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Herriman sent the Dingbat Family on vacation in one comic strip; during this time, he changed the comic strip's name, first to Krazy Kat and I. Mouse, before settling on the name Krazy Kat.
A whimsical comic strip, a rich linguistic debate and a cartoonist’s hidden story intertwine in this exploration of "Krazy Kat," surrealism and the layered meaning of words.
Among the collection was a 1938 George Herriman “Krazy Kat” comic, a 1937 “Prince Valiant” comic by King Features, and a 1937 Mickey Mouse cartoon that Walt Disney produced for a Sunday daily.
If you've never read a Krazy Kat comic prior, do yourself a favor and seek them out. It's a Platinum Age staple and is one series that fans of old comics and comic historians shouldn't miss. These ...
Of all classic comic strips, George Her­riman’s Krazy Kat was the most bril­liantly formulaic. For over 30 years, the daily installment climaxed more often than not wi1h the strip’s ...
Seeking an everyman as a focus for his recent paintings, Vonn Cummings Sumner found a cat — or kat, as the word was spelled in George Herriman’s 1913-1944 comic strip, “Krazy Kat.” Sumner ...
Krazy & Ignatz: The Kat Who Walked in Beauty: The Panoramic Dailies of 1920 George Herriman, . . Fantagraphics, $29.95 (114pp) ISBN 978-1-56097-854-1 ...
If you want to escape from reality for eighty minutes this week, check out the show Krazy Kat, featuring a kaleidoscope of existential characters as they explore the forces of life, love, and the ...