Happy 80th birthday, Sergio Aragonés! Mighty mustached maestro Sergio Aragonés taught me, and perhaps most of my generation, the importance of a clear, fast read in a funny cartoon drawing – and the ...
Each year since they started doing this panel at San Diego Comic Con, not only has the room grown and attendance doubled, this is singularly the funniest panel of any panel ever presented at a Comic ...
It is one of my all-time favourite comic books, and it's back. Groo The Wanderer by Sergio Aragonés and Mark Evanier is returning for a new series from Dark Horse Comics, to conclude their epic ...
Sergio Aragonés never dreamed that his simple pantomime cartoons would find a home at Mad magazine, where satire and parody – cartoons with words – always ruled. But after leaving Mexico City in the ...
Entrepreneur Josh Jones has acquired the animated film and television rights to the long-running comedic comic from legendary Spanish cartoonist Sergio Aragonés. By Borys Kit Senior Film Writer Groo ...
Think of them as the senior class of the "usual gang of idiots." Or the original MAD men perhaps. There's Al Jaffee, who at 90 still draws the optical illusion fold-in gags for MAD magazine's back ...
Marginalia — the notes and doodles scribbled in the white space of printed material — is usually an afterthought, but for Sergio Aragones, it’s an art. The prolific illustrator has long filled the ...
Currently on the comics racks are two very different books that demonstrate the medium's ability, when in the right hands, to tell stories without using words—and in a manner that simply would not ...
It’s a safe bet that, in the history of illustrated humor, no artist has a bigger gap between the size of his influence and the size of his drawings than Sergio Aragonés. Although he’s filled whole ...
Norman Rockwell Museum recently opened a landmark retrospective exploring the art, satire, and cultural impact of MAD Magazine, one of the longest-running humor publications in America.
Sergio Aragonés never dreamed that his simple pantomime cartoons would find a home at Mad magazine, where satire and parody – cartoons with words – always ruled. But after leaving Mexico City in the ...