Robert Crumb, known affectionately as “R Crumb” (not to be confused with your neighborhood yard sale’s collector), is a legend in modern cartooning and an epitome of eccentricity. If Dan Nadel’s meticulously detailed biography were any more revealing, it might just need a parental advisory sticker.
In the grand scheme of things, Crumb’s most mainstream claim to fame was his iconic illustration for the Big Brother and the Holding Company/Janis Joplin album Cheap Thrills. You know the one—it’s been plastered on countless dorm-room walls and 18-wheeler mudflaps like some psychedelic badge of honor. But let’s not stop there. Crumb was the mastermind behind the gritty underground comics of the Sixties and Seventies, effectively the godfather of Zap Comix. Yes, the one with the dirty jokes your mother wouldn’t approve of.
With the help of his trusty pen, Crumb introduced us to a bizarre, LSD-fueled pantheon of characters—lovers, losers, and iconoclastic thinkers, all rendered in his unmistakable hatching style. Meet Mr. Natural, the Snoid, and Fritz the Cat, all part of Crumb’s absurdist tableau. But it’s his alter ego, a lanky, bespectacled fella weighed down by life’s trials, that really steals the show. Think of him as the original reluctant superhero of self-deprecation.
Crumb gleaned his artistic flair from icons like Harvey Kurtzman (the lunatic behind Mad magazine) and Carl Barks (the mysterious “good duck artist” who managed to stay anonymous, unlike Crumb’s penchant for the spotlight). And his influence? Well, as Nadel argues, without Crumb, modern cartooning would be as exciting as a blank piece of paper. Art Spiegelman once remarked, “Every cartoonist has to pass through Crumb,” likely with the same awe one feels after emerging from a lava pit. The existential journey of discovering one’s voice has never seemed so, well, complicated.
While Crumb is often hailed as a countercultural hero, he’s more of a time traveler stuck in a bygone era, obsessively collecting old 78rpm shellac records. Imagine someone with a closet full of retro vinyl who critiques modern society while constantly looking backward, yet tethered by his own issues. It’s the classic case of wanting to change the world while still wrestling with one’s own demons—like a cartoon version of Peeping Tom.
Born in 1943 into a Philadelphia family that made Shakespeare’s tragedies read like a light comedy, the Crumb household was a hotbed of drama. Anger, addiction, and a touch of the scandalous like incest seem to have been their family’s calling cards. His older brother, a ghost from Crumb’s past, tragically succumbed to mental illness, leaving Robert to navigate this real-life soap opera. The odds were decidedly against him, but he managed to caricature his way into a successful career despite being, dare we say, a bit neurotic.
Now, let’s address the elephant in the room: Crumb’s work is decidedly #problematic. With characters like Angelfood McSpade, who could easily double as a caricature made by a guy wearing outdated glasses, Crumb maneuvered through murky racial and sexual politics that could make today’s college students clutch their pearls. Rape jokes? Check. Teenaged “Jail Bait of the Month”? Double-check. He didn’t create these societal issues—he merely held up a mirror and let them fester on the pages.
Despite his cavalier attitude towards social proprieties, Crumb didn’t see jail time as an inevitable consequence of his sexual escapades. His first marriage, a lovelorn saga culminating in neglect and disillusionment, didn’t deter his romantic pursuits with Aline Kominsky. And here’s the kicker: as the ‘60s faded, so did his relevance, leading him to a mid-life creative crisis where punk culture barely blinked at his existence. Spoiler alert: the day a punk fanzine dissed Mr. Natural was the day Crumb formally declared himself washed up, echoing every artist’s existential crisis since time immemorial.
Now, however, the pendulum of public opinion oddly swings back in his direction. As Crumb’s artwork started fetching high-brow prices, he remained blissfully indifferent, even turning down lucrative offers like $20,000 for licensing plush toys based on his work. Talk about a rock star mentality! In a world where greed often reigns, Crumb embodies a bizarre monk-like integrity that feels—how shall we say it?—a tad hipsterish.
Today, Crumb resides in rural France, possibly reflecting on life’s absurdities, with Nadel having trekked through countries and train rides long enough to get a mere shrug of acceptance for this biography. One can’t help but wonder if his next act will be an intricate doodle of enlightenment amidst organic hipster cafes. But until then, Crumb remains a complex figure, endlessly fascinating like a vintage vinyl record you can’t help but spin over and over again.
Crumb: A Cartoonist’s Life by Dan Nadel (Scribner £25 pp458). To snag your copy, head to timesbookshop.co.uk. Free UK standard P&P on orders over £25. Special discounts available for Times+ members—if that’s still a thing that exists.
