Joel beck författare
Hem / Kultur, Media & Underhållning / Joel beck författare
Martin's Griffin, New York, 1998).
From: Snarf (1973)
Website © 1994-2025 Lambiek
Last updated: 2022-01-20
In 1965, humor magazine editors voted to choose the nation's top college cartoonist and gave the honor to Beck.
Later in his abbreviated life heproduced mainly commissioned drawings and paintingsfor a small circle of friends and connoisseurs.
[Obituary taken in part from fromthe 2000 Harvey Awards ceremony.]
Books by Joel Beck
by
by
by
by
by
by
by
by
by
by
by
by
by
I, Issue #4
by
by
by
I, Issue #3
by
by
Template:Short descriptionTemplate:Use American EnglishTemplate:Use mdy datesTemplate:Infobox comics creatorJoel Beck (May 7, 1943 – September 14, 1999) was a San Francisco Bay Area artist and cartoonist.
He lived for several months in Manhattan in 1962 before returning to the West Coast. Until his death in 1999, Joel Beck lived in obscurity in Point Richmond, California doing occasional advertising commissions and being looked after by friends.
Beck wrote a personal homage to Robert Crumb in Monte Beauchamp's book 'The Life and Times of R.
Crumb.
In a detailed 1987 self-portrait, Beck depicted himself in an ecstatic state, high on the act of creation, as he labored at his drawing table late into the night, surrounded by his books, artwork, comics, Pepsi and dog.[3]
Fine art
An accomplished fine artist, Beck created many paintings in acrylics, oils and watercolors—artwork now sought by international collectors.
The comic strip that gave him this historical importance is 'Lenny of Laredo' (1965), a satirical riches-to-rags story about a foul-mouthed comedian obviously modeled after cult humorist Lenny Bruce.
Among his graphic influences are Robert Crumb, Jack Davis, Frank Frazetta, Albert Hurter, Walt Kelly, Harvey Kurtzman and Ronald Searle.
Kitchen Sink Press reprinted those stories in 1977 under the title 'Joel Beck's Comics & Stories'.
Underground comix
In the early 1960s, Beck moved into a converted closet in a housing unit near the campus of U.C. Berkeley, known as Haste House, and he continued to do cartoons for The Pelican.
Mr. Beck's protagonist, a child named Lenny, achieves fame and fortune by uttering "obscenities" such as "pee-pee thing", only to find his career in the dumps when the public becomes satiated with his naughtiness. KitchenSink also collected his earliest work underthe title Joel Beck's Comics and Stories.
Though Beck was prolificearly in his career, his output droppedprecipitously in the last two decades of his life,due in large part to illness and chronichomelessness.
He also produced the solo comics MARCHINGMARVIN and THE PROFIT (1966).
Beckmade his first national mark as acontributor "Public Gallery" in HarveyKurtzman'sHELP! When Joel Beck publishedthe Lenny Bruce-inspired comic LENNY OFLAREDO in 1965, he entered intohistory as thecreator of the second underground comic everpublished: Jack Jackson had preceded himwith GOD NOSE, but Beck beat RobertCrumb's seminal ZAP by a good twoyears. Kevin Fagan wrote Beck's obituary for the San Francisco Chronicle: Template:Blockquote Template:Reflist Template:Underground comix cartoonists Template:Authority control Joel Beck was one of the earliest artists of American underground comix. In the early 1960s Joel Beck had a nine-to-five job working for Roth Greeting Cards. Other comics of Joel Beck are 'Marching Marvin' (1966) and 'The Profit' (1966). In January 1966, The Pelican reprinted much of his previous work and labeled him "Man of the Decade".[2] His cartoons also appeared in the Berkeley Barb, and he penned a number of handbills and posters for the Jabberwock coffeehouse on Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley.[1] In addition, he was a founding member and regular contributor to the underground anthology Yellow Dog, published from 1968 to 1973. Block' (1912) and the infamous Tijuana Bibles from the 1930s and 1940s). Kinney made a graphic contribution to 'ProJunior’ (Kitchen Sink Press, 1971), a one-shot comic book paying homage to Don Dohler's character ProJunior. Beck's work appeard in several underground comix magazines (Snarf, Comix Book and others) until the late 1970s, when his work disappeared from the scene. Beck died on September 21, 1999, from complications from alcoholism in Point Richmond, California. Born in Ross, California, Beck grew up in El Sobrante, California, as an ill and bedridden child, who battled a combination of tuberculosis and spinal meningitis. Comments From Contemporaries (St. His comic book Lenny of Laredo, one of the earliest underground comic books of the 1960s, was the first underground comic book published on the West Coast. In the early 1960s, he drew studio cards for Box Cards. The San Francisco Chronicle commented: In 1965, his first full-length comic book, Lenny of Laredo, was published.Artist Bio: Joel Beck
Tributes
References
External links
Joel Beck
The Profit Death
Biography
Early life