Art Spiegelman, the first cartoonist to win a Pulitzer Prize for his graphic novel “Maus,” kicked off “Comics Sans Frontières ...
The creator of Maus has learned that the past is always present. At many points in his life Art Spiegelman has tried to escape his family’s past—and who can blame him? His parents were survivors of ...
Through interviews with the artist and those closest to him, Molly Bernstein and Philip Dolin chronicle Spiegelman’s career in standard doc portrait.
Sign up for Forwarding the News, the Forward’s morning newsletter with all the news and analysis that matters to American Jews each day. Art Spiegelman’s life was ...
Art Spiegelman’s “Li’l Pitcher” comic depicts a young boy who learns about the horrors of the Holocaust while listening to his parents’ conversation during a car ride. - Piles isn't the ...
When the Spiegelman family witnessed the towers falling on 9/11, they noticed that the gray of the buildings fell first, leaving bright red beams hanging in the air that slowly disintegrated.
On the occasion of a new documentary, the artist talks with Hyperallergic about the legacy of Maus, comics techniques, Gaza, collaboration, and more.
Art Spiegelman’s “Maus” was featured in the comic book “Funny Aminals” in 1972, with a cover by Robert Crumb, one of Spiegelman’s comic heroes. Being part of “Funny Aminals” helped ...
Art Spiegelman’s graphic novel “Maus” was about both his father Vladek’s experiences in the Holocaust and the difficult relationship they had with each other. - "Maus" is a twin story.
The creator of Maus has learned that the past is always present. At many points in his life Art Spiegelman has tried to escape his family’s past—and who can blame him? His parents were ...
From co-directors Molly Bernstein and Philip Dolin, the documentary "Art Spiegelman: Disaster Is My Muse" is a linear account of how his career in comics evolved from underground publications to ...