Fans of the art of MAD shouldn't miss the first comprehensive museum exhibition of MAD art, on display from June 8 through October 27 at the Norman Rockwell Museum. Anyone who is not a fan of MAD art should see the exhibit to learn why they're mistaken.
Room after room is densely packed with beautiful originals from the classic years of MAD.
Collectors of MAD art joined with MAD artists and writers to assemble many of the greatest hits, providing a rare opportunity to see decades of quality art as it should be seen. Harvey Kurtzman, Jack Davis, Will Elder, Wally Wood, Paul Coker Jr., Don Martin, Frank Frazetta, Mort Drucker, Sergio Aragones up through Herman Mejia, Drew Friedman, Chris Payne, Sam Viviano, Tom Richmond and Richard Williams... they're all here, displayed in an excellent, thoughtful exhibition which gives these talents the recognition they're due.
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MAD and all related elements TM and copyright EC Publications. Courtesy of DC. All rights reserved. Used with permission. |
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Yes, that's a page from the classic Superduperman in the upper left corner. MAD and all related elements TM and copyright EC Publications. Courtesy of DC. All rights reserved. Used with permission. |
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One of my favorite Wally Wood stories. MAD and all related elements TM and copyright EC Publications. Courtesy of DC. All rights reserved. Used with permission. |
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An entire room full of Mort Drucker originals! |
The Rockwell Museum is the only institution in the world that could team Richard Williams' parody of a Norman Rockwell cover with the original cover itself:
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Comparing the two paintings side by side is an education. MAD and all related elements TM and copyright EC Publications. Courtesy of DC. All rights reserved. Used with permission. |
Years ago, the dedicated followers of MAD grew up to become corporate CEOs, civic leaders, internationally renowned directors, hedge fund billionaires, great scientists, doctors and lawyers. Wherever life took them, no matter how respectable they became, they still carried the germ of MAD within them. Today those fans walk the most prestigious halls of power while MAD itself remained behind, a childhood artifact, printed on crummy paper and sold "cheap" at the corner newsstand. It's long overdue for MAD to catch up.
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Full disclosure: I served as an advisor on this exhibit, which was co-curated by Stephanie Plunkett and Steve Brodner.