <a href="https://www.accessible-archives.com/">https://www.accessible-archives.com/</a>. </p><p>Bacon, J. (2007). <i>Freedom's journal: The First African-American newspaper.</i> Rowman & Littlefield. </p><p>Barshad, A. (2019, Jan 21). <i>Shaun King on relaunching the North Star newspaper</i>. New York, Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/magazines/shaun-king-on-relaunching-north-star-newspaper/docview/2187591605/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/magazines/shaun-king-on-relaunching-north-star-newspaper/docview/2187591605/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>BLUMBERG, B. (2004). Tammany Hall_._ In R. S. McElvaine (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of the Great Depression</i> (Vol. 2, pp. 962-963). Macmillan Reference USA. </p><p><a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3404500506/GVRL?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=717af3c5">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3404500506/GVRL?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=717af3c5</a></p><p>Burrowes, C. P. (2011). “Caught in the crosswinds of the Atlantic”. Journalism History, 37(3), 130-141. Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/caught-crosswinds-atlantic/docview/904647711/se-2?accountid=1451">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/caught-crosswinds-atlantic/docview/904647711/se-2?accountid=1451</a></p><p>Douglass, F. (1968). <i>My Bondage and My Freedom</i>. Arno Press & The New York Times. </p><p>Douglass, F.. (1993). <i>Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass: An American Slave</i>. Bedford Books. </p><p>Drescher, S. (2009). A_bolition a history of slavery and antislavery_. Cambridge University Press. </p><p>Du Bois, W. E. B. (2007). <i>The Supression of the African Slave-Trade</i>. Oxford University Press. </p><p>Fagan, B. (2011). "Americans as They Really Are": The "Colored American" and the Illustration of National Identity. American Periodicals, 21(2), 97–119. </p><p>Fagan, B. (2014). “The North Star and the Atlantic 1848”. <i>African American Review</i>, 47(1), 51+. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A675538942/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=1170fb7f">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A675538942/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=1170fb7f</a></p><p>Iaccarino, A. A. (2013). Garrison, William Lloyd 1805--1879. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of race and racism</i> (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/garrison_william_lloyd_1805_1879/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/garrison_william_lloyd_1805_1879/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Jackson, M. (2013). Abolition movement. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of race and racism</i> (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/abolition_movement/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/abolition_movement/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Klein, M. A. (2014). <i>Historical Dictionary of Slavery and Abolition</i>. Rowman & Littlefield. </p><p>Magness, P. W., & Page, S. N. (2018). <i>Colonization after emancipation: Lincoln and the Movement for Black Resettlement</i>. University of Missouri Press. </p><p>McClish, G. (2007). “A man of feeling, a man of color: James Forten and the rise of African American deliberative rhetoric”. <i>Rhetorica</i>, 25(3), 297–328. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1525/rh.2007.25.3.297">https://doi.org/10.1525/rh.2007.25.3.297</a></p><p>Newman, R. S. (2006). <i>The transformation of American abolitionism: Fighting slavery in the Early Republic</i>. Univ. of North Carolina Press. </p><p>Oldfield, J.R. (2013). <i>Transatlantic Abolitionism in the Age of Revolution</i>. Cambridge University Press. </p><p>Partin, E. (2011, January 4). FREEDOM’S JOURNAL (1827–1829). BLACKPAST. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/freedom-s-journal-1827-1829/">https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/freedom-s-journal-1827-1829/</a></p><p>Public Broadcasting Service. (n.d.). Freedom's Journal. PBS. Retrieved January 4, 2022, from <a href="https://www.pbs.org/blackpress/news_bios/newbios/nwsppr/freedom/freedom.html">https://www.pbs.org/blackpress/news_bios/newbios/nwsppr/freedom/freedom.html</a></p><p>​​Reyes, D. (1999, Feb 25). Frederick Douglass and his historic north star. New York Amsterdam News Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/frederick-douglass-his-historic-north-star/docview/390315309/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/frederick-douglass-his-historic-north-star/docview/390315309/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Ripley, C. P. (1992). <i>The Black Abolitionist Papers</i> (Vol. 5). University of North Carolina Press. </p><p>Upchurch, T. A. (2016). Abolition Movement. In S. Schechter, T. S. Vontz, T. A. Birkland, M. A. Graber, & J. J. Patrick (Eds.), <i>American Governance</i> (Vol. 1, pp. 1-4). Macmillan Reference USA. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3629100012/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=058b5006">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3629100012/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=058b5006</a></p><p>Washburn, P. S., & Page, C. (2006). <i>The African American newspaper: Voice of Freedom</i>. Northwestern University Press. </p><p>Winch, J. (2013). Forten, James 1766--1842. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of race and racism</i> (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/forten_james_1766_1842/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/forten_james_1766_1842/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Winch, J. (2003). <i>A gentleman of color: The life of James Forten</i>. Oxford University Press. </p><p>Winch, J. (2007). “The Making and Meaning of James Forten's Letters from a Man of Colour.” <i>The William and Mary Quarterly</i>, 64(1), 129–138. Retrieved January 4, 2022, from <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/4491602">https://www.jstor.org/stable/4491602</a>.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 27 Oct 2022 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/abolitionist-newspapers-t8FO94al</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The birth of the Black newspaper in America took place in the form of abolitionist newspapers that spoke out against enslavement. These papers were an essential part of the Abolitionist movement in America, and many of them gave the Black community an important voice on issues that directly affected them and their communities. These newspapers spread Enlightenment-era ideas of equality and the rights of Black Americans and fought back against the negative and disparaging news that was regularly published about Black Americans in white-owned newspapers. Freedom’s Journal, The Liberator, The Colored American, and The North Star were all either operated and published by African American men or were supported by monetary contributions and printed regular articles from them. All of these newspapers built the momentum of the Abolitionist Movement and paved the way for the Civil Rights Movement to come. They were a vitally important way for Black people to speak out, circulate news and assistance to their communities, and change the way Black Americans were viewed.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1688  – the first known recorded anti-slavery incident, Quakers protested the act of slaveholding</p><p>1713-1773 –  America annually imports roughly 15,000 enslaved people</p><p>1714 – 59,000 enslaved persons in America</p><p>1758 – Abolitionist movement begins in America</p><p>1780-1789 – Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and New York outlaw slavery</p><p>1804 – every northern state had some form of emancipation in their legislation</p><p>1808 –  the import of enslaved persons were abolished in all states except South Carolina</p><p>1816 –  American Colonization Society (ACS )founded </p><p>1827 – Freedom’s Journal founded, the first African American owned and operated newspaper in the USA</p><p>1831 – The Liberator founded by William Lloyd Garrison</p><p>1833 – the militant abolitionist group called the American Anti-Slavery Society is formed</p><p>1837 – Phillip A. Bell published the first issue of his weekly newspaper called “Weekly Advocate”, later renamed “The Colored American”</p><p>1842 – James Forten, financial backer and contributor to The Liberator, dies at age 75</p><p>1847-1851 – The North Star runs, founded by Fredrick Douglass</p><p>1850 – Fugitive Slave Act, made it possible to reclaim runaway formerly enslaved persons </p><p>1865 – The Liberator ceases publication, ending with the ratification of the 13th amendment </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Abruzzo, M. (2011). <i>Polemic Pain: Slavery, Cruelty, and the Rise of Humanitarianism</i>. Johns Hopkins University Press. </p><p>African American Newspapers Collection: Parts I-XIV. (n.d.). Retrieved January 4, 2022, from <a href="https://www.accessible-archives.com/">https://www.accessible-archives.com/</a>. </p><p>Bacon, J. (2007). <i>Freedom's journal: The First African-American newspaper.</i> Rowman & Littlefield. </p><p>Barshad, A. (2019, Jan 21). <i>Shaun King on relaunching the North Star newspaper</i>. New York, Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/magazines/shaun-king-on-relaunching-north-star-newspaper/docview/2187591605/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/magazines/shaun-king-on-relaunching-north-star-newspaper/docview/2187591605/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>BLUMBERG, B. (2004). Tammany Hall_._ In R. S. McElvaine (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of the Great Depression</i> (Vol. 2, pp. 962-963). Macmillan Reference USA. </p><p><a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3404500506/GVRL?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=717af3c5">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3404500506/GVRL?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=717af3c5</a></p><p>Burrowes, C. P. (2011). “Caught in the crosswinds of the Atlantic”. Journalism History, 37(3), 130-141. Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/caught-crosswinds-atlantic/docview/904647711/se-2?accountid=1451">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/caught-crosswinds-atlantic/docview/904647711/se-2?accountid=1451</a></p><p>Douglass, F. (1968). <i>My Bondage and My Freedom</i>. Arno Press & The New York Times. </p><p>Douglass, F.. (1993). <i>Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass: An American Slave</i>. Bedford Books. </p><p>Drescher, S. (2009). A_bolition a history of slavery and antislavery_. Cambridge University Press. </p><p>Du Bois, W. E. B. (2007). <i>The Supression of the African Slave-Trade</i>. Oxford University Press. </p><p>Fagan, B. (2011). "Americans as They Really Are": The "Colored American" and the Illustration of National Identity. American Periodicals, 21(2), 97–119. </p><p>Fagan, B. (2014). “The North Star and the Atlantic 1848”. <i>African American Review</i>, 47(1), 51+. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A675538942/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=1170fb7f">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A675538942/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=1170fb7f</a></p><p>Iaccarino, A. A. (2013). Garrison, William Lloyd 1805--1879. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of race and racism</i> (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/garrison_william_lloyd_1805_1879/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/garrison_william_lloyd_1805_1879/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Jackson, M. (2013). Abolition movement. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of race and racism</i> (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/abolition_movement/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/abolition_movement/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Klein, M. A. (2014). <i>Historical Dictionary of Slavery and Abolition</i>. Rowman & Littlefield. </p><p>Magness, P. W., & Page, S. N. (2018). <i>Colonization after emancipation: Lincoln and the Movement for Black Resettlement</i>. University of Missouri Press. </p><p>McClish, G. (2007). “A man of feeling, a man of color: James Forten and the rise of African American deliberative rhetoric”. <i>Rhetorica</i>, 25(3), 297–328. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1525/rh.2007.25.3.297">https://doi.org/10.1525/rh.2007.25.3.297</a></p><p>Newman, R. S. (2006). <i>The transformation of American abolitionism: Fighting slavery in the Early Republic</i>. Univ. of North Carolina Press. </p><p>Oldfield, J.R. (2013). <i>Transatlantic Abolitionism in the Age of Revolution</i>. Cambridge University Press. </p><p>Partin, E. (2011, January 4). FREEDOM’S JOURNAL (1827–1829). BLACKPAST. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/freedom-s-journal-1827-1829/">https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/freedom-s-journal-1827-1829/</a></p><p>Public Broadcasting Service. (n.d.). Freedom's Journal. PBS. Retrieved January 4, 2022, from <a href="https://www.pbs.org/blackpress/news_bios/newbios/nwsppr/freedom/freedom.html">https://www.pbs.org/blackpress/news_bios/newbios/nwsppr/freedom/freedom.html</a></p><p>​​Reyes, D. (1999, Feb 25). Frederick Douglass and his historic north star. New York Amsterdam News Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/frederick-douglass-his-historic-north-star/docview/390315309/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/frederick-douglass-his-historic-north-star/docview/390315309/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Ripley, C. P. (1992). <i>The Black Abolitionist Papers</i> (Vol. 5). University of North Carolina Press. </p><p>Upchurch, T. A. (2016). Abolition Movement. In S. Schechter, T. S. Vontz, T. A. Birkland, M. A. Graber, & J. J. Patrick (Eds.), <i>American Governance</i> (Vol. 1, pp. 1-4). Macmillan Reference USA. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3629100012/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=058b5006">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3629100012/OVIC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-OVIC&xid=058b5006</a></p><p>Washburn, P. S., & Page, C. (2006). <i>The African American newspaper: Voice of Freedom</i>. Northwestern University Press. </p><p>Winch, J. (2013). Forten, James 1766--1842. In P. L. Mason (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of race and racism</i> (2nd ed.). Gale. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/forten_james_1766_1842/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/galerace/forten_james_1766_1842/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Winch, J. (2003). <i>A gentleman of color: The life of James Forten</i>. Oxford University Press. </p><p>Winch, J. (2007). “The Making and Meaning of James Forten's Letters from a Man of Colour.” <i>The William and Mary Quarterly</i>, 64(1), 129–138. Retrieved January 4, 2022, from <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/4491602">https://www.jstor.org/stable/4491602</a>.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="43247858" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/0b13d5b3-6e62-4583-aa99-e251346d4d87/audio/a54f899b-59af-4acc-8007-8dd7ecf6491e/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Abolitionist Newspapers</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/37fccba4-6637-4d26-95ca-40ec7b467fce/3000x3000/huynh-incomplet-podcast-revised24.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:45:01</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>The episode considers the role of abolitionist newspapers in graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>The episode considers the role of abolitionist newspapers in graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
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      <title>Harriet Tubman &amp; the $20 Bill</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>This episode considers the 2016 proposal to place the likeness of Harriet Tubman on the U.S. $20 bill. The first use of paper money dates back to 1000 CE and has been cited as the first instance of widespread access to printed images. Money is an invented concept, it has value because societies collectively agree that it does, but historically images, symbols, and seals have been used to help authenticate money within the culture that it serves. Images of gods, monarchs and historical figures imbue the money with the magic of the gods or the authority of the government to assert its value. The US has a long history of printed money, dating back even before gaining independence. The images that a culture uses to assert the value of the country reflects what that country values. why then does the US continue to feature former presidents, and slave owners, white men of privilege, versus women and minorities? Harriet Tubman was a true hero in this country, who worked under the auspices of the underground railroad, and not only gained her own freedom, but also helped to free over 300 enslaved persons in her lifetime. In 2016, the proposal was made to put her image on the $20 bill. Making a change to the design of the US $20 bill, replacing Andrew Jackson’s likeness with that of Harriet Tubman would not right the wrongs of the past, but it would be a step towards honoring the contributions of Black women in this country, as well as a step forward in c_orrecting the absence of positive representations._</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>440 BC – The Greeks first use coin money, adopted the practice from the Lydians</p><p>1000 – The first paper money was issued in China</p><p>1690 – the first paper money was printed in the U.S. by the Massachusetts Bay colony, though U.S.A. is not yet a country</p><p>1775 – Second Continental Congress issues paper money to help fund the American Revolution</p><p>1821 – Harriet Tubman was born into slavery on a Maryland plantation</p><p>1844 – Harriet Tubman’s forced marriage to John Tubman</p><p>1831 – First recorded use of the phrase Underground Railroad</p><p>1913 – Harriet Tubman dies, buried in Auburn, New York with military honors</p><p>2016 – Proposal to replace Andrew Jackson with Harriet Tubman on the U.S. $20 bill, placed on hold during Trump presidency </p><p>2021– President Biden announces plans to revisit Harriet Tubman $20 bill</p><p>2022 – plans are made to strike quarters  with historical female figures from U.S. History</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>99% Invisible. (2021, June 11). <i>Episode 54 The Colour of Money</i>. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/episode-54-the-colour-of-money/">https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/episode-54-the-colour-of-money/</a></p><p>Andrews, E. (July 19 2017, updated: September 3, 2019). How many U.S. Presidents owned enslaved People? History.com </p><p><a href="https://www.history.com/news/how-many-u-s-presidents-owned-slaves">https://www.history.com/news/how-many-u-s-presidents-owned-slaves</a></p><p>Ann, M. S. (2021). Harriet Tubman. <i>Harriet Tubman</i>, 1–N.PAG. </p><p>Biography.com Editors. (2014, April 2). <i>Harriet Tubman</i>. The Biography.Com Website. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.biography.com/activist/harriet-tubman">https://www.biography.com/activist/harriet-tubman</a></p><p>Blakemore, E. (April 30, 2018, updated: August 29, 2018). Why Andrew Jackson’s Legacy Is So Controversial. History.com</p><p><a href="https://www.history.com/news/andrew-jackson-presidency-controversial-legacy">https://www.history.com/news/andrew-jackson-presidency-controversial-legacy</a></p><p>Bradford, S. (1886). <i>Harriet, the Moses of Her People</i>. New York, Geo. R. Lockwood & Son.</p><p>Due North Productions (Producer), & Robertson, L. (Director). (2016). <i>Daughters of the New Republic: Harriet Tubman and Sarah Bradford</i>. [Video/DVD] Due North Productions. <a href="https://video.alexanderstreet.com/watch/daughters-of-the-new-republic-harriet-tubman-and-sarah-bradford">https://video.alexanderstreet.com/watch/daughters-of-the-new-republic-harriet-tubman-and-sarah-bradford</a></p><p>Fleming, C. (2018). <i>How To be Less Stupid About Race</i>. Beacon Press. Boston Massachusetts. </p><p>Gleim, S. (April 1, 2021). <i>What do the Symbols on the U.S. $1 bill Mean?</i> Howstuworks.com. <a href="https://money.howstuffworks.com/symbols-dollar-bill.htm">https://money.howstuffworks.com/symbols-dollar-bill.htm</a></p><p>Grundhauser, E. (April 22, 2016) The ornate Charm of American Currency from the 1700s. Atlasobscura.com</p><p><a href="https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-ornate-charm-of-american-currency-from-the-1700s">https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-ornate-charm-of-american-currency-from-the-1700s</a></p><p>Hannah-Jones, N. (2021). The 1619 Project. New York. One World</p><p>History.com Editors. (2022, January 25). <i>Underground Railroad</i>. HISTORY. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/underground-railroad">https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/underground-railroad</a></p><p>History.com Editors. (2021, November 16). <i>Quakers</i>. HISTORY. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.history.com/topics/immigration/history-of-quakerism">https://www.history.com/topics/immigration/history-of-quakerism</a></p><p>Klein, C. (July 8, 2020, updated: October 16, 2020). Alexander Hamilton’s Complicated relationship to Slavery. History.com. <a href="https://www.history.com/news/alexander-hamilton-slavery-facts">https://www.history.com/news/alexander-hamilton-slavery-facts</a></p><p>Laliberte, M.  (July 26, 2021). What Those Symbols on the Dollar Bill actually mean. Reader’s Digest.com <a href="https://www.rd.com/list/dollar-bill-symbols/">https://www.rd.com/list/dollar-bill-symbols/</a></p><p>Landis, M. (September 9, 2015). <i>A Proposal To Change The Words We Use When Talking About The Civil War</i>. Smithsonian Magazine.com. <a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/proposal-change-vocabulary-we-use-when-talking-about-civil-war-180956547/">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/proposal-change-vocabulary-we-use-when-talking-about-civil-war-180956547/</a></p><p>Musgrave, P. (2021, February 9). <i>Take the Presidents Off the U.S. Dollar</i>. Foreign Policy. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/02/09/america-currency-outdated-tubman-jackson/">https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/02/09/america-currency-outdated-tubman-jackson/</a></p><p>Pruitt, S.  (September 21, 2012, updated: June 23, 2020). 5 Things you may not know about Abraham Lincoln, Slavery and Emancipation. History.com</p><p><a href="https://www.history.com/news/5-things-you-may-not-know-about-lincoln-slavery-and-emancipation">https://www.history.com/news/5-things-you-may-not-know-about-lincoln-slavery-and-emancipation</a></p><p>Smith, R. (2012, April 4). <i>Redesigning Dollar Bills, and the American Brand - NYTimes.com</i>. The New York Times. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2012/04/04/bringing-dollars-and-cents-into-this-century/redesigning-dollar-bills-and-the-american-brand">https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2012/04/04/bringing-dollars-and-cents-into-this-century/redesigning-dollar-bills-and-the-american-brand</a></p><p>Weatherford, J. (1997). <i>The History of Money</i>. New York, Three Rivers Press.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 20 Oct 2022 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Ebony Sayles, Mandy Horton, Spencer Gee, Dean Kelly)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/harriet-tubman-the-20-bill-TKPbXOSR</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This episode considers the 2016 proposal to place the likeness of Harriet Tubman on the U.S. $20 bill. The first use of paper money dates back to 1000 CE and has been cited as the first instance of widespread access to printed images. Money is an invented concept, it has value because societies collectively agree that it does, but historically images, symbols, and seals have been used to help authenticate money within the culture that it serves. Images of gods, monarchs and historical figures imbue the money with the magic of the gods or the authority of the government to assert its value. The US has a long history of printed money, dating back even before gaining independence. The images that a culture uses to assert the value of the country reflects what that country values. why then does the US continue to feature former presidents, and slave owners, white men of privilege, versus women and minorities? Harriet Tubman was a true hero in this country, who worked under the auspices of the underground railroad, and not only gained her own freedom, but also helped to free over 300 enslaved persons in her lifetime. In 2016, the proposal was made to put her image on the $20 bill. Making a change to the design of the US $20 bill, replacing Andrew Jackson’s likeness with that of Harriet Tubman would not right the wrongs of the past, but it would be a step towards honoring the contributions of Black women in this country, as well as a step forward in c_orrecting the absence of positive representations._</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>440 BC – The Greeks first use coin money, adopted the practice from the Lydians</p><p>1000 – The first paper money was issued in China</p><p>1690 – the first paper money was printed in the U.S. by the Massachusetts Bay colony, though U.S.A. is not yet a country</p><p>1775 – Second Continental Congress issues paper money to help fund the American Revolution</p><p>1821 – Harriet Tubman was born into slavery on a Maryland plantation</p><p>1844 – Harriet Tubman’s forced marriage to John Tubman</p><p>1831 – First recorded use of the phrase Underground Railroad</p><p>1913 – Harriet Tubman dies, buried in Auburn, New York with military honors</p><p>2016 – Proposal to replace Andrew Jackson with Harriet Tubman on the U.S. $20 bill, placed on hold during Trump presidency </p><p>2021– President Biden announces plans to revisit Harriet Tubman $20 bill</p><p>2022 – plans are made to strike quarters  with historical female figures from U.S. History</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>99% Invisible. (2021, June 11). <i>Episode 54 The Colour of Money</i>. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/episode-54-the-colour-of-money/">https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/episode-54-the-colour-of-money/</a></p><p>Andrews, E. (July 19 2017, updated: September 3, 2019). How many U.S. Presidents owned enslaved People? History.com </p><p><a href="https://www.history.com/news/how-many-u-s-presidents-owned-slaves">https://www.history.com/news/how-many-u-s-presidents-owned-slaves</a></p><p>Ann, M. S. (2021). Harriet Tubman. <i>Harriet Tubman</i>, 1–N.PAG. </p><p>Biography.com Editors. (2014, April 2). <i>Harriet Tubman</i>. The Biography.Com Website. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.biography.com/activist/harriet-tubman">https://www.biography.com/activist/harriet-tubman</a></p><p>Blakemore, E. (April 30, 2018, updated: August 29, 2018). Why Andrew Jackson’s Legacy Is So Controversial. History.com</p><p><a href="https://www.history.com/news/andrew-jackson-presidency-controversial-legacy">https://www.history.com/news/andrew-jackson-presidency-controversial-legacy</a></p><p>Bradford, S. (1886). <i>Harriet, the Moses of Her People</i>. New York, Geo. R. Lockwood & Son.</p><p>Due North Productions (Producer), & Robertson, L. (Director). (2016). <i>Daughters of the New Republic: Harriet Tubman and Sarah Bradford</i>. [Video/DVD] Due North Productions. <a href="https://video.alexanderstreet.com/watch/daughters-of-the-new-republic-harriet-tubman-and-sarah-bradford">https://video.alexanderstreet.com/watch/daughters-of-the-new-republic-harriet-tubman-and-sarah-bradford</a></p><p>Fleming, C. (2018). <i>How To be Less Stupid About Race</i>. Beacon Press. Boston Massachusetts. </p><p>Gleim, S. (April 1, 2021). <i>What do the Symbols on the U.S. $1 bill Mean?</i> Howstuworks.com. <a href="https://money.howstuffworks.com/symbols-dollar-bill.htm">https://money.howstuffworks.com/symbols-dollar-bill.htm</a></p><p>Grundhauser, E. (April 22, 2016) The ornate Charm of American Currency from the 1700s. Atlasobscura.com</p><p><a href="https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-ornate-charm-of-american-currency-from-the-1700s">https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-ornate-charm-of-american-currency-from-the-1700s</a></p><p>Hannah-Jones, N. (2021). The 1619 Project. New York. One World</p><p>History.com Editors. (2022, January 25). <i>Underground Railroad</i>. HISTORY. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/underground-railroad">https://www.history.com/topics/black-history/underground-railroad</a></p><p>History.com Editors. (2021, November 16). <i>Quakers</i>. HISTORY. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.history.com/topics/immigration/history-of-quakerism">https://www.history.com/topics/immigration/history-of-quakerism</a></p><p>Klein, C. (July 8, 2020, updated: October 16, 2020). Alexander Hamilton’s Complicated relationship to Slavery. History.com. <a href="https://www.history.com/news/alexander-hamilton-slavery-facts">https://www.history.com/news/alexander-hamilton-slavery-facts</a></p><p>Laliberte, M.  (July 26, 2021). What Those Symbols on the Dollar Bill actually mean. Reader’s Digest.com <a href="https://www.rd.com/list/dollar-bill-symbols/">https://www.rd.com/list/dollar-bill-symbols/</a></p><p>Landis, M. (September 9, 2015). <i>A Proposal To Change The Words We Use When Talking About The Civil War</i>. Smithsonian Magazine.com. <a href="https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/proposal-change-vocabulary-we-use-when-talking-about-civil-war-180956547/">https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/proposal-change-vocabulary-we-use-when-talking-about-civil-war-180956547/</a></p><p>Musgrave, P. (2021, February 9). <i>Take the Presidents Off the U.S. Dollar</i>. Foreign Policy. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/02/09/america-currency-outdated-tubman-jackson/">https://foreignpolicy.com/2021/02/09/america-currency-outdated-tubman-jackson/</a></p><p>Pruitt, S.  (September 21, 2012, updated: June 23, 2020). 5 Things you may not know about Abraham Lincoln, Slavery and Emancipation. History.com</p><p><a href="https://www.history.com/news/5-things-you-may-not-know-about-lincoln-slavery-and-emancipation">https://www.history.com/news/5-things-you-may-not-know-about-lincoln-slavery-and-emancipation</a></p><p>Smith, R. (2012, April 4). <i>Redesigning Dollar Bills, and the American Brand - NYTimes.com</i>. The New York Times. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2012/04/04/bringing-dollars-and-cents-into-this-century/redesigning-dollar-bills-and-the-american-brand">https://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2012/04/04/bringing-dollars-and-cents-into-this-century/redesigning-dollar-bills-and-the-american-brand</a></p><p>Weatherford, J. (1997). <i>The History of Money</i>. New York, Three Rivers Press.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Harriet Tubman &amp; the $20 Bill</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Ebony Sayles, Mandy Horton, Spencer Gee, Dean Kelly</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:26:15</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode considers the 2016 proposal to place the likeness of Harriet Tubman on the U.S. $20 bill. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode considers the 2016 proposal to place the likeness of Harriet Tubman on the U.S. $20 bill. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, currency design, bipoc design history, design history, harriet tubmen</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Angel De Cora (Hinook-Mahiwi-Kalinaka)</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Angel De Cora was an artist, illustrator, and educator from the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. Around the age of 14, she was enrolled in the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute as a part of the U.S. Government’s cultural assimilation program for Indigenous American youth. While at Hampton, she found her love for art. She went on to study under notable artists such as Dwight W. Tryon at Smith College and Howard Pyle at Drexel Institute. De Cora was later featured in Harper’s Monthly Magazine when she wrote and illustrated the semi-autobiographical tales “The Sick Child” and “Gray Wolf’s Daughter.” She was published under her Thunderbird clan name, “Henook-makhewe-kelenaka.” From here, she continued to produce paintings and illustrations and began designing book covers that displayed Native American motifs and the Arts and Crafts style. In the Spring of 1905, she was hired to do the artwork for a chapter in The Indian’s Book by Natalie Curtis. But after designing a cover page for her chapter, the publishers requested she makes cover pages for the other eighteen chapters. De Cora took a job at the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania and established the Native Indian Art Department and later played a part in the publication of ‘The Indian Craftsman’, Carlisle’s monthly magazine. She was known as a “Red Progressive” who advocated for Indian education and helped found the Society of American Indians, a pan-Indian progressive group dedicated to uplifting Native peoples.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1868 or 1869 – b Angel De Cora, born in Thurston, Nebraska, on Ho-chunk (traditionally Winnebago) reservation land<br />1883 – Angel Decora was forced to go to Virginia to attend the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute<br />1891 – Graduated from Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute<br />1896 – was the first Native American to graduate from Smith College<br />1898 – Spends summer studying with Howard Pyle at his renown Brandywine Illustration school<br />1900 – painted for the cover of Franci La Flesch’s The Middle Five: Indian Boys at School.