Meet Robert Crumb: Cartoonist Extraordinaire and All-Around Oddball
Robert Crumb, or “R Crumb” as he affectionately signs his artwork (presumably to differentiate himself from all those other R. Crumbs out there), stands tall as a monumental figure in modern cartooning. With the allure of a complex character from one of his own comics, Dan Nadel’s exhaustive biography offers insights into both the man and the myth.
For years, Crumb was best recognized in the mainstream for his iconic artwork on the cover of the Big Brother and the Holding Company/Janis Joplin album Cheap Thrills. You know, the one with the trippy illustrations you’d find on dorm-room walls and 18-wheeler mudflaps. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg: Crumb was the visionary behind the underground comic scene in the Sixties and Seventies and birthed the legendary Zap Comix.
Crumb gifted the world with a psychedelic pantheon of bizarre, lustful, and ponderous characters. From Mr. Natural to Fritz the Cat, and of course, the angst-riddled R Crumb himself, there’s no shortage of relatable neuroses, all rendered in his immediately recognizable hatching style. Think of it as the existential crisis of a lanky ectomorph in milk-bottle spectacles—you can’t make this stuff up!
He learned the ropes from the likes of Harvey Kurtzman, the Mad magazine anarchist, and the elusive Carl Barks, who became the Good Duck Artist but still never gets invited to any cool parties. Nadel argues convincingly that without Crumb, there would be no Art Spiegelman, Chris Ware, Joe Sacco, or Daniel Clowes. As Spiegelman once put it: “Every cartoonist must eventually pass through Crumb. It’s like an accelerated evolution of the species—except in this case, you may end up just as neurotic.”
Despite being an emblem of the Sixties counterculture, it’s worth noting that Crumb often gazed backward rather than forward. He is a connoisseur of antiquities, particularly old 78rpm records, and his art is steeped in styles reminiscent of the 19th and early 20th centuries. When it comes to politics, he’s generally anticorporate but unrelentingly fixated on peeling back the layers of his own psyche, often dredging up a delightful mix of guilt and irony.
Born in 1943 in a Philadelphia household that could only be described as operatically dysfunctional, Crumb emerged from a cauldron of familial madness—complete with anger, addiction, and a surprisingly casual attitude toward incest. His beloved older brother, who was his comic-drawing partner in crime, never quite escaped the dark spiral of their shared upbringing. The fact that Robert made it out at all feels almost miraculous, though he came equipped with enough neuroses to fuel a small indie film festival.
Crumb’s work is undeniably #problematic—just ask his character Angelfood McSpade, a hyper-eroticized caricature that raises eyebrows and ire. Not to mention that early comics often played with the notion of rape as a punchline. The defense and justification for his frequently disturbing content? “Hey, I’m just holding up a mirror to society’s ugly truth!” A perfectly reasonable excuse, no doubt—if you enjoy swimming in murky waters.
In a comic panel Nadel highlights, Crumb depicts himself vulnerable and overwhelmed by a harangue from an angry woman, likely calling him out for his male privilege and various misdeeds. His thought bubbles, rather unfortunately, read “@*!!! BITCHES”, showcasing just how well Crumb navigates the waters of self-awareness. Much like his artistic journey, his romantic life has been a rollercoaster, filled with ups, downs, and more than a few questionable decisions.
Crumb’s biggest fetish seems to be strong-legged women, which he describes with the enthusiasm of a child discovering candy for the first time. His sexual escapades were fairly successful, at least by the standards of a man who could have been #metooed if he weren’t so oddly endearing. He contributed to his own marital demise by neglecting family duties but went on to form a complicated yet joyous partnership with Aline Kominsky.
When Crumb transitioned into the mid-Seventies, he found himself wrestling with blockages—particularly as the counterculture that once adored him began to recede. He shaped his narrative into a more realistic mode through collaborations, though his ensuing attempts to cling to relevance feel as heart-wrenching as a mid-’90s band performing at a retirement home. After a punk fanzine laid into his work, Crumb responded by “killing off” Mr. Natural, lamenting, “Nobody likes me anymore!”
Fast forward to today, and it seems Crumb has made a comeback—right around the time he stopped producing much of anything. Isn’t that just the way? He lost track of the dollar signs, having turned down a string of lucrative offers, opting instead for a monk-like integrity. After all, who would want a $20,000 payday for a Mr. Natural plushie when one can live off the residuals of underground fame and casual reclusiveness?
Now in his ninth decade and gracefully wilted like a neglected houseplant, Crumb resides in rural France. When Nadel approached him for this comprehensive portrait, Crumb’s response could be summed up with an indifferent shrug—because nothing says “I’m an artistic genius” quite like ambivalence. It took Nadel four months and a series of complex travel arrangements just to secure that brief acknowledgment!
Crumb: A Cartoonist’s Life by Dan Nadel is available for those brave enough to delve deeper into this convoluted mind, all wrapped up in a snazzy cover that’s likely to spark intriguing conversations at your next dinner party. Or not. We’ll leave that up to you!
