Comic Art Explained

Editor:Todd Hignite
Editor Title2:Assistant Editor
Editor2:Sara Rowe Hignite
Editor Title3:Design & Production
Editor3:Daniel Zimmer (#1 - #7), Jonathan Bennett (#8 & #9)
Publisher:M. Todd Hignite & Daniel Zimmer (#1 - #7), Buenaventura Press (#8 & #9)
Category:art magazines
Country:United States
Based:St. Louis, Missouri
Language:English
Issn:1542-7447

Comic Art was a magazine, founded and edited by Todd Hignite, which surveyed newspaper comic strips, magazine cartoon panels and comic book art, both historical and contemporary.[1]

History and profile

Comic Art was established in 2002.[2] The first seven issues featured articles on Art Spiegelman, Daniel Clowes, Harvey Kurtzman, Crockett Johnson and Frank King. According to critic Tom Spurgeon, "Comic Art is a comics publication that... has chosen to investigate the good and interesting no matter when it's been done."[3] Daniel Zimmer was the publication's graphic design and art director for the first seven issues. The eighth and ninth issues were expanded considerably and published annually in book form by Buenaventura Press. Alvin Buenaventura assisted Hignite with editing these two issues, and they were designed and art directed by Jonathan Bennett.

It is not connected with the original fanzine Comic Art, which was published (beginning in 1960) by Maggie and Don Thompson.

Publications

Awards

In 2003 the magazine was nominated for both the Eisner Awards and Harvey Awards, and won the 2004 Harvey Award for Best Historical, Biographical, or Journalistic Presentation.

In 2006, Yale University Press published a collection of Hignite's "In The Studio" columns in an expanded 320-page hardback, In the Studio: Visits with Contemporary Cartoonists, .

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: An Interview With Todd Hignite. November 20, 2016. The Comics Reporter. July 23, 2006.
  2. Book: Comic Art Magazine #1 (Comic Art Magazine, 1). January 2002 . November 20, 2016.
  3. http://www.comicsreporter.com/index.php/briefings/cr_reviews/822/ Tom Spurgeon (2005). Review of Comic Art #7.