| Krigstein,Bernard | ||||
| I think that there have been
only three true geniuses in the field of comic books and, oddly enough, each
of their names begin with the letter "K".
Jack Kirby
defined the form and the language of the comic book, creating the shorthand
and conventions still in use (or still very much ignored) today.
Harvey
Kurtzman took the content of the comic book to new levels of both
relevance and reality, and taught it how to really laugh, too. But it was
Bernard Krigstein who saw the, as yet unrealized, potential of
the medium and began to explore the notion of defining time and speed with
the comic panels and the spaces between them. Krigstein began working in comics in 1943 at the age of 24. This early foray was interrupted by military service, but he returned to the field in 1947. These early stories betray little of the deep exploration and understanding of the medium that was to follow. At EC in the early 1950's, Krigstein worked with Kurtzman and the two geniuses were at complete loggerheads with each other. Kurtzman's meticulously laid out story telling conflicted on almost every level with Krigstein's experimentation with panel breakdown and the use of the panel to slow down or speed up the reading process. The relationship didn't last long and it was a very stormy one. It's too bad, because I've always imagined that an exploration of the medium by these two in collaboration could and should have been awesome.
The oft-reprinted wordless sequence
above is from Krigstein's one chance at EC to tell a story his way.
It's from Impact #1 (Mar-Apr 1955) and is the denouement of "Master
These samples and virtually all of Krigstein's EC work are to be found in Russ Cochran's glorious b&w reprint series of boxed hardbound books, many still available from Bud Plant Comic Art.
It was during this period that he expanded
his market to books. Real books. In 1955 he brought his knowledge of
action and art to the service of a book on baseball. How to Play Baseball
by M.G. Bonner took his skills to their logical conclusion. The fluid motion
and his solid knowledge of the way the human body worked combined with the
opportunity for a multiplicity of movements in service to an instructional
text was As he was weaning himself from comics (and
comics were becoming less rewarding), he moved more and more into mainstream
book illustration and teaching. Abortive attempts at starting an artist's
union had left him disenchanted with his fellows and with the industry. The
lure of art with a capital A, watercolors, oils, experimentation with no
restrictions and the financial security of commercial art and a secure
teaching
Love Affair, from 1958 left, shows Krigstein's "commercial" side, as do the quartet of titles below.
Fine art was his final calling and after a few more side trips into magazine and text book illustration, and even one last 1962 comic book job, he spent the remainder of his life painting the things that he wanted to paint and that brought him joy. I hope that someday a definitive book on Krigstein will be published. Then the world will see a many-faceted artist who could have raised the comic book medium to an artistic level that has never and probably will never be attained. We're left with some very tantalizing glimpses of what might have been.... |
||||
|
Information supplied by: http://www.bpib.com/illustrat/krigstei.htm |