<br />1901 – created several illustrations for Old Indian Legends by Gertrude Bonnin aka Zitkala-Sa as well as Wigwam Stories for Mary Catherine Judd.<br />1906 – Takes a job as an art instructor at the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania<br />1907 – created several illustrations for ethnomusicologist Curtis’ project, The Indian’s Book<br />1907 – Elopes with William H. Dietz, a Sioux Indian, also known as “Lone Star”<br />1909 – begins working on the publication of Carlisle’s monthly magazine, The Indian Craftsman<br />1911 – De Cora helped found the Society of American Indians<br />1915 – De Cora resigns from Carlisle<br />1919 – D Angel De Cora dies from the flu during the Spanish Flu epidemic</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Carlisle Indian School Digital Resource Center. (n.d.). Dietz, Angel DeCora. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://carlisleindian.dickinson.edu/people/dietz-angel-decora">https://carlisleindian.dickinson.edu/people/dietz-angel-decora</a></p><p>Dragicevic, M. (n.d.). Angel De Cora. THE HISTORY OF PAINTING REVISITED. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://thehistoryofpaintingrevisited.weebly.com/angel-de-cora.html">https://thehistoryofpaintingrevisited.weebly.com/angel-de-cora.html</a></p><p>Fay, E. (2021, March 1). Angel De Cora: Indigenous American and Pyle Student | Brandywine Conservancy and Museum of Art. Brandywine River Museum of Art. <a href="https://www.brandywine.org/museum/blog/angel-de-cora-indigenous-american-and-pyle-student">https://www.brandywine.org/museum/blog/angel-de-cora-indigenous-american-and-pyle-student</a></p><p>Gere, A. R. (2004). An Art of Survivance: Angel DeCora at Carlisle. American Indian Quarterly, 28(3/4), 649–684. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/4138937">http://www.jstor.org/stable/4138937</a></p><p>Kelly, M. (2018, March 9). Finding Angel de Cora. The Consecrated Eminence. <a href="https://consecratedeminence.wordpress.com/2018/03/09/finding-angel-de-cora/">https://consecratedeminence.wordpress.com/2018/03/09/finding-angel-de-cora/</a></p><p>McAnulty, S. (2010, November 20). Angel DeCora: American Artist and Educator; article by Sarah McAnulty. Traditional Fine Arts Organization. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://tfaoi.org/aa/4aa/4aa27.htm">https://tfaoi.org/aa/4aa/4aa27.htm</a></p><p>Southall, N. (n.d.). AIGA Design Journeys: Angel DeCora – The Native Graphic Design Project. The Native Graphic Design Project. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.neebin.com/nativedesign/?p=426">https://www.neebin.com/nativedesign/?p=426</a></p><p>Tiger, Y. (n.d.). Rediscovering Native American Illustrator and Designer Angel De Cora – Society of Illustrators. Society of Illustrators. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://societyillustrators.org/event/angeldecora/">https://societyillustrators.org/event/angeldecora/</a></p><p>Waggoner, L. (2008). Fire Light: the life of Angel De Cora, Winnebago artist. University of Oklahoma Press.</p><p>Waggoner, L. (2021). “Her Greatest Work Lay in Decorative Design”: Angel DeCora Ho-Chunk Artist (1869–1919). In B. Levit (Ed.), Baseline Shift: Untold stories of women in graphic design history (pp. 12–31). Princeton Architectural Press.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 13 Oct 2022 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/angel-de-cora-onnqVkU9</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Angel De Cora was an artist, illustrator, and educator from the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. Around the age of 14, she was enrolled in the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute as a part of the U.S. Government’s cultural assimilation program for Indigenous American youth. While at Hampton, she found her love for art. She went on to study under notable artists such as Dwight W. Tryon at Smith College and Howard Pyle at Drexel Institute. De Cora was later featured in Harper’s Monthly Magazine when she wrote and illustrated the semi-autobiographical tales “The Sick Child” and “Gray Wolf’s Daughter.” She was published under her Thunderbird clan name, “Henook-makhewe-kelenaka.” From here, she continued to produce paintings and illustrations and began designing book covers that displayed Native American motifs and the Arts and Crafts style. In the Spring of 1905, she was hired to do the artwork for a chapter in The Indian’s Book by Natalie Curtis. But after designing a cover page for her chapter, the publishers requested she makes cover pages for the other eighteen chapters. De Cora took a job at the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania and established the Native Indian Art Department and later played a part in the publication of ‘The Indian Craftsman’, Carlisle’s monthly magazine. She was known as a “Red Progressive” who advocated for Indian education and helped found the Society of American Indians, a pan-Indian progressive group dedicated to uplifting Native peoples.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1868 or 1869 – b Angel De Cora, born in Thurston, Nebraska, on Ho-chunk (traditionally Winnebago) reservation land<br />1883 – Angel Decora was forced to go to Virginia to attend the Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute<br />1891 – Graduated from Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute<br />1896 – was the first Native American to graduate from Smith College<br />1898 – Spends summer studying with Howard Pyle at his renown Brandywine Illustration school<br />1900 – painted for the cover of Franci La Flesch’s The Middle Five: Indian Boys at School.<br />1901 – created several illustrations for Old Indian Legends by Gertrude Bonnin aka Zitkala-Sa as well as Wigwam Stories for Mary Catherine Judd.<br />1906 – Takes a job as an art instructor at the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania<br />1907 – created several illustrations for ethnomusicologist Curtis’ project, The Indian’s Book<br />1907 – Elopes with William H. Dietz, a Sioux Indian, also known as “Lone Star”<br />1909 – begins working on the publication of Carlisle’s monthly magazine, The Indian Craftsman<br />1911 – De Cora helped found the Society of American Indians<br />1915 – De Cora resigns from Carlisle<br />1919 – D Angel De Cora dies from the flu during the Spanish Flu epidemic</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Carlisle Indian School Digital Resource Center. (n.d.). Dietz, Angel DeCora. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://carlisleindian.dickinson.edu/people/dietz-angel-decora">https://carlisleindian.dickinson.edu/people/dietz-angel-decora</a></p><p>Dragicevic, M. (n.d.). Angel De Cora. THE HISTORY OF PAINTING REVISITED. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://thehistoryofpaintingrevisited.weebly.com/angel-de-cora.html">https://thehistoryofpaintingrevisited.weebly.com/angel-de-cora.html</a></p><p>Fay, E. (2021, March 1). Angel De Cora: Indigenous American and Pyle Student | Brandywine Conservancy and Museum of Art. Brandywine River Museum of Art. <a href="https://www.brandywine.org/museum/blog/angel-de-cora-indigenous-american-and-pyle-student">https://www.brandywine.org/museum/blog/angel-de-cora-indigenous-american-and-pyle-student</a></p><p>Gere, A. R. (2004). An Art of Survivance: Angel DeCora at Carlisle. American Indian Quarterly, 28(3/4), 649–684. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/4138937">http://www.jstor.org/stable/4138937</a></p><p>Kelly, M. (2018, March 9). Finding Angel de Cora. The Consecrated Eminence. <a href="https://consecratedeminence.wordpress.com/2018/03/09/finding-angel-de-cora/">https://consecratedeminence.wordpress.com/2018/03/09/finding-angel-de-cora/</a></p><p>McAnulty, S. (2010, November 20). Angel DeCora: American Artist and Educator; article by Sarah McAnulty. Traditional Fine Arts Organization. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://tfaoi.org/aa/4aa/4aa27.htm">https://tfaoi.org/aa/4aa/4aa27.htm</a></p><p>Southall, N. (n.d.). AIGA Design Journeys: Angel DeCora – The Native Graphic Design Project. The Native Graphic Design Project. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://www.neebin.com/nativedesign/?p=426">https://www.neebin.com/nativedesign/?p=426</a></p><p>Tiger, Y. (n.d.). Rediscovering Native American Illustrator and Designer Angel De Cora – Society of Illustrators. Society of Illustrators. Retrieved June 14, 2022, from <a href="https://societyillustrators.org/event/angeldecora/">https://societyillustrators.org/event/angeldecora/</a></p><p>Waggoner, L. (2008). Fire Light: the life of Angel De Cora, Winnebago artist. University of Oklahoma Press.</p><p>Waggoner, L. (2021). “Her Greatest Work Lay in Decorative Design”: Angel DeCora Ho-Chunk Artist (1869–1919). In B. Levit (Ed.), Baseline Shift: Untold stories of women in graphic design history (pp. 12–31). Princeton Architectural Press.</p>
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      <itunes:title>Angel De Cora (Hinook-Mahiwi-Kalinaka)</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:summary>This episode examines the life and career of Indigenous designer, and artist, Angel De Cora. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode examines the life and career of Indigenous designer, and artist, Angel De Cora. </itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Ebony &amp; BLK Magazine</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>John H. Johnson was the man driving the publishing empire that included Ebony, Jet, Tan, and Ebony Jr. Black-owned abolitionist newspapers certainly predated all of Johnson’s publications, however, Ebony was the first mainstream news and culture magazine by and for Black Americans. Much like its predecessors, Johnson’s magazines pushed back against the negative images and stereotypes of Black Americans found in many other papers and magazines. Ebony was inspired by LIFE magazine and printed stories of the “happier side of Negro life.” Ebony, as with all of Johnson’s other titles, fostered a sense of community and was popular enough that Johnson was able to attract white advertisers. It chronicled the Civil Rights movement and for that reason alone makes it an important historical record of the times. Johnson was always looking for gaps in the market that his publications could fill and he launched several titles addressing those gaps. Ebony Jr. was for Black children. Tan focused on love and romance. Jet was a pocket-sized weekly news magazine. However, one market Johnson never addressed was the Black gay community. Taking a page out of Johnson’s book, designer Alan Bell launched BLK magazine, which started as a 16-page black & white monthly paper and grew to a full-color publication of up to 40 pages. BLK featured interviews with celebrities and up-to-date information about safe sex and HIV/AIDS. Both Johnson and Bell provided a place for African American voices to speak their truths and record their own histories.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1870 – 15th Amendment gave Black Men the right to vote<br />1896  – Plessy v. Ferguson “separate but equal” ruling<br />1918  – John H. Johnston was Born Jan. 19 in Arkansas City, AR<br />1933  –  Johnson and his mother moved to Chicago, Illinois<br />1936  –  Johnson graduated with honors from DuSable <br />1936  –  Johnson met Harry H. Pace, president of Supreme Life Insurance Company<br />1936  –  Johnson enrolled at the University of Chicago, and started job as in house assistant for Supreme Liberty Guardian<br />1942  – Johnson crowdfunded <i>Negro World Digest</i> at 24 years old<br />1945  – First issue of <i>Ebony</i> magazine published<br />1947  – Circulation for <i>Ebony</i> magazine grew to 300,000<br />1948  –  Ad Space in <i>Ebony</i> magazine was at 48 pages with major advertisers<br />1950  – <i>Tan</i> magazine founded<br />1953 -54  – <i>Copper Romance</i> magazine start & end<br />1953  –  <i>HUE</i> magazine began publication<br />1957-58  – Martin Luther King Jrs column ran in <i>Ebony</i> magazine<br />1959  – <i>HUE</i> magazine ceased publication<br />1963 – Woolworth Counter Protests<br />1964 – Civil Rights Act of 1964 Passed; guaranteed right to equal employment, limited literacy tests at polling places, enforced public desegregation<br />1970  – <i>Negro World</i> came back under the title <i>Black World</i><br />1972  – <i>JET</i> magazine founded<br />1971  – <i>Tan</i> magazine re-named <i>Black Stars</i><br />1973 – <i>Ebony Jr!</i> Founded<br />1976 – <i>Black World</i> ceased publication<br />1977-79 – Alan Bell worked for <i>Gaysweek</i> magazine in NYC<br />1985 – <i>Ebony Jr!</i> ceased publication<br />1988 – <i>BLK</i> magazine was founded by Alan Bell <br />1994 – <i>BLK</i> magazine ceased publication<br />1996  –  Johnson received the Lifetime Achievement Award from American Advertising Foundation<br />2003 – Johnson inducted into the American Advertising Hall of Fame <br />2003  – Howard University renamed the School of Communications to the John H. Johnson School of Communications <br />2007  – <i>Ebony Jr!</i> went online for one year<br />2013  – Bell was inducted into the Gay Men Hall of fame of National AIDS Educations<br />2019  – <i>BLK</i> magazine archive digitized at Chicago’s DuSable Museum </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>Alan Bell</i>. (2021, April 1). NAESM, Inc. Retrieved December 6, 2021, from <a href="https://naesminc.org/hall-of-fame/alan-bell/">https://naesminc.org/hall-of-fame/alan-bell/</a>. </p><p>Behance. (n.d.). <i>Biography of Herbert temple</i>. Behance. Retrieved December 5, 2021, from <a href="https://www.behance.net/gallery/109799419/Biography-of-Herbert-Temple?tracking%5C_source=search%5C_projects%5C_published%5C_date%7CPierre-Hugues+Herbert">https://www.behance.net/gallery/109799419/Biography-of-Herbert-Temple?tracking\_source=search\_projects\_published\_date%7CPierre-Hugues+Herbert</a>. </p><p>Bernu, C. (2019). “BLK Issues: Preserving BLK Magazine in the DuSable Museum of African American History Archives”. <i>American Quarterly</i>, <i>71</i>(2), 307–403. </p><p>Borrelli, C. (2021, February 16). “Ebony's history in 6 covers”. <i>Chicago Tribune</i>, pp. 1–1. </p><p>Bowean, L. (2011, Apr 27). HERBERT TEMPLE: 1919-2011: LONGTIME ART DIRECTOR GUIDED EBONY, JET MAGAZINES. <i>Chicago Tribune</i> Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/herbert-temple-1919-2011/docview/863523424/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/herbert-temple-1919-2011/docview/863523424/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Campbell, A. (2019). <i>Queer X Design: 50 years of signs, symbols, banners, logos, and graphic art of Lgbtq</i>. Black Dog et Leventhal Publishers. </p><p>Christian, M. A., Enterprise, B., & Tillery, A. (2016, August 4). <i>John H. Johnson</i>. EBONY. Retrieved September 10, 2021, from <a href="https://www.ebony.com/black-history/john-h-johnson/">https://www.ebony.com/black-history/john-h-johnson/</a>. </p><p>Entrepreneur. (2015, August 17). <i>John H. Johnson</i>. Entrepreneur. Retrieved September 12, 2021, from <a href="https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/197650">https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/197650</a>. </p><p>Gallon, K. T. (2020). <i>Pleasure in the news: African American readership and sexuality in the Black Press</i>. University of Illinois Press. </p><p>Henderson, L. (2008). <i>Ebony Jr!: The rise, fall, and return of a black children's magazine</i>. Scarecrow Press. </p><p><i>Herbert Temple</i>. Herbert Temple | The Chicago Design Archive. (n.d.). Retrieved December 5, 2021, from <a href="https://chicagodesignarchive.org/designer/herbert-temple">https://chicagodesignarchive.org/designer/herbert-temple</a>. </p><p>Horne, G. (2017). <i>Rise and fall of the associated negro press Claude Barnett's Pan-African News and the Jim Crow paradox</i>. University of Illinois Press. </p><p>Jones, A. (2018, February 16). Lerone Bennett Jr., 89, former Ebony editor. <i>The Philadelphia Tribune</i>, p. 16. </p><p>Knupfer, A. M. (2000). African-AMerican Designers: The Chicago Experience Then and Now . <i>Design Issues</i>, <i>16</i>(3). Retrieved from <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/1511818">https://www.jstor.org/stable/1511818</a>. </p><p>​​Lavette, L., Ciara, Diddy, Common, Simmons, K. L., Wade, D., Union, G., & Williams, V. (2021). <i>Ebony: Covering black america</i>. Rizzoli. </p><p>Leekley, D. (1985, 08). Magazines for kids. <i>Parents, 60</i>, 138. Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/magazines/magazines-kids/docview/1898983131/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/magazines/magazines-kids/docview/1898983131/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Munro, S. (n.d.). <i>BLK Magazine and Black Jack Newsletter</i>. Arena. Retrieved December 6, 2021, from <a href="https://www.are.na/silas-munro/blk-magazine-and-black-jack-newsletter">https://www.are.na/silas-munro/blk-magazine-and-black-jack-newsletter</a>. </p><p>ONE Archives Foundation. (2019, May 24). <i>Writing while BLK: A conversation on the history of Blk</i>. ONE Archives Foundation. Retrieved September 13, 2021, from <a href="https://www.onearchives.org/writing-while-blk/">https://www.onearchives.org/writing-while-blk/</a>. </p><p>Palmer, C. A., & Robinson, G. (2006). Ebony. In <i>Encyclopedia of African American culture and history: The black experience in the Americas</i> (2nd ed.). Thomson Gale. </p><p><i>Robert Newman</i>. Robert Newman RSS. (n.d.). Retrieved December 5, 2021, from <a href="http://www.robertnewman.com/black-history-magazines-ebony-jr/">http://www.robertnewman.com/black-history-magazines-ebony-jr/</a>. </p><p><i>Robert Newman</i>. Robert Newman RSS. (n.d.). Retrieved December 5, 2021, from <a href="http://www.robertnewman.com/the-best-of-black-history-month-magazines/">http://www.robertnewman.com/the-best-of-black-history-month-magazines/</a>. </p><p>Robinson, G. (2006). Ebony. In C. A. Palmer (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History</i> (2nd ed., Vol. 2, p. 672). Macmillan Reference USA. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3444700410/GVRL?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=b78f82d6">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3444700410/GVRL?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=b78f82d6</a></p><p>West, E. J. (2017). Lerone Bennett, jr.: A life in popular black history. <i>The Black Scholar</i>, <i>47</i>(4), 3–17. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1080/00064246.2017.1368063">https://doi.org/10.1080/00064246.2017.1368063</a></p><p>West, E. J. (2020). <i>Ebony Magazine and Lerone Bennett Jr.: Popular black history in postwar America</i>. University of Illinois Press.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 6 Oct 2022 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/ebony-blk-magazine-1lIhcRr3</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>John H. Johnson was the man driving the publishing empire that included Ebony, Jet, Tan, and Ebony Jr. Black-owned abolitionist newspapers certainly predated all of Johnson’s publications, however, Ebony was the first mainstream news and culture magazine by and for Black Americans. Much like its predecessors, Johnson’s magazines pushed back against the negative images and stereotypes of Black Americans found in many other papers and magazines. Ebony was inspired by LIFE magazine and printed stories of the “happier side of Negro life.” Ebony, as with all of Johnson’s other titles, fostered a sense of community and was popular enough that Johnson was able to attract white advertisers. It chronicled the Civil Rights movement and for that reason alone makes it an important historical record of the times. Johnson was always looking for gaps in the market that his publications could fill and he launched several titles addressing those gaps. Ebony Jr. was for Black children. Tan focused on love and romance. Jet was a pocket-sized weekly news magazine. However, one market Johnson never addressed was the Black gay community. Taking a page out of Johnson’s book, designer Alan Bell launched BLK magazine, which started as a 16-page black & white monthly paper and grew to a full-color publication of up to 40 pages. BLK featured interviews with celebrities and up-to-date information about safe sex and HIV/AIDS. Both Johnson and Bell provided a place for African American voices to speak their truths and record their own histories.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1870 – 15th Amendment gave Black Men the right to vote<br />1896  – Plessy v. Ferguson “separate but equal” ruling<br />1918  – John H. Johnston was Born Jan. 19 in Arkansas City, AR<br />1933  –  Johnson and his mother moved to Chicago, Illinois<br />1936  –  Johnson graduated with honors from DuSable <br />1936  –  Johnson met Harry H. Pace, president of Supreme Life Insurance Company<br />1936  –  Johnson enrolled at the University of Chicago, and started job as in house assistant for Supreme Liberty Guardian<br />1942  – Johnson crowdfunded <i>Negro World Digest</i> at 24 years old<br />1945  – First issue of <i>Ebony</i> magazine published<br />1947  – Circulation for <i>Ebony</i> magazine grew to 300,000<br />1948  –  Ad Space in <i>Ebony</i> magazine was at 48 pages with major advertisers<br />1950  – <i>Tan</i> magazine founded<br />1953 -54  – <i>Copper Romance</i> magazine start & end<br />1953  –  <i>HUE</i> magazine began publication<br />1957-58  – Martin Luther King Jrs column ran in <i>Ebony</i> magazine<br />1959  – <i>HUE</i> magazine ceased publication<br />1963 – Woolworth Counter Protests<br />1964 – Civil Rights Act of 1964 Passed; guaranteed right to equal employment, limited literacy tests at polling places, enforced public desegregation<br />1970  – <i>Negro World</i> came back under the title <i>Black World</i><br />1972  – <i>JET</i> magazine founded<br />1971  – <i>Tan</i> magazine re-named <i>Black Stars</i><br />1973 – <i>Ebony Jr!</i> Founded<br />1976 – <i>Black World</i> ceased publication<br />1977-79 – Alan Bell worked for <i>Gaysweek</i> magazine in NYC<br />1985 – <i>Ebony Jr!</i> ceased publication<br />1988 – <i>BLK</i> magazine was founded by Alan Bell <br />1994 – <i>BLK</i> magazine ceased publication<br />1996  –  Johnson received the Lifetime Achievement Award from American Advertising Foundation<br />2003 – Johnson inducted into the American Advertising Hall of Fame <br />2003  – Howard University renamed the School of Communications to the John H. Johnson School of Communications <br />2007  – <i>Ebony Jr!</i> went online for one year<br />2013  – Bell was inducted into the Gay Men Hall of fame of National AIDS Educations<br />2019  – <i>BLK</i> magazine archive digitized at Chicago’s DuSable Museum </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>Alan Bell</i>. (2021, April 1). NAESM, Inc. Retrieved December 6, 2021, from <a href="https://naesminc.org/hall-of-fame/alan-bell/">https://naesminc.org/hall-of-fame/alan-bell/</a>. </p><p>Behance. (n.d.). <i>Biography of Herbert temple</i>. Behance. Retrieved December 5, 2021, from <a href="https://www.behance.net/gallery/109799419/Biography-of-Herbert-Temple?tracking%5C_source=search%5C_projects%5C_published%5C_date%7CPierre-Hugues+Herbert">https://www.behance.net/gallery/109799419/Biography-of-Herbert-Temple?tracking\_source=search\_projects\_published\_date%7CPierre-Hugues+Herbert</a>. </p><p>Bernu, C. (2019). “BLK Issues: Preserving BLK Magazine in the DuSable Museum of African American History Archives”. <i>American Quarterly</i>, <i>71</i>(2), 307–403. </p><p>Borrelli, C. (2021, February 16). “Ebony's history in 6 covers”. <i>Chicago Tribune</i>, pp. 1–1. </p><p>Bowean, L. (2011, Apr 27). HERBERT TEMPLE: 1919-2011: LONGTIME ART DIRECTOR GUIDED EBONY, JET MAGAZINES. <i>Chicago Tribune</i> Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/herbert-temple-1919-2011/docview/863523424/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/newspapers/herbert-temple-1919-2011/docview/863523424/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Campbell, A. (2019). <i>Queer X Design: 50 years of signs, symbols, banners, logos, and graphic art of Lgbtq</i>. Black Dog et Leventhal Publishers. </p><p>Christian, M. A., Enterprise, B., & Tillery, A. (2016, August 4). <i>John H. Johnson</i>. EBONY. Retrieved September 10, 2021, from <a href="https://www.ebony.com/black-history/john-h-johnson/">https://www.ebony.com/black-history/john-h-johnson/</a>. </p><p>Entrepreneur. (2015, August 17). <i>John H. Johnson</i>. Entrepreneur. Retrieved September 12, 2021, from <a href="https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/197650">https://www.entrepreneur.com/article/197650</a>. </p><p>Gallon, K. T. (2020). <i>Pleasure in the news: African American readership and sexuality in the Black Press</i>. University of Illinois Press. </p><p>Henderson, L. (2008). <i>Ebony Jr!: The rise, fall, and return of a black children's magazine</i>. Scarecrow Press. </p><p><i>Herbert Temple</i>. Herbert Temple | The Chicago Design Archive. (n.d.). Retrieved December 5, 2021, from <a href="https://chicagodesignarchive.org/designer/herbert-temple">https://chicagodesignarchive.org/designer/herbert-temple</a>. </p><p>Horne, G. (2017). <i>Rise and fall of the associated negro press Claude Barnett's Pan-African News and the Jim Crow paradox</i>. University of Illinois Press. </p><p>Jones, A. (2018, February 16). Lerone Bennett Jr., 89, former Ebony editor. <i>The Philadelphia Tribune</i>, p. 16. </p><p>Knupfer, A. M. (2000). African-AMerican Designers: The Chicago Experience Then and Now . <i>Design Issues</i>, <i>16</i>(3). Retrieved from <a href="https://www.jstor.org/stable/1511818">https://www.jstor.org/stable/1511818</a>. </p><p>​​Lavette, L., Ciara, Diddy, Common, Simmons, K. L., Wade, D., Union, G., & Williams, V. (2021). <i>Ebony: Covering black america</i>. Rizzoli. </p><p>Leekley, D. (1985, 08). Magazines for kids. <i>Parents, 60</i>, 138. Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/magazines/magazines-kids/docview/1898983131/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/magazines/magazines-kids/docview/1898983131/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Munro, S. (n.d.). <i>BLK Magazine and Black Jack Newsletter</i>. Arena. Retrieved December 6, 2021, from <a href="https://www.are.na/silas-munro/blk-magazine-and-black-jack-newsletter">https://www.are.na/silas-munro/blk-magazine-and-black-jack-newsletter</a>. </p><p>ONE Archives Foundation. (2019, May 24). <i>Writing while BLK: A conversation on the history of Blk</i>. ONE Archives Foundation. Retrieved September 13, 2021, from <a href="https://www.onearchives.org/writing-while-blk/">https://www.onearchives.org/writing-while-blk/</a>. </p><p>Palmer, C. A., & Robinson, G. (2006). Ebony. In <i>Encyclopedia of African American culture and history: The black experience in the Americas</i> (2nd ed.). Thomson Gale. </p><p><i>Robert Newman</i>. Robert Newman RSS. (n.d.). Retrieved December 5, 2021, from <a href="http://www.robertnewman.com/black-history-magazines-ebony-jr/">http://www.robertnewman.com/black-history-magazines-ebony-jr/</a>. </p><p><i>Robert Newman</i>. Robert Newman RSS. (n.d.). Retrieved December 5, 2021, from <a href="http://www.robertnewman.com/the-best-of-black-history-month-magazines/">http://www.robertnewman.com/the-best-of-black-history-month-magazines/</a>. </p><p>Robinson, G. (2006). Ebony. In C. A. Palmer (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History</i> (2nd ed., Vol. 2, p. 672). Macmillan Reference USA. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3444700410/GVRL?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=b78f82d6">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/CX3444700410/GVRL?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-GVRL&xid=b78f82d6</a></p><p>West, E. J. (2017). Lerone Bennett, jr.: A life in popular black history. <i>The Black Scholar</i>, <i>47</i>(4), 3–17. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1080/00064246.2017.1368063">https://doi.org/10.1080/00064246.2017.1368063</a></p><p>West, E. J. (2020). <i>Ebony Magazine and Lerone Bennett Jr.: Popular black history in postwar America</i>. University of Illinois Press.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <enclosure length="30600601" type="audio/mpeg" url="https://cdn.simplecast.com/audio/db77199b-3626-4512-aa8e-1eac84ec4c66/episodes/a4f57afa-9c7a-4c57-a394-8328f54f3aa3/audio/0805d282-aa89-4325-9495-09da69037492/default_tc.mp3?aid=rss_feed&amp;feed=wuMsskkC"/>
      <itunes:title>Ebony &amp; BLK Magazine</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/5feb0ecf-0e81-4dde-89eb-d364ad870982/3000x3000/huynh-incomplet-podcast-revised21.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:31:51</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the history of magazines published for Black audiences in America, including multiple publications from the Johnson Publishing Company with emphasis on Ebony Magazine. Additionally the episode considers an audience left out of the Johnson company empire, examining BLK and the LGBT African American magazine audience.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the history of magazines published for Black audiences in America, including multiple publications from the Johnson Publishing Company with emphasis on Ebony Magazine. Additionally the episode considers an audience left out of the Johnson company empire, examining BLK and the LGBT African American magazine audience.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
    </item>
    <item>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">8b980440-8e86-4f47-bdd2-6d213d129950</guid>
