Showing posts with label S. CLAY WILSON. Show all posts
Showing posts with label S. CLAY WILSON. Show all posts

Monday, September 3, 2018

The International Comix Conspiracy

Playboy, December 1970

Although the underground movement changed the face of comics and begat alternative comics, part of it was another boys' club, and Playboy was there to cover the aspects of it that would be of interest to its readers.
January 1970
November 1970
And here was an ad from the December 1970 issue, artist unknown

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Drug Humor

Stoned people had a somewhat eclectic sense of humor. Usually they would print work by well-known underground cartoonists like S. Clay Wilson  photo 6-6-1_zps2cfbd8c8.jpg Then there were those by cartoonists who weren't as well-known, maybe local, maybe not on a par with the bigger names, but somewhat talented in their own right.  photo 6-6-2_zps2db23d86.jpg And people who went on to bigger things.  photo 6-6-3_zps3dd64c7a.jpg  photo 6-6-4_zpsf9091a9d.jpg  photo 6-6-5_zpsf187fe54.jpg Often papers such as the National Weed might get strips from syndicates and be able to print strips by people like Gilbert Shelton...  photo 6-6-6natlweed_zpsa896f84e.jpg ...or Kim Deitch...  photo 6-6-7_zps163991f8.jpg ...or Bill Griffith...  photo 6-6-8_zpsa4d96aac.jpg ...or Spain Rodriguez...  photo 6-6-9_zpsaf6acf42.jpg ...but a lot of the time it was things like this... ...plus things that were probably funny when really stoned...  photo 6-6-11SoCalOracle1967-08p02_zps1acae062.jpg ...or just things that made sense only when stoned.  photo 6-6-13_zps6e1ca223.jpg Why psychedelics? Because often it's the only way to understand something like the above.  photo 6-6-14_zps8f55820b.jpg Often I wonder what the sponsors thought of the finished ads when they saw them, if these were done by the newspaper staff.  photo 6-6-15_zps7e6b9947.jpg Are you enticed to seek their product because of the execution of these ads? I mean besides as places to possibly find killer weed.  photo 6-6-16_zps624abac1.jpg I'm just waiting for someone to come out of nowhere and say “Hey, I did this art. Why are you making fun of it, man?”  photo 6-6-17_zpsa9a04f14.jpg  photo 6-6-18_zps26cfd339.jpg

Saturday, June 5, 2010

The Great Speckled Post

Some of this was in The Complete Crumb Comics, but here it is in its original context, from the December 1970 ESQUIRE.







Apparently, the original caption to the S. Clay Wilson cartoon was “What's come over you, Bernice?” but deemed too dirty for them. What do you expect when you hire underground cartoonists for a mainstream magazine?

I'm not sure who did the Henry Syverson parody.

from ESQUIRE, October 1957