Showing posts with label underground comix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label underground comix. Show all posts

Sunday, August 20, 2017

Larry's Underground Cartoonist Photo Scrapbook

In my last post I stumbled down Memory Lane with underground cartoonist/artist Hector Tellez.

In the process of creating that post I dredged up a small handful of snapshots of the San Francisco comix scene (primarily of the mid 70’s).

It’s a shame, but I only have a very few poor-quality pictures from San Francisco and a few cartoonists get-togethers  (The Loonies, San Diego Con, Bay Con).  Snapshots back then were considerably rarer than today with the advent of the cell phone camera.

Here’s a small smattering of possibly historically interest shots…


Group photo for magazine Towards Revolutionary Art (TRA) 1976. Larry, Harry "R. Diggs" Driggs, Guy Cowlell, Ingrid B., and Trina Robbins. 


Leonard Rifas and me. Golden Gate Park, 1978.
(This is scanned from a contact sheet)

                                                    Leonard Rifas 1978

This is youthful me in Trina's studio, 1975. Lots of Fiction House comic book art on the wall. Note Trina's nose in lower right hand corner.                                                                          (Photo by Denis Kitchen)


San Diego Con 1979: Don Dougherty, Paul Mavrides, Roger May, me, Shel Dorf, Steve Leialoha, Dan O'Niell's elbow, Melinda Gebbie, Bob Foster, Trina and Carol Lay.

And... Harvey Kurtzman.     (Photos by Jackie Estrada)


Monthly Loonies get-together, Cafe Commons, SF, October 1979.
It was a Halloween celebration so I'm wearing a paper mask I made.
Gahan Wilson was guest of honor. (Steve Leialoha in background)
Photo by Bob Nelson


Terry Boyce and obviously confused masked man at Gahan Wilson's art opening, also in SF, October 1979.

Gary Arlington and Wimmen's Comix artist Dalison in front of the San Francisco Comic Book Company, 1980


Leonard and Larry, Noe Valley, SF. (Larry's shirt courtesy of Goodwill).

M.T. Gilbert and company

Michael T. "Mr. Monster" Gilbert. Late 1970's

Cartoonist Alan Cumings and me 1978


Molly says I should put this one on. Photo taken by Gary Galaxy at the SF Bay Con circa 1977.

Tim Boxell and Revilo at the San Diego Con (by the swimming pool)

Par Holman and Lynn Hansen in San Diego 

Byron "Famous Potatoes" Werner San Diego 1983

Monday, March 4, 2013

Larry's Cartoon Vault: Remembering Willy Murphy


Cartoonist Willy Murphy died 37 years ago this month on March 2, 1976.
from Artists in Print

He was part of the underground comix movement in the late ‘60’s-early ‘70’s in San Francisco.
San Francisco Comic Book #4 1972

Of all the notable underground cartoonists of that era, Murphy is perhaps one of the most under acknowledged. That’s truly too bad because he was one of the best. Willy Murphy was the Milt Gross of the underground.  Seriously wild and wacky (and an all around good guy).
I first remember seeing Murphy’s work in the Berkeley Tribe underground paper and immediately took to it. ( I mostly remember a wonderfully devastating cartoon of Richard Nixon).
As a youngster-neophyte cartoonist in San Francisco,  I looked up to Willy  and he was very supportive of my early scribblings. In fact, I saw print a couple of times in those early days because Willy was in charge of editing the project (such as the San Francisco Sunday Paper and perhaps an early issue of San Francisco Comic Book).
As I understand it, before cartooning Murphy had worked in advertising. I believe he did photography as well.  I recall him once saying to me that he had loved photography but it didn’t love him.
Willy Murphy died young. He was truly building a head of steam by the late 70’s creating and contributing to a number of projects including the Give Me Liberty, Two Fools,  Arcade Comics Revue and his own title Flamed Out Funnies.

He was also just beginning to contribute to National Lampoon at the time of this death.  In fact, his Lampoon deadline played a role in his demise.
Willy was working on a piece for Lampoon and had a cold that turned into pneumonia while he  continued to work to meet his deadline. He was found unconscious in his room and taken to the hospital but never recovered. He was 39 years old.
We’ll never know how good he could have been. He did some awfully funny stuff that deserves to be remembered.
Here are a few odds and ends (some odder than others) by Willy Murphy. 



from Arcade #3



from the short lived San Francisco Sunday Paper 1972

Arcade



from Snarf #6



Again from San Francisco Sunday Paper


A nutty parody of the long ago Terry and the Pirates type strips


Arcade #4



Ted Richard's piece from Arcade #6