      <title>Sequoyah &amp; The Cherokee Syllabary</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>There are not a lot of definitive details known about the life of Sequoyah and what information we do have is often conflicting, like was his anglicized name George Guess or George Gist? Did he possibly go by both? Sequoyah has been called an enigmatic figure and a genius because despite all unknowns about his life, what most historians can and do agree on is that he is the sole creator of the Cherokee Alphabet. The alphabet is more accurately called a syllabary, and Sequoyah is the only figure recorded in history to develop a written language all on his own. The development of the syllabary, containing 85 symbols, was a tremendous feat, especially considering Sequoyah had previously been illiterate. The impact of this invention to the Cherokee people was great indeed as history reports that the syllabary was incredibly easy to learn and that after just a few days of instruction Cherokee people were able to begin communicating with each other through letters. It is through the development of this written language that many Cherokee were able to resist removal for as long as they did. It enabled the Cherokee to begin printing their own newspaper, The Cherokee Phoenix, but it had unforeseen circumstances as well. Christian missionaries were able to use this written language to convert the Cherokee to Christianity. The development of the Cherokee written language is more broadly significant as part of the history of visual communication. Even though most western histories focus on the development of the Latin alphabet, the syllabary is seminal to the history of graphic design.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1766(?) – Sequoyah is born (dates disputed)</p><p>1821 – the invention of a Cherokee alphabet by Sequoyah (dates disputed) </p><p>1827 – he first document printed in the Cherokee language, a translation of the first five verses of the book of Genesis</p><p>1828 – Charles Bird King completes his painting of Sequoyah</p><p>1828 – The Cherokee Phoenix is founded by Elias Boudinot and Samuel Worcester as a newspaper for the Cherokee Nation</p><p>1830s – Cherokee Phoenix to editorialize against the Indian Removal act by Cherokee Nation leaders, such as Chief John Ross and editor Elias Boudinot</p><p>1834 – The Cherokee Phoenix seized by the Georgia military</p><p>1843 – Sequoyah Dies</p><p>1844 – Cherokee Nation newspaper is restarted in Indian Territory (Tahlequah, Oklahoma), now called the Cherokee Advocate.</p><p>2007 – The Cherokee Phoenix was restarts as an online newspaper</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Bender, M. C. (2002). <i>Signs of Cherokee culture Sequoyah's syllabary in Eastern Cherokee life</i>. University of North Carolina Press.</p><p>Bird, T. (1971). <i>Tell Them They Lie: The Sequoyah Myth</i>. Westernlore Press.</p><p>Cherokee Phoenix. (n.d.). <i>About Us</i>. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://www.cherokeephoenix.org/site/about.html">https://www.cherokeephoenix.org/site/about.html</a></p><p>Dasylva, A. O. (2006). 'Culture Education' and the Challenge of Globalization in Modern Nigeria. <i>Oral Tradition</i>, <i>21</i>(2), 325–341.</p><p>Doskey, A. V., & Bannon, F. (2014). Cherokee Phoenix: The Birth and Revival of Cherokee Language Printing in the Southeast. In J. Brock, M. Harper, T. B. Reeves, K. Tepper, & J. Newberry (Eds.), <i>Excerpts</i> (pp. 56-68). Zuckerman Museum of Art. <a href="http://juliabrock.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/ZMA-Excerpts-catalogue-X.pdf">http://juliabrock.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/ZMA-Excerpts-catalogue-X.pdf</a></p><p>Fortier, J. (Director). (2021). <i>Searching for Sequoyah</i> [Film]. Turtle Island Productions.</p><p>Hoig, S. (1995). <i>Sequoyah : the Cherokee genius</i>. Oklahoma Historical Society: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. </p><p>Kalter, S. (2001). 'America's Histories' Revisited: The Case of Tell Them They Lie. <i>American Indian Quarterly</i>, <i>25</i>(3), 329.</p><p>Leavy, P. (2011). <i>Oral History : Understanding Qualitative Research</i>, Oxford University Press.</p><p>Malone, H. T. (1972). Traveller Bird. "Tell Them They Lie: The Sequoyah Myth" (Book Review) [Review of <i>Traveller Bird. "Tell Them They Lie: The Sequoyah Myth" (Book Review)_]. _Western Historical Quarterly</i>, <i>3</i>(4), 437. Utah State University.</p><p>Neuman, Lisa K.. <i>Indian Play : Indigenous Identities at Bacone College</i>, Nebraska, 2020. <i>ProQuest Ebook Central</i>, <a href="http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ucok-ebooks/detail.action?docID=1543723">http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ucok-ebooks/detail.action?docID=1543723</a>.</p><p>Created from ucok-ebooks on 2021-06-17 18:10:44.</p><p>Sequoyah. (2018). In P. Lagasse, & Columbia University, <i>The Columbia encyclopedia</i> (8th ed.). Columbia University Press. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/columency/sequoyah/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/columency/sequoyah/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Sequoyah. (2017). In Encyclopaedia Britannica, <i>Britannica concise encyclopedia</i>. Britannica Digital Learning. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/ebconcise/sequoyah/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/ebconcise/sequoyah/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Simek, J. F., Carroll, B. D., Reed, J., Cressler, A., Belt, T., Adams, W., & White, M. (2019). The Red Bird River Shelter (15CY52) Revisited: The Archaeology of the Cherokee Syllabary and of Sequoyah in Kentucky. <i>American Antiquity</i>, <i>84</i>(2), 302–316. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2018.8">https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2018.8</a></p><p>Simek, J. F., Carroll, B. D., Reed, J., Cressler, A., Belt, T., Adams, W., & White, M. (2020). There Is No Cherokee Syllabary at Red Bird River Shelter (15CY52): Reply to Tankersley and Weeks. <i>American Antiquity</i>, <i>85</i>(2), 388–391. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2020.5">https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2020.5</a></p><p>Syropoulos, A. (2002). Typesetting Native American Languages. <i>The Journal of Electronic Publishing</i>, <i>8</i>(1). <a href="https://quod.lib.umich.edu/j/jep/3336451.0008.105/--typesetting-native-american-languages?rgn=main;view=fulltext">https://quod.lib.umich.edu/j/jep/3336451.0008.105/--typesetting-native-american-languages?rgn=main;view=fulltext</a></p><p>Tankersley, K. B., & Weeks, W. R. (2020). Red Bird and Sequoyah: A Reply to Simek et al. <i>American Antiquity</i>, <i>85</i>(2), 383–387. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2020.4">https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2020.4</a></p><p>Trimbur, J., & Goody, J. (1982). The Domestication of the Savage Mind [Review of <i>The Domestication of the Savage Mind_]. _College Composition and Communication</i>, <i>33</i>(4), 461–463. National Council of Teachers of English. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2307/357966">https://doi.org/10.2307/357966</a></p><p>Thane, P. M. (1999). Oral History, Memory and Written Tradition: An Introduction. <i>Transactions of the Royal Historical Society</i>, <i>9</i>, 161–168. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/3679397">http://www.jstor.org/stable/3679397</a></p><p>Weeks, R., & Tankersley, K. (2011). Talking leaves and rocks that teach: the archaeological discovery of Sequoyah's oldest written record. <i>Antiquity</i>, <i>85</i>(329), 978–576. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00068435">https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00068435</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 29 Sep 2022 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton, Spencer Gee, Dean Kelly, Ebony Sayles)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/sequoyah-the-cherokee-syllabary-vZNHBj_X</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There are not a lot of definitive details known about the life of Sequoyah and what information we do have is often conflicting, like was his anglicized name George Guess or George Gist? Did he possibly go by both? Sequoyah has been called an enigmatic figure and a genius because despite all unknowns about his life, what most historians can and do agree on is that he is the sole creator of the Cherokee Alphabet. The alphabet is more accurately called a syllabary, and Sequoyah is the only figure recorded in history to develop a written language all on his own. The development of the syllabary, containing 85 symbols, was a tremendous feat, especially considering Sequoyah had previously been illiterate. The impact of this invention to the Cherokee people was great indeed as history reports that the syllabary was incredibly easy to learn and that after just a few days of instruction Cherokee people were able to begin communicating with each other through letters. It is through the development of this written language that many Cherokee were able to resist removal for as long as they did. It enabled the Cherokee to begin printing their own newspaper, The Cherokee Phoenix, but it had unforeseen circumstances as well. Christian missionaries were able to use this written language to convert the Cherokee to Christianity. The development of the Cherokee written language is more broadly significant as part of the history of visual communication. Even though most western histories focus on the development of the Latin alphabet, the syllabary is seminal to the history of graphic design.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1766(?) – Sequoyah is born (dates disputed)</p><p>1821 – the invention of a Cherokee alphabet by Sequoyah (dates disputed) </p><p>1827 – he first document printed in the Cherokee language, a translation of the first five verses of the book of Genesis</p><p>1828 – Charles Bird King completes his painting of Sequoyah</p><p>1828 – The Cherokee Phoenix is founded by Elias Boudinot and Samuel Worcester as a newspaper for the Cherokee Nation</p><p>1830s – Cherokee Phoenix to editorialize against the Indian Removal act by Cherokee Nation leaders, such as Chief John Ross and editor Elias Boudinot</p><p>1834 – The Cherokee Phoenix seized by the Georgia military</p><p>1843 – Sequoyah Dies</p><p>1844 – Cherokee Nation newspaper is restarted in Indian Territory (Tahlequah, Oklahoma), now called the Cherokee Advocate.</p><p>2007 – The Cherokee Phoenix was restarts as an online newspaper</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Bender, M. C. (2002). <i>Signs of Cherokee culture Sequoyah's syllabary in Eastern Cherokee life</i>. University of North Carolina Press.</p><p>Bird, T. (1971). <i>Tell Them They Lie: The Sequoyah Myth</i>. Westernlore Press.</p><p>Cherokee Phoenix. (n.d.). <i>About Us</i>. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://www.cherokeephoenix.org/site/about.html">https://www.cherokeephoenix.org/site/about.html</a></p><p>Dasylva, A. O. (2006). 'Culture Education' and the Challenge of Globalization in Modern Nigeria. <i>Oral Tradition</i>, <i>21</i>(2), 325–341.</p><p>Doskey, A. V., & Bannon, F. (2014). Cherokee Phoenix: The Birth and Revival of Cherokee Language Printing in the Southeast. In J. Brock, M. Harper, T. B. Reeves, K. Tepper, & J. Newberry (Eds.), <i>Excerpts</i> (pp. 56-68). Zuckerman Museum of Art. <a href="http://juliabrock.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/ZMA-Excerpts-catalogue-X.pdf">http://juliabrock.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/09/ZMA-Excerpts-catalogue-X.pdf</a></p><p>Fortier, J. (Director). (2021). <i>Searching for Sequoyah</i> [Film]. Turtle Island Productions.</p><p>Hoig, S. (1995). <i>Sequoyah : the Cherokee genius</i>. Oklahoma Historical Society: Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. </p><p>Kalter, S. (2001). 'America's Histories' Revisited: The Case of Tell Them They Lie. <i>American Indian Quarterly</i>, <i>25</i>(3), 329.</p><p>Leavy, P. (2011). <i>Oral History : Understanding Qualitative Research</i>, Oxford University Press.</p><p>Malone, H. T. (1972). Traveller Bird. "Tell Them They Lie: The Sequoyah Myth" (Book Review) [Review of <i>Traveller Bird. "Tell Them They Lie: The Sequoyah Myth" (Book Review)_]. _Western Historical Quarterly</i>, <i>3</i>(4), 437. Utah State University.</p><p>Neuman, Lisa K.. <i>Indian Play : Indigenous Identities at Bacone College</i>, Nebraska, 2020. <i>ProQuest Ebook Central</i>, <a href="http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ucok-ebooks/detail.action?docID=1543723">http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/ucok-ebooks/detail.action?docID=1543723</a>.</p><p>Created from ucok-ebooks on 2021-06-17 18:10:44.</p><p>Sequoyah. (2018). In P. Lagasse, & Columbia University, <i>The Columbia encyclopedia</i> (8th ed.). Columbia University Press. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/columency/sequoyah/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/columency/sequoyah/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Sequoyah. (2017). In Encyclopaedia Britannica, <i>Britannica concise encyclopedia</i>. Britannica Digital Learning. Credo Reference: <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/ebconcise/sequoyah/0?institutionId=1845">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/entry/ebconcise/sequoyah/0?institutionId=1845</a></p><p>Simek, J. F., Carroll, B. D., Reed, J., Cressler, A., Belt, T., Adams, W., & White, M. (2019). The Red Bird River Shelter (15CY52) Revisited: The Archaeology of the Cherokee Syllabary and of Sequoyah in Kentucky. <i>American Antiquity</i>, <i>84</i>(2), 302–316. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2018.8">https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2018.8</a></p><p>Simek, J. F., Carroll, B. D., Reed, J., Cressler, A., Belt, T., Adams, W., & White, M. (2020). There Is No Cherokee Syllabary at Red Bird River Shelter (15CY52): Reply to Tankersley and Weeks. <i>American Antiquity</i>, <i>85</i>(2), 388–391. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2020.5">https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2020.5</a></p><p>Syropoulos, A. (2002). Typesetting Native American Languages. <i>The Journal of Electronic Publishing</i>, <i>8</i>(1). <a href="https://quod.lib.umich.edu/j/jep/3336451.0008.105/--typesetting-native-american-languages?rgn=main;view=fulltext">https://quod.lib.umich.edu/j/jep/3336451.0008.105/--typesetting-native-american-languages?rgn=main;view=fulltext</a></p><p>Tankersley, K. B., & Weeks, W. R. (2020). Red Bird and Sequoyah: A Reply to Simek et al. <i>American Antiquity</i>, <i>85</i>(2), 383–387. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2020.4">https://doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2020.4</a></p><p>Trimbur, J., & Goody, J. (1982). The Domestication of the Savage Mind [Review of <i>The Domestication of the Savage Mind_]. _College Composition and Communication</i>, <i>33</i>(4), 461–463. National Council of Teachers of English. <a href="https://doi.org/10.2307/357966">https://doi.org/10.2307/357966</a></p><p>Thane, P. M. (1999). Oral History, Memory and Written Tradition: An Introduction. <i>Transactions of the Royal Historical Society</i>, <i>9</i>, 161–168. <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/3679397">http://www.jstor.org/stable/3679397</a></p><p>Weeks, R., & Tankersley, K. (2011). Talking leaves and rocks that teach: the archaeological discovery of Sequoyah's oldest written record. <i>Antiquity</i>, <i>85</i>(329), 978–576. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00068435">https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003598X00068435</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Sequoyah &amp; The Cherokee Syllabary</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton, Spencer Gee, Dean Kelly, Ebony Sayles</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/dce407a2-e374-4731-af2a-785dd31ab9fa/3000x3000/huynh-incomplet-podcast-revised20.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:29:19</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode investigates the conflicting history of Sequoyah and the development of the Cherokee syllabary</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode investigates the conflicting history of Sequoyah and the development of the Cherokee syllabary</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>cherokee alphabet, graphic design history, cherokee syllabary, visual communication history, sequoyah</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>2</itunes:season>
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      <guid isPermaLink="false">ea51f23f-315a-46c4-945b-0effe14e57ad</guid>
      <title>Afrikan Alphabets</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Often the images and fonts meant to Africa are stereotypical and reduce the diversity and complexity of a vast continent to simplified imagery and types. Like Rudolf Koch’s typeface Neuland, used in the logo for Disney’s The Lion King, which wasn’t even supposed to be representative of anything other than Koch’s own religious fervor. The origin and development of typography in Africa is far more diverse and interesting. It is also, unfortunately, inextricably tied to the colonization of the continent. Alphabets and syllabaries were largely efforts to resist colonization while preserving languages and cultures. The first and most influential of these was King Njoya’s syllabary of the Shu-mom language of the Bamum people of western Cameroon. King Njoya created this written language in 1869 while Germany was occupying Cameroon. Following Njoya’s lead, many other African peoples developed written languages and for similar reasons. Dualu Bukele developed the Vai syllabary. Kisimi Kamara designed the Mende syllabary. The list goes on. The idea of a written language as an act of resistance to western colonization produced wonderfully fluid letterforms free from the western regimented grid system and a written record of languages, cultures, and their people. </p><p> </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1820 – Dualu Bukele is credited with first recording the Vai syllabary, the specific origins of  are unknown</p><p>1884 – Berlin Conference, European countries drew up various “Protection” treaties with African nations</p><p>1896 – at the age of 25, King Njoya invented the Shu-mom writing system</p><p>1896 – the Ethiopian army defeated Italy</p><p>1900s – the majority of Africa colonized by 7 European Powers</p><p>1904 – King Njoya built a museum to house the artifacts and books in theShu-mom language</p><p>1921 – The Mende Syllabary was created by Kisimi Kamara</p><p>1922 – the Somali alphabet was created by Cismaan Kenadid</p><p>1923 – Neuland designed in 1923 by Rudolf Koch</p><p>1931 – King Njoya was exiled </p><p>1945 – marked the beginning of the end of colonization in Africa </p><p>1960 – the “year of Africa” with 17 territories gained independence</p><p>1973  – an alphabet was created for Somali using latin characters</p><p>1990s – everywhere in Africa (except South Africa) were ruling independently</p><p>1999 – Saki Mafundikwa founds ZIVA, Zimbabwe Institute of Vigital Arts</p><p>2004  – Saki Mafundikwa publishes Afrikan Alphabets</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Abraham, C. (2011, Aug). Africa had its own writing systems! <i>New African,</i> , 82-87. Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/magazines/africa-had-own-writing-systems/docview/884629705/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/magazines/africa-had-own-writing-systems/docview/884629705/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Curtin, P., Feirerman, S., Thompson, L., & Vansina, J. (1982). <i>African History</i>. Little Brown and Company. </p><p>Fine, P. C. (2021). <i>The design of race: How visual culture shapes America</i>. Bloomsbury Visual Arts. </p><p>French, H. W. (1997, October 21). Foumban Journal; Inheritors of an African Kingdom, Come and Gone. <i>New York Times</i>. </p><p>Gnanadesikan, Amalia E.. <i>The Writing Revolution : Cuneiform to the Internet</i>, John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, 2009. <i>ProQuest Ebook Central</i>, <a href="https://ebookcentral-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/lib/ucok-ebooks/detail.action?docID=428169">https://ebookcentral-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/lib/ucok-ebooks/detail.action?docID=428169</a>.</p><p>Iweriebor, E. E. G. (2011). <i>The colonization of Africa</i>. Africana Age: African & Africa Diasporan Transformations in the 20th Century . Retrieved September 15, 2021, from <a href="http://exhibitions.nypl.org/africanaage/essay-colonization-of-africa.html">http://exhibitions.nypl.org/africanaage/essay-colonization-of-africa.html</a>. </p><p>Jefferson, L. E. (1974). <i>The Decorative Arts of Africa</i>. Collins. </p><p>Orosz, K. (2015). Njoya’s Alphabet The Sultan of Bamum and French Colonial Reactions to the A ka u ku Script. <i>Cahiers d’études Africaines</i>, <i>217</i>, 45–66. <a href="https://journals.openedition.org/etudesafricaines/18002#quotation">https://journals.openedition.org/etudesafricaines/18002#quotation</a></p><p>Kreamer, C. M., Roberts, M. N., Harney, E., & Purpura, A. (2007). Inscribing Meaning: Writing and Graphic Systems in African Art. <i>African Arts</i>, <i>40</i>(3), 78+. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A167932208/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=5fed3052">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A167932208/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=5fed3052</a></p><p>Mafundikwa, S. (n.d.). <i>Afrikan Alphabets & African Diasporic Design Lineage lesson</i>. BIPOC Design History. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://bipocdesignhistory.com/">https://bipocdesignhistory.com/</a></p><p>Mafundikwa, S. (2007). <i>Afrikan alphabets: The story of writing in Afrika</i>. Mark Batty Publisher. </p><p>Meggs, P. B., & Purvis, A. W. (2016). <i>Meggs' history of Graphic Design</i>. Wiley. </p><p>Musa, T. (2006, April 30). Cameroon: For those who say Africa had no writing system... <i>New Africana; London</i>, (450), 1–1. </p><p>Kries, M., & Klein, A. (2015). <i>Making Africa: A continent of contemporary design</i>. Vitra Design Stiftung. </p><p>Pater, R. (2017). <i>The politics of design: A (not so) global manual for visual communication</i>. BIS Publishers. </p><p>Tuchscherer, K. (1999). Royal African Society. <i>African Affairs</i>, <i>98</i>(390), 55–77. <a href="https://doi.org/https://www.jstor.org/stable/723684">https://doi.org/https://www.jstor.org/stable/723684</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 22 Sep 2022 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Dean Kelly, Ebony Sayles, Spencer Gee, Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/afrikan-alphabets-M7TUmXDx</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Often the images and fonts meant to Africa are stereotypical and reduce the diversity and complexity of a vast continent to simplified imagery and types. Like Rudolf Koch’s typeface Neuland, used in the logo for Disney’s The Lion King, which wasn’t even supposed to be representative of anything other than Koch’s own religious fervor. The origin and development of typography in Africa is far more diverse and interesting. It is also, unfortunately, inextricably tied to the colonization of the continent. Alphabets and syllabaries were largely efforts to resist colonization while preserving languages and cultures. The first and most influential of these was King Njoya’s syllabary of the Shu-mom language of the Bamum people of western Cameroon. King Njoya created this written language in 1869 while Germany was occupying Cameroon. Following Njoya’s lead, many other African peoples developed written languages and for similar reasons. Dualu Bukele developed the Vai syllabary. Kisimi Kamara designed the Mende syllabary. The list goes on. The idea of a written language as an act of resistance to western colonization produced wonderfully fluid letterforms free from the western regimented grid system and a written record of languages, cultures, and their people. </p><p> </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1820 – Dualu Bukele is credited with first recording the Vai syllabary, the specific origins of  are unknown</p><p>1884 – Berlin Conference, European countries drew up various “Protection” treaties with African nations</p><p>1896 – at the age of 25, King Njoya invented the Shu-mom writing system</p><p>1896 – the Ethiopian army defeated Italy</p><p>1900s – the majority of Africa colonized by 7 European Powers</p><p>1904 – King Njoya built a museum to house the artifacts and books in theShu-mom language</p><p>1921 – The Mende Syllabary was created by Kisimi Kamara</p><p>1922 – the Somali alphabet was created by Cismaan Kenadid</p><p>1923 – Neuland designed in 1923 by Rudolf Koch</p><p>1931 – King Njoya was exiled </p><p>1945 – marked the beginning of the end of colonization in Africa </p><p>1960 – the “year of Africa” with 17 territories gained independence</p><p>1973  – an alphabet was created for Somali using latin characters</p><p>1990s – everywhere in Africa (except South Africa) were ruling independently</p><p>1999 – Saki Mafundikwa founds ZIVA, Zimbabwe Institute of Vigital Arts</p><p>2004  – Saki Mafundikwa publishes Afrikan Alphabets</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Abraham, C. (2011, Aug). Africa had its own writing systems! <i>New African,</i> , 82-87. Retrieved from <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/magazines/africa-had-own-writing-systems/docview/884629705/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/magazines/africa-had-own-writing-systems/docview/884629705/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Curtin, P., Feirerman, S., Thompson, L., & Vansina, J. (1982). <i>African History</i>. Little Brown and Company. </p><p>Fine, P. C. (2021). <i>The design of race: How visual culture shapes America</i>. Bloomsbury Visual Arts. </p><p>French, H. W. (1997, October 21). Foumban Journal; Inheritors of an African Kingdom, Come and Gone. <i>New York Times</i>. </p><p>Gnanadesikan, Amalia E.. <i>The Writing Revolution : Cuneiform to the Internet</i>, John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated, 2009. <i>ProQuest Ebook Central</i>, <a href="https://ebookcentral-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/lib/ucok-ebooks/detail.action?docID=428169">https://ebookcentral-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/lib/ucok-ebooks/detail.action?docID=428169</a>.</p><p>Iweriebor, E. E. G. (2011). <i>The colonization of Africa</i>. Africana Age: African & Africa Diasporan Transformations in the 20th Century . Retrieved September 15, 2021, from <a href="http://exhibitions.nypl.org/africanaage/essay-colonization-of-africa.html">http://exhibitions.nypl.org/africanaage/essay-colonization-of-africa.html</a>. </p><p>Jefferson, L. E. (1974). <i>The Decorative Arts of Africa</i>. Collins. </p><p>Orosz, K. (2015). Njoya’s Alphabet The Sultan of Bamum and French Colonial Reactions to the A ka u ku Script. <i>Cahiers d’études Africaines</i>, <i>217</i>, 45–66. <a href="https://journals.openedition.org/etudesafricaines/18002#quotation">https://journals.openedition.org/etudesafricaines/18002#quotation</a></p><p>Kreamer, C. M., Roberts, M. N., Harney, E., & Purpura, A. (2007). Inscribing Meaning: Writing and Graphic Systems in African Art. <i>African Arts</i>, <i>40</i>(3), 78+. <a href="https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A167932208/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=5fed3052">https://link.gale.com/apps/doc/A167932208/LitRC?u=edmo56673&sid=bookmark-LitRC&xid=5fed3052</a></p><p>Mafundikwa, S. (n.d.). <i>Afrikan Alphabets & African Diasporic Design Lineage lesson</i>. BIPOC Design History. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://bipocdesignhistory.com/">https://bipocdesignhistory.com/</a></p><p>Mafundikwa, S. (2007). <i>Afrikan alphabets: The story of writing in Afrika</i>. Mark Batty Publisher. </p><p>Meggs, P. B., & Purvis, A. W. (2016). <i>Meggs' history of Graphic Design</i>. Wiley. </p><p>Musa, T. (2006, April 30). Cameroon: For those who say Africa had no writing system... <i>New Africana; London</i>, (450), 1–1. </p><p>Kries, M., & Klein, A. (2015). <i>Making Africa: A continent of contemporary design</i>. Vitra Design Stiftung. </p><p>Pater, R. (2017). <i>The politics of design: A (not so) global manual for visual communication</i>. BIS Publishers. </p><p>Tuchscherer, K. (1999). Royal African Society. <i>African Affairs</i>, <i>98</i>(390), 55–77. <a href="https://doi.org/https://www.jstor.org/stable/723684">https://doi.org/https://www.jstor.org/stable/723684</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Afrikan Alphabets</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Dean Kelly, Ebony Sayles, Spencer Gee, Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/f4125ffe-6957-4d9f-94be-e2b9de4ddb54/3000x3000/huynh-incomplet-podcast-revised19.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:21:14</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode is an overview of the history of various alphabets &amp; syllabaries from the African continent. </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode is an overview of the history of various alphabets &amp; syllabaries from the African continent. </itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, visual communication history, african alphabets, afrikan alphabets, alphabets</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Acee Blue Eagle</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>An indigenous artist from Oklahoma, Alex C. Mackintosh was born in 1907 with Creek and Scottish ancestry. He attended the Chilocco federal Boarding school for Native Americans in Newkirk Oklahoma, it was there that he took on the name Acee Blue Eagle to honor his heritage. The name “Blue Eagle” was reportedly from his mother’s family; this matrilineal approach to last names is traditional and accepted in many indigenous cultures. After graduating from Chilocco he would go on to attend the Bacone Indian College and from there he was accepted to study art at the University of Oklahoma, where a special program had been founded to foster Native American art. Acee Blue Eagle would go on to exhibit his art with a prominent group of artists from this program known today as the Kiowa Six, though Acee himself was not Kiowa he was an informal member of this group. Acee Blue Eagle established himself not only as a well-known artist but also as a performer. He exhibited work across the U.S. and Europe. His work was purchased by many museums and foreign dignitaries. He was also a mural painter for the WPA program and painted several murals in Oklahoma. Towards the end of his life and career, he began experimenting with printing techniques and design work including designing a set of souvenir glasses for Knox Oil, and a line of greeting cards. He illustrated books as well, even writing a few of his own, including one on Oklahoma Indian Painting and Poetry that was published the year he passed away. To the very end, Acee was an ardent supporter of Oklahoma Indian artists and traditions.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1907 – b Oklahoma, as Alex C. MacIntosh<br />1928 – Graduated from Bacone Indian College in Muskogee<br />1931-1932 – Attended University of Oklahoma to study art under Oscar Jacobson<br />1932 – Wrote and illustrated Echogee: The Little Blue Deer, a children’s book with full-color Illustrations<br />1934 – First public commissions for murals through the WPA<br />1934 – Paints murals in Mitchell Hall Theater on the UCO Campus<br />1935 – Travels to Oxford University to lecture on Native American Art<br />1935 – Accepts a teaching position at Bacone as the founding director of the new Art Department<br />1938 – Leaves his position at Bacone to practice art full-time<br />1950 – UCO theater murals are painted over in an effort to redecorate<br />1954 – begins exploring a career as a commercial artist including creating a line of greeting cards<br />1956 – Illustrates Mae Abbott’s book Oklahoma: Indian Cook Book<br />1959 – Writes and publishes Oklahoma Indian Painting–Poetry<br />1959 – died penniless in a veterans hospital in Muskogee of liver failure, at 52<br />1971 – Echogee: The Little Blue Deer is finally published</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Acee Blue Eagle, Oklahoma Indian Painting–Poetry (Tulsa, Okla.: Acorn Publishing Co., 1959).</p><p>Abbott, M. W. (1956). Oklahoma Indian cook book, the best Indian recipes from the best Indian state / y Mae Abbott. (1st ed.). Acorn Printing.</p><p>American Social History Project / Center for Media and Learning. (n.d.). “Kill the Indian, and Save the Man”: Capt. Richard H. Pratt on the Education of Native Americans. History Matters, The US Survey Course on the Web. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/4929">http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/4929</a></p><p>Anthes, B. (2014). Why Injun Artist Me. In Native Diasporas (p. 411). UNP - Nebraska Paperback.</p><p>Blue Eagle, A. (1971). Echogee : The little blue deer (Second ed.).</p><p>Blue Eagle, A., & University of Central Oklahoma. Library. Special Collections/Archives. (1959). Oklahoma Indian painting - poetry. Tulsa, Okla.: Acorn Publishing.</p><p>Broder, P. (1981). American Indian Painting and Sculpture. Abbeville Press.</p><p>Edmon Low Library. (n.d.). Chilocco Indian Agricultural School Collection. Oklahoma State University Library. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://library.okstate.edu/search-and-find/collections/digital-collections/chilocco-indian-agricultural-school-photo-collection/">https://library.okstate.edu/search-and-find/collections/digital-collections/chilocco-indian-agricultural-school-photo-collection/</a></p><p>Elder, T. (2006). Lumhee Holot-Tee : The art and life of Acee Blue Eagle.</p><p>Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art. (n.d.). Kiowa Agency: Stories of the Six. Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, The University of Oklahoma. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://www.ou.edu/fjjma/exhibitions1/past-exhibitions/2020-/KiowaAgency">https://www.ou.edu/fjjma/exhibitions1/past-exhibitions/2020-/KiowaAgency</a></p><p>Kelly, M. (1991). Acee Blue Eagle Glasses. Promotional Glass Collectors Association. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="http://www.pgcaglassclub.com/articles_archives/acee.htm">http://www.pgcaglassclub.com/articles_archives/acee.htm</a></p><p>Lee, R. (1995, November 3). Knox Oil Co. Offered Glasses. The Oklahoman. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/1995/11/03/knox-oil-co-offered-glasses/62374538007/">https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/1995/11/03/knox-oil-co-offered-glasses/62374538007/</a></p><p>Lester, P. (1995). The Biographical Directory of Native American Painters. SIR Publications.</p><p>Miner, J. (2018). Remediating the "famous indian artist": Native aesthetics beyond tourism and tragedy. Studies in American Indian Literatures, 30(2), 79-105. <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/scholarly-journals/remediating-famous-indian-artist-native/docview/2063292811/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/scholarly-journals/remediating-famous-indian-artist-native/docview/2063292811/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Neuman, L.. (2014). Marketing Culture. In Indian Play. University of Nebraska Press - Nebraska.</p><p>Official Report of the Nineteenth Annual Conference of Charities and Correction (1892), 46–59. Reprinted in Richard H. Pratt, “The Advantages of Mingling Indians with Whites,” Americanizing the American Indians: Writings by the “Friends of the Indian” 1880–1900 (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1973), 260–271.</p><p>Petete, T., & Womack, C. (2006). Thomas E. Moore's Sour Sofkee in the Tradition of Muskogee Dialect Writers. Studies in American Indian Literatures, 18(4), series 2, 1-37. Retrieved June 15, 2021, from</p><p>Snodgrass, J. (1968). American Indian Painters: A Biographical Directory. The Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation.</p><p>Tsianina Lomawaima, K. (n.d.). Chilocco Indian Agricultural School. Oklahoma Historical Society. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=ch042">https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=ch042</a></p><p>Zinn, H. (2003). A People’s History of the United States. Harper Collins. New York.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 15 Sep 2022 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Ebony Sayles, Dean Kelly, Spencer Gee, Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/acee-blue-eagle-qHrAYcOZ</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>An indigenous artist from Oklahoma, Alex C. Mackintosh was born in 1907 with Creek and Scottish ancestry. He attended the Chilocco federal Boarding school for Native Americans in Newkirk Oklahoma, it was there that he took on the name Acee Blue Eagle to honor his heritage. The name “Blue Eagle” was reportedly from his mother’s family; this matrilineal approach to last names is traditional and accepted in many indigenous cultures. After graduating from Chilocco he would go on to attend the Bacone Indian College and from there he was accepted to study art at the University of Oklahoma, where a special program had been founded to foster Native American art. Acee Blue Eagle would go on to exhibit his art with a prominent group of artists from this program known today as the Kiowa Six, though Acee himself was not Kiowa he was an informal member of this group. Acee Blue Eagle established himself not only as a well-known artist but also as a performer. He exhibited work across the U.S. and Europe. His work was purchased by many museums and foreign dignitaries. He was also a mural painter for the WPA program and painted several murals in Oklahoma. Towards the end of his life and career, he began experimenting with printing techniques and design work including designing a set of souvenir glasses for Knox Oil, and a line of greeting cards. He illustrated books as well, even writing a few of his own, including one on Oklahoma Indian Painting and Poetry that was published the year he passed away. To the very end, Acee was an ardent supporter of Oklahoma Indian artists and traditions.