Ah, Robert Crumb, or as he fancifully signs his work, “R Crumb”—the undisputed heavyweight champion of modern cartooning and general oddballery. Dan Nadel’s meticulously crafted biography reveals the delightful contradictions that define this eccentric figure.
For a significant stretch of time, the average Joe knew Crumb best from his iconic cover art for the Big Brother and the Holding Company/Janis Joplin album Cheap Thrills and his cartoonish figures that languidly proclaim “Keep on Truckin’,” gracing dorm-room walls and mudflaps with equal aplomb. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Crumb was the grand wizard of underground comics throughout the Sixties and Seventies, the creative spark behind Zap Comix, and the mastermind of preposterously delightful characters.
Crumb unleashed upon us a veritable buffet of LSD-infused characters, their outlandish exploits captured in his signature hatching style—Mr. Natural, the Snoid, Angelfood McSpade, Fritz the Cat. And most notably, a mirror image of himself: that lanky, bespectacled figure squirming with anxieties and a smorgasbord of resentments.
Crumb didn’t emerge from a vacuum; he learned the ropes from iconic figures like Harvey Kurtzman of Mad fame and Carl Barks—who became the “good duck artist” after drawing Donald Duck strips under cover. Yet, as Nadel argues, without Crumb, there wouldn’t be an Art Spiegelman, a Chris Ware, or even a Daniel Clowes. Spiegelman, creator of Maus, puts it succinctly: “Every cartoonist has to pass through Crumb. It’s like an accelerated evolution scene from 2001; you have to navigate through him to discover your own voice.”
Despite being a counterculture icon, Crumb often embraced the past with a nostalgic twist. His obsession with collecting ancient 78rpm shellac records reads like a love letter to the pre-television era. His illustrated commentary on society frequently took a back seat to his relentless self-scrutiny, revealing the depths of his discontent and neuroses.
Birthed in 1943 to a rather dysfunctional Philadelphia family, Crumb’s upbringing was a veritable Greek tragedy—complete with family feuds, madness, and more than a sprinkle of addiction. One might say he stepped into a world where existential angst served as an appetizer for his eventual career in cartooning. Yet, the sheer fact that he managed to escape his past is something of an enigma; his older brother, a fellow comic artist, tragically succumbed to the demons of mental illness and substance abuse.
Crumb’s work does not shy away from the “#problematic” label, reflecting a cultural landscape littered with outdated ideals. Angelfood McSpade—a cartoon caricature that raises more than a few eyebrows—exemplifies this uncomfortable truth. Other gems like “Jail Bait of the Month,” featuring a 13-year-old, make one question whether laughter is truly the best medicine or simply an awkward Band-Aid for a festering issue. Crumb and Nadel both argue that his work doesn’t create stereotypes; rather, it merely holds a reflective mirror to a society keen on ignoring its flaws.
Crumb’s begrudgingly honest self-portrayals often serve to indict his own shortcomings. One particularly humorous panel shows him bumbling through a feminist critique, head bowed in shame as accusations of privilege rain down. His inner thoughts? A delightful cocktail of “@*!!! BITCHES.” It’s as if he sends himself up while simultaneously landing damning critiques of society!
And lest you believe his personal life was any smoother, it seems Crumb thrived on “bizarre” in both art and life. Despite having a marriage that withered over neglect, he eventually partnered with Aline Kominsky—a match as unconventional as his works. As the Sixties idealism began to fade, Crumb experienced a creative block which led him to step back from the art scene, only to later reemerge with a more somber tone, spiced up by punk rock and the occasional existential crisis.
In recent years, the tide has turned—his work is now a collector’s dream even post-retirement. But Crumb has always been a bit like a forgetful squirrel saving up on acorns; he turned down hefty paychecks for opportunities that didn’t align with his artistic integrity—like licensing Mr. Natural plush toys or doing album art for the Rolling Stones. Good luck finding a cartoonist with that level of conviction today!
As Nadel’s biography reveals, Robert Crumb is now a quirky elder statesman of the comic world, residing in rural France and embodying both a mundane domestic life and the limelight of his past. Even though he might have offered Nadel a mere shrug at the thought of revealing himself openly, it seems every feather of his eccentricity remains intact. This biography serves not just as a peek into Crumb’s world but as a reflective journey through the messy, absurd, and sometimes cringeworthy legacy he leaves behind—like an artist perpetually caught in an existentialist comic strip.
