If someone drew a MAD map of the U.S.A. for August 2009, its center would be in Ojai, where the Ojai Valley Museum (OVM) has organized an entertaining and historical retrospective of the work of one of MAD Magazine’s most prolific and distinctive artists, Sergio Aragonés. OVM creative director Fred Kidder and exhibit designer Roger Conrad have collaborated directly with Aragonés, who lives in Ojai, to create an artist’s world in miniature, including glimpses of every imaginable aspect of the creative process. To add to the MADcap fun of this show, alongside the traditional informational wall cards of an art exhibit, viewers get a number of drawings done right on the walls by Aragonés himself. These not-so-minor masterpieces of marginalia are just as irreverent as the ones that Aragonés has been publishing as his signature contribution to MAD for decades. To imagine the artist prowling around the installation of the show, pen in hand and ready to strike, is a fair symbol of the man’s approach to his art. For Aragonés, there always seems to be more fun to be had, more jokes to be made, and more drawing to do.
A portrait of the artist, carrying a very big pencil or as a very small person — take your pick.
Because the museum has had such unparalleled access not only to the artist, but also to his studio and collections, the show includes some great materials that offer important context for the work as a whole. For instance, in the space adjacent to the main room, a substantial group of original comics by other artists who influenced Aragonés can be seen. Many of these sheets are original artwork, and they often include personal inscriptions. Upon entering the main space, one sees immediately how crucial the process of copying others’ work is to the early development of a cartoonist, as several of the figures from the influences section—Hekyll and Jekyll, The Gumps—reappear in Aragonés’s doodling from his school notebooks.
Once he gets going as a professional artist, Aragonés becomes an unstoppable force of visual creativity, and from MAD to Groo the Wanderer and beyond, his drawing appears to come as naturally to him as breathing. It’s Aragonés’s genius for physical comedy based on unexpected uses of space that keeps coming back to the viewer as one moves through the gallery. And the exhibit itself winds its way through the artist’s career, from the fascinating storyboard sketches he submitted to MAD to the marginalia, and then to the sumptuous detail of his large tableau, such as the giant drawing of Hollywood that Aragonés produced for the trade magazine of cartoonists, the Reuben Journal, just this spring. Like these giant tableaus, this exhibit teems with life.
Related Links
Double-clicking on any word or phrase in this story will open a reference window with definitions and links to other reference material.

Print friendly
E-mail story
Tip Us Off
iPod friendly
Comments
Bookmark This
Previous Month


Comments
Discussion Guidelines
Congratulations Sergio! Sounds like a blast. How long is this show running?
Suesan (Mell's daughter)
Readers say: Thumbs Up: 0 of 0 • Thumbs Down: 0 of 0
toneupsb (anonymous profile)
August 21, 2009 at 8:42 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Post a comment