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Ohio State University logo University Libraries arrow Cartoon Research Library
Cartoon Research Library
Untitled Document
Korean Comics:A Society through Small Frames
Sugar & Spice: Little Girls in the Funnies
A Tale of the Jungle Imps by Felix Fiddle
Drawn on Stone: Political Prints from the 1830s and 1840s
Kate Salley Palmer: Born to Cartoon
The Yellow Kid: Hero of Hogan's Alley
The Sting of The Wasp
Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend
Humor in a Jugular Vein: A Selection of the Art and Artifacts of MAD Magazine
Hoo-Boy! Morrie Brickman’s The Small Society
Cartoons by Leland S. McClelland: A Retrospective Exhibition
Cartooning AIDS Around the World
Jewish Cartoonists and the American Experience
Paul Palnik: The Fine Art of the Cartoon from Generation to Generation
Seventy-fifth Birthday of Barney Google and Snuffy Smith
Bill Crawford: A Retrospective Exhibition
A Tribute to Milton Caniff
Untitled Document
September 22 - December 31
Sam Milai
of the Pittsburgh Courier

 

Jeff Smith:  Before Bone
May 1-September 5, 2008

Jeff Smith brought a much more polished feature to the campus newspaper than most student cartoonists.  From its inception, Thorn, the title of Smith’s Lantern strip which was named after its female protagonist, exhibited an unusual level of sophistication.  The strip demonstrated very capable manipulation of layout and design coupled with time-honored comic strip narrative techniques.  It is interesting to note that by his early twenties, Smith clearly grasped the power of epic narrative, even though the storyline of Thorn, while sophisticated and entertaining, was not linear. 

The vantage point of a quarter century and the phenomenal international success of Bone make us see Jeff Smith’s college cartoons in a different perspective than we did when they first ran in The Lantern.  At Ohio State University, the student newspaper describes itself as a “laboratory newspaper,” and it served that purpose very successfully for Smith.  He used Thorn both to hone his artistic skills and to experiment with several types of storytelling.  From a sketchbook page to finished comic strips, this exhibition celebrates the education of a young man.  

A signed and numbered catalogue limited to 500 copies is available.  It reprints all of the Thorn comic strips in this exhibit and has an introduction by Jeff Smith, a foreword by his colleague Jim Kammerud and an essay by Lucy Shelton Caswell.  The volume is available from the library for $25 per copy.   All proceeds from the sale of this catalogue will benefit the Cartoon Research Library.

To order Jeff Smith: Before Bone, complete this FORM