13 COVERS: Chip Kidd’s Magnificent BATMAN Exhibit

Almost 90 of the world’s greatest artists are featured in the Society of Illustrators’ new Batman: Black and White exhibition.

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Chip Kidd is an award-winning book designer and Batman aficionado of the first order. He not only gave us the wonderful coffee-table book Batman Collected — which speaks to the ardent collector in me — but he’s also the person chiefly responsible for bringing Jiro Kuwata’s fantastic Batmanga to these shores. He also designed Mythology: The DC Comics Art of Alex Ross, a book that was instrumental in my return to comics after a nearly decade-long hiatus.

I’m sure you know this only scratches the surface.

Kidd’s worked or rubbed elbows with the absolute best the industry has to offer — and now has a superb exhibition at Manhattan’s Society of Illustrators, featuring contributions from some of the most heralded illustrators and cartoonists on the planet.

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When DC brought back Batman: Black and White two years ago, the first issue featured a blank sketch variant. Kidd saw an opportunity and amassed a collection of pieces by a wide array of spectacular talent.

I’m not just talking about Eisner winners — though they’re well represented. I’m talking about a Nobel laureate, at least two Pulitzer winners, a New York City socialite of the highest magnitude — and Chip‘s dad.

The covers will be collected in a book to benefit the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund. In the meantime, if you are anywhere in the New York area — or will be here the week of New York Comic Con — then you have to see this show. Because these pieces in person are breathtaking.

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I know it sounds like I’m hyperventilating but there are few things more exhilarating than seeing something you love so deeply executed so inventively and masterfully.

So here are 13 COVERS. This isn’t a ranking. They’re just the ones that really grabbed me up close. Believe me, there’s not a dog in the bunch.

And to put this exhibit into perspective, here’s just a small handful of artists who are not included in my sampling below: Alison Bechdel, Dave Gibbons, Frank Quitely, Jules Feiffer, Alex Ross, Gabriel Ba, Fabio Moon, Klaus Janson, Gilbert Hernandez, Chris Ware, Drew Friedman and Jae Lee.

I’m even leaving out the contributions of some of my favorite artists like Neal Adams, Mike Allred and Dave Bullock.

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I think that tells you something about the breadth of this show, which runs until 11/7. Kidd will be lecturing at the Society of Illustrators on 9/29 and there will be a special reception 10/7, the week of NYCC.

For more info, check out the Society’s website here, and Kidd’s website here. The SOI is at 128 E. 63rd St.

(NOTE: A number of these are high-res scans. Excuse the glare on some of the pix taken at the exhibit itself.)

Ward Sutton. This might be my favorite of the entire exhibit.

Ward Sutton. This might be my favorite of the entire exhibit.

Gloria Vanderbilt. Yes, that Gloria Vanderbilt.

Gloria Vanderbilt. Yes, that Gloria Vanderbilt.

Art Spiegelman

Art Spiegelman

Charles Burns, doing a dead-on Jerry Robinson.

Charles Burns

Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk

Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk

Chadwick Haverland

Philip Pearlstein

Joost Swarte

Joost Swarte

Ryan Heshka

Ryan Heshka

Michael Cho

Michael Cho

Vanesa Del Rey

Vanesa Del Rey

Peter Kuper

Peter Kuper

Stephen Savage

Stephen Savage

Jiro Kuwata

Jiro Kuwata

Author: Dan Greenfield

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