After a Century- Comics Strips are Given the Stamp of Approval... And The Approval of
STAMPS

by Rick Marschall

The hundredth anniversary of the comic strip is around the corner—1995 or 1996, depending on how you read history, which means that celebrations will logically and happily occur over two years—and it has taken only the slowest amongst us by surprise. For some time our small band of comics scholars and popular-culture feuilletonists have looked toward the Centennial (yes, it’s momentous enough to merit capitalization) as more than an excuse for late-night parties in front of R.F. Outcault’s birthplace. Through all the years of articles, books, speeches and Ph.D. theses; for all the apologia in conferences and symposia; despite the many attempts to mount serious museum and gallery considerations of the comics as an art form... by and large we are still making same desperate arguments to closed ears, hard hearts, and stiff necks; and to the same effect. The critical establishment, the cultural elite, still regards comics as a vulgar trifle instead of the vital—and indigenous—art form that it is. For the most part, when museums like the Whitney and MoMA focus on comics it is for strips’ amusingly recondite lowest-common-denominator appeal, or their mere service as reference-points for modern artists. For years the Museum of Cartoon Art mounted notable exhibitions and The New York Times accorded increasing space to them: fine. But the most ink the Times ever gave MoCA was when scores of Dick Tracy and Prince Valiant originals were stolen in an inside job. To add insult to injury, the congenitally staid Times hoked up the headlines, calling for Dick Tracy himself to crack the case. (When Munch’s The Scream was stolen from an Oslo museum last year, did the Times or anyone else suggest that distraught art lovers scurry across bridges with their hands astride their heads and mouths open like knotholes?) The answer—and an appropriate manifesto for the comics’ second hundred years—is to leave the incestuous group of insiders alone. Let their galleries and museums promote artists with less talent and certainly less enduring significance than average cartoonists. They can be happy; the dupes who attend and purchase can be happy; and we’ll save time—and be happy ourselves, knowing the comics are a unique art form, a precious form of communication, a plastic medium of ideas, excitement, commentary, humor, and fantasy, and a marvelous mirror of the culture that produces them. Numbers alone do not confer status upon art forms, but there are some numbers worth considering here. Twenty millions of images have beenproduced in comics’ century, testimony at leastto the solidity of this fluid form. And numbers—of readers, of production activities, of references—count for somethingin a society whereour culture is defined and continues to assert itself by such numbers. It istime to recognize that America is not a cultural cipher or (as the art-critic thugspropagate) that we must define our arts in terms of traditions of canvas, concert halls, ancient literature, and stages. Comics should not be crammed into the nearest semi-logical cubbyhole, there to be more easily denigrated, but rather should be seen as an independent and dynamic form. Let other, perhaps future, forms of expression claim to be “similar” to comics, or in the tradition of the strip form. As comics close out their first hundred years, we look ahead not just at a new century but a new millenium, and we should redefine our place in society, in cultural traditions, and be proud rather than apologetic for the comics’ role—both inthe rich century just ending, and the exciting future. Suddenly... look who’s on this soapbox with us. An unlikely ally in the battle for comics’ legitimacy and larger acceptance is one of America’s primary grantors of various imprimaturs: the United StatesPostal Service! This is not trivial norwithout positive consequence. I have been the consultant to the USPS on the project that will bring more than 200-million stamps before the public early next year. Twenty stamps will compose the American Comic-Strip Classics set. The USPS is confident that correspondents will be attracted, that collectors will have special interest, that foreign sales will be high. I am fascinated as much by what is not happening as by what is. I have been among many who have long advocated such recognition by the Postal Service (in the old nemo magazine I urged a petition-campaign for block-sets pairing cartoonists and their creations; the MoCA led cartoonists to advocate strip-stamps in their syndicated features; and so forth), but among the factors I thought doomed the prospects were the traditional arguments against comics as worthy of respect—see above—and visions of angry protestors picketing local post offices, their placards decrying taxpayers’ money being spent on, yuk, comics. More, after all the lines we’ve crossed to bring us to this enlightened age, how could stamps be politically correct (what was that strip about the black female poetess who organized disabled rural cloggers?). Well, those visions have not materialized, nor does the USPS think they will. With the commercial success of the Elvis stamp the committees are not chary of mass appeal nor overt plans to that end; and with the surprising success of the Al Hirschfeld caricatures on stamps they realize that cartoons can be user-friendly. Other obstacles in my mind were not obstacles. The USPS has a policy of not picturing living people on stamps; you have to be dead in this country to be commemorated on a postage stamp (reflecting the old adage that Americans never know when they’re licked), and I wondered about depicting strips and characters that are still running. Commercials? Copyright problems? No, the USPS wants to celebrate American icons no matter their status; and copyrights theywill deal with in a straightforward manner. Huzzah. Sometimes stamp-sheets feature selvage—information about the series printed on the larger sheet—but for only the second time in US Postal history (the first being Legends of the West, currently in production too) stamps will feature information on the backs of the stamps, under the glue. I have been chosen to write this data, which will include facts about the creators, the start-dates of the strips, and miscellaneous details about the characters. Unfortunately the space is virtually postage-stamp size (actually, they will be oversized horizontal commemoratives) but we’ll get the basics covered. There will also be a collectors’ book produced and sold through mail-order and the nation’s 1600 post offices. I have been asked to write a history of the comics featuring the 20 strips of this series and their characters; so it will be a highlight narrative. But we will include other strips and characters, material about the larger movements in comics history; and the illustrations will be many, with 20 of them designed to merge with the stamps’ images. At deadline for this issue of Hogan’s Alley the stamps are still being designed. In some cases I have nominated dozens and dozens of images for strip characters; and more than 15 designs have been changed in recent weeks from earlier dummies and mock-ups. (In spite of their marked-confidentiality, early prototypes have circulated.) The stamps will be released early in 1995, with a first-day of issue location yet to be decided at press time. Hogan’s Alley readers will be informed of this and other details in our next issue. Now to the 29-cent question: what strips will be featured? Here they are,the result of many nominations, long discussions, many levels of decisions, and input from designers, consultants, and postal authorities: The Yellow Kid; The Katzenjammer Kids; Little Nemo in Slumberland; Bringing Up Father; Krazy Kat; Rube Goldberg’s Inventions; Toonerville Folks; Gasoline Alley; Barney Google;Little Orphan Annie; Popeye; Blondie; Dick Tracy; Alley Oop; Nancy; Flash Gordon; Li’l Abner; Terry and the Pirates; Prince Valiant; and—stick with me here, it’s still a debate at press time, and most readers will know where my vote is—either Brenda Starr or Pogo. There were some arbitrary rules imposed—for instance, about strips created subsequent to 1950—which left out many favorites like Peanuts, Dennis the Menace, B.C., Beetle Bailey, and Calvin and Hobbes. But neither stamp fans nor comics fans should despair. Another series could follow, and we have already begun discussions about comic-book character series; the stars of animation; political cartoonists’ icons and subjects; and, again, the cartoonists themselves. Unlike postage stamps, dreams cannot be cancelled. And as we witness this dream-come-true about recognition for the comics, let us all abandon the thought, so often expressed, that philately will get you nowhere.