Unraveling the Enigma: R. Crumb
Meet Robert Crumb, or “R. Crumb” as he lovingly scribbles on checks he probably will never cash—one of the towering figures of modern cartooning and an extraordinarily peculiar gentleman. Dan Nadel’s biography is a fastidiously detailed account that tells you all you never knew (and probably didn’t want to) about this cartooning enigma.
For years, Crumb was best known in the “straight” world for his eye-catching cover art for the Big Brother and the Holding Company/Janis Joplin album, *Cheap Thrills*. You probably had that iconic image hanging over your dorm bed, sharing space with a poster of kittens and Einstein sticking out his tongue. But let’s be real: that was just the tip of the iceberg. This guy was the head honcho of underground comics in the Sixties and Seventies and the mastermind behind *Zap Comix*, a title that would eventually make you the life of any hipster party.
Crumb gifted us with a psychedelic bazaar of absurdist characters that might just give Freud a run for his money. From Mr. Natural to Fritz the Cat and the notoriously tangled web of Angelfood McSpade, these figures emerged from his instantly recognizable pen, hatching existential crises ticked off on the therapy invoice. And what of R. Crumb himself? That lanky ectomorph sports milk-bottle specs while seething with an entire fever dream of resentments and anxieties. If neuroses were currency, Crumb would be a billionaire.
He honed his craft under the wing of Harvey Kurtzman, the anarchic genius behind *Mad* magazine, as well as Carl Barks, known anonymously as “the good duck artist.” Everyone took notes from Crumb’s lessons; as Nadel emphasizes, without Crumb, we might not have Art Spiegelman, Chris Ware, Joe Sacco, or Daniel Clowes gracing the comic scene. Spiegelman, who penned the Pulitzer Prize-winning *Maus*, commented, “Every cartoonist has to pass through Crumb.” It’s almost like a rite of passage—participants in this pilgrimage might start off white-knuckling their Sketchers and end up in berets with obscenely long mustaches.
While Crumb may be synonymous with the Sixties counterculture, he’s more like a vintage vinyl record scrubbed clean of any excess hipster dust. His obsessive love for collecting old 78rpm shellac records reveals a penchant for nostalgia, reflecting an artistic style that peers into the 19th and early 20th centuries. His politics are broadly anticorporate, although one could argue that his relentless self-examination often overshadows societal critique. Who needs a philosophy degree when you can have a self-portrait of existential dread?
Born in 1943 into a Philadelphia family rife with dysfunction—complete with a side serving of addiction and a pinch of madness—Crumb’s childhood was one for the books. His beloved older brother, with whom Crumb first exchanged comic panels, tragically succumbed to mental illness and substance abuse. Crumb dodged a bullet (or many) by escaping into the world, taking his neuroses along for the ride. If inner turmoil were a sport, Crumb would be an Olympic athlete.
Now, let’s address the elephant in the room—Crumb is indeed, as the kids say, #problematic. Characters like Angelfood McSpade are replete with hyper-eroticized caricatures, and the racial and sexual politics in his works are murky at best. Rape was often played for laughs in his early comics. Yes, you read that correctly; tuning in for the comedy of the absurd often turned into a twist of the darkly uncomfortable. The defense from Crumb himself and his biographer? He merely reflects a culture steeped in these portrayals. What a charmingly grim outlook!
Instead of facing consequences or enduring the chatroom cancel culture, Crumb enjoyed a surprising record of sexual success throughout his years. His first marriage—where he was blissfully clueless about neglecting their son—eventually crumbled. Following that, a delightful but not always exclusive relationship with Aline Kominsky blossomed. But as is the case in all good sitcoms, conflict arose when Crumb hit a creative block while the La-La Land of counterculture began to fade. If the punk movement offered a lifeline, it also delivered a brutal reality check when a fanzine lampooned his work. Ah, fame—so fickle!
Fast-forward to today: Crumb’s work is fetching serious coin just as he taps out of the production race, proving that time has a bizarre sense of irony. Despite being a man, let’s say “unfettered” by money matters, there’s a monk-like integrity in his pursuit of artistic sincerity. Now residing in serene rural France and a little rounder in the waist, Crumb remains an enigma. Nadel’s biography gives you all the skinny, even if you might need to read it in layers of irony, complete with a side of dry humor.
Grab your copy of “Crumb: A Cartoonist’s Life” by Dan Nadel—if you dare! You might just find the true essence of a man who paints his own psychodrama.
