Signed and numbered Haight & Ashbury giclée print
In 1992, Crumb sketched a drawing in his sketchbook illustrating the myth that he and his exwife Dana sold his first underground comic book from their baby carriage on the corner of Haight & Ashbury in San Francisco. That occurred, supposedly, in 1968. In fact, Crumb never really sold them for a baby carriage. Rather, Dana and her friend peddled the comics from store to store trying sell them wholesale. But it did start out as a very small scale operation from the hippie epicenter of the Haight-Ashbury neighborhood, which would soon include Berkeley. It may seem odd that Crumb decided to illustrate something that he's pretty sure never happened, but he was very amused with the story. It somehow seemed to capture the spirit of his fledgling enterprise perfectly, so he decided to illustrate it. Also, because Crumb was taking so much LSD and smoking so much marijauna at that time, there's the possibility that he might not be able to remember something that actually did happen. Thirty years later, in 2022, Crumb reworked that sketch and placed the real buildings on that corner of Haight & Ashbury in the background. He then colored the illustration with watercolors. We enlarged the drawing to a 14" x 18" size and printed it on white Somerset Velvet archival paper in a standard frame size of 18" x 24." The entire giclée edition of 300 prints is printed with Epson Ultrachrome inks, which are archival inks. Crumb numbered and signed his 25 artist proofs and gave us some to sell. We're putting the second one up for sale this summer. This one is #4/25.
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- Default Title — 640.00 USD — Out of stock
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