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University of Chicago hosts an all-star comics conference at Logan Center

Art Spiegelman, Joe Sacco, Alison Bechdel + Chris Ware are among the speakers.

By Web Behrens
Published: May 17, 2012

377.ar.ar.op.Comics
Excerpt from Joe Sacco, Journalism (Metropolitan Books, 2012).
Excerpt from Chris Ware, Building Stories (Pantheon, 2012).
Hillary Chute
  • Excerpt from Joe Sacco, Journalism (Metropolitan Books, 2012).

    Excerpt from Joe Sacco, Journalism (Metropolitan Books, 2012).

    Photo: Joe Sacco377.ar.ar.op.Comics.jpgExcerpt from Joe Sacco, Journalism (Metropolitan Books, 2012).153570411
  • Excerpt from Chris Ware, Building Stories (Pantheon, 2012).

    Excerpt from Chris Ware, Building Stories (Pantheon, 2012).

    Photo: Courtesy of Pantheon377.ar.ar.op.Comics.2Ware.jpgExcerpt from Chris Ware, Building Stories (Pantheon, 2012).153570362
  • Hillary Chute

    Hillary Chute

    Photo: Kris Snibbe377.ar.ar.op.Comics.1Chute.jpgHillary Chute153570313

Excerpt from Joe Sacco, Journalism (Metropolitan Books, 2012).

Photo: Joe Sacco

Comics Philosophy and Practice | slideshow
Daniel Clowes, detail of original cover art for Ghost World, 1997.
Alison Bechdel, detail of excerpt from Are You My Mother?, 2012.
Phoebe Gloeckner, art from a forthcoming novel about the murders of young women in Ciudad Juárez.
Ivan Brunetti, detail of “An Interview with Ivan Brunetti” from the Yale University Press Fall 2008 catalogue.
Charles Burns, detail of excerpt from Black Hole (Pantheon, 2005).
Seth, detail of excerpt from The Great Northern Brotherhood of Canadian Cartoonists (Drawn and Quarterly, 2011).
Art Spiegelman, "A Jew in Rostock," The New Yorker, 1992; republished in MetaMaus (Pantheon, 2011).
Justin Green, detail of an excerpt from Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary, republished by McSweeney's (using scans of Green's original art) in...
  • Daniel Clowes, detail of original cover art for Ghost World, 1997.

    Daniel Clowes, detail of original cover art for Ghost World, 1997.

    Photo: © Daniel Clowes373.ar.Comics.Clowes.jpgDaniel Clowes, detail of original cover art for Ghost World, 1997.153679561
  • Alison Bechdel, detail of excerpt from Are You My Mother?, 2012.

    Alison Bechdel, detail of excerpt from Are You My Mother?, 2012.

    Photo: © Alison Bechdel, courtesy of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company377.ar.Comics.Bechdel.jpgAlison Bechdel, detail of excerpt from Are You My Mother?, 2012.153679662
  • Phoebe Gloeckner, art from a forthcoming novel about the murders of young women in Ciudad Juárez.

    Phoebe Gloeckner, art from a forthcoming novel about the murders of young women in Ciudad Juárez.

    Photo: Courtesy of the artist373.ar.Comics.Gloeckner.jpgPhoebe Gloeckner, art from a forthcoming novel about the murders of young women in Ciudad Juárez.153679613
  • Ivan Brunetti, detail of “An Interview with Ivan Brunetti” from the Yale University Press Fall 2008 catalogue.

    Ivan Brunetti, detail of “An Interview with Ivan Brunetti” from the Yale University Press Fall 2008 catalogue.

    Photo: Courtesy of Yale University Press377.ar.Comics.Brunetti.jpgIvan Brunetti, detail of “An Interview with Ivan Brunetti” from the Yale University Press Fall 2008 catalogue.153679714
  • Charles Burns, detail of excerpt from Black Hole (Pantheon, 2005).

    Charles Burns, detail of excerpt from Black Hole (Pantheon, 2005).

    Photo: Courtesy of Pantheon377.ar.Comics.Burns.jpgCharles Burns, detail of excerpt from Black Hole (Pantheon, 2005).153679765
  • Seth, detail of excerpt from The Great Northern Brotherhood of Canadian Cartoonists (Drawn and Quarterly, 2011).

