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Jim Woodring

Jim Woodring

Jim Woodring; artist, writer and prone to hallucinations.

Name:
Jim Woodring
Aliases:
Birth date:
October 11th, 1952
Home town:
Seattle
Country:
U.S.A
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Personal Life

Jim Woodring was born in Los Angeles in 1952 and enjoyed a childhood made interesting by frequent hallucinations, apparitions, disembodied voices and other psychological malfunctions. Despite the generally frightening nature of his delusions he learned to accept them as part of life and was accordingly a reasonably cheerful and good-natured child.

After barely graduating from high school, Woodring got a job as a Garbage man and lived in picturesque squalor as he set about the task of capturing his inner life in words and pictures.Some of these fledgling efforts were printed in various "underground" publications of the day: Two-bit Comics (a weekly tabloid), the Los Angeles Free Press, and an early effort at self-publishing, The Little Swimmer. Gradually he developed a number of serviceable drawing styles and became a full-time freelance cartoonist, doing work primarily for advertising agencies and public relations companies but also working on whatever projects came his way, such as student films and other collaborative art.

Career

Eventually Woodring landed a salaried job in an L.A. animation studio where he worked with the likes of Jack Kirby and Gil Kane.

In 1980 he self-published the first issue of his "illustrated autojournal," JIM, containing comics, drawings and stories drawn from his indelible ongoing childhood experiences.JIM was subsequently published as a 32-page magazine by Fantagraphics. Response was good enough to pursuade Woodring to leave animation and embark on a career as a full-time cartoon artist.

Since then he has drawn enough autobiographical material to fill a book (specifically the book of Jim), hundreds of pages of wordless FRANK comics (The Frank Book, The Lute String, The Museum of Love and Mystery, Pupshaw and Pushpaw, The Portable Frank and Weathercraft), designed dozens of vinyl and plastic toys (Crazy Newts, Imperial Newts, Dorbel, Mr. Bumper, Mantra, Jiva and Big Egypt Parlor Sphinx), produced numerous elaborate charcoal drawings and paintings, many if which are gathered in the 2005 collection Seeing Things, and written a handful of articles and essays (such as the introduction to New directions' 2008 Kenneth Patchen collection The Walking Away World).

In 2006 he and guitarist Bill Frisell received United states Artists Fellowships for their multi-media collaborations. He has received numerous other awards and honours, including an artist residency at San Fransisco's Yerba Buena Arts Center in 2009 and a Rasmussen Foundation-sponsored residency in Homer Alaska for March 2010.

Woodring now lives in Seattle with his family.

Issues

December 1990

May 1991

November 1991

December 1991

May 1992

August 1992

September 1992

November 1992

January 1993

March 1993

August 1993

September 1993

October 1993

March 1994

January 1995

June 1995

August 1995

February 1996

December 1997

January 1998

February 1998

September 1999

December 1999

January 2001

October 2007

December 2007

January 2010

April 2010

September 2011

September 2013

Volumes

1990

1991

1992

1993

1995

1996

1997

1999

2000

2005

2010

2011

2013

2018

2020

Characters