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1907 – b Oklahoma, as Alex C. MacIntosh<br />1928 – Graduated from Bacone Indian College in Muskogee<br />1931-1932 – Attended University of Oklahoma to study art under Oscar Jacobson<br />1932 – Wrote and illustrated Echogee: The Little Blue Deer, a children’s book with full-color Illustrations<br />1934 – First public commissions for murals through the WPA<br />1934 – Paints murals in Mitchell Hall Theater on the UCO Campus<br />1935 – Travels to Oxford University to lecture on Native American Art<br />1935 – Accepts a teaching position at Bacone as the founding director of the new Art Department<br />1938 – Leaves his position at Bacone to practice art full-time<br />1950 – UCO theater murals are painted over in an effort to redecorate<br />1954 – begins exploring a career as a commercial artist including creating a line of greeting cards<br />1956 – Illustrates Mae Abbott’s book Oklahoma: Indian Cook Book<br />1959 – Writes and publishes Oklahoma Indian Painting–Poetry<br />1959 – died penniless in a veterans hospital in Muskogee of liver failure, at 52<br />1971 – Echogee: The Little Blue Deer is finally published</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Acee Blue Eagle, Oklahoma Indian Painting–Poetry (Tulsa, Okla.: Acorn Publishing Co., 1959).</p><p>Abbott, M. W. (1956). Oklahoma Indian cook book, the best Indian recipes from the best Indian state / y Mae Abbott. (1st ed.). Acorn Printing.</p><p>American Social History Project / Center for Media and Learning. (n.d.). “Kill the Indian, and Save the Man”: Capt. Richard H. Pratt on the Education of Native Americans. History Matters, The US Survey Course on the Web. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/4929">http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/4929</a></p><p>Anthes, B. (2014). Why Injun Artist Me. In Native Diasporas (p. 411). UNP - Nebraska Paperback.</p><p>Blue Eagle, A. (1971). Echogee : The little blue deer (Second ed.).</p><p>Blue Eagle, A., & University of Central Oklahoma. Library. Special Collections/Archives. (1959). Oklahoma Indian painting - poetry. Tulsa, Okla.: Acorn Publishing.</p><p>Broder, P. (1981). American Indian Painting and Sculpture. Abbeville Press.</p><p>Edmon Low Library. (n.d.). Chilocco Indian Agricultural School Collection. Oklahoma State University Library. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://library.okstate.edu/search-and-find/collections/digital-collections/chilocco-indian-agricultural-school-photo-collection/">https://library.okstate.edu/search-and-find/collections/digital-collections/chilocco-indian-agricultural-school-photo-collection/</a></p><p>Elder, T. (2006). Lumhee Holot-Tee : The art and life of Acee Blue Eagle.</p><p>Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art. (n.d.). Kiowa Agency: Stories of the Six. Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, The University of Oklahoma. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://www.ou.edu/fjjma/exhibitions1/past-exhibitions/2020-/KiowaAgency">https://www.ou.edu/fjjma/exhibitions1/past-exhibitions/2020-/KiowaAgency</a></p><p>Kelly, M. (1991). Acee Blue Eagle Glasses. Promotional Glass Collectors Association. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="http://www.pgcaglassclub.com/articles_archives/acee.htm">http://www.pgcaglassclub.com/articles_archives/acee.htm</a></p><p>Lee, R. (1995, November 3). Knox Oil Co. Offered Glasses. The Oklahoman. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/1995/11/03/knox-oil-co-offered-glasses/62374538007/">https://www.oklahoman.com/story/news/1995/11/03/knox-oil-co-offered-glasses/62374538007/</a></p><p>Lester, P. (1995). The Biographical Directory of Native American Painters. SIR Publications.</p><p>Miner, J. (2018). Remediating the "famous indian artist": Native aesthetics beyond tourism and tragedy. Studies in American Indian Literatures, 30(2), 79-105. <a href="https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/scholarly-journals/remediating-famous-indian-artist-native/docview/2063292811/se-2?accountid=14516">https://libproxy.uco.edu/login?url=https://www-proquest-com.libproxy.uco.edu/scholarly-journals/remediating-famous-indian-artist-native/docview/2063292811/se-2?accountid=14516</a></p><p>Neuman, L.. (2014). Marketing Culture. In Indian Play. University of Nebraska Press - Nebraska.</p><p>Official Report of the Nineteenth Annual Conference of Charities and Correction (1892), 46–59. Reprinted in Richard H. Pratt, “The Advantages of Mingling Indians with Whites,” Americanizing the American Indians: Writings by the “Friends of the Indian” 1880–1900 (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1973), 260–271.</p><p>Petete, T., & Womack, C. (2006). Thomas E. Moore's Sour Sofkee in the Tradition of Muskogee Dialect Writers. Studies in American Indian Literatures, 18(4), series 2, 1-37. Retrieved June 15, 2021, from</p><p>Snodgrass, J. (1968). American Indian Painters: A Biographical Directory. The Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation.</p><p>Tsianina Lomawaima, K. (n.d.). Chilocco Indian Agricultural School. Oklahoma Historical Society. Retrieved June 9, 2022, from <a href="https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=ch042">https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=ch042</a></p><p>Zinn, H. (2003). A People’s History of the United States. Harper Collins. New York.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Acee Blue Eagle</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Ebony Sayles, Dean Kelly, Spencer Gee, Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/d0138db6-48d4-48b3-b9d1-03729869e604/3000x3000/huynh-incomplet-podcast-revised18.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:24:30</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the life of Indigenous Oklahoma Artist Acee Blue Eagle; this well recognized artist led and extremely interesting life and also created artwork that could be classified as graphic design and illustration.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the life of Indigenous Oklahoma Artist Acee Blue Eagle; this well recognized artist led and extremely interesting life and also created artwork that could be classified as graphic design and illustration.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>acee blue eagle, indigenous artist, graphic design history, indigenous designer, graphic design</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Eiko Ishioka</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Eiko Ishioka was a graphic, costume, and set designer. She was born July 12, 1938 in Tokyo, Japan. Growing up, her life always fused western and Japanese culture. She graduated from the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music in 1960 and immediately started working for the largest cosmetic company in Japan, Shiseido. There she revolutionized the poster with her bold use of diverse models and progressive feminist messages that defied tradition. Ishioka later worked as a creative director for the department store Parco, producing iconic posters and television ads that broke with tradition and showed no products. In 1983, Ishioka left Parco and opened her own design studio. Once in her own practice, Eiko experimented more and more with surrealism as she moved into designing sets and costumes for film and theater. She won awards for her work on Mishima (1985) and Madame Butterfly (1988). Ishioka would go on to win the 1993 Academy Award for Best Costume Design (along with multiple other awards) for her incredible costume designs for Francis Ford Coppola’s 1992 film adaptation of Bram Stoker's <i>Dracula</i>. It was Ishioka’s life work to push up against tradition. The result is a stunning body of work worthy of inclusion in the design history canon.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1938 –  <i>b.</i> Tokyo, Japan<br />1961 –  graduated Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music<br />1970 –  founded own firm<br />1970 –  ūman ribu movement<br />1980 –  moved to New York<br />1983 –  published her own book <i>Eiko by Eiko</i><br />1985 –  Equal Opportunity Law passed in Japan; <i>Mishima</i> releases featuring set designs from Ishioka, for which she wins the Award for Artistic Contribution at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival.<br />1992 –  Bram Stoker's Dracula<br />1993 –  Ishioka’s costume designs on Dracula win her the Academy Award for Best Costume Design<br />2002 –  Designs sports uniforms for the 2002 Olympics<br />2008 –  Designs the opening ceremony costume designs for the Beijing Olympics <br />2010 –  Costume Designs for Broadway Musical, “Spiderman: Turn Off the Dark”<br />2012 –  <i>d.</i> Age 73 in Tokyo, Japan from pancreatic cancer</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Associated Press. (2012, January 26). <i>Costume designer Eiko Ishioka, recently known for Broadway’s “Spider-Man,” has died at 73</i>. Washington Post. <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20120205143125/http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/theater-dance/costume-designer-eiko-ishioka-recently-known-for-broadways-spider-man-has-died-at-73/2012/01/26/gIQAyZhgTQ_story.html">https://web.archive.org/web/20120205143125/http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/theater-dance/costume-designer-eiko-ishioka-recently-known-for-broadways-spider-man-has-died-at-73/2012/01/26/gIQAyZhgTQ_story.html</a></p><p>Dalí Paris. (n.d). <i>Dalí and fashion</i>. Dalí Paris. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.daliparis.com/en/salvador-dali-en/dali-fashion/">https://www.daliparis.com/en/salvador-dali-en/dali-fashion/</a></p><p>Edwards, L. N. (1988). Equal Employment Opportunity in Japan: A View from the West. ILR Review, 41(2), 240–250. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1177/001979398804100206">https://doi.org/10.1177/001979398804100206</a></p><p><i>Eiko Ishioka</i>. (1992). ADC Global. <a href="http://adcglobal.org/hall-of-fame/eiko-ishioka/">http://adcglobal.org/hall-of-fame/eiko-ishioka/</a></p><p><i>Eiko Ishioka</i>. (n.d.). A SEARCH HISTORY. <a href="https://asearchhistory.weebly.com/eiko-ishioka.html">https://asearchhistory.weebly.com/eiko-ishioka.html</a></p><p>Fox, M. (1984, March 1). <i>An Interview with Eiko Ishioka, by Ingrid Sischy</i>. Artforum International. <a href="https://www.artforum.com/print/198403/an-interview-with-eiko-ishioka-by-ingrid-sischy-35403">https://www.artforum.com/print/198403/an-interview-with-eiko-ishioka-by-ingrid-sischy-35403</a></p><p>Fox, M. (2012, January 27). <i>Eiko Ishioka, Costumer of the Surreal, Dies at 73</i>. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/27/arts/design/eiko-ishioka-designer-dies-at-73.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/27/arts/design/eiko-ishioka-designer-dies-at-73.html</a></p><p>Fusek, A. P. (2021, February 27). <i>The Feminist Movement in Japan: WWII to the 1970s</i>. Unseen Japan. <a href="https://unseenjapan.com/feminist-movement-japan-wwii-1970s/">https://unseenjapan.com/feminist-movement-japan-wwii-1970s/</a></p><p>Goodall, H. (2013, January 3). <i>Origins and influence of surrealism in Japanese art</i>. Unframed. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://unframed.lacma.org/2013/01/03/origins-and-influence-of-surrealism-in-japanese-art">https://unframed.lacma.org/2013/01/03/origins-and-influence-of-surrealism-in-japanese-art</a></p><p><i>Graphic Liberation of Gender: Eiko Ishioka Poster ExhibitionThe Japan Foundation, Toronto</i>. (2017, September 6). Japan Foundation. <a href="https://jftor.org/event/eiko-ishioka-poster-exhibition/2017-09-06/">https://jftor.org/event/eiko-ishioka-poster-exhibition/2017-09-06/</a></p><p>Haley, M. (n.d.). <i>Sneak Peek: Eiko Ishioka Papers at UCLA Library Special Collections</i>. LA Collective. <a href="https://laacollective.org/work/eiko-ishioka">https://laacollective.org/work/eiko-ishioka</a></p><p>Hooks, R. (2018). Surrealism in  graphic design. 99designs. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://99designs.com/blog/design-history-movements/surreal-graphic-design/">https://99designs.com/blog/design-history-movements/surreal-graphic-design/</a></p><p>ITSLIQUID. (2020, December 18). <i>Eiko Ishioka: Blood, Sweat, and Tears</i>. <a href="https://www.itsliquid.com/eikoishioka-bloodsweatandtears.html">https://www.itsliquid.com/eikoishioka-bloodsweatandtears.html</a></p><p>Japanese Pickers. (2017, January 6). <i>1990 Print Available</i> [Facebook Post]. Facebook. <a href="https://www.facebook.com/unsupportedbrowser">https://www.facebook.com/unsupportedbrowser</a></p><p>K. (2020, February 10). <i>Shibuya PARCO - Interactive Shopping, Art, And Hands-On Technology</i>. Matcha - Japan Travel Web Magazine. <a href="https://matcha-jp.com/en/9390">https://matcha-jp.com/en/9390</a></p><p>Lorde Velho. (2020, July 23). <i>The Costumes Are the Sets - The Design of Eiko Ishioka (Legendado PTBR)</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3TFCNCt-gUk">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3TFCNCt-gUk</a></p><p>Molony, B. (2000). Women's Rights, Feminism, and Suffragism in Japan, 1870-1925. <i>Pacific Historical Review,</i> <i>69</i>(4), 639-661. doi:10.2307/3641228</p><p>Parsons, K. (2019, July 22). <i>THE THEATER. VERY PARCO. | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum</i>. Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. <a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2018/03/17/the-theater-very-parco-2/">https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2018/03/17/the-theater-very-parco-2/</a></p><p>Pola Museum of Art. (2019). <i>Surrealist painting: Influences and iterations in Japan</i>. Pola Museum of Art. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.polamuseum.or.jp/english/exhibition/20191215s01/">https://www.polamuseum.or.jp/english/exhibition/20191215s01/</a></p><p>Sayej, N. (2018, January 16). 7 designers keeping the art of surrealism alive today. <i>Print Mag</i>. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.printmag.com/post/7-designers-keeping-surrealism-alive">https://www.printmag.com/post/7-designers-keeping-surrealism-alive</a></p><p>Schenker, M. (2018, October 25). <i>Design trend report: Surrealism</i>. Creative Market. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://creativemarket.com/blog/design-trend-report-surrealism">https://creativemarket.com/blog/design-trend-report-surrealism</a></p><p>Stech, A. (2019, October 4). <i>How 1920s surrealism impacted modern design</i>. Wallpaper. Retrieved from 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.wallpaper.com/design/surrealism-and-design-vitra-design-museum-exhibition">https://www.wallpaper.com/design/surrealism-and-design-vitra-design-museum-exhibition</a></p><p><i>Surreal Costumes by Legendary Designer Eiko Ishioka</i>. (2019, June 4). Juxtapoz: Art and Culture. <a href="https://www.juxtapoz.com/news/design/surreal-costumes-by-legendary-designer-eiko-ishioka/">https://www.juxtapoz.com/news/design/surreal-costumes-by-legendary-designer-eiko-ishioka/</a></p><p>Takeuchi-Demirci, A. (2010). Birth Control and Socialism: The Frustration of Margaret Sanger and Ishimoto Shizue's Mission. <i>The Journal of American-East Asian Relations,</i> <i>17</i>(3), 257-280. Retrieved April 28, 2021, from <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/23613288">http://www.jstor.org/stable/23613288</a></p><p>The Academy. (2018, March 30). <i>How Eiko Ishioka’s revolutionary costumes won Coppola’s “Dracula” an Oscar</i>. Medium. <a href="https://medium.com/art-science/how-francis-ford-coppola-s-choice-to-work-with-a-weirdo-outsider-led-to-an-oscar-dd22bdf51e2a">https://medium.com/art-science/how-francis-ford-coppola-s-choice-to-work-with-a-weirdo-outsider-led-to-an-oscar-dd22bdf51e2a</a></p><p>Times, T. N. Y. (1973, December 8). <i>Japan Braces for a Full‐Scale Oil Crisis</i>. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/1973/12/08/archives/japan-braces-for-a-fullscale-oil-crisis-japan-whose-busy-economy.html">https://www.nytimes.com/1973/12/08/archives/japan-braces-for-a-fullscale-oil-crisis-japan-whose-busy-economy.html</a></p><p>Times, T. N. Y. (1983, March 27). <i>CHANGING FACE OF JAPAN</i>. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/1983/03/27/magazine/changing-face-of-japan.html">https://www.nytimes.com/1983/03/27/magazine/changing-face-of-japan.html</a></p><p>Vitra Design Museum. (2019). <i>Objects of desire: Surrealism and design 1924 - today</i>. Vitra Design Museum. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.design-museum.de/en/exhibitions/detailpages/objects-of-desire-surrealism-and-design.html?desktop=318&cHash=c626c20211a0d1333a9393761a0ffc40">https://www.design-museum.de/en/exhibitions/detailpages/objects-of-desire-surrealism-and-</a></p><p><a href="https://www.design-museum.de/en/exhibitions/detailpages/objects-of-desire-surrealism-and-design.html?desktop=318&cHash=c626c20211a0d1333a9393761a0ffc40">design.html?desktop=318&cHash=c626c20211a0d1333a9393761a0ffc40</a></p><p>Wang, M. (2017, March 8). _What’s PARCO?_JAPAN Monthly Web Magazine. <a href="https://japan-magazine.jnto.go.jp/en/special_parco.html">https://japan-magazine.jnto.go.jp/en/special_parco.html</a></p><p>Wood, G. (2007). <i>Surrealism and design</i>. V&A. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.vam.ac.uk/articles/surrealism-and-design">https://www.vam.ac.uk/articles/surrealism-and-design</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 25 Nov 2021 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton, Spencer Gee, Shayne Valencia, Kayla Sinclair)</author>
      <link>https://idh.fm/episodes/eiko-ishioka</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Eiko Ishioka was a graphic, costume, and set designer. She was born July 12, 1938 in Tokyo, Japan. Growing up, her life always fused western and Japanese culture. She graduated from the Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music in 1960 and immediately started working for the largest cosmetic company in Japan, Shiseido. There she revolutionized the poster with her bold use of diverse models and progressive feminist messages that defied tradition. Ishioka later worked as a creative director for the department store Parco, producing iconic posters and television ads that broke with tradition and showed no products. In 1983, Ishioka left Parco and opened her own design studio. Once in her own practice, Eiko experimented more and more with surrealism as she moved into designing sets and costumes for film and theater. She won awards for her work on Mishima (1985) and Madame Butterfly (1988). Ishioka would go on to win the 1993 Academy Award for Best Costume Design (along with multiple other awards) for her incredible costume designs for Francis Ford Coppola’s 1992 film adaptation of Bram Stoker's <i>Dracula</i>. It was Ishioka’s life work to push up against tradition. The result is a stunning body of work worthy of inclusion in the design history canon.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1938 –  <i>b.</i> Tokyo, Japan<br />1961 –  graduated Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music<br />1970 –  founded own firm<br />1970 –  ūman ribu movement<br />1980 –  moved to New York<br />1983 –  published her own book <i>Eiko by Eiko</i><br />1985 –  Equal Opportunity Law passed in Japan; <i>Mishima</i> releases featuring set designs from Ishioka, for which she wins the Award for Artistic Contribution at the 1985 Cannes Film Festival.<br />1992 –  Bram Stoker's Dracula<br />1993 –  Ishioka’s costume designs on Dracula win her the Academy Award for Best Costume Design<br />2002 –  Designs sports uniforms for the 2002 Olympics<br />2008 –  Designs the opening ceremony costume designs for the Beijing Olympics <br />2010 –  Costume Designs for Broadway Musical, “Spiderman: Turn Off the Dark”<br />2012 –  <i>d.</i> Age 73 in Tokyo, Japan from pancreatic cancer</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Associated Press. (2012, January 26). <i>Costume designer Eiko Ishioka, recently known for Broadway’s “Spider-Man,” has died at 73</i>. Washington Post. <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20120205143125/http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/theater-dance/costume-designer-eiko-ishioka-recently-known-for-broadways-spider-man-has-died-at-73/2012/01/26/gIQAyZhgTQ_story.html">https://web.archive.org/web/20120205143125/http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/theater-dance/costume-designer-eiko-ishioka-recently-known-for-broadways-spider-man-has-died-at-73/2012/01/26/gIQAyZhgTQ_story.html</a></p><p>Dalí Paris. (n.d). <i>Dalí and fashion</i>. Dalí Paris. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.daliparis.com/en/salvador-dali-en/dali-fashion/">https://www.daliparis.com/en/salvador-dali-en/dali-fashion/</a></p><p>Edwards, L. N. (1988). Equal Employment Opportunity in Japan: A View from the West. ILR Review, 41(2), 240–250. <a href="https://doi.org/10.1177/001979398804100206">https://doi.org/10.1177/001979398804100206</a></p><p><i>Eiko Ishioka</i>. (1992). ADC Global. <a href="http://adcglobal.org/hall-of-fame/eiko-ishioka/">http://adcglobal.org/hall-of-fame/eiko-ishioka/</a></p><p><i>Eiko Ishioka</i>. (n.d.). A SEARCH HISTORY. <a href="https://asearchhistory.weebly.com/eiko-ishioka.html">https://asearchhistory.weebly.com/eiko-ishioka.html</a></p><p>Fox, M. (1984, March 1). <i>An Interview with Eiko Ishioka, by Ingrid Sischy</i>. Artforum International. <a href="https://www.artforum.com/print/198403/an-interview-with-eiko-ishioka-by-ingrid-sischy-35403">https://www.artforum.com/print/198403/an-interview-with-eiko-ishioka-by-ingrid-sischy-35403</a></p><p>Fox, M. (2012, January 27). <i>Eiko Ishioka, Costumer of the Surreal, Dies at 73</i>. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/27/arts/design/eiko-ishioka-designer-dies-at-73.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/27/arts/design/eiko-ishioka-designer-dies-at-73.html</a></p><p>Fusek, A. P. (2021, February 27). <i>The Feminist Movement in Japan: WWII to the 1970s</i>. Unseen Japan. <a href="https://unseenjapan.com/feminist-movement-japan-wwii-1970s/">https://unseenjapan.com/feminist-movement-japan-wwii-1970s/</a></p><p>Goodall, H. (2013, January 3). <i>Origins and influence of surrealism in Japanese art</i>. Unframed. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://unframed.lacma.org/2013/01/03/origins-and-influence-of-surrealism-in-japanese-art">https://unframed.lacma.org/2013/01/03/origins-and-influence-of-surrealism-in-japanese-art</a></p><p><i>Graphic Liberation of Gender: Eiko Ishioka Poster ExhibitionThe Japan Foundation, Toronto</i>. (2017, September 6). Japan Foundation. <a href="https://jftor.org/event/eiko-ishioka-poster-exhibition/2017-09-06/">https://jftor.org/event/eiko-ishioka-poster-exhibition/2017-09-06/</a></p><p>Haley, M. (n.d.). <i>Sneak Peek: Eiko Ishioka Papers at UCLA Library Special Collections</i>. LA Collective. <a href="https://laacollective.org/work/eiko-ishioka">https://laacollective.org/work/eiko-ishioka</a></p><p>Hooks, R. (2018). Surrealism in  graphic design. 99designs. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://99designs.com/blog/design-history-movements/surreal-graphic-design/">https://99designs.com/blog/design-history-movements/surreal-graphic-design/</a></p><p>ITSLIQUID. (2020, December 18). <i>Eiko Ishioka: Blood, Sweat, and Tears</i>. <a href="https://www.itsliquid.com/eikoishioka-bloodsweatandtears.html">https://www.itsliquid.com/eikoishioka-bloodsweatandtears.html</a></p><p>Japanese Pickers. (2017, January 6). <i>1990 Print Available</i> [Facebook Post]. Facebook. <a href="https://www.facebook.com/unsupportedbrowser">https://www.facebook.com/unsupportedbrowser</a></p><p>K. (2020, February 10). <i>Shibuya PARCO - Interactive Shopping, Art, And Hands-On Technology</i>. Matcha - Japan Travel Web Magazine. <a href="https://matcha-jp.com/en/9390">https://matcha-jp.com/en/9390</a></p><p>Lorde Velho. (2020, July 23). <i>The Costumes Are the Sets - The Design of Eiko Ishioka (Legendado PTBR)</i> [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3TFCNCt-gUk">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3TFCNCt-gUk</a></p><p>Molony, B. (2000). Women's Rights, Feminism, and Suffragism in Japan, 1870-1925. <i>Pacific Historical Review,</i> <i>69</i>(4), 639-661. doi:10.2307/3641228</p><p>Parsons, K. (2019, July 22). <i>THE THEATER. VERY PARCO. | Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum</i>. Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum. <a href="https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2018/03/17/the-theater-very-parco-2/">https://www.cooperhewitt.org/2018/03/17/the-theater-very-parco-2/</a></p><p>Pola Museum of Art. (2019). <i>Surrealist painting: Influences and iterations in Japan</i>. Pola Museum of Art. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.polamuseum.or.jp/english/exhibition/20191215s01/">https://www.polamuseum.or.jp/english/exhibition/20191215s01/</a></p><p>Sayej, N. (2018, January 16). 7 designers keeping the art of surrealism alive today. <i>Print Mag</i>. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.printmag.com/post/7-designers-keeping-surrealism-alive">https://www.printmag.com/post/7-designers-keeping-surrealism-alive</a></p><p>Schenker, M. (2018, October 25). <i>Design trend report: Surrealism</i>. Creative Market. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://creativemarket.com/blog/design-trend-report-surrealism">https://creativemarket.com/blog/design-trend-report-surrealism</a></p><p>Stech, A. (2019, October 4). <i>How 1920s surrealism impacted modern design</i>. Wallpaper. Retrieved from 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.wallpaper.com/design/surrealism-and-design-vitra-design-museum-exhibition">https://www.wallpaper.com/design/surrealism-and-design-vitra-design-museum-exhibition</a></p><p><i>Surreal Costumes by Legendary Designer Eiko Ishioka</i>. (2019, June 4). Juxtapoz: Art and Culture. <a href="https://www.juxtapoz.com/news/design/surreal-costumes-by-legendary-designer-eiko-ishioka/">https://www.juxtapoz.com/news/design/surreal-costumes-by-legendary-designer-eiko-ishioka/</a></p><p>Takeuchi-Demirci, A. (2010). Birth Control and Socialism: The Frustration of Margaret Sanger and Ishimoto Shizue's Mission. <i>The Journal of American-East Asian Relations,</i> <i>17</i>(3), 257-280. Retrieved April 28, 2021, from <a href="http://www.jstor.org/stable/23613288">http://www.jstor.org/stable/23613288</a></p><p>The Academy. (2018, March 30). <i>How Eiko Ishioka’s revolutionary costumes won Coppola’s “Dracula” an Oscar</i>. Medium. <a href="https://medium.com/art-science/how-francis-ford-coppola-s-choice-to-work-with-a-weirdo-outsider-led-to-an-oscar-dd22bdf51e2a">https://medium.com/art-science/how-francis-ford-coppola-s-choice-to-work-with-a-weirdo-outsider-led-to-an-oscar-dd22bdf51e2a</a></p><p>Times, T. N. Y. (1973, December 8). <i>Japan Braces for a Full‐Scale Oil Crisis</i>. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/1973/12/08/archives/japan-braces-for-a-fullscale-oil-crisis-japan-whose-busy-economy.html">https://www.nytimes.com/1973/12/08/archives/japan-braces-for-a-fullscale-oil-crisis-japan-whose-busy-economy.html</a></p><p>Times, T. N. Y. (1983, March 27). <i>CHANGING FACE OF JAPAN</i>. The New York Times. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/1983/03/27/magazine/changing-face-of-japan.html">https://www.nytimes.com/1983/03/27/magazine/changing-face-of-japan.html</a></p><p>Vitra Design Museum. (2019). <i>Objects of desire: Surrealism and design 1924 - today</i>. Vitra Design Museum. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.design-museum.de/en/exhibitions/detailpages/objects-of-desire-surrealism-and-design.html?desktop=318&cHash=c626c20211a0d1333a9393761a0ffc40">https://www.design-museum.de/en/exhibitions/detailpages/objects-of-desire-surrealism-and-</a></p><p><a href="https://www.design-museum.de/en/exhibitions/detailpages/objects-of-desire-surrealism-and-design.html?desktop=318&cHash=c626c20211a0d1333a9393761a0ffc40">design.html?desktop=318&cHash=c626c20211a0d1333a9393761a0ffc40</a></p><p>Wang, M. (2017, March 8). _What’s PARCO?_JAPAN Monthly Web Magazine. <a href="https://japan-magazine.jnto.go.jp/en/special_parco.html">https://japan-magazine.jnto.go.jp/en/special_parco.html</a></p><p>Wood, G. (2007). <i>Surrealism and design</i>. V&A. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.vam.ac.uk/articles/surrealism-and-design">https://www.vam.ac.uk/articles/surrealism-and-design</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Eiko Ishioka</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton, Spencer Gee, Shayne Valencia, Kayla Sinclair</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:17:29</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the contributions of Japanese designer Eiko Ishioka to graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the contributions of Japanese designer Eiko Ishioka to graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, graphic design, women designers, japanese designer</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>12</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
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      <title>Margo Chase</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Margo Chase became a graphic designer almost by accident. In college, Chase was determined to become a veterinarian and in an attempt to get a higher GPA, signed up for a graphic design course. She discovered her love of solving problems creatively and attempted to combine her two loves of science and design by getting a masters degree in medical illustration. Chase realized she wouldn’t have the creative freedom she wanted and dropped out of school to become a full time designer. Some of her first jobs were designing album covers and typefaces for Geffen Records, Columbia, Warner Brothers, and Capitol Records. She worked on album typography for Madonna, Prince, Cher, Bonnie Raitt, and Selena, even winning a Grammy for her work on Cher’s album <i>Love Hurts</i>. Her bold, goth calligraphic style got her noticed as the queen of goth, and she was hired to design logos for shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel as well as for Francis Ford Coppola’s film <i>Dracula</i>. Chase’s reputation got the best of her. She wanted to break away from the entertainment industry and the ‘Queen of Goth’ label. She and her team began branding for corporate businesses such as Target, and did package designs for Califia Farms, KIND, Chinese Laundry, Kama Sutra, and Campbell Soup Co. Margo Chase pushed the boundaries of what a designer could do, and always made it her mission to create the best work she could to put out into the world. </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1958 –  b Los Angeles, California<br />1986 –  opened her own studio, Chase Design Group<br />1991 –  designed Bonnie Raitt’s record cover, “Luck of the Draw.”<br />1992  –  Victory Records Ten Inch Men’s “Pretty Vultures” cover<br />1998 –  created typefaces for projects such as Evolution and Shiraz<br />2007 –  became an aerobatic pilot<br />2017 –  d Apple Valley, California</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Campbell-Dollaghan, K. (2018a, July 9). <i>Club Culture, And The Design It Inspired, Finally Gets A Visual History</i>. Fast Company. <a href="https://www.fastcompany.com/90160778/club-culture-and-the-design-it-inspired-gets-a-monograph?_ga=2.85689049.174350571.1615070439-607903494.1615070439">https://www.fastcompany.com/90160778/club-culture-and-the-design-it-inspired-gets-a-monograph?_ga=2.85689049.174350571.1615070439-607903494.1615070439</a></p><p>Campbell-Dollaghan, K. (2018b, July 9). <i>How punk rock changed the course of design history</i>. Fast Company. <a href="https://www.fastcompany.com/90175535/the-secret-history-of-design-and-punk">https://www.fastcompany.com/90175535/the-secret-history-of-design-and-punk</a></p><p>Chase Design Group. (n.d.). <i>Our Founder</i>. <a href="https://www.chasedesigngroup.com/culture/our-founder/">https://www.chasedesigngroup.com/culture/our-founder/</a></p><p>Deseo, J. (2014, October 2). <i>Spotlight: Chase Design Group</i>. Dieline - Design, Branding & Packaging Inspiration. <a href="https://thedieline.com/blog/2014/9/24/spotlight-chase-design-group">https://thedieline.com/blog/2014/9/24/spotlight-chase-design-group</a>?