Tag: Carol Tyler (page 1 of 2)

New Exhibit! Write it Down, Draw it Out: The Comics Art of Carol Tyler – Opening May 24

For Immediate Release:
May 6, 2025

Media Contact: 
Tessa Gatz
gatz.16@osu.edu

The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum Announces Exhibit
Celebrating the Art of Carol Tyler

Columbus, OH – The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library and Museum is proud to present Write it Down, Draw it Out: The Comics Art of Carol Tyler , an exhibit celebrating the origins, working process and finished art of autobiographic cartoonist Carol Tyler.

This show provides a rare look at the creative mind and masterful hand of one of the comics medium’s most accomplished artists. Over her 40-year comics career, Carol Tyler has crafted powerful stories, sometimes humorous, often heartbreaking and always honest. Write it Down, Draw it Out features many representative examples, from published pieces to never-before seen works from Tyler’s archive.

On display are original stories from 1980s anthologies like Weirdo and Wimmen’s Comix, to pages from Tyler’s solo books including The Job Thing (2001), Late Bloomer (2005) and the highly acclaimed Soldier’s Heart: A The Campaign to Understand My WWII Veteran Father: A Daughter’s Memoir (2015). Also on view is artwork and archival material from fan favorite Fab4 Mania (2018), a memoir about Tyler’s joyful obsession with the Beatles as a young girl in the 1960s, complete with original fan ephemera from Tyler’s adolescence. The exhibit also features selections from Tyler’s newest and most ambitious project to date: The Ephemerata: Shaping the Exquisite Nature of Grief (2025), an intense meditation on loss.

This is no ordinary exhibit. In addition to dozens of pages of original artwork, Write It Down, Draw It Out includes extensive examples of initial diary entries, sketches, notes, rare artifacts, scraps of paper and other personal materials that fueled the inspiration and led to the development of her story making style.

How does the initial spark of an idea for a work of art transform into a printed page? Discover the answer with several narrative statements throughout the exhibit space by Tyler that further support and explain her creative process.

“A show like this–I don’t think it should be called a retrospective, even though, of course, I know it is,” Tyler said. “Rather, I like thinking of it as a mid-point review because I feel like I’m just getting started. To me, everything I see on display here brings into focus how much more I’ve got to do. And improve upon. I’m in my 70s, and yet always, I feel the need to up my game to make sure that the reader gets their money’s worth.”

Taking on the tough stuff and maneuvering through complex topics like parenting, economic hardships, health woes, spousal betrayal and the death of loved ones is not easy, but Tyler has found over the decades that making comics about these things has been an effective way to navigate life’s difficulties. Delving into her career with Write It Down, Draw It Out makes it clear that Carol Tyler is one of comics’ most important voices.

There is a staggering depth to this exhibit. Visitors to Write It Down, Draw It Out are bound to come away inspired, appreciative, and encouraged by this singular artist’s body of work. The exhibition is on view in the Robinson Family Gallery at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Museum & Library from May 24 to November 9, 2025, and is free and open to the public.

Exhibit curated by Julia Green with exhibition labels written by John Kelly.

Save the date: Join us on Friday, May 30 from 6 to 8 p.m. to celebrate the opening of Write it Down, Draw it Out: The Comics Art of Carol Tyler with a free special program featuring Carol Tyler in conversation with comics scholar Christina Pasqua.

Image credits:
First image – Credit: © Carol Tyler, 2025
Second image – Credit: © Carol Tyler, “Not All Scars R Visible” published in Soldier’s Heart, 2015
Third image – Credit: © Carol Tyler, “Just a Bad Seed” published in Late Bloomer, 2005

BICLM Event: Carol Tyler Presents “Soldier’s Heart”

On Monday, February 29th, Carol Tyler will be giving a talk called “Comics to a ’T’: Time, Techniques, Trouble and new Territory” based on her new release SOLDIER’S HEART: The Campaign to Understand My WWII Veteran Father, A Daughter’s Memoir. The talk details the theme of PTSD and the techniques used to create a 364 page graphic novel. Ms. Tyler will also map out the unique challenges of autobiographical storytelling set in real time with real characters.

7pm – Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum’s Will Eisner Seminar Room – FREE

Soldiers Heart poster_Branded

Soldier’s Heart is a sophisticated graphic masterpiece that explores the damaging effects of war and the toll it can take on families.

Many soldiers return home and never talk about what happened – especially those from the Greatest Generation. Thus was the case with S/Sgt. Charles W. Tyler, who late in life began to open up to his daughter Carol. By looking at him, you would never know that he was wounded in combat, but as she states at the beginning: “Not all scars are visible.”

The narrative unfolds over 360 pages of masterfully crafted drawings. Stunning ink and color washes weave through the decades: Tyler examines the past in sepia, confronts reality in stark black & white and uses rich color to convey the moods and fragility of the present. She overlays her father’s memories with her own, while struggling to understand her troubled life: a failed marriage, a teenage daughter on the edge, and an elderly father and mother. It’s literate, emotionally compelling, historically accurate, and took the artist a decade to complete. Winner of the Ohio Arts Council Excellence Award, nominated for 11 Eisners, 2 Harveys, 2 Ignatz awards, and named a finalist LA Times Book Prize, Soldier’s Heart is a magnificent achievement.

Books will be on sale after the event, and Carol will be available for signing.

This event is part of the national Will Eisner Week celebration. More info on WEW here: http://www.willeisnerweek.com/

This event is cosponsored by OSU’s Project Narrative, Humanities and Medicine Working Group, Pop Culture Studies, and The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum.

 

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