Chester Brown
Chester William David Brown (born 16 May 1960) is a Canadian cartoonist. Brown has gone through several stylistic and thematic periods. He gained notice in alternative comics circles in the 1980s for the surreal, scatological ''Ed the Happy Clown'' serial. After bringing ''Ed'' to an abrupt end, he delved into confessional autobiographical comics in the early 1990s and was strongly associated with fellow Toronto-based cartoonists Joe Matt and Seth, and the autobiographical comics trend. Two graphic novels came from this period: ''The Playboy'' (1992) and ''I Never Liked You'' (1994). Surprise mainstream success in the 2000s came with ''Louis Riel'' (2003), a historical-biographical graphic novel about rebel Métis leader Louis Riel. ''Paying for It'' (2011) drew controversy as a polemic in support of decriminalizing prostitution, a theme he explored further with ''Mary Wept Over the Feet of Jesus'' (2016), a book of adaptations of stories from the Bible that Brown believes promote pro-prostitution attitudes among early Christians.Brown draws from a range of influences, including monster and superhero comic books, underground comix, and comic strips such as Harold Gray's ''Little Orphan Annie''. His later works employ a sparse drawing style and flat dialogue. Rather than the traditional method of drawing complete pages, Brown draws individual panels without regard for page composition and assembles them into pages after completion. Since the late 1990s Brown has had a penchant for providing detailed annotations for his work and extensively altering and reformatting older works.
Brown at first self-published his work as a minicomic called ''Yummy Fur'' beginning in 1983; Toronto publisher Vortex Comics began publishing the series as a comic book in 1986. The content tended towards controversial themes: a distributor and a printer dropped it in the late 1980s, and it has been held up at the Canada–United States border. Since 1991, Brown has associated himself with Montreal publisher Drawn & Quarterly. Following ''Louis Riel'' Brown ceased serializing his work to publish graphic novels directly. He has received grants from the Canada Council to complete ''Louis Riel'' and ''Paying for It''. Provided by Wikipedia
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1by Tomasz Gambin, Bo Yuan, Weimin Bi, Pengfei Liu, Jill A. Rosenfeld, Zeynep Coban-Akdemir, Amber N. Pursley, Sandesh C. S. Nagamani, Ronit Marom, Sailaja Golla, Lauren Dengle, Heather G. Petrie, Reuben Matalon, Lisa Emrick, Monica B. Proud, Diane Treadwell-Deering, Hsiao-Tuan Chao, Hannele Koillinen, Chester Brown, Nora Urraca, Roya Mostafavi, Saunder Bernes, Elizabeth R. Roeder, Kimberly M. Nugent, Patricia I. Bader, Gary Bellus, Michael Cummings, Hope Northrup, Myla Ashfaq, Rachel Westman, Robert Wildin, Anita E. Beck, LaDonna Immken, Lindsay Elton, Shaun Varghese, Edward Buchanan, Laurence Faivre, Mathilde Lefebvre, Christian P. Schaaf, Magdalena Walkiewicz, Yaping Yang, Sung-Hae L. Kang, Seema R. Lalani, Carlos A. Bacino, Arthur L. Beaudet, Amy M. Breman, Janice L. Smith, Sau Wai Cheung, James R. Lupski, Ankita Patel, Chad A. Shaw, Paweł StankiewiczGet full text
Published 2017-09-01
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