Frigidaire (magazine) explained

Category:Comics magazine
Founded:1980
Firstdate:November 1980
Finaldate:2008
Country:Italy
Based:Rome
Language:Italian
Website:Frigidaire

Frigidaire was a comics magazine published in Rome, Italy. The magazine had significant effects on graphic design, illustrations and written speech in the country during the 1980s. In 2008 it folded, and from 2009 it became a supplement of Liberazione, a defunct communist newspaper.

History and profile

Frigidaire was established in 1980.[1] The first issue appeared in November.[2] The founders were Vincenzo Sparagna, Stefano Tamburini, Filippo Scòzzari, Andrea Pazienza, Massimo Mattioli, and Tanino Liberatore.[3] [4] The magazine had its headquarters in Rome.[5]

In addition to cartoons Frigidaire featured avant-garde reportages and interviews[1] and covers articles on visual art.[5] It also included investigative reports.[5] Over time the magazine became a mouthpiece for left-wing counterculture in the country.[5]

At the beginning of the 2000s the frequency of Frigidaire was switched to bi-monthly.[2] In 2003 Vincenzo Sparagna sold the publisher of the magazine,[6] which was temporarily ceased publication from April–May 2003 to 2006.[2]

In 2005, Sparagna moved the magazine's headquarters from Rome to a rural area near Giano. The estate, dubbed the 'Republic of Frigolandia', housed the magazine's museum. The estate acted like a micro-country, and was established with a constitution that values inclusion.[7]

On 25 April 2009 the magazine began to be published as an insert of Liberazione, a communist daily.

In September 2002, the covers and some selected pages of the magazine were exhibited at the 7th International Comics Festival in Athens.[1] Frigidaire’s archives are housed at Yale's Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library.

In 2020, a local right-wing party attempted to evict Sparagna from the Republic of Frigolandia, threatening the museum and its archives.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Frigidaire. Athens International Comics Festival. 17 August 2015. 6 March 2019. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20190306044141/http://www.aicf.gr/en/7o-festibal/tribute/frigidaire-magazine.
  2. Web site: Frigidaire. Slumberland. 17 August 2015. it.
  3. Federico Pagello. Cannibale, Frigidaire and the multitude: Post-1977 italian comics through radical theory. Studies in Comics. 10.1386/stic.3.2.231_1. December 2012. 3. 2. 231–251 .
  4. Book: Simone Castaldi. Drawn and Dangerous: Italian Comics of the 1970s and 1980s. Jackson, MS. 978-1-60473-777-6. 2010. University Press of Mississippi. 8.
  5. News: Michela Ruggeri. "Frigidaire" magazine and computer art. Arshake. 17 August 2015.
  6. News: Aldo Ricci. 'Frigidaire', abbasso la satira italiana!. Il Fatto Quotidiano. 17 August 2015. it.
  7. Web site: 23 July 2020. Protest Culture in Peril: Frigidaire under Threat in Italy Today. Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library. 5 June 2024.