Starhead Comix

Starhead Comix was an alternative/underground comics publisher that operated from 1984–c. 1999.[1] Founded by Michael Dowers, Starhead was based in Seattle, Washington. Mostly known for limited-edition minicomics, Starhead also published standard-sized, black-and-white comics in the early 1990s.

Starhead Comix
IndustryMinicomics, comics
GenreAlternative, underground
Founded1984
FounderMichael Dowers
Defunct1999
HeadquartersSeattle, Washington, United States

Creators associated with Starhead included Dennis Eichhorn, Ellen Forney, Roberta Gregory, David Lasky, Pat Moriarity, Art Penn, Ed "Big Daddy" Roth, J. R. Williams, Steve Willis, and Dennis Worden.

History

Self-described "hippie"[2] Michael Dowers discovered minicomics in 1982[2] and was immediately enthralled by the form. He began writing, drawing, printing, copying, and distributing his own mini comics (under the name Nessie Productions), and by 1984 formed Starhead Comix to publish his work and that of fellow cartoonists, including Ronald Roach and Steve Willis.

In the late 1980s, Starhead experimented with standard format comics, and from 1991–1995 the company focused almost exclusively on this form, often publishing Pacific Northwest-based creators like Dennis P. Eichhorn, Forney, Gregory, Lasky, Colin Upton, and J. R. Williams.

The company's last few years were limited to publishing reprints and updates of the pornographic Tijuana Bibles from the 1930s.

In 1999, publisher Dowers retired the Starhead Comix name and created Brownfield Press to sell remaining titles and occasionally publish new projects.[1]

In 2010, Fantagraphics Books published Newave!: The Underground Mini Comix of the 1980s, a nearly 900-page collection of minicomics (many of which originally saw print via Starhead), edited by Dowers.

Titles (selected)

Minicomics

  • 3R Cosmix (8 issues, 1984–1986) — Ronald Roach
  • Armageddonquest (1984–1986) — Ronald Roach; followed by a full-size comics series in 1994
  • Exquisite Corpse Comix (1985–1990) — anthology
  • Morty the Dog (2 issues, 1987) — Steve Willis
  • Outside In (7 issues, 1984–1985) — numbering continued from self-published Steve Willis title
  • Seattle Star (1985–1990) — newsprint tabloid-size
  • Starhead Presents (3 issues, 1987) — anthology

Comics

  • Amazing Adventures of Ace International (1 issue, 1993) — Dennis Eichhorn
  • Armageddonquest (3 issues, 1994) — Ronald Roach
  • Artistic Licentiousness (3 issues, 1991–1994) — Roberta Gregory
  • Bezango Obscuro (1 issue, 1994) — Steve Willis
  • Big Black Thing (1 issue, 1994) — Colin Upton
  • Big Mouth (2 issues, 1992–1993) — Pat Moriarity
  • Bumber Comix (2 issues, 1985–1988) — second issue published with a grant from the Bumbershoot Arts Festival
  • Cruel and Unusual Punishment (2 issues, 1993–1994)
  • Fun House (1 issue, 1993) — J. R. Williams
  • Hemp for Victory (1 issue, 1995)
  • The Mutant Book of the Dead (1 issue, 1994) — Mack White
  • Northwest Cartoon Cookery (1 issue, 1995) - edited by Dennis Eichhorn
  • Rat Fink Comix (1 issue, 1987) — Ed "Big Daddy" Roth
  • Real Schmuck (1 issue, 1993) — Dennis Eichhorn
  • Seattle Sketchbook (1 issue, 1995) — David Collier
  • Stickboy (2 issues, 1993–1995)— Dennis Worden; numbering continues from Fantagraphics Books/Revolutionary Comics title
  • The Tijuana Bible (9 issues, 1994–1998) — reprints of stories from the 1930s
  • Tomato (2 issues, 1994–1995) — Ellen Forney
gollark: PotatOS is MIT-licensed, so it has that, as well as some extra clauses like> If any provision of this policy is found by a court (or other entity) to be unenforceable, it nevertheless remains in force. This organization is not liable and this agreement shall not be construed. We are not responsible for any issue whatsoever at all arising from use of potatOS, potatOS services, anything at all, or otherwise.and> You are responsible for anything which potatOS might do to your things. You ran it. It is all your fault. We are not liable, ethically, morally, existentially, financially or legally, for anything whatsoever.for safety.
gollark: Maybe the ATL license but with a "NO WARRANTY WHATSOEVER" bit.
gollark: I'm now imagining having a bunch of highly-paid corporate lawyers trying to figure out exactly what circumstances they can use some software in based on the day of the week.
gollark: Good idea! It could switch between them.
gollark: Hmm, maybe I could have something where the applicable set of licenses is deterministically chosen based on the current date or something.

References

Notes

  1. Sandall, Simon. "Michael Dowers p3," Reader's Voice (Mar. 1, 2013).
  2. Dowers, Michael. "Introduction," Newave!: The Underground Mini Comix of the 1980s, edited by Michael Dowers (Fantagraphics, 2010).

Sources consulted

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.