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The Joker and Batman copyright © 2010 DC Comics. All rights reserved. Reprinted (partial) with permission. All other illustrations and photographs courtesy of the Jerry Robinson collection copyright © 2010. All rights reserved

It was three o’clock in the afternoon and Jerry Robinson was waiting on lunch. That says something about the kind of schedule the 88-year-old creator of the Joker keeps these days. At a time when many people would be resting on their laurels, Robinson has more projects in the pipeline than most people half his age. On the afternoon I spoke with him, he actually had three different books to plug and was preparing to launch a new Website, Jerry Robinson on Art.com. Not bad for someone who was born when Warren Harding was President.


For the past year, Robinson has been collaborating with N. C. Christopher Couch on Jerry Robinson: Ambassador of Comics, a combination biography and art book from Abrams ComicArts that offers a comprehensive look at Robinson’s career. Robinson told me he had done a year’s worth of interviews and culled through 70 years of artwork to find appropriate pictures. He has also put the finishing touches on an updated edition of The Comics: An Illustrated History of Comic Strip Art. The first edition, which he wrote in 1974, is widely regarded as definitive, and Robinson has made substantial additions to this new version: “I wrote 20,000 words and selected 120 new color images in order to update it. I’m very excited about it”.


cover art

Jerry Robinson: Ambassador of Comics

N.C. Christopher Couch

(Abrams ComicArts; US: Sep 2010)

Robinson’s third project may make the biggest news of all. After an absence of more than 60 years, he is returning to the world of his most famous creation. “For my next project, I’m starting a Joker graphic novel… if I survive it”, he added with a chuckle. The return of the Joker’s original creator after so many years makes this book a nearly unprecedented event in pop culture history. “I have an idea that would make a great Joker story. I thought one by me might be interesting after all these years”.


As he continued talking about his ongoing projects, our conversation started to feel like a study in irony. While I rummaged through my notes and stammered to phrase questions, Robinson rattled off names of colleagues, titles of books, and details from a myriad of anecdotes—all with barely a pause. He’s the kind of person who makes reasonably productive people look lazy. However, he doesn’t direct all of that energy toward productivity for its own sake. Instead, much like the superheroes with which he will forever be identified, his career reflects a lifetime of pushing boundaries, challenging conventions, and fighting for artistic integrity.


Oddly enough, he never originally meant to be an artist: “I guess I was just lucky with something about the art form [of comics]. I intended to be a journalist… never thought about drawing or art as my career”. However, a funny thing happened on the way to journalism school. According to Couch, by sheer happenstance, the 17-year-old Robinson caught the eye of Bob Kane at a resort in the Poconos. Robinson had drawn some cartoon sketches on a white painter’s jacket he was wearing. Kane, who had just recently created Batman along with writer Bill Finger, needed an assistant and offered Robinson a job.


Thus, Robinson became the third member of the triumvirate that would shape Batman. Of course, calling him “Bob Kane’s assistant” is like calling Tiger Woods a caddy because he hands someone a golf club. Before long, the teenage Robinson had designed the logo for the new Batman book, was doing much of the interior artwork, and had become the most dynamic of the Batman cover artists. Nor was his input isolated to the easel. When Kane and Finger decided to give Batman a sidekick, Robinson designed the costume and came up with the name, “Robin”. Even more impressively, when the team struggled to produce enough material to fill a second Batman title, Robinson created a new arch-enemy for Batman. That character, the Joker, would go on to become the first and most enduring of all comic book supervillains.


Sadly, what most of us know about Robinson starts and stops in Gotham City, but after reading Couch’s book and talking with Robinson, I began to see someone quite different. A restless spirit, constantly pushing against the barriers established by convention, commerce, and corporation, Robinson has dramatically changed the landscape of popular culture and prodded an industry slowly towards a greater sense of artistic ambition, freedom, and ethics.


The first sign that something was different about Robinson came during his seven years on Batman. While he was clearly talented, having talent was not unique. The Golden Age of comic books gave birth to many people with talent. What set Robinson apart was his self-awareness, his consciousness that both he and his colleagues were making history with a brand new art form. While most of the original art from that era is lost, Robinson made it a point to save special pieces, both his own and others. To put things in perspective, the legendary artist Jack Kirby was fighting Marvel Comics for his original artwork as late as the ‘80s. How did Robinson, a teenager with no formal training, know to start collecting original artwork 40 years earlier when no one else, including the corporations, saw any value in it?


In this case, Robinson hints that his lack of experience may have served him well. “Because I never studied art, I had a fresh eye about it. I saw the relative worth of the art. What we were producing was worthy of protection or saving even though it had no [monetary] value”. He told me that when he finished a story, the engraver was ordered to destroy all original art on the same day he picked it up. So when Robinson wanted a piece, he had to act quickly, calling the engraver and specifying what he wanted saved. The requests were unexpected, and sometimes, when struggling against deadlines, Robinson missed the window for saving a piece by only an hour. Yet he managed to retrieve many original works, including some of his own legendary covers and some of the iconic covers Fred Ray drew for Superman. Many of these original works have now appeared in museum exhibits Robinson has curated over the years.


Art courtesy of the Jerry Robinson collection copyright XX 2010. All rights reserved.

Art courtesy of the Jerry Robinson collection copyright © 2010.
All rights reserved.


Robinson also resisted getting pigeonholed as a “Batman artist” where he would have spent his best years producing work anonymously for others. Always looking to expand his vision, Robinson created superheroes for other companies and worked on a wide range of genres for Stan Lee at Timely Comics (now Marvel) in the ‘50s. In Ambassador of Comics, Couch includes several full-page examples of Robinson’s work on westerns, crime, and war comics during this time, and the pages demonstrate a real growth in terms of Robinson’s experimental approach to visual narrative.  When I asked him about his work from this period, Robinson assessed it pragmatically. “I didn’t want to start doing one feature for seven years [like Batman]”. The virtue of his range of work at Timely was simple: “I could experiment”.


Robinson’s real breakthrough, however, came in the early ‘60s when he finally found the ideal place to break boundaries, experiment, and comment on the issues of the day. For many of us who think of Robinson primarily as a Batman artist, it comes as a bit of a shock to learn that he has actually spent most of his career as an editorial cartoonist.


Unfortunately, the editorial page of most daily newspapers was closed to additional features. Always the innovator, Robinson designed the editorial cartoon, Still Life, to help break down the rigid guidelines for the editorial page and help lay the groundwork for what would eventually become today’s op-ed pages. He still sees his innovations as partly inspired by the closed doors of the profession at the time. “In order to get on the editorial page with some political content or satire, it had to look different and be concise”.


Greg Carpenter has a Ph.D. in English and has taught classes in a variety of subjects, including American Literature, Comics, Creative Writing, and Shakespeare. He has published essays on August Wilson, Tennessee Williams, Eric Bogosian, and Flash Gordon among others. He currently teaches at a university in Nashville, and he is working on a new book on comics for Sequart. You can follow him @tgregcarpenter.


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