Tag Archives: exhibit

Superheroes in Court!


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The Yale Law School’s Lillian Goldman Law Library has an exhibit running titled Superheroes in Court! Lawyers, Law and Comic Books.  The guest curator for the exhibition is Mark S. Zaid, Esq., a Washington, D.C. attorney who specializes in national security law.  Zaid is a comic book collector, dealer, advisor to the Overstreet Comic Book Price & Grading Guides and a co-founder of the Comic Book Collecting Association.

The exhibition is on display Sept. 6 to Dec. 16, 2010, in the Rare Book Exhibition Gallery, located on Level L2 of the Lillian Goldman Law Library in the Yale Law School (127 Wall St., New Haven CT). The exhibition is open to the public. Highlights of the exhibition will appear in installments here in the Yale Law Library Rare Books Blog.

In addition, Mark Zaid will give an exhibition talk on Sept. 30 at 1:00pm in the Yale Law School.

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Graphic Details: Confessional Comics by Jewish Women


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Cartoon Art MuseumGraphic Details: Confessional Comics by Jewish Women opens at San Francisco’s Cartoon Art Museum on October 1.  The exhibit features work by Vanessa Davis, Bernice Eisenstein, Sarah Glidden, Miriam Katin, Aline Kominsky-Crumb, Miss Lasko-Gross, Miriam Libicki, Corinne Pearlman, Sarah Lightman, Sarah Lazarovic, Diane Noomin, Trina Robbins, Racheli Rottner, Sharon Rudahl, Laurie Sandell, Ariel Schrag, Lauren Weinstein, and Ilana Zeffren.

You can check out the details on Graphic Details on it’s blog or become a friend on Facebook.

German Museum Says Shalom to Jewish Comic Creators

JOHN MACDOUGALL, AFP / Getty Images


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Heroes, Freaks and Superrabbis — the Jewish Colour of Comics, is the latest exhibit by the Berlin Jewish Museum.  It looks at 45 Jewish comic creators who are some of the most successful comic artists.  An example is Superman creators Jerry Siegel and Joe Schuster, who named their creation Kal-El, which is also a Hebrew word meaning “voice of God.”

Much of the exhibit, which opened April 30, deals with how Siegel and Schuster, as well as Kirby, Simon and other New York comic book writers, dealt with the issues of World War II.

New York-based Rabbi Simcha Weinstein thinks heroes share a lot with their Jewish creators ancestry.  A topic he explored in his 2007 book Up, Up, and Oy Vey! Doesn’t Spider-man/Peter Parker share the neurotic, nebbish quality of Jewish comedians like Jerry Seinfeld and Woody Allen?

The exhibit is on display until August 8.

An exhibition of the Musée d’art et d’histoire du Judaïsme in Paris and the Joods Historisch Museum in Amsterdam in cooperation with the Jewish Museum Berlin.

Superman was the work of Jewish cartoonists—as were Batman, Spiderman, and other superheroes of the era. Ever since the comic strip was invented in the immigrant neighborhoods of New York, Jewish artists have played a key role in developing the medium. The exhibition draws on the work of over forty artists to trace the history of Jewish illustrators, scriptwriters and publishers of comics throughout the twentieth century. It presents heroes and anti-heroes, hard-hitting opponents of Hitler, and neurotic petty bourgeois. With over 400 objects on display, it spans an arc from the first superhero comics of the 1930s and 1940s, through the underground scene of the 1960s, to the more challenging literary format of our time, the graphic novel.
Veterans of the medium such as Rube Goldberg, Will Eisner and Harvey Kurtzman are represented along with contemporary artists such as Art Spiegelman, Rutu Modan, Joann Sfar and Ben Katchor by numerous original drawings, sketches, and comic books.

When: 30 April—8 August 2010. Opening: 29 April 2010 at 7 p.m.
Where: Jewish Museum Berlin, Old Building, Level 1
Admission: 4 euros, reduced: 2 euros

Comics Exhibit in Pittsburgh


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If you’re in the Pittsburgh area we recommend you head over to the 709 Penn Gallery is holding an exhibit of artist and writer Christopher Moeller’s work.

Moeller has done work for Dark Horse Comics, Caliber Comics and DC Comics, according to his website. He has done more than 100 illustrations for the trading card game, “Magic: the Gathering,” and has also done illustrations for another trading card game based on “World of Warcraft.”

Currently, Moeller writes and produces his own comics, called “Iron Empires.” He has thus far published two such graphic novels titled “Faith Conquers” and “Sheva’s War,” according to his site. He’s also published three comics with pre-established characters.

Chris MoellerOff the Page: The Comic Book and Game Art of Christopher Moeller

March 5 through April 25

709 Penn Gallery

Wed/Th — 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Fri/Sat — 11a.m. to8 p.m.

Sun — 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.

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