In driesd 's collection
Chris Ware - Rusty Brown
Ink
51 x 73 cm (20.08 x 28.74 in.)
Added on 9/21/14
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Description
Rusty Brown — Stephanie and Alice in Class. 28" x 20" 2002
The Acme Novelty Library 17
You can als see Jordan Lint in this page...
The Acme Novelty Library 17
You can als see Jordan Lint in this page...
Comment
The school is inspired on Chris Ware's high school...
"'Rusty Brown' is a graphic novel I began many years ago and am serializing chapter by chapter in my regular comic book, 'The ACME Novelty Library.' It concerns the doings of a group of seven people all either employed by or attending a private high school in Omaha, Neb., which bears a striking, affectionate and hopefully non-litigious resemblance to the 1970s version of my own high school, Brownell-Talbot, though all of the main characters and situations are completely invented."
http://newsroom.unl.edu/releases/2007/02/01/Chris+Ware+exhibition's+focus+is+artist's+graphic+novel+based+in+Omah
"The book is largely set in my own memories of the parochial school I attended as a kid, which in my early adulthood I realised I’d spent more time in than at home. The rooms, hallways and kids were almost all certainly more familiar to me than my own family and house, and still reappear in my dreams, even if they’re incongruously populated with the people and details of my life now."
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/sep/28/i-envy-writers-who-suffer-from-no-self-doubts-inside-the-world-of-graphic-novelist-chris-ware
Chris Ware about Peanuts:
"Peanuts really changed my life more than anything; I looked at superhero comics, but I read Peanuts. Those characters seemed so real to me, like real friends. Every time I entered that world of Charles Schulz, those little drawings came to life on the page for me in a way that almost nothing else did. It made me really want to become a cartoonist."
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/writersandcompany/chris-ware-on-how-peanuts-his-mother-and-being-bullied-in-school-made-him-a-cartoonist-1.5479805
My first Chris Ware. Bought at the Carl Hammer Chris Ware expo in 2008.
Exhibited in Antwerps at Grafixx (2023).
"'Rusty Brown' is a graphic novel I began many years ago and am serializing chapter by chapter in my regular comic book, 'The ACME Novelty Library.' It concerns the doings of a group of seven people all either employed by or attending a private high school in Omaha, Neb., which bears a striking, affectionate and hopefully non-litigious resemblance to the 1970s version of my own high school, Brownell-Talbot, though all of the main characters and situations are completely invented."
http://newsroom.unl.edu/releases/2007/02/01/Chris+Ware+exhibition's+focus+is+artist's+graphic+novel+based+in+Omah
"The book is largely set in my own memories of the parochial school I attended as a kid, which in my early adulthood I realised I’d spent more time in than at home. The rooms, hallways and kids were almost all certainly more familiar to me than my own family and house, and still reappear in my dreams, even if they’re incongruously populated with the people and details of my life now."
https://www.theguardian.com/books/2019/sep/28/i-envy-writers-who-suffer-from-no-self-doubts-inside-the-world-of-graphic-novelist-chris-ware
Chris Ware about Peanuts:
"Peanuts really changed my life more than anything; I looked at superhero comics, but I read Peanuts. Those characters seemed so real to me, like real friends. Every time I entered that world of Charles Schulz, those little drawings came to life on the page for me in a way that almost nothing else did. It made me really want to become a cartoonist."
https://www.cbc.ca/radio/writersandcompany/chris-ware-on-how-peanuts-his-mother-and-being-bullied-in-school-made-him-a-cartoonist-1.5479805
My first Chris Ware. Bought at the Carl Hammer Chris Ware expo in 2008.
Exhibited in Antwerps at Grafixx (2023).
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About Chris Ware
Franklin Christenson Ware, known as Chris Ware, is an American comic book writer. Since 1993 he has published the Acme Novelty Library, a series with an irregular format and periodicity. Jimmy Corrigan, his main work (1995-2000), has won him numerous awards in the English-speaking world (several Ignatz, Harved and Eisner awards, as well as an American Book Award and the Guardian First Book Award) as well as in the French-speaking world ("Prix du meilleur album" at the Angoulême Festival and the Prix de la critique).