</p><p>Devroye, L. (n.d.). <i>Margo Chase Design (was: Gravy Designs)</i>. Luc Devroye. <a href="http://luc.devroye.org/fonts-24739.html">http://luc.devroye.org/fonts-24739.html</a></p><p>Friel, K. (2019, April 25). <i>A Timeline of Margo Chase</i>. Issuu. <a href="https://issuu.com/mecagd/docs/mc_book">https://issuu.com/mecagd/docs/mc_book</a></p><p>Goodwin, T. (2013, April 5). <i>How Culture Has Influenced Design: BoldThink Creative & Marketing</i>. Boldthink | Marketing & Branding Agency | Website Design | Indianapolis. <a href="https://boldthinkcreative.com/culturedesign/">https://boldthinkcreative.com/culturedesign/</a></p><p>Goolsby, C. (2019, May 29). <i>What Rock 'N' Roll Taught Margo Chase About Packaging</i>. Packaging Strategies. <a href="https://www.packagingstrategies.com/articles/94598-what-rock-n-roll-taught-margo-chase-about-packaging">https://www.packagingstrategies.com/articles/94598-what-rock-n-roll-taught-margo-chase-about-packaging</a></p><p>Gosling, E. (2016a, August 24). <i>What Rave Culture Is Teaching Modern Graphic Designers</i>. AIGA Eye on Design. <a href="https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/what-rave-culture-is-teaching-modern-graphic-designers/">https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/what-rave-culture-is-teaching-modern-graphic-designers/</a></p><p>Gosling, E. (2016b, November 3). <i>The Design + Music Industries are BFFs—They Just Don’t Know it Yet</i>. AIGA Eye on Design. <a href="https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/the-vital-links-between-the-design-music-industries-how-can-they-enhance-one-another/">https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/the-vital-links-between-the-design-music-industries-how-can-they-enhance-one-another/</a></p><p>J. (2021, April 6). <i>From the Misc. Foods Aisle: Generic Brands</i>. Gone but Not Forgotten Groceries. <a href="http://gbnfgroceries.blogspot.com/2014/01/from-misc-foods-aisle-generic-brands.html">http://gbnfgroceries.blogspot.com/2014/01/from-misc-foods-aisle-generic-brands.html</a></p><p>Linderman, E. (2010, September 15). <i>Gale Literature Resource Center - Document - Heller, Steven. Pop: How Graphic Design Shapes Popular Culture</i>. Gale Literature Resource Center. <a href="https://go.gale.com/ps/i.do?p=LitRC&u=edmo56673&id=GALE%7CA238423770&v=2.1&it=r&sid=LitRC&asid=a4e33013">https://go.gale.com/ps/i.do?p=LitRC&u=edmo56673&id=GALE|A238423770&v=2.1&it=r&sid=LitRC&asid=a4e33013</a></p><p><i>Margo Chase on Failure</i>. (2017, June 26). [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6W4d5NIe24&feature=youtu.be">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6W4d5NIe24&feature=youtu.be</a></p><p>Seymour, C. (2019, May 28). <i>Ray Gun—The Magazine That Defined the Alt ’90s—Lives Again</i>. Vogue. <a href="https://www.vogue.com/article/ray-gun-magazine-anthology">https://www.vogue.com/article/ray-gun-magazine-anthology</a></p><p>Slangbusters Branding Studio. (2019, July 23). <i>Is generic packaging the new brand? - The Slangbusters Blog</i>. Medium. <a href="https://medium.com/slangbusters/is-generic-packaging-the-new-brand-c0672da16e94">https://medium.com/slangbusters/is-generic-packaging-the-new-brand-c0672da16e94</a></p><p>Waldbillig, L. (2021, April 6). <i>Generic Products of The ’80s</i>. History’s Dumpster. <a href="http://historysdumpster.blogspot.com/2012/08/generic-products-of-80s.html">http://historysdumpster.blogspot.com/2012/08/generic-products-of-80s.html</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 18 Nov 2021 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia, Spencer Gee, Kayla Sinclair)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/margo-chase-s_o2QFeB</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Margo Chase became a graphic designer almost by accident. In college, Chase was determined to become a veterinarian and in an attempt to get a higher GPA, signed up for a graphic design course. She discovered her love of solving problems creatively and attempted to combine her two loves of science and design by getting a masters degree in medical illustration. Chase realized she wouldn’t have the creative freedom she wanted and dropped out of school to become a full time designer. Some of her first jobs were designing album covers and typefaces for Geffen Records, Columbia, Warner Brothers, and Capitol Records. She worked on album typography for Madonna, Prince, Cher, Bonnie Raitt, and Selena, even winning a Grammy for her work on Cher’s album <i>Love Hurts</i>. Her bold, goth calligraphic style got her noticed as the queen of goth, and she was hired to design logos for shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel as well as for Francis Ford Coppola’s film <i>Dracula</i>. Chase’s reputation got the best of her. She wanted to break away from the entertainment industry and the ‘Queen of Goth’ label. She and her team began branding for corporate businesses such as Target, and did package designs for Califia Farms, KIND, Chinese Laundry, Kama Sutra, and Campbell Soup Co. Margo Chase pushed the boundaries of what a designer could do, and always made it her mission to create the best work she could to put out into the world. </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1958 –  b Los Angeles, California<br />1986 –  opened her own studio, Chase Design Group<br />1991 –  designed Bonnie Raitt’s record cover, “Luck of the Draw.”<br />1992  –  Victory Records Ten Inch Men’s “Pretty Vultures” cover<br />1998 –  created typefaces for projects such as Evolution and Shiraz<br />2007 –  became an aerobatic pilot<br />2017 –  d Apple Valley, California</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Campbell-Dollaghan, K. (2018a, July 9). <i>Club Culture, And The Design It Inspired, Finally Gets A Visual History</i>. Fast Company. <a href="https://www.fastcompany.com/90160778/club-culture-and-the-design-it-inspired-gets-a-monograph?_ga=2.85689049.174350571.1615070439-607903494.1615070439">https://www.fastcompany.com/90160778/club-culture-and-the-design-it-inspired-gets-a-monograph?_ga=2.85689049.174350571.1615070439-607903494.1615070439</a></p><p>Campbell-Dollaghan, K. (2018b, July 9). <i>How punk rock changed the course of design history</i>. Fast Company. <a href="https://www.fastcompany.com/90175535/the-secret-history-of-design-and-punk">https://www.fastcompany.com/90175535/the-secret-history-of-design-and-punk</a></p><p>Chase Design Group. (n.d.). <i>Our Founder</i>. <a href="https://www.chasedesigngroup.com/culture/our-founder/">https://www.chasedesigngroup.com/culture/our-founder/</a></p><p>Deseo, J. (2014, October 2). <i>Spotlight: Chase Design Group</i>. Dieline - Design, Branding & Packaging Inspiration. <a href="https://thedieline.com/blog/2014/9/24/spotlight-chase-design-group">https://thedieline.com/blog/2014/9/24/spotlight-chase-design-group</a>?</p><p>Devroye, L. (n.d.). <i>Margo Chase Design (was: Gravy Designs)</i>. Luc Devroye. <a href="http://luc.devroye.org/fonts-24739.html">http://luc.devroye.org/fonts-24739.html</a></p><p>Friel, K. (2019, April 25). <i>A Timeline of Margo Chase</i>. Issuu. <a href="https://issuu.com/mecagd/docs/mc_book">https://issuu.com/mecagd/docs/mc_book</a></p><p>Goodwin, T. (2013, April 5). <i>How Culture Has Influenced Design: BoldThink Creative & Marketing</i>. Boldthink | Marketing & Branding Agency | Website Design | Indianapolis. <a href="https://boldthinkcreative.com/culturedesign/">https://boldthinkcreative.com/culturedesign/</a></p><p>Goolsby, C. (2019, May 29). <i>What Rock 'N' Roll Taught Margo Chase About Packaging</i>. Packaging Strategies. <a href="https://www.packagingstrategies.com/articles/94598-what-rock-n-roll-taught-margo-chase-about-packaging">https://www.packagingstrategies.com/articles/94598-what-rock-n-roll-taught-margo-chase-about-packaging</a></p><p>Gosling, E. (2016a, August 24). <i>What Rave Culture Is Teaching Modern Graphic Designers</i>. AIGA Eye on Design. <a href="https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/what-rave-culture-is-teaching-modern-graphic-designers/">https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/what-rave-culture-is-teaching-modern-graphic-designers/</a></p><p>Gosling, E. (2016b, November 3). <i>The Design + Music Industries are BFFs—They Just Don’t Know it Yet</i>. AIGA Eye on Design. <a href="https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/the-vital-links-between-the-design-music-industries-how-can-they-enhance-one-another/">https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/the-vital-links-between-the-design-music-industries-how-can-they-enhance-one-another/</a></p><p>J. (2021, April 6). <i>From the Misc. Foods Aisle: Generic Brands</i>. Gone but Not Forgotten Groceries. <a href="http://gbnfgroceries.blogspot.com/2014/01/from-misc-foods-aisle-generic-brands.html">http://gbnfgroceries.blogspot.com/2014/01/from-misc-foods-aisle-generic-brands.html</a></p><p>Linderman, E. (2010, September 15). <i>Gale Literature Resource Center - Document - Heller, Steven. Pop: How Graphic Design Shapes Popular Culture</i>. Gale Literature Resource Center. <a href="https://go.gale.com/ps/i.do?p=LitRC&u=edmo56673&id=GALE%7CA238423770&v=2.1&it=r&sid=LitRC&asid=a4e33013">https://go.gale.com/ps/i.do?p=LitRC&u=edmo56673&id=GALE|A238423770&v=2.1&it=r&sid=LitRC&asid=a4e33013</a></p><p><i>Margo Chase on Failure</i>. (2017, June 26). [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6W4d5NIe24&feature=youtu.be">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A6W4d5NIe24&feature=youtu.be</a></p><p>Seymour, C. (2019, May 28). <i>Ray Gun—The Magazine That Defined the Alt ’90s—Lives Again</i>. Vogue. <a href="https://www.vogue.com/article/ray-gun-magazine-anthology">https://www.vogue.com/article/ray-gun-magazine-anthology</a></p><p>Slangbusters Branding Studio. (2019, July 23). <i>Is generic packaging the new brand? - The Slangbusters Blog</i>. Medium. <a href="https://medium.com/slangbusters/is-generic-packaging-the-new-brand-c0672da16e94">https://medium.com/slangbusters/is-generic-packaging-the-new-brand-c0672da16e94</a></p><p>Waldbillig, L. (2021, April 6). <i>Generic Products of The ’80s</i>. History’s Dumpster. <a href="http://historysdumpster.blogspot.com/2012/08/generic-products-of-80s.html">http://historysdumpster.blogspot.com/2012/08/generic-products-of-80s.html</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Margo Chase</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia, Spencer Gee, Kayla Sinclair</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:12:08</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the contributions of graphic designer Margo Chase, dubbed the &quot;queen of goth&quot;, to graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the contributions of graphic designer Margo Chase, dubbed the &quot;queen of goth&quot;, to graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, goth design, graphic design, album cover design, margo chase, women designers</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>11</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Jacqueline Casey</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Jacqueline Casey was born in Quincy, Massachusetts in 1927 and  grew up with a passion for art. While her parents encouraged her to study bookkeeping, she pursued art against their wishes by entering the Massachusetts College of Art. It was at MassArt that Casey met and befriended Muriel Cooper. In 1949, Casey graduated from MassArt with a degree in fashion design and illustration. She entered the workforce which was very gradually becoming more accepting of women and worked in fashion design, advertising, and interior design. Except none of them felt quite right. Frustrated, Casey took three months to travel across Europe and clear her head. In 1955, Muriel Cooper hired Casey to work with her at MIT’s Office of Publications. Casey would soon become responsible for posters, catalogs, and other promotional materials. In 1958, Casey worked with Thérèse Moll, an assistant to seminal Swiss designer Karl Gerstner. Moll introduced Casey to the International Typographic Style. Casey was later appointed director of the Office of Publications, and MIT’s public image became recognizably influenced by the International Typographic Style. Under Casey’s directorship, the MIT Office of Publications adapted ITS and went on to play a critical role in popularizing Swiss modernism across America.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1927 –  b Jacqueline Casey in Quincy, Massachusetts.<br />1949 – Casey graduates from Massachusetts College of Art with a Bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts and a focus in design/illustration.<br />1955 – Casey is hired by friend and fellow MassArt alumna Muriel Cooper to work at MIT’s Office of Publications.<br />1957 – Cooper leaves MIT and Jacqueline Casey takes on a larger, more active role within MIT’s Office of Publications.<br />1958 – Casey that summer works with Thérèse Moll, friend and assistant to famous Swiss designer Karl Gerstner. Moll introduces Jacqueline Casey to the International Typographic Style, which Casey adopts.<br />1972  – Casey is appointed director of the Office of Publications at MIT and under her influence MIT’s public image becomes recognizably influenced by the International Typographic Style. MIT goes on to influence American graphic design, spreading ITS and Swiss modernism across the country.<br />1989 – Jacqueline Casey retires but continues to work with MIT as a visiting scholar.<br />1992 – d Jacqueline Casey at age 65 in Brookline, Massachusetts from cancer.</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>07. Jacqueline S. Casey</i>. (n.d). History of Graphic Design. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://edpacheco16.wordpress.com/jacqueline-s-casey/">https://edpacheco16.wordpress.com/jacqueline-s-casey/</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey.</i> (2021). San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.sfmoma.org/artist/jacqueline_casey/">https://www.sfmoma.org/artist/jacqueline_casey/</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey</i>. (n.d.). Cooper Hewitt. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://collection.cooperhewitt.org/people/18053543/">https://collection.cooperhewitt.org/people/18053543/</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey</i>. (n.d.). Designing women. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://designingwomen.readymag.com/profiles/jacqueline-casey/">https://designingwomen.readymag.com/profiles/jacqueline-casey/</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey</i>. (n.d.). Rochester Institute of Technology. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.rit.edu/carycollection/jacqueline-casey">https://www.rit.edu/carycollection/jacqueline-casey</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey: A forgotten design hero</i>. (2018, April 12). Documenting Design. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://wordpress91977.wordpress.com/2018/04/12/jacqueline-casey-a-forgotten-design-hero/">https://wordpress91977.wordpress.com/2018/04/12/jacqueline-casey-a-forgotten-design-hero/</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey research.</i> (n.d.). Jacqueline Casey Research. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://samsgraphicresearch.weebly.com/history.html">https://samsgraphicresearch.weebly.com/history.html</a></p><p>Reinfurt, D. (2017). <i>Muriel Cooper</i>. MIT Press.</p><p>Resnick, E. (2008). Women at the edge of technology. <i>Eye Magazine</i>. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="http://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/woman-at-the-edge-of-technology">http://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/woman-at-the-edge-of-technology</a></p><p><i>The Humanistic Designer: Jacqueline Casey</i>. (2016). Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <br /><a href="https://mit2016.mit.edu/campus-cambridge/century-employees/casey">https://mit2016.mit.edu/campus-cambridge/century-employees/casey</a></p><p>Sherin, A. (2012, February 6). Casey, Jacqueline. In_ Grove Encyclopedia of Classical Art and Architecture_. <br /><a href="https://doi.org/10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.T202155">https://doi.org/10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.T2021558</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 11 Nov 2021 06:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Spencer Gee, Shayne Valencia, Kayla Sinclair, Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/jacqueline-casey-fvjt5_jq</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Jacqueline Casey was born in Quincy, Massachusetts in 1927 and  grew up with a passion for art. While her parents encouraged her to study bookkeeping, she pursued art against their wishes by entering the Massachusetts College of Art. It was at MassArt that Casey met and befriended Muriel Cooper. In 1949, Casey graduated from MassArt with a degree in fashion design and illustration. She entered the workforce which was very gradually becoming more accepting of women and worked in fashion design, advertising, and interior design. Except none of them felt quite right. Frustrated, Casey took three months to travel across Europe and clear her head. In 1955, Muriel Cooper hired Casey to work with her at MIT’s Office of Publications. Casey would soon become responsible for posters, catalogs, and other promotional materials. In 1958, Casey worked with Thérèse Moll, an assistant to seminal Swiss designer Karl Gerstner. Moll introduced Casey to the International Typographic Style. Casey was later appointed director of the Office of Publications, and MIT’s public image became recognizably influenced by the International Typographic Style. Under Casey’s directorship, the MIT Office of Publications adapted ITS and went on to play a critical role in popularizing Swiss modernism across America.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1927 –  b Jacqueline Casey in Quincy, Massachusetts.<br />1949 – Casey graduates from Massachusetts College of Art with a Bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts and a focus in design/illustration.<br />1955 – Casey is hired by friend and fellow MassArt alumna Muriel Cooper to work at MIT’s Office of Publications.<br />1957 – Cooper leaves MIT and Jacqueline Casey takes on a larger, more active role within MIT’s Office of Publications.<br />1958 – Casey that summer works with Thérèse Moll, friend and assistant to famous Swiss designer Karl Gerstner. Moll introduces Jacqueline Casey to the International Typographic Style, which Casey adopts.<br />1972  – Casey is appointed director of the Office of Publications at MIT and under her influence MIT’s public image becomes recognizably influenced by the International Typographic Style. MIT goes on to influence American graphic design, spreading ITS and Swiss modernism across the country.<br />1989 – Jacqueline Casey retires but continues to work with MIT as a visiting scholar.<br />1992 – d Jacqueline Casey at age 65 in Brookline, Massachusetts from cancer.</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>07. Jacqueline S. Casey</i>. (n.d). History of Graphic Design. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://edpacheco16.wordpress.com/jacqueline-s-casey/">https://edpacheco16.wordpress.com/jacqueline-s-casey/</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey.</i> (2021). San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.sfmoma.org/artist/jacqueline_casey/">https://www.sfmoma.org/artist/jacqueline_casey/</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey</i>. (n.d.). Cooper Hewitt. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://collection.cooperhewitt.org/people/18053543/">https://collection.cooperhewitt.org/people/18053543/</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey</i>. (n.d.). Designing women. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://designingwomen.readymag.com/profiles/jacqueline-casey/">https://designingwomen.readymag.com/profiles/jacqueline-casey/</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey</i>. (n.d.). Rochester Institute of Technology. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.rit.edu/carycollection/jacqueline-casey">https://www.rit.edu/carycollection/jacqueline-casey</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey: A forgotten design hero</i>. (2018, April 12). Documenting Design. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://wordpress91977.wordpress.com/2018/04/12/jacqueline-casey-a-forgotten-design-hero/">https://wordpress91977.wordpress.com/2018/04/12/jacqueline-casey-a-forgotten-design-hero/</a></p><p><i>Jacqueline Casey research.</i> (n.d.). Jacqueline Casey Research. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://samsgraphicresearch.weebly.com/history.html">https://samsgraphicresearch.weebly.com/history.html</a></p><p>Reinfurt, D. (2017). <i>Muriel Cooper</i>. MIT Press.</p><p>Resnick, E. (2008). Women at the edge of technology. <i>Eye Magazine</i>. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="http://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/woman-at-the-edge-of-technology">http://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/woman-at-the-edge-of-technology</a></p><p><i>The Humanistic Designer: Jacqueline Casey</i>. (2016). Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <br /><a href="https://mit2016.mit.edu/campus-cambridge/century-employees/casey">https://mit2016.mit.edu/campus-cambridge/century-employees/casey</a></p><p>Sherin, A. (2012, February 6). Casey, Jacqueline. In_ Grove Encyclopedia of Classical Art and Architecture_. <br /><a href="https://doi.org/10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.T202155">https://doi.org/10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.T2021558</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Jacqueline Casey</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Spencer Gee, Shayne Valencia, Kayla Sinclair, Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:14:56</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the contributions of graphic designer and design director of MIT Jacqueline Casey to graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the contributions of graphic designer and design director of MIT Jacqueline Casey to graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, poster design, graphic design, jacqueline casey, women designers</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Bonnie MacLean</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Bonnie MacLean’s story has rather humble beginnings. She was largely a self-taught artist and graphic designer. Originally from Philadelphia, she relocated to San Francisco in 1963, during a pivotal time in US history. MacLean started her career as an assistant to Bill Graham before he began working as a concert promoter for the Filmore. She would eventually take over as the in-house poster designer from Wes Wilson, who is often cited as a strong influence on MacLean’s work. Her previous design experience included chalkboard announcements and evening lineups for the concert hall. Today her work for the  Filmore is considered an important contribution to the psychedelic music scene of the 1960s. However, despite her contributions, the history of graphic design largely recognizes the “Big Five'' as the most important or iconic figures contributing to the music poster scene of this era. It shouldn’t be surprising that the “Big Five'' doesn't include MacLean. However, her psychedelic posters for the Filmore have been collected and exhibited by museums and galleries and recognized for their impact on the music poster scene of 1960s San Francisco.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1939 – <i>b</i> Philadelphia<br />1961 – graduated from Penn State university with a degree in French<br />1961 – Moved to New York city, took drawing classes at night at Pratt Institute where she was working<br />1963 – Moved to San Francisco and began work with Bill Graham<br />1967 – Married concert promoter Bill Graham<br />1967 – Wes Wilson left the Filmore and Bonnie became the primary poster designer in his stead.<br />1968 – gave birth to son David<br />1975 – Divorced Bill Graham<br />1981 – married second husband Jacques Fabert (artist)<br />2005 – work was featured at the Tate Liverpool in a show called “The Summer of Love: Art of the Psychedelic era”<br />2013 – Jacques Fabert dies<br />2014 –  headliner at the TRPS Festival of Rock Posters in San Francisco<br />2015 – designs commemorative poster for Hall & Oates to mark the grand opening of the Philadelphia Fillmore <br />2020 – died in Pennsylvania</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Ankeny, J. (ND). “Bonne Maclean”. <i>All Music</i>. <a href="https://www.allmusic.com/artist/bonnie-maclean-mn0001841640/biography">https://www.allmusic.com/artist/bonnie-maclean-mn0001841640/biography</a></p><p>“Bonnie Maclean” (ND). <i>Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco</i>.  <a href="https://art.famsf.org/bonnie-maclean">https://art.famsf.org/bonnie-maclean</a></p><p>Doyle, M. (2002). “Staging the Revolution: Guerrilla Theater as a Countercultural Practice, 1965-1968”. <i>The Digger Archives</i>. <a href="https://www.diggers.org/guerrilla_theater.htm">https://www.diggers.org/guerrilla_theater.htm</a></p><p>Esmaili, T. (June 2017). “Obscenity”. <i>Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School</i>.  <a href="https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/obscenity">https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/obscenity</a></p><p>Grushkin, P. (2015). <i>The Art of Rock: Posters from Presley to Punk.</i> Abbeville Press. </p><p>Kamiya, G. (August 7, 2015). “How A Mime Troupe Arrest Sparked Bill Graham's Promoting Career”. <i>The San Francisco Chronicle</i>. <a href="https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/How-a-Mime-Troupe-arrest-sparked-Bill-Graham-s-6431937.php">https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/How-a-Mime-Troupe-arrest-sparked-Bill-Graham-s-6431937.php</a></p><p>Marks, B. (February 12, 2020). “Bonnie MacLean, 1939-2020”. <i>TRPS (The Rock Poster Society)</i>.<a href="https://trps.org/2020/02/12/bonnie-maclean-1939-2020/">https://trps.org/2020/02/12/bonnie-maclean-1939-2020/</a></p><p>Morley, M. (March 7, 2019) “The Cost of Free Love and the Designers Who Bore It—Meet the Women of Psychedelic Design”. <i>AIGA Eye on Design</i>. <a href="https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/women-of-psychedelic-design/">https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/women-of-psychedelic-design/</a></p><p>Vaziri, A.  (February 12, 2020). “Bonnie Maclean, pioneering rock poster artist and wife of Bill Graham, dies at 80“. <i>Datebook, San Francisco Chronicle</i>. <a href="https://datebook.sfchronicle.com/art-exhibits/bonnie-maclean-pioneering-rock-poster-artist-and-wife-of-bill-graham-dies-at-80">https://datebook.sfchronicle.com/art-exhibits/bonnie-maclean-pioneering-rock-poster-artist-and-wife-of-bill-graham-dies-at-80</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 4 Nov 2021 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Shayne Valencia, Spencer Gee, Amanda Horton, Kayla Sinclair)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/bonnie-maclean-tmExaDI_</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bonnie MacLean’s story has rather humble beginnings. She was largely a self-taught artist and graphic designer. Originally from Philadelphia, she relocated to San Francisco in 1963, during a pivotal time in US history. MacLean started her career as an assistant to Bill Graham before he began working as a concert promoter for the Filmore. She would eventually take over as the in-house poster designer from Wes Wilson, who is often cited as a strong influence on MacLean’s work. Her previous design experience included chalkboard announcements and evening lineups for the concert hall. Today her work for the  Filmore is considered an important contribution to the psychedelic music scene of the 1960s. However, despite her contributions, the history of graphic design largely recognizes the “Big Five'' as the most important or iconic figures contributing to the music poster scene of this era. It shouldn’t be surprising that the “Big Five'' doesn't include MacLean. However, her psychedelic posters for the Filmore have been collected and exhibited by museums and galleries and recognized for their impact on the music poster scene of 1960s San Francisco.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1939 – <i>b</i> Philadelphia<br />1961 – graduated from Penn State university with a degree in French<br />1961 – Moved to New York city, took drawing classes at night at Pratt Institute where she was working<br />1963 – Moved to San Francisco and began work with Bill Graham<br />1967 – Married concert promoter Bill Graham<br />1967 – Wes Wilson left the Filmore and Bonnie became the primary poster designer in his stead.<br />1968 – gave birth to son David<br />1975 – Divorced Bill Graham<br />1981 – married second husband Jacques Fabert (artist)<br />2005 – work was featured at the Tate Liverpool in a show called “The Summer of Love: Art of the Psychedelic era”<br />2013 – Jacques Fabert dies<br />2014 –  headliner at the TRPS Festival of Rock Posters in San Francisco<br />2015 – designs commemorative poster for Hall & Oates to mark the grand opening of the Philadelphia Fillmore <br />2020 – died in Pennsylvania</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Ankeny, J. (ND). “Bonne Maclean”. <i>All Music</i>. <a href="https://www.allmusic.com/artist/bonnie-maclean-mn0001841640/biography">https://www.allmusic.com/artist/bonnie-maclean-mn0001841640/biography</a></p><p>“Bonnie Maclean” (ND). <i>Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco</i>.  <a href="https://art.famsf.org/bonnie-maclean">https://art.famsf.org/bonnie-maclean</a></p><p>Doyle, M. (2002). “Staging the Revolution: Guerrilla Theater as a Countercultural Practice, 1965-1968”. <i>The Digger Archives</i>. <a href="https://www.diggers.org/guerrilla_theater.htm">https://www.diggers.org/guerrilla_theater.htm</a></p><p>Esmaili, T. (June 2017). “Obscenity”. <i>Legal Information Institute, Cornell Law School</i>.  <a href="https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/obscenity">https://www.law.cornell.edu/wex/obscenity</a></p><p>Grushkin, P. (2015). <i>The Art of Rock: Posters from Presley to Punk.</i> Abbeville Press. </p><p>Kamiya, G. (August 7, 2015). “How A Mime Troupe Arrest Sparked Bill Graham's Promoting Career”. <i>The San Francisco Chronicle</i>. <a href="https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/How-a-Mime-Troupe-arrest-sparked-Bill-Graham-s-6431937.php">https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/How-a-Mime-Troupe-arrest-sparked-Bill-Graham-s-6431937.php</a></p><p>Marks, B. (February 12, 2020). “Bonnie MacLean, 1939-2020”. <i>TRPS (The Rock Poster Society)</i>.<a href="https://trps.org/2020/02/12/bonnie-maclean-1939-2020/">https://trps.org/2020/02/12/bonnie-maclean-1939-2020/</a></p><p>Morley, M. (March 7, 2019) “The Cost of Free Love and the Designers Who Bore It—Meet the Women of Psychedelic Design”. <i>AIGA Eye on Design</i>. <a href="https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/women-of-psychedelic-design/">https://eyeondesign.aiga.org/women-of-psychedelic-design/</a></p><p>Vaziri, A.  (February 12, 2020). “Bonnie Maclean, pioneering rock poster artist and wife of Bill Graham, dies at 80“. <i>Datebook, San Francisco Chronicle</i>. <a href="https://datebook.sfchronicle.com/art-exhibits/bonnie-maclean-pioneering-rock-poster-artist-and-wife-of-bill-graham-dies-at-80">https://datebook.sfchronicle.com/art-exhibits/bonnie-maclean-pioneering-rock-poster-artist-and-wife-of-bill-graham-dies-at-80</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Bonnie MacLean</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Shayne Valencia, Spencer Gee, Amanda Horton, Kayla Sinclair</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:16:44</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the contributions of psychedelic music poster designer and Artist Bonnie MacLean to graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the contributions of psychedelic music poster designer and Artist Bonnie MacLean to graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>psychedelic art, graphic design history, poster design, graphic design, music posters, women designers, bonnie maclean</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>9</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Ray Eames</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Ray Eames was a graphic designer and abstract artist at the height of the post war era. She studied abstract art with Hans Hoffman for six years before meeting and moving to California with her husband, Charles Eames, in 1941. Ray was not professionally trained as a designer but was deeply involved in the design process. She combined her abstract sensibilities with her interest in structure and form. The Eames are most well-known for developing molded plywood chairs and other furniture that blurred the line between playfulness and function. The Eames Office did more than just design furniture. They worked on ads, packaging, exhibition spaces, toys, and even films. The Eames Office was incredibly collaborative, and everyone at the office was involved in every project. As a result, Ray never claimed any design as her own. However, she was responsible for some textile designs and magazine cover illustrations for the Arts and Architecture publication. Ray was in her element when it came to color and arrangements. She arranged furniture exhibits for Herman Miller and designed the color schemes for her own home. It’s not hyperbole to say the furniture and designs that came out of the Eames Office defined a generation and they have Ray’s influence written all over them.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1912 – b Sacramento, California<br />1931 – May Friend Bennett School for Girls <br />1932 – mentor at Hans Hoffman studio for 6 years<br />1940 – moved to Michigan, studied at Cranbrook Academy of Art<br />1941 – married Charles Eames<br />1943 – Eames office established<br />1942-1947 – covers for Arts and Architecture magazine<br />1946 – Ray Eames pattern designs made <br />1953 – Deborah Sussman hired at Eames office<br />1957 – Day of the Dead film<br />1959 – Moscow World’s Fair<br />2010 – Eames exhibit made by Deborah Sussman and Andrew Byrom</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Banks, T. (2012, August 22). <i>Addressing the need: The Graphic Design of the Eames Office</i>. Design Week. <a href="https://www.designweek.co.uk/issues/may-2012/addressing-the-need-the-graphic-design-of-the-eames-office/">https://www.designweek.co.uk/issues/may-2012/addressing-the-need-the-graphic-design-of-the-eames-office/</a></p><p><i>BBC The Genius Of Design 3 of 5 Blueprints For War</i> 2010. (2011, October 21). [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q_0z1kvM6ns">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q_0z1kvM6ns</a></p><p>Brown, B. (2017, November 6). <i>Celebrating Graphic Design Sorceress Deborah Sussman</i>. Journal. <a href="https://architizer.com/blog/inspiration/industry/deborah-sussman-dies-at-83/">https://architizer.com/blog/inspiration/industry/deborah-sussman-dies-at-83/</a></p><p>Butler, A. (2013, December 11). Deborah Sussman Interview. <i>Designboom</i> | Architecture & Design Magazine. <a href="https://www.designboom.com/design/deborah-sussman-interview-12-11-2013/">https://www.designboom.com/design/deborah-sussman-interview-12-11-2013/</a></p><p>Caduff, R. (Director). (2011) <i>The Visual Language of Herbert Matter.</i> [Film]. PiXiU Films</p><p>Cohn, J. & Jersey, B. (Directors). (2011) <i>Eames: The Architect and the Painter.</i> [Film]. Quest Productions. Bread & Butter Films. American Masters Productions</p><p>Ellison, K. (2018, March 10). The chromatic legacy of environmental designer Deborah Sussman. <i>99designs</i>. <a href="https://99designs.com/blog/famous-design/environmental-design-deborah-sussman/">https://99designs.com/blog/famous-design/environmental-design-deborah-sussman/</a></p><p>Hans Hoffman. (n.d.). <i>HANS HOFMANN</i>. <a href="http://www.hanshofmann.org/1930-1939">http://www.hanshofmann.org/1930-1939</a></p><p>Ray Eames in World War II. (2019, September 27). <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/blog/ray-eames-in-world-war-2/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/blog/ray-eames-in-world-war-2/</a></p><p>4 films by Charles and Ray Eames. (2019, October 18). <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/4-films-by-charles-and-ray-eames/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/4-films-by-charles-and-ray-eames/</a></p><p>Day of The Dead. (2019, April 16). <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/day-of-the-dead-2/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/day-of-the-dead-2/</a></p><p>Dot Pattern.