Month: March 2012 (page 5 of 6)

Will Eisner Week: Gre-Solvent

Drawn by a 19 year old Will Eisner as a commercial job for the cleaning product “Gre-Solvent”; without the strip below Eisner & Iger Studio (also known as Syndicated Features Corporation) may have never existed.

"Gre-Solvent" Advertisement drawn by Will Eisner. From The Will Eisner Collection, of The Ohio State University Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum

In 1936 after the dissolve of Samuel Maxwell “Jerry” Iger’s Wow, What a Magazine!, Iger and Eisner teamed up with the plan of forming a studio that would produce comics “on demand”. Comic publishers at the time had previously focused on reprints of newspaper strips, while Eisner & Iger were able to bring something new to the table: full feature comic stories created specifically for their publication.

As legend has it, Iger was hesitant about the finances it would require to start up a company. Eisner convinced him otherwise by using the $15 he had received for drawing the “Gre-Solvent” ad to pay the first 3 months rent for an office space (rent being $5 per month). Thus emerged Eisner & Iger Studio, and an opportunity for young cartoonists they hired such as Jack Kirby, Wallace Wood, and Jules Feiffer to first enter the field.

Will Eisner Week: ReadAloud – A Contract With God

In honor of Will Eisner’s birthday (March 6th), Caitlin McGurk (that’s me!) and graduate student Ben Owen will be reading aloud from Eisner’s A Contract With God in Thompson Library, Room 150A from 3:00-4:00pm. We will be reading the story Cookalein– a tale of interweaving relationships between tenement residents from the Bronx, as they leave the city for their summer vacation in the Borscht Belt.

Please join us, and have an excellent Will Eisner Day!

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