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Richard Sala - Desert Night Drive
Mixed Media
Added on 7/31/22
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Richard Sala on his blog:
I haven't been back to AZ in at least 15 years and I know the desert is probably a lot smaller now. I first left in 1979 and didn't return until the mid-'80s and things had grown (sprawled) and changed so massively even back then that I can't imagine how different it is now. I still have family and friends who live there who love it, so the strip is just a personal observation -- a memory of impressions from that time and may say more about me and my personal demons than the actual desert. Felt good to "get it off my chest" when I drew it, though!
I haven't been back to AZ in at least 15 years and I know the desert is probably a lot smaller now. I first left in 1979 and didn't return until the mid-'80s and things had grown (sprawled) and changed so massively even back then that I can't imagine how different it is now. I still have family and friends who live there who love it, so the strip is just a personal observation -- a memory of impressions from that time and may say more about me and my personal demons than the actual desert. Felt good to "get it off my chest" when I drew it, though!
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About Richard Sala
Richard Sala's work has been appearing in a wide variety of newspapers, books and magazines, as well as on toy packaging, greeting cards and on the internet since the 1980s. After debuting with a self-published magazine, 'Night Drive,' Richard Sala gradually became (as he puts it himself) the "king of the bad anthologies".
Once Sala appeared in Raw magazine, he became a regular feature in many different types of magazines, including Buzz, Twist, Escape, Drawn & Quarterly, and Rip Off Comix. He and Charles Burns even found their way into the mainstream by way of MTV's animation showcase 'Liquid Television'. Sala's animated serial, 'Invisible Hands' appeared on MTV, and his work can also be found on the CD-ROMs 'Freak Show' and 'Bad Day on the Midway'.
But Sala liked his horror-noir material best, so he concentrated on doing comics for magazines. His "magnum opus", 'The Chuckling Whatsit', was serialized over seventeen issues of the Fantagraphics 'Zero Zero' magazine. His comic book series 'Evil Eye' ran for 12 issues between 1998 and 2001. He has since released several horror-noir graphic novels, including 'Peculia' (2002), 'Mad Night' (2005), 'The Grave Robber's Daughter' (2006), 'Cat Burglar Black' (2009) and 'The Hidden ' (2011).
Text (c) Lambiek