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Button 139: United Cartoon Workers Local 4: Princeton WI
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Price: $5.00
(in stock)
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139. United Cartoon Workers Local 4:
Princeton WI (1990).
Designed by Peter Poplaski and Denis
Kitchen. In the early '70s underground cartoonists actually
considered the formation of a labor union. Artists like Spain
Rodriguez and Robert Crumb attended meetings of the
venerable but tiny International Workers of the World (I.W.W.)
in San Francisco. Some artists thought a union would help them
get better deals with publishers. The affiliation with the old
left "Wobblies" never went anywhere but the idea
of artist solidarity had wide appeal. Denis Kitchen, then in
the midwest, was publisher and owner of Krupp Comic Works/Kitchen
Sink, but he was also a cartoonist and at the time a card-carrying
socialist. He created U.C.W.A. buttons as the first visible symbol
of cartoonist solidarity.
There were only two significant clusters
of underground cartoonists in 1973: San Francisco, where undergrounds
originated and flourished, was designated Local No. 1 and Milwaukee,
then home to Krupp/Kitchen Sink and half a dozen or so underground
cartoonists, became Local No. 2 and they enjoyed the only official
buttons for seventeen years. By 1990 the growing number of young
and activist cartoonists led Kitchen to expand the number of
official locals. The cumbersome two and a quarter inch buttons
were replaced by more practical (wearable) one and a quarter
inch designs. Princeton,
Wisconsin (home of Kitchen, Poplaski, Don Simpson, Mike
Newhall, Leonard Rifas, writer/editor Dave Schreiner
and temporary home to numerous cartoonists and writers passing
thru) was designated Local No. 4. (See also buttons #2-A,
7-A, 67, 136-138, 140-141 and 157).
Diameter 1.25 inches. $5.00
One note, for serious button collectors,
you may want to read the KSP
BUTTON TEXT which explains the numbering systems for
identifying the various buttons produced over the last 30 years,
or see the COMPLETE
KSP BUTTON LIST. The list is VERY long, so be patient
while it loads.
|
<< Previous Product
Next Product >>
Button 139: United Cartoon Workers Local 4: Princeton WI
139. United Cartoon Workers Local 4:
Princeton WI (1990).
Designed by Peter Poplaski and Denis
Kitchen. In the early '70s underground cartoonists actually
considered the formation of a labor union. Artists like Spain
Rodriguez and Robert Crumb attended meetings of the
venerable but tiny International Workers of the World (I.W.W.)
in San Francisco. Some artists thought a union would help them
get better deals with publishers. The affiliation with the old
left "Wobblies" never went anywhere but the idea
of artist solidarity had wide appeal. Denis Kitchen, then in
the midwest, was publisher and owner of Krupp Comic Works/Kitchen
Sink, but he was also a cartoonist and at the time a card-carrying
socialist. He created U.C.W.A. buttons as the first visible symbol
of cartoonist solidarity.
There were only two significant clusters
of underground cartoonists in 1973: San Francisco, where undergrounds
originated and flourished, was designated Local No. 1 and Milwaukee,
then home to Krupp/Kitchen Sink and half a dozen or so underground
cartoonists, became Local No. 2 and they enjoyed the only official
buttons for seventeen years. By 1990 the growing number of young
and activist cartoonists led Kitchen to expand the number of
official locals. The cumbersome two and a quarter inch buttons
were replaced by more practical (wearable) one and a quarter
inch designs. Princeton,
Wisconsin (home of Kitchen, Poplaski, Don Simpson, Mike
Newhall, Leonard Rifas, writer/editor Dave Schreiner
and temporary home to numerous cartoonists and writers passing
thru) was designated Local No. 4. (See also buttons #2-A,
7-A, 67, 136-138, 140-141 and 157).
Diameter 1.25 inches. $5.00
One note, for serious button collectors,
you may want to read the KSP
BUTTON TEXT which explains the numbering systems for
identifying the various buttons produced over the last 30 years,
or see the COMPLETE
KSP BUTTON LIST. The list is VERY long, so be patient
while it loads.
|
$5.00
|