(2019, October 24). <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/dot-pattern-drawings/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/dot-pattern-drawings/</a></p><p>Eames in NYC.(2017, March 2). Ray (Kaiser) <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/ray-kaiser-eames-new-york-city/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/ray-kaiser-eames-new-york-city/</a></p><p>Ray’s Arts & Architecture magazine covers. (2019, October 4). <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/rays-arts-architecture-magazine-covers/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/rays-arts-architecture-magazine-covers/</a></p><p>Kirkham, P. (2021). Ray Kaiser Eames. <i>Pioneering Women of American Architecture</i>. <a href="https://pioneeringwomen.bwaf.org/ray-kaiser-eames/">https://pioneeringwomen.bwaf.org/ray-kaiser-eames/</a></p><p>Lawrence, S. (1985). Declaration of Function: Documents from the Museum of Modern Art's Design Crusade, 1933-1950. <i>Design Issues</i>, 2(1), 65-77. doi:10.2307/1511530</p><p>McGuirk, J. (2020, September 23). There’s no I in Eames. <i>The Guardian</i>. <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2010/oct/26/eames-furniture-team-charles-ray">https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2010/oct/26/eames-furniture-team-charles-ray</a></p><p>Narkiewicz-Laine, C. (2020, June 1). The Good Design Awards. <i>Good Design</i>. <a href="https://www.good-designawards.com/news/2020/06/01/the-seventy-year-history-of-good-design%C2%AE/">https://www.good-designawards.com/news/2020/06/01/the-seventy-year-history-of-good-design%C2%AE/</a></p><p>Neuhart, M., & Neuhart, J. (2010). <i>The Story of Eames Furniture: The Early Years</i> (Vol. 1). Gestalten Verlag, Berlin.</p><p>Olsberg, N. (2017, November 27). Herbert Matter. <i>Drawing Matter</i>. <a href="https://drawingmatter.org/herbert-matter/">https://drawingmatter.org/herbert-matter/</a></p><p>Phaidon Editors. (2012). Eames graphic designs on show | design | <i>Phaidon.</i> Phaidon. <a href="https://www.phaidon.com/agenda/design/articles/2012/august/28/eames-graphic-designs-on-show/">https://www.phaidon.com/agenda/design/articles/2012/august/28/eames-graphic-designs-on-show/</a></p><p>Raphael, T. (2016, April 12). The “Damsels of Design,” women who changed automotive history. <i>The World from PRX</i>. <a href="https://www.pri.org/stories/2016-04-12/damsels-design-women-who-changed-automotive-history">https://www.pri.org/stories/2016-04-12/damsels-design-women-who-changed-automotive-history</a></p><p>Romano, A. (2019, June 17). The Value of Good Design. <i>DisegnoDaily</i>. <a href="https://www.disegnodaily.com/article/the-value-of-good-design">https://www.disegnodaily.com/article/the-value-of-good-design</a></p><p>Saval, N. (2019, April 4). How “Good Design” Failed Us. <i>The New Yorker</i>. <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/how-good-design-failed-us">https://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/how-good-design-failed-us</a></p><p>Schuessler, J. (2020, May 16). Ray Eames, Out of Her Husband’s Shadow. <i>The New York Times</i>. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/15/arts/ray-charles-eames-artists.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/15/arts/ray-charles-eames-artists.html</a></p><p>Smith, R. (2009, June 5). The Ordinary as Objects of Desire: MoMA Looks Back at Everyday Design. <i>The New York Times</i>. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/05/arts/design/05desi.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/05/arts/design/05desi.html</a></p><p>Sussman/Prejza & Co. (2020, June 29). Deborah Sussman. <i>Sussman Prejza</i>. <a href="https://sussmanprejza.com/bio/deborah-sussman/">https://sussmanprejza.com/bio/deborah-sussman/</a></p><p>The design genius of Charles + Ray Eames. (2009, July 6). [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0vDWqp6J7Y">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0vDWqp6J7Y</a></p><p>The Museum of Modern Art. (2009, May 6). MoMA REVISITS WHAT ‘GOOD DESIGN’ WAS OVER 50 YEARS LATER[Press release]. <a href="https://assets.moma.org/documents/moma_press-release_387178.pdf?_ga=2.250983619.475073280.1609623298-1952243929.1609623298">https://assets.moma.org/documents/moma_press-release_387178.pdf?_ga=2.250983619.475073280.1609623298-1952243929.1609623298</a></p><p>Veit, R. (2016, March 22). The Story Behind GM’s Celebrated “Damsels of Design.” <i>Core77</i>. <a href="https://www.core77.com/posts/49498/The-Story-Behind-GMs-Celebrated-Damsels-of-Design">https://www.core77.com/posts/49498/The-Story-Behind-GMs-Celebrated-Damsels-of-Design</a></p><p>Walker, A. (2015, April 2). The Designer Who Helped Give L.A. Its Look. <i>T Magazine.</i> <a href="https://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/12/17/on-view-the-designer-who-helped-give-l-a-its-look/">https://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/12/17/on-view-the-designer-who-helped-give-l-a-its-look/</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 28 Oct 2021 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia, Kayla Sinclair, Spencer Gee)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/ray-eames-jDOADR4Y</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ray Eames was a graphic designer and abstract artist at the height of the post war era. She studied abstract art with Hans Hoffman for six years before meeting and moving to California with her husband, Charles Eames, in 1941. Ray was not professionally trained as a designer but was deeply involved in the design process. She combined her abstract sensibilities with her interest in structure and form. The Eames are most well-known for developing molded plywood chairs and other furniture that blurred the line between playfulness and function. The Eames Office did more than just design furniture. They worked on ads, packaging, exhibition spaces, toys, and even films. The Eames Office was incredibly collaborative, and everyone at the office was involved in every project. As a result, Ray never claimed any design as her own. However, she was responsible for some textile designs and magazine cover illustrations for the Arts and Architecture publication. Ray was in her element when it came to color and arrangements. She arranged furniture exhibits for Herman Miller and designed the color schemes for her own home. It’s not hyperbole to say the furniture and designs that came out of the Eames Office defined a generation and they have Ray’s influence written all over them.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1912 – b Sacramento, California<br />1931 – May Friend Bennett School for Girls <br />1932 – mentor at Hans Hoffman studio for 6 years<br />1940 – moved to Michigan, studied at Cranbrook Academy of Art<br />1941 – married Charles Eames<br />1943 – Eames office established<br />1942-1947 – covers for Arts and Architecture magazine<br />1946 – Ray Eames pattern designs made <br />1953 – Deborah Sussman hired at Eames office<br />1957 – Day of the Dead film<br />1959 – Moscow World’s Fair<br />2010 – Eames exhibit made by Deborah Sussman and Andrew Byrom</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Banks, T. (2012, August 22). <i>Addressing the need: The Graphic Design of the Eames Office</i>. Design Week. <a href="https://www.designweek.co.uk/issues/may-2012/addressing-the-need-the-graphic-design-of-the-eames-office/">https://www.designweek.co.uk/issues/may-2012/addressing-the-need-the-graphic-design-of-the-eames-office/</a></p><p><i>BBC The Genius Of Design 3 of 5 Blueprints For War</i> 2010. (2011, October 21). [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q_0z1kvM6ns">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q_0z1kvM6ns</a></p><p>Brown, B. (2017, November 6). <i>Celebrating Graphic Design Sorceress Deborah Sussman</i>. Journal. <a href="https://architizer.com/blog/inspiration/industry/deborah-sussman-dies-at-83/">https://architizer.com/blog/inspiration/industry/deborah-sussman-dies-at-83/</a></p><p>Butler, A. (2013, December 11). Deborah Sussman Interview. <i>Designboom</i> | Architecture & Design Magazine. <a href="https://www.designboom.com/design/deborah-sussman-interview-12-11-2013/">https://www.designboom.com/design/deborah-sussman-interview-12-11-2013/</a></p><p>Caduff, R. (Director). (2011) <i>The Visual Language of Herbert Matter.</i> [Film]. PiXiU Films</p><p>Cohn, J. & Jersey, B. (Directors). (2011) <i>Eames: The Architect and the Painter.</i> [Film]. Quest Productions. Bread & Butter Films. American Masters Productions</p><p>Ellison, K. (2018, March 10). The chromatic legacy of environmental designer Deborah Sussman. <i>99designs</i>. <a href="https://99designs.com/blog/famous-design/environmental-design-deborah-sussman/">https://99designs.com/blog/famous-design/environmental-design-deborah-sussman/</a></p><p>Hans Hoffman. (n.d.). <i>HANS HOFMANN</i>. <a href="http://www.hanshofmann.org/1930-1939">http://www.hanshofmann.org/1930-1939</a></p><p>Ray Eames in World War II. (2019, September 27). <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/blog/ray-eames-in-world-war-2/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/blog/ray-eames-in-world-war-2/</a></p><p>4 films by Charles and Ray Eames. (2019, October 18). <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/4-films-by-charles-and-ray-eames/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/4-films-by-charles-and-ray-eames/</a></p><p>Day of The Dead. (2019, April 16). <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/day-of-the-dead-2/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/day-of-the-dead-2/</a></p><p>Dot Pattern.(2019, October 24). <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/dot-pattern-drawings/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/dot-pattern-drawings/</a></p><p>Eames in NYC.(2017, March 2). Ray (Kaiser) <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/ray-kaiser-eames-new-york-city/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/ray-kaiser-eames-new-york-city/</a></p><p>Ray’s Arts & Architecture magazine covers. (2019, October 4). <i>Eames Office</i>. <a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/rays-arts-architecture-magazine-covers/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/the-work/rays-arts-architecture-magazine-covers/</a></p><p>Kirkham, P. (2021). Ray Kaiser Eames. <i>Pioneering Women of American Architecture</i>. <a href="https://pioneeringwomen.bwaf.org/ray-kaiser-eames/">https://pioneeringwomen.bwaf.org/ray-kaiser-eames/</a></p><p>Lawrence, S. (1985). Declaration of Function: Documents from the Museum of Modern Art's Design Crusade, 1933-1950. <i>Design Issues</i>, 2(1), 65-77. doi:10.2307/1511530</p><p>McGuirk, J. (2020, September 23). There’s no I in Eames. <i>The Guardian</i>. <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2010/oct/26/eames-furniture-team-charles-ray">https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2010/oct/26/eames-furniture-team-charles-ray</a></p><p>Narkiewicz-Laine, C. (2020, June 1). The Good Design Awards. <i>Good Design</i>. <a href="https://www.good-designawards.com/news/2020/06/01/the-seventy-year-history-of-good-design%C2%AE/">https://www.good-designawards.com/news/2020/06/01/the-seventy-year-history-of-good-design%C2%AE/</a></p><p>Neuhart, M., & Neuhart, J. (2010). <i>The Story of Eames Furniture: The Early Years</i> (Vol. 1). Gestalten Verlag, Berlin.</p><p>Olsberg, N. (2017, November 27). Herbert Matter. <i>Drawing Matter</i>. <a href="https://drawingmatter.org/herbert-matter/">https://drawingmatter.org/herbert-matter/</a></p><p>Phaidon Editors. (2012). Eames graphic designs on show | design | <i>Phaidon.</i> Phaidon. <a href="https://www.phaidon.com/agenda/design/articles/2012/august/28/eames-graphic-designs-on-show/">https://www.phaidon.com/agenda/design/articles/2012/august/28/eames-graphic-designs-on-show/</a></p><p>Raphael, T. (2016, April 12). The “Damsels of Design,” women who changed automotive history. <i>The World from PRX</i>. <a href="https://www.pri.org/stories/2016-04-12/damsels-design-women-who-changed-automotive-history">https://www.pri.org/stories/2016-04-12/damsels-design-women-who-changed-automotive-history</a></p><p>Romano, A. (2019, June 17). The Value of Good Design. <i>DisegnoDaily</i>. <a href="https://www.disegnodaily.com/article/the-value-of-good-design">https://www.disegnodaily.com/article/the-value-of-good-design</a></p><p>Saval, N. (2019, April 4). How “Good Design” Failed Us. <i>The New Yorker</i>. <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/how-good-design-failed-us">https://www.newyorker.com/culture/cultural-comment/how-good-design-failed-us</a></p><p>Schuessler, J. (2020, May 16). Ray Eames, Out of Her Husband’s Shadow. <i>The New York Times</i>. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/15/arts/ray-charles-eames-artists.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/15/arts/ray-charles-eames-artists.html</a></p><p>Smith, R. (2009, June 5). The Ordinary as Objects of Desire: MoMA Looks Back at Everyday Design. <i>The New York Times</i>. <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/05/arts/design/05desi.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/05/arts/design/05desi.html</a></p><p>Sussman/Prejza & Co. (2020, June 29). Deborah Sussman. <i>Sussman Prejza</i>. <a href="https://sussmanprejza.com/bio/deborah-sussman/">https://sussmanprejza.com/bio/deborah-sussman/</a></p><p>The design genius of Charles + Ray Eames. (2009, July 6). [Video]. YouTube. <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0vDWqp6J7Y">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0vDWqp6J7Y</a></p><p>The Museum of Modern Art. (2009, May 6). MoMA REVISITS WHAT ‘GOOD DESIGN’ WAS OVER 50 YEARS LATER[Press release]. <a href="https://assets.moma.org/documents/moma_press-release_387178.pdf?_ga=2.250983619.475073280.1609623298-1952243929.1609623298">https://assets.moma.org/documents/moma_press-release_387178.pdf?_ga=2.250983619.475073280.1609623298-1952243929.1609623298</a></p><p>Veit, R. (2016, March 22). The Story Behind GM’s Celebrated “Damsels of Design.” <i>Core77</i>. <a href="https://www.core77.com/posts/49498/The-Story-Behind-GMs-Celebrated-Damsels-of-Design">https://www.core77.com/posts/49498/The-Story-Behind-GMs-Celebrated-Damsels-of-Design</a></p><p>Walker, A. (2015, April 2). The Designer Who Helped Give L.A. Its Look. <i>T Magazine.</i> <a href="https://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/12/17/on-view-the-designer-who-helped-give-l-a-its-look/">https://tmagazine.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/12/17/on-view-the-designer-who-helped-give-l-a-its-look/</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Ray Eames</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia, Kayla Sinclair, Spencer Gee</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://image.simplecastcdn.com/images/b4a698f6-c00f-4b52-ae12-d1142158f4dd/967f542f-674a-43ee-bb43-05e28bf590b9/3000x3000/incomplet-ep8.jpg?aid=rss_feed"/>
      <itunes:duration>00:17:12</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the contributions of designer Ray Eames to graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the contributions of designer Ray Eames to graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, graphic design, ray eames, eames, women designers</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
      <itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode>
      <itunes:season>1</itunes:season>
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      <title>Louise Jefferson</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Louise Jefferson was a graphic designer, photographer, illustrator, and civil rights activist. Born in Washington, DC, Jefferson spent much of her career in Harlem, New York. It was there that she became the first female African-American art director in publishing. While working as the art director for the Friendship Press, she also did freelance work for civil rights publications such as Opportunity (which encouraged young Black writers) and Crisis, the official publication of the NAACP. She worked on a children’s book titled We Sing America that was intended to educate children about the realities of being black in America. It was controversial, and even banned in Georgia. Jefferson later illustrated E. Jefferson Murphy’s book <i>Understanding Africa</i>, which showed the cultural richness and diversity of Africa. The project she seemed most proud of was her own book <i>The Decorative Arts of Africa</i> which documented the cultures and lifestyle of the peoples of Africa. The book took several years and five trips to Africa to complete. Jefferson lived in times and places of turmoil. She fought racial discrimination and stood for social justice. She worked tirelessly to increase opportunities for her fellow Black Americans through programs like the Works Progress Administration and the Harlem Artists Guild. Her entire career was characterized by her determination to improve life and create more opportunity for Black Americans.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1908 – b Louise Jefferson in Washington, DC.<br />1919 – Race riots break out across DC.<br />1935 –  Louise Jefferson moves to Harlem in New York and becomes a photographer. The first Harlem riot breaks out. Jefferson helps found the Harlem Artists Guild to fund public works post-Depression.<br />1936 – <i>We Sing America</i> is published, featuring illustrations from Jefferson. Intended to educate children about the realities of being Black in America and including depictions of desegregated groups of children, the book is quickly banned in Georgia.<br />1940 – Louise visits the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama during the period of what would become known as the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment. Louise captures the sense of depression and grief within the community on film.<br />1942 – Louise becomes art director at Friendship Press, becoming the first female African American art director in the publishing industry.<br />1969 – Jefferson illustrates the educational book <i>Understanding Africa</i> and works on her own book <i>Decorative Arts of Africa</i>.<br />1973 – <i>Decorative Arts of Africa</i> is published, becoming one of the first large collections documenting African culture, containing over 300 illustrations and photographs. Jefferson later retires.<br />2002 – d Louise Jefferson in Litchfield, Connecticut.</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>About Ghana</i>. (2021). UNDP in Ghana. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.gh.undp.org/content/ghana/en/home/countryinfo.html">https://www.gh.undp.org/content/ghana/en/home/countryinfo.html</a></p><p><i>About</i>. (2021). National Urban League. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://nul.org">https://nul.org</a></p><p>Banks, T. J. (2012). <i>Sketch people: Stories along the way</i>. Inspiring Voices.</p><p>Brockell, G. (2019, July 15). The deadly race riot ‘aided and abetted’ by The Washington Post a century ago. <i>The Washington Post</i>. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2019/07/15/deadly-race-riot-aided-abetted-by-washington-post-century-ago/">https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2019/07/15/deadly-race-riot-aided-abetted-by-washington-post-century-ago/</a></p><p>Convis, C. (2020). <i>1908-2002 Louise E. Jefferson, artist publisher photographer mapmaker</i>. Esri Community. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://community.esri.com/t5/conservation-gis-documents/1908-2002-louise-e-jefferson-artist-publisher-photographer/ta-p/914970">https://community.esri.com/t5/conservation-gis-documents/1908-2002-louise-e-jefferson-</a><br /><a href="https://community.esri.com/t5/conservation-gis-documents/1908-2002-louise-e-jefferson-artist-publisher-photographer/ta-p/914970">artist-publisher-photographer/ta-p/914970</a></p><p><i>Daniel Hale Williams and the first successful heart surgery</i>. (n.d.) Columbia University Department of Surgery. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://columbiasurgery.org/news/daniel-hale-williams-and-first-successful-heart-surgery">https://columbiasurgery.org/news/daniel-hale-williams-and-first-successful-heart-surgery</a></p><p>Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica, The. (n.d.). Opportunity. In <i>Encyclopaedia Britannica</i>. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Opportunity-American-magazine">https://www.britannica.com/topic/Opportunity-American-magazine</a></p><p>Facincani, L. (2012). <i>Jefferson, Louise E. (1908-2002)</i>. Amistad Research Center. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="http://amistadresearchcenter.tulane.edu/archon/?p=creators/creator&id=845">http://amistadresearchcenter.tulane.edu/archon/?p=creators/creator&id=845</a></p><p>Gross, J. (2012). <i>Then: 125th street</i>. NYC then/now: Great depression & great recession. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/brooks12/then-125th-street/">https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/brooks12/then-125th-street/</a></p><p>Heller, J. (2017, May 10). <i>AP was there: Black men untreated in Tuskegee syphilis study</i>. Associated Press. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://apnews.com/article/e9dd07eaa4e74052878a68132cd3803a">https://apnews.com/article/e9dd07eaa4e74052878a68132cd3803a</a></p><p>Jefferson, L. (1946). <i>Americans of negro lineage</i> [Map]. Friendship Press.</p><p>Jefferson, L. (1987) <i>Alabama boy</i> [Photograph]<i>.</i> Mutual Art. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <br /><a href="https://www.mutualart.com/Artwork/Alabama-Boy/D89D81A498D419E2?freeunlock=AF4CB17BDA2069E2">https://www.mutualart.com/Artwork/Alabama-Boy/D89D81A498D419E2?freeunlock=AF4CB17BDA2069E2</a></p><p>King, J. (2018). <i>Louise E. Jefferson’s design journey</i>. AIGA. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <br /><a href="https://www.aiga.org/design-journeys-louise-e-jefferson">https://www.aiga.org/design-journeys-louise-e-jefferson</a></p><p><i>Louise E. Jefferson</i>. (2021). Petrucci Family Foundation Collection. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <br /><a href="https://pffcollection.com/artists/louise-e-jefferson/">https://pffcollection.com/artists/louise-e-jefferson/</a></p><p><i>Louise E. Jefferson.</i> (n.d.) Extravagant Crowd. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="http://brbl-archive.library.yale.edu/exhibitions/cvvpw/gallery/jefferson.html">http://brbl-archive.library.yale.edu/exhibitions/cvvpw/gallery/jefferson.html</a></p><p>McQuirter, M. (2003). <i>A brief history of African Americans in Washington, DC.</i> Cultural Tourism DC. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.culturaltourismdc.org/portal/a-brief-history-of-african-americans-in-washington-dc">https://www.culturaltourismdc.org/portal/a-brief-history-of-african-americans-in-washington-dc</a></p><p>Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Jean Blackwell Hutson Research and Reference Division, The New York Public Library. (1936). <i>We Sing America.</i> Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <br /><a href="https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/f0881d50-e599-0134-43d6-098d51a24b40">https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/f0881d50-e599-0134-43d6-098d51a24b40</a></p><p>Whitebeck, D. (1984, February). Gallery. <i>The Hartford Courant</i>, E10</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 21 Oct 2021 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Kayla Sinclair, Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia, Spencer Gee)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/louise-jefferson-T_YP9tcr</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Louise Jefferson was a graphic designer, photographer, illustrator, and civil rights activist. Born in Washington, DC, Jefferson spent much of her career in Harlem, New York. It was there that she became the first female African-American art director in publishing. While working as the art director for the Friendship Press, she also did freelance work for civil rights publications such as Opportunity (which encouraged young Black writers) and Crisis, the official publication of the NAACP. She worked on a children’s book titled We Sing America that was intended to educate children about the realities of being black in America. It was controversial, and even banned in Georgia. Jefferson later illustrated E. Jefferson Murphy’s book <i>Understanding Africa</i>, which showed the cultural richness and diversity of Africa. The project she seemed most proud of was her own book <i>The Decorative Arts of Africa</i> which documented the cultures and lifestyle of the peoples of Africa. The book took several years and five trips to Africa to complete. Jefferson lived in times and places of turmoil. She fought racial discrimination and stood for social justice. She worked tirelessly to increase opportunities for her fellow Black Americans through programs like the Works Progress Administration and the Harlem Artists Guild. Her entire career was characterized by her determination to improve life and create more opportunity for Black Americans.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1908 – b Louise Jefferson in Washington, DC.<br />1919 – Race riots break out across DC.<br />1935 –  Louise Jefferson moves to Harlem in New York and becomes a photographer. The first Harlem riot breaks out. Jefferson helps found the Harlem Artists Guild to fund public works post-Depression.<br />1936 – <i>We Sing America</i> is published, featuring illustrations from Jefferson. Intended to educate children about the realities of being Black in America and including depictions of desegregated groups of children, the book is quickly banned in Georgia.<br />1940 – Louise visits the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama during the period of what would become known as the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment. Louise captures the sense of depression and grief within the community on film.<br />1942 – Louise becomes art director at Friendship Press, becoming the first female African American art director in the publishing industry.<br />1969 – Jefferson illustrates the educational book <i>Understanding Africa</i> and works on her own book <i>Decorative Arts of Africa</i>.<br />1973 – <i>Decorative Arts of Africa</i> is published, becoming one of the first large collections documenting African culture, containing over 300 illustrations and photographs. Jefferson later retires.<br />2002 – d Louise Jefferson in Litchfield, Connecticut.</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><i>About Ghana</i>. (2021). UNDP in Ghana. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.gh.undp.org/content/ghana/en/home/countryinfo.html">https://www.gh.undp.org/content/ghana/en/home/countryinfo.html</a></p><p><i>About</i>. (2021). National Urban League. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://nul.org">https://nul.org</a></p><p>Banks, T. J. (2012). <i>Sketch people: Stories along the way</i>. Inspiring Voices.</p><p>Brockell, G. (2019, July 15). The deadly race riot ‘aided and abetted’ by The Washington Post a century ago. <i>The Washington Post</i>. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2019/07/15/deadly-race-riot-aided-abetted-by-washington-post-century-ago/">https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2019/07/15/deadly-race-riot-aided-abetted-by-washington-post-century-ago/</a></p><p>Convis, C. (2020). <i>1908-2002 Louise E. Jefferson, artist publisher photographer mapmaker</i>. Esri Community. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://community.esri.com/t5/conservation-gis-documents/1908-2002-louise-e-jefferson-artist-publisher-photographer/ta-p/914970">https://community.esri.com/t5/conservation-gis-documents/1908-2002-louise-e-jefferson-</a><br /><a href="https://community.esri.com/t5/conservation-gis-documents/1908-2002-louise-e-jefferson-artist-publisher-photographer/ta-p/914970">artist-publisher-photographer/ta-p/914970</a></p><p><i>Daniel Hale Williams and the first successful heart surgery</i>. (n.d.) Columbia University Department of Surgery. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://columbiasurgery.org/news/daniel-hale-williams-and-first-successful-heart-surgery">https://columbiasurgery.org/news/daniel-hale-williams-and-first-successful-heart-surgery</a></p><p>Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica, The. (n.d.). Opportunity. In <i>Encyclopaedia Britannica</i>. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Opportunity-American-magazine">https://www.britannica.com/topic/Opportunity-American-magazine</a></p><p>Facincani, L. (2012). <i>Jefferson, Louise E. (1908-2002)</i>. Amistad Research Center. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="http://amistadresearchcenter.tulane.edu/archon/?p=creators/creator&id=845">http://amistadresearchcenter.tulane.edu/archon/?p=creators/creator&id=845</a></p><p>Gross, J. (2012). <i>Then: 125th street</i>. NYC then/now: Great depression & great recession. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/brooks12/then-125th-street/">https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/brooks12/then-125th-street/</a></p><p>Heller, J. (2017, May 10). <i>AP was there: Black men untreated in Tuskegee syphilis study</i>. Associated Press. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://apnews.com/article/e9dd07eaa4e74052878a68132cd3803a">https://apnews.com/article/e9dd07eaa4e74052878a68132cd3803a</a></p><p>Jefferson, L. (1946). <i>Americans of negro lineage</i> [Map]. Friendship Press.</p><p>Jefferson, L. (1987) <i>Alabama boy</i> [Photograph]<i>.</i> Mutual Art. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <br /><a href="https://www.mutualart.com/Artwork/Alabama-Boy/D89D81A498D419E2?freeunlock=AF4CB17BDA2069E2">https://www.mutualart.com/Artwork/Alabama-Boy/D89D81A498D419E2?freeunlock=AF4CB17BDA2069E2</a></p><p>King, J. (2018). <i>Louise E. Jefferson’s design journey</i>. AIGA. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <br /><a href="https://www.aiga.org/design-journeys-louise-e-jefferson">https://www.aiga.org/design-journeys-louise-e-jefferson</a></p><p><i>Louise E. Jefferson</i>. (2021). Petrucci Family Foundation Collection. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <br /><a href="https://pffcollection.com/artists/louise-e-jefferson/">https://pffcollection.com/artists/louise-e-jefferson/</a></p><p><i>Louise E. Jefferson.</i> (n.d.) Extravagant Crowd. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="http://brbl-archive.library.yale.edu/exhibitions/cvvpw/gallery/jefferson.html">http://brbl-archive.library.yale.edu/exhibitions/cvvpw/gallery/jefferson.html</a></p><p>McQuirter, M. (2003). <i>A brief history of African Americans in Washington, DC.</i> Cultural Tourism DC. Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.culturaltourismdc.org/portal/a-brief-history-of-african-americans-in-washington-dc">https://www.culturaltourismdc.org/portal/a-brief-history-of-african-americans-in-washington-dc</a></p><p>Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Jean Blackwell Hutson Research and Reference Division, The New York Public Library. (1936). <i>We Sing America.</i> Retrieved 25 May 2021 from <br /><a href="https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/f0881d50-e599-0134-43d6-098d51a24b40">https://digitalcollections.nypl.org/items/f0881d50-e599-0134-43d6-098d51a24b40</a></p><p>Whitebeck, D. (1984, February). Gallery. <i>The Hartford Courant</i>, E10</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Louise Jefferson</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Kayla Sinclair, Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia, Spencer Gee</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:15:27</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the contributions of African American designer Louise Jefferson to graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the contributions of African American designer Louise Jefferson to graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, black designers, graphic design, louise jefferson, bipoc design history, women designers</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Elaine Lustig Cohen</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Elaine Lustig Cohen got an unconventional start as a graphic designer. After deciding not to pursue a career in art education, she began working as an assistant to her first husband, noted modernist designer Alvin Lustig. Her early work in the industry was far from glamorous, as she was mostly doing paste-up and assembling Alvin’s designs. She described her position as more of an “office slave”. As Alvin began to lose his sight due to complications with diabetes, he began to rely on Elaine and his other assistants more and more. When Alvin passed away, Elaine took over the business. Her first commission was to complete the design for signage of the Seagram building in NYC working with architects Philip Johnson and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. The success of this work turned into more commissions. She took on some of Alvin’s other clients, leading to a close relationship with, and later marriage to Meridian books editor and founder Arthur Cohen. Elaine closed her studio in 1969 to focus on a career in art, but continued creating designs for Ex Libris, the antiquarian book business she started with Arthur, which imported rare books and documents of the European Avant Garde to America. Though she began her career with little formal training as a designer, Elaine designed over 150 book covers, a number of promotional and catalog designs for exhibitions, pioneered what she called Architectural Identification Design and has since had her work honored through many well-deserved exhibitions and awards.