Courtesy of Will Eisner’s exhibition, AIPT can share the original Will Einer art featured in the exhibition. Will Eisner’s exhibition will be open to the public from February 13th to Saturday, March 8th. There will be an opening reception on February 13th from 6pm to 9pm.
The Philippe Labaune Gallery is located at 534 West 24th Street in New York and is open Thursday through Saturday from 10am to 6pm.
“Eisner believed that the power of cartoon lies in its ability to convey complex ideas through both words and images,” said Philip Laverne. “Eisner’s innovation was not limited to his own craft. He also defended the comic book medium as a serious art form. His educational efforts were made to pose a distinction between comic book and art. It helped him fill the gap and made him a central figure in the movement to enhance comics as a legitimate literary effort.”
Check out your pencils and then inked art in each slideshow below!
For more information about the gallery, please see the press release below!
This month, the famous Philip Lavern Gallery in New York City will be exhibited across the artwork career of legendary cartoonist Will Eisner, featuring groundbreaking works from every stage of the artist’s career from 1941 to 2002. We will hold a meeting. , the exhibition honors offer a significant contribution to Eisner’s artistic vision and medium, providing an opportunity to first-hand experience the creativity and innovation behind his iconic works. In addition to the pages of wartime paintings, Eisner’s beloved spirits and New York’s metropolitan comic strips, the exhibition features almost complete sequential presentations of his covenant with God: Super.
Known as the father of graphic novels, Will Eisner’s comic career began in 1936 when his comics were featured in WOW magazines. From there, pioneering artists and writers created the fan-favorite hero The Spirit, and helped shape the comic book medium as we know today. The Covenant with God is considered to be the first modern graphic novel and continues to be the holy grail of sequential art. Written years after the death of her young daughter to leukemia, the Covenant with God is Eisner’s most personal work, consisting of four stories set in a tenement in the Bronx. “Super” is a bleak and moving quest for tension between the tenant and its director, reminding readers that nothing is as simple as it looks. Eisner’s passion for comic book format and deep empathy can be found on every page.
“Eisner believed that the power of cartoon lies in its ability to convey complex ideas through both words and images,” said Philip Laverne. “Eisner’s innovation was not limited to his own craft. He also defended the comic book medium as a serious art form. His educational efforts were made to pose a distinction between comic book and art. It helped him fill the gap and made him a central figure in the movement to enhance comics as a legitimate literary effort.”
The Philippe Labaune Gallery is located at 534 West 24th Street in New York and is open Thursday through Saturday from 10am to 6pm. The Philippe Labaune Gallery’s roots have a strong European influence. Among the artists are respected creators such as Lorenzo Mattotti, Nicolas de Crécy, Guido Crepax, Dave Mc Kean, and François Schuiten. In recent years, American artists such as Landis Blair, Rebecca Reveil Guai, Frank Miller and Peter De Save have been cultivated by the Philip Laverne Gallery, which cultivates overlapping communities of art collectors and comic fans around the world. It helped me.
Will Eisner’s exhibition will be open to the public from February 13th to Saturday, March 8th. The opening reception will be held on February 13th from 6pm to 9pm.
