4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM
Four Color 454

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COMIC DETAILS

Comic Description: Four Color 454
Grade: 9.4
Page Quality: OFF-WHITE TO WHITE
Certification #: 0202007005
Owner: 4GEMWORKS

SET DETAILS

Custom Sets: This comic is not in any custom sets.
Sets Competing: 4GEMWORKS COMPLETE FOUR COLOR EMPORIUM  Score: 180
Research: See CGC's Census Report for this Comic

Owner's Description

Krazy Kat Comics 2/53 Adapted from the newspaper strip "Krazy Kat" by George Herriman. First Krazy Kat Four Color to appear after the regular Krazy Kat (Dell, 1951 series) title ends with #5 (August-October 1952).
Cover Art: Dan Gormley
Pencils: Dan Gormley and Lloyd White
Inks: Dan Gormley and Suzanne Seaborne


This is the single best of four copies graded to date. 04/13. I originally bought this ungraded as a VF+ from Metropolis.



Table of Contents
1. 0. [no title indexed]
Krazy Kat
2. 1. Koon-Skin Kapers
Krazy Kat
3. 2. [Anticipating the New Highway]
Krazy Kat
4. 3. [Bubble Bath]
Krazy Kat and Ignatz
5. 4. [Deputy Krazy]
Krazy Kat
6. 5. [Rubber Horse at Beach]
Ignatz Mouse
7. 6. [Blowing up Balloons]
Ignatz Also the back cover of this copy. AD backs variants did not appear to have started at this point.

Some data courtesy of the Grand Comics Database under a Creative Commons Attribution license. http://www.comics.org/
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/legalcode
http://www.comics.org/issue/173227/

Krazy Kat had a zig zag career. Don Markstein's Toonopedia™ provides additional and very interesting information about the history of Krazy Kat.

In 1924, art critic Gilbert Seldes devoted a chapter in his book The Seven Lively Arts to Krazy Kat and her (his?) creator, George Herriman — making Krazy the first comic strip character, and Herriman the first comic strip artist, to receive serious critical appraisal from the world of letters. Others, such as Crockett Johnson's Barnaby, Walt Kelly's Pogo and Jack Kent's King Aroo, would follow, but Krazy Kat was the first.
For a darling of the intelligentsia, Krazy's beginnings were rather obscure and inauspicious. During the 19-aughts, Herriman had produced a number of short-lived comic strips for the organization that later evolved into King Features Syndicate, including Baron Mooch, Gooseberry Sprigg and Major Ozone's Fresh Air Crusade. In 1910, he was doing a regular feature sometimes called The Family Upstairs and sometimes The Dingbat Family. (At the time, the word "dingbat" referred to a typographic ornament, something used to break up masses of gray wordage on a page — a meaning it still retains in the printing trade. It was Herriman's strip that gave it its present meaning, i.e., a person who is about as smart as a typographic dingbat.)
Herriman got in the habit of running an extra gag across the bottom of the Dingbat strip, about their cat and a resident mouse. In his words, it was done "to fill up the waste space" — but the gags grew more complex, and the cat and mouse characters richer and more fully rounded. On July 26, 1910, the mouse hurled a brick at the cat, thus inaugurating a major element of a relationship that would last over a third of a century. — and be remembered so long that as recently as 1995, a very similar scene, taken from a Herriman drawing, appeared on a U.S. postage stamp.
In 1913, Krazy Kat moved out into a daily strip of his (her?) own. While its "Kokonino Kounty" landscape sported dozens of unique characters, including Mrs. Kwak Wakk, "Bum Bill" Bee, Don Kiyote and Kolin Kelly the brickmaker, at its heart stood a triangle — Ignatz Mouse, obsessed with beaning Krazy with a brick; Krazy Kat, who mistook the repeated assaults for affection; and Offissa Pupp, who expressed his unrequited love for Krazy by repeatedly jailing the miscreant mouse.
A weekly page began on April 23, 1916 — but instead of appearing in color, with the Sunday comics, it was printed in black and white in the Hearst papers' art and drama sections. Thus, Krazy was introduced to a new audience, one that looked down its nose at ordinary comic strips. It was among such people that the strip found its most vocally appreciative readers.
With the general public, however, Krazy Kat was never very popular. Those who liked it loved it, and would carry on enthusiastically about its subtleties and finely tuned character relations; but the majority, less sensitive to those subtleties, were unable to see its appeal. Among its admirers was William Randolph Hearst, who owned King Features Syndicate. That's why King Features wouldn't drop the strip, despite the fact that it was carried by fewer than 50 papers.
Dell Comics published ten Krazy Kat comic books between 1950 and '56, and Gold Key reprinted one of them in 1964. But these scarcely bear mentioning.
In 1944, King Features, following its standard practice upon the departure of a strip's creator, gave Krazy Kat to a new artist. When Hearst saw the result, he asked why his syndicate would distribute such sub-standard material. He was told that Herriman had died on April 25 of that year. Hearst immediately ordered the strip's cancellation, making it the very first syndicate-owned comic to end as a result of its creator's death.
Today, Krazy is popular enough to sell copies whenever the strips are reprinted in book form. But his (her?) popularity generally holds to a similar pattern. Comics Revue, America's premier comic strip reprint publication, runs a half-dozen Krazy Kat daily strips in each monthly issue. As numbers go, it's the magazine's least popular feature — but the readers who do like it usually list it as their favorite.

Copied and used with specific permission from GiGi Dane, the widow of the late Don Markstein. Please visit their site: http://www.toonopedia.com/articles/susie-q.htm



 
 
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