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1927 – <i>b</i> 1927, Elaine Firstenberg<br />1948 – Married Alvin Lustig<br />1955 – Alvin Lustig Died<br />1956 – Married Arthur Cohen (Meridian Books editor) <br />1969 – closed design studio to focus on art<br />1972 – Started Ex Libris w/ Cohen<br />1995 – retrospective at Cooper Hewitt curated by Ellen Lupton<br />1998 -  Closed Ex Libris<br />2011 – Awarded AIGA Medal<br />2014 – P! show<br />2015 – paintings shown at Philip Johnson’s “Glass House”<br />2016 – <i>d</i> 2016<br />2018  – Jewish Museum Show, exhibition of art and design work</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><a href="https://elainelustigcohen.com/">https://elainelustigcohen.com/</a></p><p>Barron, M. (2013, May 8). Elaine Lustig Cohen Interview. Bomb Magazine. Retrieved August 7, 2019 from: <a href="https://elainelustigcohen.com/bomb-magazine-elaine-lustig-cohen-interview/">https://elainelustigcohen.com/bomb-magazine-elaine-lustig-cohen-interview/</a></p><p>Belen, P. & D’Onofrio, G. (2012) Elaine Lustig Cohen: The art of modern graphics. <i>The Shelf Journal</i>. Issue N. 2. Retrieved August 7, 2019 from: <a href="https://elainelustigcohen.com/the-art-of-modern-graphics/">https://elainelustigcohen.com/the-art-of-modern-graphics/</a></p><p>Campbell, A. (2015). Elaine Lusting Cohen. <i>Art in America (1939),</i> <i>103</i>(8), 153.</p><p>Gates, A. (2016). Elaine Lustig Cohen, Modernist Designer, Dies at 89. <i>The New York Times</i>, pp. The New York Times, 2016-10-09.</p><p>Hagerty, J.. (2016). Elaine Lustig Cohen Designed Elegant Signage and Book Covers; Influenced by European avant-garde, she later turned to painting. <i>The Wall Street Journal. Eastern Edition</i>, pp. The Wall Street journal. Eastern edition, 2016-10-14.</p><p>Heller, S. (2007). Modern pioneer. <i>Print, 61</i>(2), 14. </p><p>Heller, S. (2011, December 5). Elaine Lustig Cohen. AIGA.org Retrieved August 7, 2019 from <a href="https://www.aiga.org/medalist-elainelustigcohen">https://www.aiga.org/medalist-elainelustigcohen</a></p><p>Heller, S., & Cohen, E. (2010). <i>Born modern : The life and work of Alvin Lustig</i>. Chronicle books.</p><p>Lupton, E.  (1995). Elaine Lustig Cohen, Modern Graphic Designer. <i>Eye Magazine</i> Retrieved August 7, 2019 from: <a href="https://elainelustigcohen.com/modern-graphic-designer/">https://elainelustigcohen.com/modern-graphic-designer/</a></p><p>MacAdam, B. (1995). Showcasing a New Type of Designer: Lustig Cohen's International Style at Cooper-Hewitt. <i>Forward (New York, N.Y.)</i>, pp. Forward (New York, N.Y.), 1995-03-10.</p><p>Sherin, A., & Cohen, E. (2014). <i>Elaine Lustig Cohen : Modernism reimagined</i> (Graphic design archives chapbook series; 5) RIT Press: Rochester, New York.</p><p>And special thanks to Tamar Cohen, Elaine’s daughter, for clarifying some additional details for us. Tamar’s amazing work can be found at <a href="http://tamarcohen.com/">http://tamarcohen.com/</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 14 Oct 2021 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Kayla Sinclair, Spencer Gee, Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/elaine-lustig-cohen-D29_AEFu</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Elaine Lustig Cohen got an unconventional start as a graphic designer. After deciding not to pursue a career in art education, she began working as an assistant to her first husband, noted modernist designer Alvin Lustig. Her early work in the industry was far from glamorous, as she was mostly doing paste-up and assembling Alvin’s designs. She described her position as more of an “office slave”. As Alvin began to lose his sight due to complications with diabetes, he began to rely on Elaine and his other assistants more and more. When Alvin passed away, Elaine took over the business. Her first commission was to complete the design for signage of the Seagram building in NYC working with architects Philip Johnson and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. The success of this work turned into more commissions. She took on some of Alvin’s other clients, leading to a close relationship with, and later marriage to Meridian books editor and founder Arthur Cohen. Elaine closed her studio in 1969 to focus on a career in art, but continued creating designs for Ex Libris, the antiquarian book business she started with Arthur, which imported rare books and documents of the European Avant Garde to America. Though she began her career with little formal training as a designer, Elaine designed over 150 book covers, a number of promotional and catalog designs for exhibitions, pioneered what she called Architectural Identification Design and has since had her work honored through many well-deserved exhibitions and awards.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1927 – <i>b</i> 1927, Elaine Firstenberg<br />1948 – Married Alvin Lustig<br />1955 – Alvin Lustig Died<br />1956 – Married Arthur Cohen (Meridian Books editor) <br />1969 – closed design studio to focus on art<br />1972 – Started Ex Libris w/ Cohen<br />1995 – retrospective at Cooper Hewitt curated by Ellen Lupton<br />1998 -  Closed Ex Libris<br />2011 – Awarded AIGA Medal<br />2014 – P! show<br />2015 – paintings shown at Philip Johnson’s “Glass House”<br />2016 – <i>d</i> 2016<br />2018  – Jewish Museum Show, exhibition of art and design work</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p><a href="https://elainelustigcohen.com/">https://elainelustigcohen.com/</a></p><p>Barron, M. (2013, May 8). Elaine Lustig Cohen Interview. Bomb Magazine. Retrieved August 7, 2019 from: <a href="https://elainelustigcohen.com/bomb-magazine-elaine-lustig-cohen-interview/">https://elainelustigcohen.com/bomb-magazine-elaine-lustig-cohen-interview/</a></p><p>Belen, P. & D’Onofrio, G. (2012) Elaine Lustig Cohen: The art of modern graphics. <i>The Shelf Journal</i>. Issue N. 2. Retrieved August 7, 2019 from: <a href="https://elainelustigcohen.com/the-art-of-modern-graphics/">https://elainelustigcohen.com/the-art-of-modern-graphics/</a></p><p>Campbell, A. (2015). Elaine Lusting Cohen. <i>Art in America (1939),</i> <i>103</i>(8), 153.</p><p>Gates, A. (2016). Elaine Lustig Cohen, Modernist Designer, Dies at 89. <i>The New York Times</i>, pp. The New York Times, 2016-10-09.</p><p>Hagerty, J.. (2016). Elaine Lustig Cohen Designed Elegant Signage and Book Covers; Influenced by European avant-garde, she later turned to painting. <i>The Wall Street Journal. Eastern Edition</i>, pp. The Wall Street journal. Eastern edition, 2016-10-14.</p><p>Heller, S. (2007). Modern pioneer. <i>Print, 61</i>(2), 14. </p><p>Heller, S. (2011, December 5). Elaine Lustig Cohen. AIGA.org Retrieved August 7, 2019 from <a href="https://www.aiga.org/medalist-elainelustigcohen">https://www.aiga.org/medalist-elainelustigcohen</a></p><p>Heller, S., & Cohen, E. (2010). <i>Born modern : The life and work of Alvin Lustig</i>. Chronicle books.</p><p>Lupton, E.  (1995). Elaine Lustig Cohen, Modern Graphic Designer. <i>Eye Magazine</i> Retrieved August 7, 2019 from: <a href="https://elainelustigcohen.com/modern-graphic-designer/">https://elainelustigcohen.com/modern-graphic-designer/</a></p><p>MacAdam, B. (1995). Showcasing a New Type of Designer: Lustig Cohen's International Style at Cooper-Hewitt. <i>Forward (New York, N.Y.)</i>, pp. Forward (New York, N.Y.), 1995-03-10.</p><p>Sherin, A., & Cohen, E. (2014). <i>Elaine Lustig Cohen : Modernism reimagined</i> (Graphic design archives chapbook series; 5) RIT Press: Rochester, New York.</p><p>And special thanks to Tamar Cohen, Elaine’s daughter, for clarifying some additional details for us. Tamar’s amazing work can be found at <a href="http://tamarcohen.com/">http://tamarcohen.com/</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Elaine Lustig Cohen</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Kayla Sinclair, Spencer Gee, Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:14:34</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the contributions of graphic designer and artist Elaine Lustig Cohen to graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the contributions of graphic designer and artist Elaine Lustig Cohen to graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, graphic design, elaine lustig coehn, exhibition design, book cover design, women designers, book design</itunes:keywords>
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      <itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode>
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      <title>Deborah Sussman</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Deborah Sussman is known as a leader of environmental graphic design, a relatively new field at the time that had a surprising number of women leading the charge. Sussman had a passion for the arts and attended some of the finest art and design institutions in the nation, including the Black Mountain College, the Institute of Design in Chicago, and Bard College in NYC. Sussman interned at the Eames office then later started her own successful design studio with her husband Paul Prejza, Sussman/Prejza & Company. The pair made a dynamic team, earning a considerable amount of recognition in Sussman’s lifetime. The colorful modernism seen in much of Sussman’s work was most visible in her designs for the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. Her designs were highly regarded for the bold colors and graphics that were both attractive and functional. The Olympic designs were even included in Time Magazine’s “Best of the Decade”. In addition to the designs for the Olympics, Sussman/Prejza & Company did environmental design work for Disney and comprehensive design systems for the cities of Santa Monica & Philadelphia. While her designs for the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles brought the most attention to the burgeoning field of environmental design, it was her dedication to pioneering the field that cements her place in the canon of graphic design.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1931 – <i>b</i> New York<br />1948 – Attends summer school at the Black Mountain College, for art & performance<br />1948-50 – Attends Bard College, New York for painting & acting<br />1950-53 – Attends the Institute of Design, Chicago<br />1953-58 – works at Eames office<br />1957-58 – Awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study in Ulm, Germany<br />1961 – Returns to work for the Eames office<br />1968 – Establishes her own practice<br />1972 – Marries architect Paul Prejza<br />1975 – Awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study in Calcutta, India<br />1980 – Founds Sussman/Prejza & Company, a partnership with her husband<br />1983 – Fellow and founder of AIGA/LA<br />1987 – Elected member of AGI, Alliance Graphique Internationale<br />1987 – Elected member of The Trusteeship, International Women’s Forum<br />1988 – Named an Honorary member of the American Institute of Architects<br />1990 – featured in <i>Time</i> Magazine’s “Best of the Decade” for ‘84 Los Angeles Olympic designs<br />1991 – Named Fellow of the Society of Environmental Graphic Design<br />1995 – First woman to exhibit at School of Visual Arts’ “Master Series” <br />2014 – <i>d</i> in Los Angeles at the age of 83</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Black Mountain College: A Brief Introduction. (2020, July 9). </p><p><a href="https://www.blackmountaincollege.org/history/">https://www.blackmountaincollege.org/history/</a></p><p>Deborah Sussman. (2020, June 29). <i>Sussman/Prejza & Company</i>. Retrieved December 01, 2020, </p><p>from <a href="https://sussmanprejza.com/bio/deborah-sussman/">https://sussmanprejza.com/bio/deborah-sussman/</a></p><p>Discover Los Angeles. (2020, July 20). <i>Historical Timeline of Los Angeles</i>. Retrieved December </p><p>01, 2020, from <a href="http://www.discoverlosangeles.com/things-to-do/historical-timeline-of-los-angeles">http://www.discoverlosangeles.com/things-to-do/historical-timeline-of-los-angeles</a></p><p>Eames Office. (2020, March 26). Charles and Ray Eames. </p><p><a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/eames-office/charles-and-ray/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/eames-office/charles-and-ray/</a></p><p>Giovannini, J. (2006). Turning surface into symbols: the environmental design firm </p><p>Sussman-Prejza enriches architecture with graphics. <i>Architectural Record</i>, 194(1).</p><p>History.com Editors. (2009, November 13). <i>Soviets announce boycott of 1984 Olympics</i>. A&E </p><p>Television Networks. Retrieved December 01, 2020, from <a href="http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/soviets-announce-boycott-of-1984-olympics">http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/soviets-announce-boycott-of-1984-olympics</a></p><p>Latson, J. (2014, September 05). "Murder in Munich": A Terrorist Threat Ignored. Time. </p><p>Retrieved December 01, 2020, from <a href="https://time.com/3223225/munich-anniversary/">https://time.com/3223225/munich-anniversary/</a></p><p>Meggs, P. B., & Purvis, A. W. (2016). <i>Meggs' history of graphic design</i>. Hoboken, NJ: John </p><p>Wiley & Sons.</p><p>Mertin, E. (2012). The Soviet Union and the Olympic games of 1980 and 1984. <i>East Plays West:</i></p><p><i>Sport and the Cold War</i>, 235.</p><p>Olsberg, N. (2014). Architecture and Sculpture a Dialogue in Los Angeles. <i>Architectural Review</i>, </p><p>235(1405), 88–93.</p><p>Sussman, D. (2014). L.A. Wo Man. <i>Creative Review</i>, 34(1), 48–53.</p><p>Poulin, Richard. (2012). <i>Graphic Design and Architecture, A 20th Century History</i>. Osceola: Quarto Publishing Group USA.</p><p>Twemlow, A. (2004, September 6). <i>Deborah Sussman</i>. AIGA.org Retrieved December 01, 2020, from </p><p><a href="https://www.aiga.org/medalist-deborahsussman">https://www.aiga.org/medalist-deborahsussman</a></p><p>Waldo, E. (2014). Deborah Sussman Dies at 83. <i>Contract</i>, <i>55</i>(7), 16.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 7 Oct 2021 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Shayne Valencia, Spencer Gee, Estee Perkins Fioroni, Kayla Sinclair, Amanda Horton)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/deborah-sussman-oV1hvR0_</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Deborah Sussman is known as a leader of environmental graphic design, a relatively new field at the time that had a surprising number of women leading the charge. Sussman had a passion for the arts and attended some of the finest art and design institutions in the nation, including the Black Mountain College, the Institute of Design in Chicago, and Bard College in NYC. Sussman interned at the Eames office then later started her own successful design studio with her husband Paul Prejza, Sussman/Prejza & Company. The pair made a dynamic team, earning a considerable amount of recognition in Sussman’s lifetime. The colorful modernism seen in much of Sussman’s work was most visible in her designs for the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles. Her designs were highly regarded for the bold colors and graphics that were both attractive and functional. The Olympic designs were even included in Time Magazine’s “Best of the Decade”. In addition to the designs for the Olympics, Sussman/Prejza & Company did environmental design work for Disney and comprehensive design systems for the cities of Santa Monica & Philadelphia. While her designs for the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles brought the most attention to the burgeoning field of environmental design, it was her dedication to pioneering the field that cements her place in the canon of graphic design.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1931 – <i>b</i> New York<br />1948 – Attends summer school at the Black Mountain College, for art & performance<br />1948-50 – Attends Bard College, New York for painting & acting<br />1950-53 – Attends the Institute of Design, Chicago<br />1953-58 – works at Eames office<br />1957-58 – Awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study in Ulm, Germany<br />1961 – Returns to work for the Eames office<br />1968 – Establishes her own practice<br />1972 – Marries architect Paul Prejza<br />1975 – Awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study in Calcutta, India<br />1980 – Founds Sussman/Prejza & Company, a partnership with her husband<br />1983 – Fellow and founder of AIGA/LA<br />1987 – Elected member of AGI, Alliance Graphique Internationale<br />1987 – Elected member of The Trusteeship, International Women’s Forum<br />1988 – Named an Honorary member of the American Institute of Architects<br />1990 – featured in <i>Time</i> Magazine’s “Best of the Decade” for ‘84 Los Angeles Olympic designs<br />1991 – Named Fellow of the Society of Environmental Graphic Design<br />1995 – First woman to exhibit at School of Visual Arts’ “Master Series” <br />2014 – <i>d</i> in Los Angeles at the age of 83</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Black Mountain College: A Brief Introduction. (2020, July 9). </p><p><a href="https://www.blackmountaincollege.org/history/">https://www.blackmountaincollege.org/history/</a></p><p>Deborah Sussman. (2020, June 29). <i>Sussman/Prejza & Company</i>. Retrieved December 01, 2020, </p><p>from <a href="https://sussmanprejza.com/bio/deborah-sussman/">https://sussmanprejza.com/bio/deborah-sussman/</a></p><p>Discover Los Angeles. (2020, July 20). <i>Historical Timeline of Los Angeles</i>. Retrieved December </p><p>01, 2020, from <a href="http://www.discoverlosangeles.com/things-to-do/historical-timeline-of-los-angeles">http://www.discoverlosangeles.com/things-to-do/historical-timeline-of-los-angeles</a></p><p>Eames Office. (2020, March 26). Charles and Ray Eames. </p><p><a href="https://www.eamesoffice.com/eames-office/charles-and-ray/">https://www.eamesoffice.com/eames-office/charles-and-ray/</a></p><p>Giovannini, J. (2006). Turning surface into symbols: the environmental design firm </p><p>Sussman-Prejza enriches architecture with graphics. <i>Architectural Record</i>, 194(1).</p><p>History.com Editors. (2009, November 13). <i>Soviets announce boycott of 1984 Olympics</i>. A&E </p><p>Television Networks. Retrieved December 01, 2020, from <a href="http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/soviets-announce-boycott-of-1984-olympics">http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/soviets-announce-boycott-of-1984-olympics</a></p><p>Latson, J. (2014, September 05). "Murder in Munich": A Terrorist Threat Ignored. Time. </p><p>Retrieved December 01, 2020, from <a href="https://time.com/3223225/munich-anniversary/">https://time.com/3223225/munich-anniversary/</a></p><p>Meggs, P. B., & Purvis, A. W. (2016). <i>Meggs' history of graphic design</i>. Hoboken, NJ: John </p><p>Wiley & Sons.</p><p>Mertin, E. (2012). The Soviet Union and the Olympic games of 1980 and 1984. <i>East Plays West:</i></p><p><i>Sport and the Cold War</i>, 235.</p><p>Olsberg, N. (2014). Architecture and Sculpture a Dialogue in Los Angeles. <i>Architectural Review</i>, </p><p>235(1405), 88–93.</p><p>Sussman, D. (2014). L.A. Wo Man. <i>Creative Review</i>, 34(1), 48–53.</p><p>Poulin, Richard. (2012). <i>Graphic Design and Architecture, A 20th Century History</i>. Osceola: Quarto Publishing Group USA.</p><p>Twemlow, A. (2004, September 6). <i>Deborah Sussman</i>. AIGA.org Retrieved December 01, 2020, from </p><p><a href="https://www.aiga.org/medalist-deborahsussman">https://www.aiga.org/medalist-deborahsussman</a></p><p>Waldo, E. (2014). Deborah Sussman Dies at 83. <i>Contract</i>, <i>55</i>(7), 16.</p>
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      <itunes:title>Deborah Sussman</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Shayne Valencia, Spencer Gee, Estee Perkins Fioroni, Kayla Sinclair, Amanda Horton</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:13:47</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the contributions of exhibition designer Deborah Sussman to graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the contributions of exhibition designer Deborah Sussman to graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Tomoko Miho</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Tomoko Miho was a Japanese-American graphic and industrial designer. Born Tomoko Kawakami in 1931 in Los Angeles, California, she learned her first design principles from the family flower business. Tomoko lived in LA until her family was forcibly interned in 1942. The Kawakami family spent three years of their lives imprisoned without reason or evidence at the Gila River War Relocation Center. Like most internment camps, Gila River was overcrowded and unhygienic, conditions that contributed to a majority of the 1,862 internment camp deaths. Tomoko and the Kawakami family survived their internment and moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota. Tomoko took design classes there and later moved back to Los Angeles, California with a full scholarship to the Art Center School. Around graduation she met her future husband, fellow designer James Miho. The couple would travel together often during their lives, moving to different cities for work or taking international trips for both business and leisure. Tomoko Miho met many fellow talented designers of her day, even mentoring under prolific modernist designer Irving Harper. Tomoko Miho would eventually start her own firm, Tomoko Miho Design, where she was known for her creative take on minimalism that would use shape and harmony to create elegant, multilayered worlds. Her unique style has left a lasting impression, especially on catalog design which her innovative minimalism transformed into something stylish and fashionable.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1931 – b Tomoko Kawakami in Los Angeles, California.<br />1942 – President Franklin Roosevelt issues Executive Order 9066; Japanese internment begins in America.<br />1945 – Internment ends; the Kawakami family relocates to Minneapolis, Minnesota.<br />1958 – Tomoko graduates from the Art Center School of Minneapolis, Minnesota with an industrial design degree.  Around this time, Tomoko meets husband James Miho.<br />1960 – Tomoko and James take a six-month tour of Europe, meeting several notable European designers.<br />1974 – The couple opens their own company, Miho Associates.<br />1982  – Tomoko and James divorce; Tomoko founds Tomoko Miho Design in New York.<br />2012  – d Tomoko Miho in New York, NY.</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Americans of Japanese Ancestry WWII Memorial Alliance. (2020). <i>Gila River Relocation Center.</i> Japanese American Veterans Association. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="http://www.javadc.org/gila_river_relocation_center.htm">http://www.javadc.org/gila_river_relocation_center.htm</a></p><p>Conradi, J. (2010, September 18). <i>Looking back, thinking forward: A narrative of the Vignellis</i>. The Design Observer Group. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://archive.is/20130121113802/http://observatory.designobserver.com/feature/looking-back-thinking-forward-a-narrative-of-the-vignellis/15308/">https://archive.is/20130121113802/http://observatory.designobserver.com/feature/looking-back-thinking-forward-a-narrative-of-the-vignellis/15308/</a></p><p>Corley, M. (2018, May 17). <i>Health in Japanese internment camps</i>. Health and medicine in American history. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu/HistoryofMedicine/spring2018/health-in-japanese-internment-camps/">https://lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu/HistoryofMedicine/spring2018/health-in-japanese-internment-camps/</a></p><p><i>History about.</i> (2015). Gila River Indian Community. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="http://www.gilariver.org">http://www.gilariver.org</a></p><p>Kedmey, K. (2017, January 14). <i>How Isamu Noguchi’s seven months in a Japanese internment camp inspired his art</i>. Artsy. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-noguchis-seven-months-japanese-internment-camp-inspired-art">https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-noguchis-seven-months-japanese-internment-camp-inspired-art</a></p><p>Leong, K. J. (2020). Gila River. In Brian Niiya (ed.), Densho Encyclopedia. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Gila%20River/#Closing_and_Aftermath">http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Gila%20River/</a></p><p>Maciag, M. (2013). <i>Population Density for U.S. Cities Statistics</i>. Governing: the future of states and localities. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.governing.com/gov-data/population-density-land-area-cities-map.html">https://www.governing.com/gov-data/population-density-land-area-cities-map.html</a></p><p>Martin, R. (2015, October 15). California dreaming: Reconsidering the work of Charles and Ray Eames. <i>Apollo Magazine</i>. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.apollo-magazine.com/california-dreaming-reconsidering-the-work-of-charles-and-ray-eames/">https://www.apollo-magazine.com/california-dreaming-reconsidering-the-work-of-charles-and-ray-eames/</a></p><p><i>Other resources.</i> (2021, January 5). National Archives. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.archives.gov/research/japanese-americans/links">https://www.archives.gov/research/japanese-americans/links</a></p><p>Paid notice: Deaths Miho, Tomoko Kawakami. (2012, February 26). <i>The New York Times</i>. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://archive.nytimes.com/query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage-9803E1DE113AF935A15751C0A9649D8B63.html">https://archive.nytimes.com/query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage-9803E1DE113AF935A15751C0A9649D8B63.html</a></p><p><i>Remembering Tomoko Miho</i>. (2017). Ginkgo Journal. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://ginkgojournal.com/home/remembering-tomoko-miho/2017">https://ginkgojournal.com/home/remembering-tomoko-miho/2017</a></p><p>Takei, G. (2019). <i>They called us enemy</i>. Top Shelf Productions.</p><p>Vienne, V. (1993). <i>1993 AIGA medalist: Tomoko Miho</i>. AIGA: The professional association for design. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20210309014433/https://www.aiga.org/medalist-tomokomiho">https://web.archive.org/web/20210309014433/https://www.aiga.org/medalist-tomokomiho</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 30 Sep 2021 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Spencer Gee, Shayne Valencia, Amanda Horton, Kayla Sinclair)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/tomoko-miho-DuyfEjGs</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tomoko Miho was a Japanese-American graphic and industrial designer. Born Tomoko Kawakami in 1931 in Los Angeles, California, she learned her first design principles from the family flower business. Tomoko lived in LA until her family was forcibly interned in 1942. The Kawakami family spent three years of their lives imprisoned without reason or evidence at the Gila River War Relocation Center. Like most internment camps, Gila River was overcrowded and unhygienic, conditions that contributed to a majority of the 1,862 internment camp deaths. Tomoko and the Kawakami family survived their internment and moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota. Tomoko took design classes there and later moved back to Los Angeles, California with a full scholarship to the Art Center School. Around graduation she met her future husband, fellow designer James Miho. The couple would travel together often during their lives, moving to different cities for work or taking international trips for both business and leisure. Tomoko Miho met many fellow talented designers of her day, even mentoring under prolific modernist designer Irving Harper. Tomoko Miho would eventually start her own firm, Tomoko Miho Design, where she was known for her creative take on minimalism that would use shape and harmony to create elegant, multilayered worlds. Her unique style has left a lasting impression, especially on catalog design which her innovative minimalism transformed into something stylish and fashionable.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1931 – b Tomoko Kawakami in Los Angeles, California.<br />1942 – President Franklin Roosevelt issues Executive Order 9066; Japanese internment begins in America.<br />1945 – Internment ends; the Kawakami family relocates to Minneapolis, Minnesota.<br />1958 – Tomoko graduates from the Art Center School of Minneapolis, Minnesota with an industrial design degree.  Around this time, Tomoko meets husband James Miho.<br />1960 – Tomoko and James take a six-month tour of Europe, meeting several notable European designers.<br />1974 – The couple opens their own company, Miho Associates.<br />1982  – Tomoko and James divorce; Tomoko founds Tomoko Miho Design in New York.<br />2012  – d Tomoko Miho in New York, NY.</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Americans of Japanese Ancestry WWII Memorial Alliance. (2020). <i>Gila River Relocation Center.</i> Japanese American Veterans Association. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="http://www.javadc.org/gila_river_relocation_center.htm">http://www.javadc.org/gila_river_relocation_center.htm</a></p><p>Conradi, J. (2010, September 18). <i>Looking back, thinking forward: A narrative of the Vignellis</i>. The Design Observer Group. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://archive.is/20130121113802/http://observatory.designobserver.com/feature/looking-back-thinking-forward-a-narrative-of-the-vignellis/15308/">https://archive.is/20130121113802/http://observatory.designobserver.com/feature/looking-back-thinking-forward-a-narrative-of-the-vignellis/15308/</a></p><p>Corley, M. (2018, May 17). <i>Health in Japanese internment camps</i>. Health and medicine in American history. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu/HistoryofMedicine/spring2018/health-in-japanese-internment-camps/">https://lewiscar.sites.grinnell.edu/HistoryofMedicine/spring2018/health-in-japanese-internment-camps/</a></p><p><i>History about.</i> (2015). Gila River Indian Community. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="http://www.gilariver.org">http://www.gilariver.org</a></p><p>Kedmey, K. (2017, January 14). <i>How Isamu Noguchi’s seven months in a Japanese internment camp inspired his art</i>. Artsy. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-noguchis-seven-months-japanese-internment-camp-inspired-art">https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-noguchis-seven-months-japanese-internment-camp-inspired-art</a></p><p>Leong, K. J. (2020). Gila River. In Brian Niiya (ed.), Densho Encyclopedia. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Gila%20River/#Closing_and_Aftermath">http://encyclopedia.densho.org/Gila%20River/</a></p><p>Maciag, M. (2013). <i>Population Density for U.S. Cities Statistics</i>. Governing: the future of states and localities. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.governing.com/gov-data/population-density-land-area-cities-map.html">https://www.governing.com/gov-data/population-density-land-area-cities-map.html</a></p><p>Martin, R. (2015, October 15). California dreaming: Reconsidering the work of Charles and Ray Eames. <i>Apollo Magazine</i>. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.apollo-magazine.com/california-dreaming-reconsidering-the-work-of-charles-and-ray-eames/">https://www.apollo-magazine.com/california-dreaming-reconsidering-the-work-of-charles-and-ray-eames/</a></p><p><i>Other resources.</i> (2021, January 5). National Archives. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://www.archives.gov/research/japanese-americans/links">https://www.archives.gov/research/japanese-americans/links</a></p><p>Paid notice: Deaths Miho, Tomoko Kawakami. (2012, February 26). <i>The New York Times</i>. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://archive.nytimes.com/query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage-9803E1DE113AF935A15751C0A9649D8B63.html">https://archive.nytimes.com/query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage-9803E1DE113AF935A15751C0A9649D8B63.html</a></p><p><i>Remembering Tomoko Miho</i>. (2017). Ginkgo Journal. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://ginkgojournal.com/home/remembering-tomoko-miho/2017">https://ginkgojournal.com/home/remembering-tomoko-miho/2017</a></p><p>Takei, G. (2019). <i>They called us enemy</i>. Top Shelf Productions.</p><p>Vienne, V. (1993). <i>1993 AIGA medalist: Tomoko Miho</i>. AIGA: The professional association for design. Retrieved 21 May 2021 from <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20210309014433/https://www.aiga.org/medalist-tomokomiho">https://web.archive.org/web/20210309014433/https://www.aiga.org/medalist-tomokomiho</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Tomoko Miho</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Spencer Gee, Shayne Valencia, Amanda Horton, Kayla Sinclair</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:13:20</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the contributions of Japanese American designer Tomoko Miho to graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the contributions of Japanese American designer Tomoko Miho to graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