    Seth, detail of excerpt from The Great Northern Brotherhood of Canadian Cartoonists (Drawn and Quarterly, 2011).

    Photo: Courtesy of Drawn and Quarterly377.ar.Comics.Seth.jpgSeth, detail of excerpt from The Great Northern Brotherhood of Canadian Cartoonists (Drawn and Quarterly, 2011).153679816
  • Art Spiegelman, "A Jew in Rostock," The New Yorker, 1992; republished in MetaMaus (Pantheon, 2011).

    Art Spiegelman, "A Jew in Rostock," The New Yorker, 1992; republished in MetaMaus (Pantheon, 2011).

    Photo: Courtesy of Pantheon377.ar.Comics.Spiegelman.jpgArt Spiegelman, "A Jew in Rostock," The New Yorker, 1992; republished in MetaMaus (Pantheon, 2011). 153679867
  • Justin Green, detail of an excerpt from Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary, republished by McSweeney's (using scans of Green's original art) in...

    Justin Green, detail of an excerpt from Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary, republished by McSweeney's (using scans of Green's original art) in 2009.

    Photo: Courtesy of the artist and McSweeney's377.Comics.Green.jpgJustin Green, detail of an excerpt from Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary, republished by McSweeney's (using scans of Green's original art) in...153679918

Daniel Clowes, detail of original cover art for Ghost World, 1997.

Photo: © Daniel Clowes

Hillary Chute has revealed her superpower: wrangling 17 of the heaviest hitters in the literary comics world for the Comics: Philosophy and Practice conference, happening Friday 18 through Sunday 20.

Some of her favorite interactions have been with R. Crumb, who doesn’t correspond by e-mail. When I spoke with Chute earlier this month, the University of Chicago assistant professor of English read from a postcard Crumb sent in March. The conference schedule, he wrote, “looks okay to me. My biggest fear about such panels is that the audience will become bored. I try to be entertaining and not too serious or intellectual. This is, after all, about comic books.”

“I thought that was hilarious,” Chute says, adding that she’s on the same page as Crumb. “I’m excited to have conversations that aren’t too dry but are content-driven, serious conversations about where the field is going.”

The conference invites lauded sequential-art creators with a wide array of styles: Chris Ware and his architecturally precise layouts; Art Spiegelman and his moody black-and-white illustrations; Lynda Barry and her whimsically sketchy cartoons. Given that the roster also includes notables such as Alison Bechdel (who’s co-teaching an autobiography class with Chute), Joe Sacco and Daniel Clowes, it’s no surprise the free event hit capacity hours after registration opened. Still, Chute expects room for walk-ups. Unclaimed tickets will be released 15 minutes before each event. (Advice to hopefuls: Camp out early. The U. of Chicago will also webcast most of the conference live at on.fb.me/uchicagolive.)

What I didn’t expect for an event that intends to consider the future of comics were Chute’s own predictions about the medium. Though many publishing houses are increasingly delving into online distribution, she admits to having little interest in digital formats.

“Honestly, I’m such a print-culture person, that hasn’t been one of my areas of focus,” says Chute, author of Graphic Women (a 2010 study of five female cartoonists from Columbia University Press) and associate editor of Spiegelman’s MetaMaus (Pantheon). She’s an unabashed champion of the book format: “Although it seems anachronistic, I think that’s where the field is going. The graphic novel is upholding an interest in material objects among readers.”

Via e-mail, Sacco—an American Book Award winner whose nonfiction comics depict war zones such as Palestine and Bosnia—explains he’s not much interested in the so-called digital revolution, either. “Of course it’s possible to draw something specifically for the tablets,” he acknowledges. “I’m just not inclined to do that. If anything, I want to draw larger.”

Chute and Sacco are both struck by the increase in museums and galleries showcasing comic-book pages. (The Museum of Contemporary Art, which devoted a 2006 exhibition to Ware, will present Clowes’s traveling retrospective in 2013.) “I’m always interested in seeing my peers’ work on a wall,” Sacco notes. “It’s nice to see the brush or pen work up close to understand what physically has been done. But ultimately, the real object is the book. Comics are meant for the printed page. So I understand the gallery interest, but I’m somewhat ambivalent about it.”

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