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      <title>Mary Blair</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Mary Blair was a fine artist, commercial artist, concept artist, and Disney Imagineer. After graduating from Chouinard and marrying Lee Blair, Mary was set to build a career as a regionalist watercolor painter like her husband. Due to World War 2, fine art was not working out, and the two entered the world of commercial art and animation. Both landed positions at Ub Iwerks Studio. In 1940, Blair joined Walt Disney studios as a sketch artist. The job frustrated her, and she quit shortly after. A few months later, Walt Disney animators went on strike in 1941, right when Walt left on a Goodwill tour of South America. Lee Blair was invited to go with a group of Disney artists. Mary desperately wanted to go, so she convinced Walt to bring her. The South American tour was where Mary Blair flourished as an artist and developed the style we know of today. Walt supported and encouraged her work and involved her in a number of projects back at the studios. Blair was the art director on the films <i>Three Caballeros</i> and <i>Saludos Amigos</i>, and concept artist for <i>Cinderella</i>, <i>Alice in Wonderland</i>, and <i>Peter Pan</i>. Blair left the Disney studios and moved to New York to pursue freelance commercial art. She illustrated for Little Golden Books, did set designs for Radio City Music Hall, and designed ads for Bakers Cocoa and Pall Mall. Mary returned to Disney for her biggest project yet: creating the look for a new Disneyland attraction called “It’s a Small World.” Mary Blair’s modern style had a huge impact on the way Disney created their films and her influence at Disney can be seen to this day. </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1911 – <i>b</i> Mcalister, Oklahoma<br />1918 – moved to Morgan Hill, California<br />1933 – Graduated Chouinard Art Institute<br />1940 – hired at Disney Studios <br />1941 – quit Disney<br />1941 – Animators Strike at the Walt Disney Animation Studios<br />1941 – Disney’s South American Goodwill Tour<br />~1940-1960 – Mary Blair worked on Saludos Amigos, 3 Caballeros Peter Pan, Cinderella,  etc.<br />1953 – Left disney to begin freelance commercial artist work in New York<br />1951 – Illustrated “I Can Fly” golden book<br />1963 – Walt asked Mary Blair to art direct “It’s a Small World”<br />1964 – World’s Fair<br />1967 – murals for Disneyland’s Tomorrowland<br />1970 – moved to Soquel, California<br />1971 – mural for Disney World Contemporary Resort<br />1978 – <i>d</i> Soquel, California<br />1991 – Awarded Disney Legends award </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Bemis, B. (2018, October 18). <i>Mickey Mouse morale: Disney on the World War II home front</i>. National Museum of American History. <a href="https://americanhistory.si.edu/blog/ww2-disney">https://americanhistory.si.edu/blog/ww2-disney</a></p><p>Canemaker, J. (1996). <i>Before the Animation Begins: The Art and Lives of Disney Inspirational Sketch Artists</i> (1st ed.). Hyperion.</p><p>Canemaker, J. (2012). <i>Mary Blair Treasury of Golden Books</i>. Golden Books.</p><p>Canemaker, J. (2014). <i>The Art and Flair of Mary Blair (Updated Edition): An Appreciation (Disney Editions Deluxe)</i>(Updated ed.). Disney Editions.</p><p><i>Chatting with Hal Ambro and Lee Blair</i>. (2016, June 28). Cartoon Research. <a href="https://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/chatting-with-hal-ambro-and-lee-blair/">https://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/chatting-with-hal-ambro-and-lee-blair/</a></p><p>Cook, G. (2016, February 15). <i>Modernist Cute: Mary Blair’s Art For ‘Dumbo,’ Golden Books, ‘It’s A Small World’ | The ARTery</i>. WBUR.Org. <a href="https://www.wbur.org/artery/2016/02/15/mary-blair">https://www.wbur.org/artery/2016/02/15/mary-blair</a></p><p><i>The Life Behind the Color: A Brief Biography of Mary Blair</i>. (2014, March 19). LaughingPlace.Com. <a href="https://www.laughingplace.com/w/articles/2014/03/19/the-life-behind-the-color-a-brief-biography-of-mary-blair/">https://www.laughingplace.com/w/articles/2014/03/19/the-life-behind-the-color-a-brief-biography-of-mary-blair/</a></p><p>Hanke, L. (1945, March). <i>What Is the Good Neighbor Policy? | AHA</i>. Historians.Org. <a href="https://www.historians.org/about-aha-and-membership/aha-history-and-archives/gi-roundtable-series/pamphlets/em-14-is-the-good-neighbor-policy-a-success-(1945)/what-is-the-good-neighbor-policy">https://www.historians.org/about-aha-and-membership/aha-history-and-archives/gi-roundtable-series/pamphlets/em-14-is-the-good-neighbor-policy-a-success-(1945)/what-is-the-good-neighbor-policy</a></p><p>Hillcrest Press, Inc. (2002). <i>Lee Blair Biography – California Watercolor</i>. Californiawatercolor.Com. <a href="https://www.californiawatercolor.com/pages/lee-blair-biography">https://www.californiawatercolor.com/pages/lee-blair-biography</a></p><p>Kinder, B. (2015, November 7). <i>There’s Something About Mary: The World of Mary Blair</i>. EatDrinkFilms.Com. <a href="https://eatdrinkfilms.com/2014/07/23/theres-something-about-mary-the-world-of-mary-blair/">https://eatdrinkfilms.com/2014/07/23/theres-something-about-mary-the-world-of-mary-blair/</a></p><p>Llamoca, J. (2017, November 27). <i>That Time Walt Disney Went to Latin America to Fight Nazi Sentiment</i>. Latino USA. <a href="https://www.latinousa.org/2017/11/17/time-walt-disney-went-latin-america-fight-nazi-sentiment/">https://www.latinousa.org/2017/11/17/time-walt-disney-went-latin-america-fight-nazi-sentiment/</a></p><p><i>MARY BLAIR (1911-1978)</i>. (2007). Sullivangoss.Com. <a href="https://www.sullivangoss.com/artists/mary-blair-1911-1978">https://www.sullivangoss.com/artists/mary-blair-1911-1978</a></p><p>Norman Rockwell Museum. <i>Mary Blair - Illustration History</i>. Illustration History <a href="https://www.illustrationhistory.org/artists/mary-blair">https://www.illustrationhistory.org/artists/mary-blair</a></p><p>Okubo, K. (Producer), & Thomas, T. (Director). (2009). <i>Walt & El Grupo</i> [Motion Picture]. USA: Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures</p><p><i>Private Snafu Cartoon Series</i>. (2020, May 19). The National WWII Museum | New Orleans. <a href="https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/private-snafu-cartoon-series">https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/private-snafu-cartoon-series</a></p><p>Reed, G. (2017, April 5). <i>The Surprising Impact of World War II Propaganda Animation Design</i>. Ethos3.Com. <a href="https://www.ethos3.com/2017/04/the-surprising-impact-of-world-war-ii-propaganda-animation-design/">https://www.ethos3.com/2017/04/the-surprising-impact-of-world-war-ii-propaganda-animation-design/</a></p><p>Schmidt, N. (2020, April 21). <i>Six Things You Didn’t Know About Disney Icon Mary Blair</i>. AllEars.Net. <a href="https://allears.net/2020/04/19/six-things-you-didnt-know-about-disney-icon-mary-blair/">https://allears.net/2020/04/19/six-things-you-didnt-know-about-disney-icon-mary-blair/</a></p><p>Sito, T. (2005, July 19). <i>The Disney Strike of 1941: How It Changed Animation & Comics</i>. Animation World Network. <a href="https://www.awn.com/animationworld/disney-Strike-1941-How-It-Changed-Animation-Comics">https://www.awn.com/animationworld/disney-Strike-1941-How-It-Changed-Animation-Comics</a></p><p>Sito, T. <i>The Disney Strike, 1941 | Animation Guild</i>. Animationguild.Org. <a href="https://animationguild.org/about-the-guild/disney-strike-1941/">https://animationguild.org/about-the-guild/disney-strike-1941/</a></p><p><i>Walt and the Goodwill Tour | The Walt Disney Family Museum</i>. (2016, September 8). Waltdisney.Org. <a href="https://www.waltdisney.org/blog/walt-and-goodwill-tour">https://www.waltdisney.org/blog/walt-and-goodwill-tour</a></p><p><i>Yesterland: Mary Blair Tomorrowland Tile Murals</i>. (2019, March 1). Yesterland.Com. <a href="https://www.yesterland.com/maryblair.html">https://www.yesterland.com/maryblair.html</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 23 Sep 2021 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Spencer Gee, Kayla Sinclair, Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/mary-blair-pSmGnNWi</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mary Blair was a fine artist, commercial artist, concept artist, and Disney Imagineer. After graduating from Chouinard and marrying Lee Blair, Mary was set to build a career as a regionalist watercolor painter like her husband. Due to World War 2, fine art was not working out, and the two entered the world of commercial art and animation. Both landed positions at Ub Iwerks Studio. In 1940, Blair joined Walt Disney studios as a sketch artist. The job frustrated her, and she quit shortly after. A few months later, Walt Disney animators went on strike in 1941, right when Walt left on a Goodwill tour of South America. Lee Blair was invited to go with a group of Disney artists. Mary desperately wanted to go, so she convinced Walt to bring her. The South American tour was where Mary Blair flourished as an artist and developed the style we know of today. Walt supported and encouraged her work and involved her in a number of projects back at the studios. Blair was the art director on the films <i>Three Caballeros</i> and <i>Saludos Amigos</i>, and concept artist for <i>Cinderella</i>, <i>Alice in Wonderland</i>, and <i>Peter Pan</i>. Blair left the Disney studios and moved to New York to pursue freelance commercial art. She illustrated for Little Golden Books, did set designs for Radio City Music Hall, and designed ads for Bakers Cocoa and Pall Mall. Mary returned to Disney for her biggest project yet: creating the look for a new Disneyland attraction called “It’s a Small World.” Mary Blair’s modern style had a huge impact on the way Disney created their films and her influence at Disney can be seen to this day. </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1911 – <i>b</i> Mcalister, Oklahoma<br />1918 – moved to Morgan Hill, California<br />1933 – Graduated Chouinard Art Institute<br />1940 – hired at Disney Studios <br />1941 – quit Disney<br />1941 – Animators Strike at the Walt Disney Animation Studios<br />1941 – Disney’s South American Goodwill Tour<br />~1940-1960 – Mary Blair worked on Saludos Amigos, 3 Caballeros Peter Pan, Cinderella,  etc.<br />1953 – Left disney to begin freelance commercial artist work in New York<br />1951 – Illustrated “I Can Fly” golden book<br />1963 – Walt asked Mary Blair to art direct “It’s a Small World”<br />1964 – World’s Fair<br />1967 – murals for Disneyland’s Tomorrowland<br />1970 – moved to Soquel, California<br />1971 – mural for Disney World Contemporary Resort<br />1978 – <i>d</i> Soquel, California<br />1991 – Awarded Disney Legends award </p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Bemis, B. (2018, October 18). <i>Mickey Mouse morale: Disney on the World War II home front</i>. National Museum of American History. <a href="https://americanhistory.si.edu/blog/ww2-disney">https://americanhistory.si.edu/blog/ww2-disney</a></p><p>Canemaker, J. (1996). <i>Before the Animation Begins: The Art and Lives of Disney Inspirational Sketch Artists</i> (1st ed.). Hyperion.</p><p>Canemaker, J. (2012). <i>Mary Blair Treasury of Golden Books</i>. Golden Books.</p><p>Canemaker, J. (2014). <i>The Art and Flair of Mary Blair (Updated Edition): An Appreciation (Disney Editions Deluxe)</i>(Updated ed.). Disney Editions.</p><p><i>Chatting with Hal Ambro and Lee Blair</i>. (2016, June 28). Cartoon Research. <a href="https://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/chatting-with-hal-ambro-and-lee-blair/">https://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/chatting-with-hal-ambro-and-lee-blair/</a></p><p>Cook, G. (2016, February 15). <i>Modernist Cute: Mary Blair’s Art For ‘Dumbo,’ Golden Books, ‘It’s A Small World’ | The ARTery</i>. WBUR.Org. <a href="https://www.wbur.org/artery/2016/02/15/mary-blair">https://www.wbur.org/artery/2016/02/15/mary-blair</a></p><p><i>The Life Behind the Color: A Brief Biography of Mary Blair</i>. (2014, March 19). LaughingPlace.Com. <a href="https://www.laughingplace.com/w/articles/2014/03/19/the-life-behind-the-color-a-brief-biography-of-mary-blair/">https://www.laughingplace.com/w/articles/2014/03/19/the-life-behind-the-color-a-brief-biography-of-mary-blair/</a></p><p>Hanke, L. (1945, March). <i>What Is the Good Neighbor Policy? | AHA</i>. Historians.Org. <a href="https://www.historians.org/about-aha-and-membership/aha-history-and-archives/gi-roundtable-series/pamphlets/em-14-is-the-good-neighbor-policy-a-success-(1945)/what-is-the-good-neighbor-policy">https://www.historians.org/about-aha-and-membership/aha-history-and-archives/gi-roundtable-series/pamphlets/em-14-is-the-good-neighbor-policy-a-success-(1945)/what-is-the-good-neighbor-policy</a></p><p>Hillcrest Press, Inc. (2002). <i>Lee Blair Biography – California Watercolor</i>. Californiawatercolor.Com. <a href="https://www.californiawatercolor.com/pages/lee-blair-biography">https://www.californiawatercolor.com/pages/lee-blair-biography</a></p><p>Kinder, B. (2015, November 7). <i>There’s Something About Mary: The World of Mary Blair</i>. EatDrinkFilms.Com. <a href="https://eatdrinkfilms.com/2014/07/23/theres-something-about-mary-the-world-of-mary-blair/">https://eatdrinkfilms.com/2014/07/23/theres-something-about-mary-the-world-of-mary-blair/</a></p><p>Llamoca, J. (2017, November 27). <i>That Time Walt Disney Went to Latin America to Fight Nazi Sentiment</i>. Latino USA. <a href="https://www.latinousa.org/2017/11/17/time-walt-disney-went-latin-america-fight-nazi-sentiment/">https://www.latinousa.org/2017/11/17/time-walt-disney-went-latin-america-fight-nazi-sentiment/</a></p><p><i>MARY BLAIR (1911-1978)</i>. (2007). Sullivangoss.Com. <a href="https://www.sullivangoss.com/artists/mary-blair-1911-1978">https://www.sullivangoss.com/artists/mary-blair-1911-1978</a></p><p>Norman Rockwell Museum. <i>Mary Blair - Illustration History</i>. Illustration History <a href="https://www.illustrationhistory.org/artists/mary-blair">https://www.illustrationhistory.org/artists/mary-blair</a></p><p>Okubo, K. (Producer), & Thomas, T. (Director). (2009). <i>Walt & El Grupo</i> [Motion Picture]. USA: Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures</p><p><i>Private Snafu Cartoon Series</i>. (2020, May 19). The National WWII Museum | New Orleans. <a href="https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/private-snafu-cartoon-series">https://www.nationalww2museum.org/war/articles/private-snafu-cartoon-series</a></p><p>Reed, G. (2017, April 5). <i>The Surprising Impact of World War II Propaganda Animation Design</i>. Ethos3.Com. <a href="https://www.ethos3.com/2017/04/the-surprising-impact-of-world-war-ii-propaganda-animation-design/">https://www.ethos3.com/2017/04/the-surprising-impact-of-world-war-ii-propaganda-animation-design/</a></p><p>Schmidt, N. (2020, April 21). <i>Six Things You Didn’t Know About Disney Icon Mary Blair</i>. AllEars.Net. <a href="https://allears.net/2020/04/19/six-things-you-didnt-know-about-disney-icon-mary-blair/">https://allears.net/2020/04/19/six-things-you-didnt-know-about-disney-icon-mary-blair/</a></p><p>Sito, T. (2005, July 19). <i>The Disney Strike of 1941: How It Changed Animation & Comics</i>. Animation World Network. <a href="https://www.awn.com/animationworld/disney-Strike-1941-How-It-Changed-Animation-Comics">https://www.awn.com/animationworld/disney-Strike-1941-How-It-Changed-Animation-Comics</a></p><p>Sito, T. <i>The Disney Strike, 1941 | Animation Guild</i>. Animationguild.Org. <a href="https://animationguild.org/about-the-guild/disney-strike-1941/">https://animationguild.org/about-the-guild/disney-strike-1941/</a></p><p><i>Walt and the Goodwill Tour | The Walt Disney Family Museum</i>. (2016, September 8). Waltdisney.Org. <a href="https://www.waltdisney.org/blog/walt-and-goodwill-tour">https://www.waltdisney.org/blog/walt-and-goodwill-tour</a></p><p><i>Yesterland: Mary Blair Tomorrowland Tile Murals</i>. (2019, March 1). Yesterland.Com. <a href="https://www.yesterland.com/maryblair.html">https://www.yesterland.com/maryblair.html</a></p>
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      <itunes:title>Mary Blair</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Spencer Gee, Kayla Sinclair, Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:12:54</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the contributions of Artist, Illustrator and Disney Imagineer Mary Blair on graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the contributions of Artist, Illustrator and Disney Imagineer Mary Blair on graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, graphic design, illustrator, concept art, disney, mary blair</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Bea Feitler</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Bea Feitler was a graphic designer, art director, educator, and a mentor to young professionals. Originally from Brazil, Feitler eventually found her home in New York City and made a name for herself in the magazine industry. Early on in her career she was named co-art director of Harper’s Bazaar along with Ruth Ansel—both having served as graphic designers under art director Marvin Israel (1924–85) who had been one of Feitler’s instructors at Parsons. Known for taking chances, Feitler and Ansel pushed Harper’s to its limits. Under Feitler’s and Ansel’s direction, Harper’s became one of the first national publications to photograph and feature an African American model. After leaving Harper’s, Feitler got involved with Ms., a liberal feminist publication founded by Gloria Steinem and Dorothy Pitman Hughes. At Ms. Magazine, Feitler was responsible for many controversial covers including one for a December (Christmas) issue, which featured the slogan “Peace on Earth, Good Will toward People”, revising the historically patriarchal statement “Peace on Earth, Good Will toward Men.” Despite a relatively short career, due to her untimely death at age 44, she made a significant impact on magazine design while also taking a stand for feminism and equality. </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1938 – <i>b</i> Rio de Janeiro<br />1959 – Attended Parson’s School of Design<br />1959 – Founds Estudio G in Rio de Janeiro<br />1961 – Returns to New York as assistant to Marvin Israel at Harper’s Bazaar<br />1963 (62?) – Named art director at Harper’s Bazaar (with Ruth Ansel)<br />1965 – First to hire black model in popular U.S. fashion magazine, Harper's Bazaar<br />1971 – Named art director of startup magazine <i>Ms.</i><br />1972 – Left Harper’s Bazaar, transitions to full-time at <i>Ms.</i><br />1976 – Left <i>Ms.</i> to start her own company<br />1982 – <i>d</i> Rio de Janeiro, April 8<br />1989 – AIGA Medal awarded, <i>posthumously</i><br />1991 – Inducted into the Art Directors Club Hall of Fame, <i>posthumously</i></p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Andre, L. T. (1976, Oct 08). Eye® view. <i>Wwd, 133</i>, 36. </p><p>Bea Feitler, Magazine And Book Designer, 44. (1982, April 11). <i>The New York Times</i>.  <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/1982/04/11/obituaries/bea-feitler-magazine-and-book-designer-44.html">https://www.nytimes.com/1982/04/11/obituaries/bea-feitler-magazine-and-book-designer-44.html</a></p><p>Bruno Feitler on Bea Feitler (2014, March 18). <i>Hall of Femmes</i>. <a href="http://halloffemmes.com/2014/03/bruno-feitler-about-bea-feitler/">http://halloffemmes.com/2014/03/bruno-feitler-about-bea-feitler/</a></p><p>Bea Feitler. (1991). ADCglobal. org <a href="http://adcglobal.org/hall-of-fame/bea-feitler/">http://adcglobal.org/hall-of-fame/bea-feitler/</a></p><p>Chetty, D. (2019, February 1). <i>Black History Month: Trailblazing black models who broke barriers</i>. Zoomer. <a href="http://www.everythingzoomer.com/style/2019/02/01/black-models-broke-barriers/">http://www.everythingzoomer.com/style/2019/02/01/black-models-broke-barriers/</a></p><p>Gavin, T. (2017, September 8). <i>The Pioneering female art director you’ve never heard of</i>. AnOther. <a href="http://www.anothermag.com/art-photography/10134/the-pioneering-female-art-director-youve-never-heard-of">http://www.anothermag.com/art-photography/10134/the-pioneering-female-art-director-youve-never-heard-of</a></p><p>Meggs, P. (1989, September 1). <i>Bea Feitler</i>. AIGA.org <a href="https://www.aiga.org/medalist-beafeitler">https://www.aiga.org/medalist-beafeitler</a></p><p>Norman, D. (2018, February 2). <i>Black Excellence: The legacy of Donyale Luna</i>. V Magazine. <a href="https://vmagazine.com/article/black-excellence-donyale-luna/">https://vmagazine.com/article/black-excellence-donyale-luna/</a></p><p>Ren, M. (2018). Steinem, Gloria. In S. Bronner (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of American studies</i>. MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. </p><p>Sherin, A. (2006, October 20)  Feitler, Bea(triz). <i>Grove Art Online.</i> Ed.   </p><p>Steinem, Gloria. (2001). In H. Rappaport, <i>Encyclopedia of women social reformers</i>. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. </p><p>Stevenson, A. (2016, December 18). <i>“Peace on earth good will to people”: holiday reflections on Ms. Magazine</i>. Australian Women’s History Network.  <a href="http://www.auswhn.org.au/blog/peace-earth-good-will-people/">http://www.auswhn.org.au/blog/peace-earth-good-will-people/</a></p><p>The Editor’s Guest Book. (1964, February). <i>Harper's Bazaar, 97</i>, 93.</p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 16 Sep 2021 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Shayne Valencia, Spencer Gee, Amanda Horton, Kayla Sinclair)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/bea-feitler-_veX3th5</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Bea Feitler was a graphic designer, art director, educator, and a mentor to young professionals. Originally from Brazil, Feitler eventually found her home in New York City and made a name for herself in the magazine industry. Early on in her career she was named co-art director of Harper’s Bazaar along with Ruth Ansel—both having served as graphic designers under art director Marvin Israel (1924–85) who had been one of Feitler’s instructors at Parsons. Known for taking chances, Feitler and Ansel pushed Harper’s to its limits. Under Feitler’s and Ansel’s direction, Harper’s became one of the first national publications to photograph and feature an African American model. After leaving Harper’s, Feitler got involved with Ms., a liberal feminist publication founded by Gloria Steinem and Dorothy Pitman Hughes. At Ms. Magazine, Feitler was responsible for many controversial covers including one for a December (Christmas) issue, which featured the slogan “Peace on Earth, Good Will toward People”, revising the historically patriarchal statement “Peace on Earth, Good Will toward Men.” Despite a relatively short career, due to her untimely death at age 44, she made a significant impact on magazine design while also taking a stand for feminism and equality. </p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1938 – <i>b</i> Rio de Janeiro<br />1959 – Attended Parson’s School of Design<br />1959 – Founds Estudio G in Rio de Janeiro<br />1961 – Returns to New York as assistant to Marvin Israel at Harper’s Bazaar<br />1963 (62?) – Named art director at Harper’s Bazaar (with Ruth Ansel)<br />1965 – First to hire black model in popular U.S. fashion magazine, Harper's Bazaar<br />1971 – Named art director of startup magazine <i>Ms.</i><br />1972 – Left Harper’s Bazaar, transitions to full-time at <i>Ms.</i><br />1976 – Left <i>Ms.</i> to start her own company<br />1982 – <i>d</i> Rio de Janeiro, April 8<br />1989 – AIGA Medal awarded, <i>posthumously</i><br />1991 – Inducted into the Art Directors Club Hall of Fame, <i>posthumously</i></p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Andre, L. T. (1976, Oct 08). Eye® view. <i>Wwd, 133</i>, 36. </p><p>Bea Feitler, Magazine And Book Designer, 44. (1982, April 11). <i>The New York Times</i>.  <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/1982/04/11/obituaries/bea-feitler-magazine-and-book-designer-44.html">https://www.nytimes.com/1982/04/11/obituaries/bea-feitler-magazine-and-book-designer-44.html</a></p><p>Bruno Feitler on Bea Feitler (2014, March 18). <i>Hall of Femmes</i>. <a href="http://halloffemmes.com/2014/03/bruno-feitler-about-bea-feitler/">http://halloffemmes.com/2014/03/bruno-feitler-about-bea-feitler/</a></p><p>Bea Feitler. (1991). ADCglobal. org <a href="http://adcglobal.org/hall-of-fame/bea-feitler/">http://adcglobal.org/hall-of-fame/bea-feitler/</a></p><p>Chetty, D. (2019, February 1). <i>Black History Month: Trailblazing black models who broke barriers</i>. Zoomer. <a href="http://www.everythingzoomer.com/style/2019/02/01/black-models-broke-barriers/">http://www.everythingzoomer.com/style/2019/02/01/black-models-broke-barriers/</a></p><p>Gavin, T. (2017, September 8). <i>The Pioneering female art director you’ve never heard of</i>. AnOther. <a href="http://www.anothermag.com/art-photography/10134/the-pioneering-female-art-director-youve-never-heard-of">http://www.anothermag.com/art-photography/10134/the-pioneering-female-art-director-youve-never-heard-of</a></p><p>Meggs, P. (1989, September 1). <i>Bea Feitler</i>. AIGA.org <a href="https://www.aiga.org/medalist-beafeitler">https://www.aiga.org/medalist-beafeitler</a></p><p>Norman, D. (2018, February 2). <i>Black Excellence: The legacy of Donyale Luna</i>. V Magazine. <a href="https://vmagazine.com/article/black-excellence-donyale-luna/">https://vmagazine.com/article/black-excellence-donyale-luna/</a></p><p>Ren, M. (2018). Steinem, Gloria. In S. Bronner (Ed.), <i>Encyclopedia of American studies</i>. MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. </p><p>Sherin, A. (2006, October 20)  Feitler, Bea(triz). <i>Grove Art Online.</i> Ed.   </p><p>Steinem, Gloria. (2001). In H. Rappaport, <i>Encyclopedia of women social reformers</i>. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO. </p><p>Stevenson, A. (2016, December 18). <i>“Peace on earth good will to people”: holiday reflections on Ms. Magazine</i>. Australian Women’s History Network.  <a href="http://www.auswhn.org.au/blog/peace-earth-good-will-people/">http://www.auswhn.org.au/blog/peace-earth-good-will-people/</a></p><p>The Editor’s Guest Book. (1964, February). <i>Harper's Bazaar, 97</i>, 93.</p>
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      <itunes:title>Bea Feitler</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Shayne Valencia, Spencer Gee, Amanda Horton, Kayla Sinclair</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:12:06</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode examines the contributions of Brazilian graphic designer Bea Feitler to graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode examines the contributions of Brazilian graphic designer Bea Feitler to graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
      <itunes:keywords>graphic design history, magazine design, graphic design, bea feitler, harper&apos;s bazaar, brazil</itunes:keywords>
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      <title>Varvara Stepanova</title>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Varvara Stepanova was a leader of the constructivist movement and co-author of the constructivist manifesto. Described as “a frenzied artist,” she designed books, magazines, posters, advertisements, as well as textiles, clothing, and costumes. On top of that, she was an author and poet. Her design style and aesthetic was avant garde, modern, and often characterized by simplicity and geometric forms and patterns, but Varvara was never content with stasis. She constantly evolved her style and worked to develop new concepts and ideas. As a co-founder of the Constructivist movement, her work typifies the aesthetic and philosophies of Constructivism. While Varavara worked on many of her own projects, she also did many together with her husband, Alexander Rodchenko, another well-known Constructivist designer. Her work often gets linked to Rodchenko’s, and it’s Rodchenko who gets mentioned in histories of graphic design and credit for designs that should be attributed to Stepanova as well. At a time when women were largely still expected to be no more than wives and mothers, Stepanova was a woman who made an unmistakable mark on art and design.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1894 – <i>b</i> Kovno [now Kaunas, Lithuania]<br />1910-11 – Attended Kazan’ School of Art (meets Aleksandr Rodchenko)<br />1913-14 – Attended Stroganov School, studied with Konstantin Yuon & Il’ya Mashkov<br />1920-30 – Taught at the Vkhutemas design school<br />1921 – Work included as part of the 5 x 5 = 25 exhibition<br />1922 – Co-wrote the Constructivist Manifesto with Alexander Rodchenko & Aleksei Gan <br />1922 – Designed the set and costumes for <i>The Death of Tarelkin</i><br />1923 – Worked at the  First Textile Printing Factory designing fabrics<br />1924 – Vladimir Lenin dies, marks the beginning of the end of the Soviet Avant Garde<br />1925 – Costume designs for the play <i>The Death of Tarelkin</i> were exhibited in the Soviet Pavilion at the International Exhibition of Modern Industrial and Decorative Arts in Paris<br />1932 – Independent artist groups are banned by Josef Stalin<br />1958 – <i>d</i> Moscow, May 20th</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Adaskina, N. (1987). Constructivist Fabrics and Dress Design. <i>The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts,</i> <i>5</i>, 144-159. doi:10.2307/1503941</p><p>Aspden, R. (2009, Jan 26). Constructing a new world. <i>New Statesman, 138</i>, 40-43. Retrieved from </p><p>Cunningham, R. (1998). The Russian women artist/designers of the avant-garde. <i>TD&T: Theatre Design & Technology</i>, <i>34</i>(2), 38–51. </p><p>Fer, B. (1989). Tatlin; Varvara Stepanova: a Constructivist life. <i>Art History</i>, <i>12</i>, 382–385. </p><p>Goldman, W. (2002). <i>Women at the gates gender and industry in Stalin's Russia</i>. Cambridge, UK; New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.</p><p>Jenkins, S. (2014). Russia’s dynamic duo. <i>Art Newspaper</i>, <i>24</i>(263), 32. </p><p>Lavrentiev, A. (1988). <i>Varvara Stepanova: A constructivist life</i>. London; Thames and Hudson.</p><p>Nazarov, Y. (1996). Can Man Live Without Wonder? by Varvara Stepanova (review). <i>Leonardo,</i> <i>29</i>(1), 79.</p><p>Vkhutemas. (2004). In G. Julier, <i>The Thames & Hudson dictionary of design since 1900</i> (2nd ed.). Thames & Hudson. Credo Reference: </p><p>Wolanksi, M. (retrieved on June 25, 2020) “The Role of Women in Soviet Russia”. <i>Guided History: History Research guides by Boston University students.</i> Blog. <a href="https://blogs.bu.edu/guidedhistory/moderneurope/molly-wolanski/">https://blogs.bu.edu/guidedhistory/moderneurope/molly-wolanski/</a></p>
]]></description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 9 Sep 2021 05:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <author>amandy.horton@gmail.com (Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia, Kayla Sinclair, Spencer Gee)</author>
      <link>https://incomplet-design-history.simplecast.com/episodes/varvara-stepanova-jHzwNlSj</link>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Varvara Stepanova was a leader of the constructivist movement and co-author of the constructivist manifesto. Described as “a frenzied artist,” she designed books, magazines, posters, advertisements, as well as textiles, clothing, and costumes. On top of that, she was an author and poet. Her design style and aesthetic was avant garde, modern, and often characterized by simplicity and geometric forms and patterns, but Varvara was never content with stasis. She constantly evolved her style and worked to develop new concepts and ideas. As a co-founder of the Constructivist movement, her work typifies the aesthetic and philosophies of Constructivism. While Varavara worked on many of her own projects, she also did many together with her husband, Alexander Rodchenko, another well-known Constructivist designer. Her work often gets linked to Rodchenko’s, and it’s Rodchenko who gets mentioned in histories of graphic design and credit for designs that should be attributed to Stepanova as well. At a time when women were largely still expected to be no more than wives and mothers, Stepanova was a woman who made an unmistakable mark on art and design.</p><h2>TIMELINE</h2><p>1894 – <i>b</i> Kovno [now Kaunas, Lithuania]<br />1910-11 – Attended Kazan’ School of Art (meets Aleksandr Rodchenko)<br />1913-14 – Attended Stroganov School, studied with Konstantin Yuon & Il’ya Mashkov<br />1920-30 – Taught at the Vkhutemas design school<br />1921 – Work included as part of the 5 x 5 = 25 exhibition<br />1922 – Co-wrote the Constructivist Manifesto with Alexander Rodchenko & Aleksei Gan <br />1922 – Designed the set and costumes for <i>The Death of Tarelkin</i><br />1923 – Worked at the  First Textile Printing Factory designing fabrics<br />1924 – Vladimir Lenin dies, marks the beginning of the end of the Soviet Avant Garde<br />1925 – Costume designs for the play <i>The Death of Tarelkin</i> were exhibited in the Soviet Pavilion at the International Exhibition of Modern Industrial and Decorative Arts in Paris<br />1932 – Independent artist groups are banned by Josef Stalin<br />1958 – <i>d</i> Moscow, May 20th</p><h2>REFERENCES</h2><p>Adaskina, N. (1987). Constructivist Fabrics and Dress Design. <i>The Journal of Decorative and Propaganda Arts,</i> <i>5</i>, 144-159. doi:10.2307/1503941</p><p>Aspden, R. (2009, Jan 26). Constructing a new world. <i>New Statesman, 138</i>, 40-43. Retrieved from </p><p>Cunningham, R. (1998). The Russian women artist/designers of the avant-garde. <i>TD&T: Theatre Design & Technology</i>, <i>34</i>(2), 38–51. </p><p>Fer, B. (1989). Tatlin; Varvara Stepanova: a Constructivist life. <i>Art History</i>, <i>12</i>, 382–385. </p><p>Goldman, W. (2002). <i>Women at the gates gender and industry in Stalin's Russia</i>. Cambridge, UK; New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.</p><p>Jenkins, S. (2014). Russia’s dynamic duo. <i>Art Newspaper</i>, <i>24</i>(263), 32. </p><p>Lavrentiev, A. (1988). <i>Varvara Stepanova: A constructivist life</i>. London; Thames and Hudson.</p><p>Nazarov, Y. (1996). Can Man Live Without Wonder? by Varvara Stepanova (review). <i>Leonardo,</i> <i>29</i>(1), 79.</p><p>Vkhutemas. (2004). In G. Julier, <i>The Thames & Hudson dictionary of design since 1900</i> (2nd ed.). Thames & Hudson. Credo Reference: </p><p>Wolanksi, M. (retrieved on June 25, 2020) “The Role of Women in Soviet Russia”. <i>Guided History: History Research guides by Boston University students.</i> Blog. <a href="https://blogs.bu.edu/guidedhistory/moderneurope/molly-wolanski/">https://blogs.bu.edu/guidedhistory/moderneurope/molly-wolanski/</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
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      <itunes:title>Varvara Stepanova</itunes:title>
      <itunes:author>Amanda Horton, Shayne Valencia, Kayla Sinclair, Spencer Gee</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>00:14:48</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>This episode looks into the contributions of Russian Constructivist designer and leader Varvara Stepanova to graphic design history.</itunes:summary>
      <itunes:subtitle>This episode looks into the contributions of Russian Constructivist designer and leader Varvara Stepanova to graphic design history.</itunes:subtitle>
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