Jay Kennedy's Ug collection

Started by 50Cent #II (1st print), July 01, 2008, 11:33:53 AM

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Reverend

I don't know if the collection is ready to be viewed yet. Once it is, however, I'm definitely planning the trip.

Sir Real

Y'know, we should set a standard of collectorism.  One simply MUST make a pilgrimage to the JK Collection.
Timeo Hominem Unius Libri

Comix Junky

Collecting is a disease = Obsessive-Possessive Disorder.
---------------
Slabbing Undergrounds is sacrilege.
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The phrase "Action 1 of the Undergrounds"
makes my skin crawl.

Reverend

I just received a reply from the curator this morning:

"I cannot give you a definite date when the Jay Kennedy Collection will be fully cataloged.  I am hopeful that a cataloger will be assigned to this project later in the summer.  The situation here is complicated by the delivery of the International Museum of Cartoon Art Collection [3 semi-truckloads].  Please use this e-mail address to check back with us.  I am sorry that I can't be more helpful."

Sir Real

Wotta job that would be.  We need an insider.
Timeo Hominem Unius Libri

cimmerian32

#20
I volunteer...  :thumbsup:

thillaj

Quote from: Reverend on July 01, 2008, 02:21:09 PM
Here's a page on the library's site mentioning the collection: http://cartoons.osu.edu/jay_kennedy.php.

Jay Kennedy bequest

Jay Kennedy, the former Editor in Chief at King Features Syndicate who died in 2007, bequeathed his collection of underground comic books to The Ohio State University Cartoon Research Library.  The collection of more than 9,500 items is one of the most extensive in the world.   Kennedy, who authored the seminal reference work The Official Underground and Newave Comix Price Guide:  Listing Alternative Comix in the U.S. & Canada from 1962 to the Present (Boatner Norton Press: 1982), was an authority on underground comics.  A comics scholar, a gentleman, a lover of the 60s, and an artist himself, Kennedy held underground comics as not just an art movement, but also a social, political and cultural movement.

"We are honored that Jay bequeathed his collection to us," says Lucy Shelton Caswell, professor and curator of the library.  "It is a very substantial resource that will interest scholars in several areas."

The Jay Kennedy Collection will be housed in the library's secure, climate-controlled stacks so that the materials will be convenient for users in its reading room.  According to Caswell, work has begun to catalog these materials to make them available to researchers as soon as possible.

Brendan Burford, Kennedy's associate at King Features Syndicate, stated, "During the time I knew Jay Kennedy, I was fortunate to have him share many things with me, among them, his comic book collection. I got to know his collection very well as we worked together for several years cataloging its contents. It's a tremendous collection -- one that is unparalleled. I can't think of a better home for Jay's comic books than the OSU Cartoon Research Library. The collection will live on admirably."

About the Cartoon Research Library:  The Cartoon Research Library's primary mission is to develop a comprehensive research collection of materials documenting American printed cartoon art (editorial cartoons, comic strips, comic books, graphic novels, sports cartoons, and magazine cartoons) and to provide access to these collections.  The library is open Monday-Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.  See http://cartoons.osu.edu/ for further information.

Note that the press release only said 9,500 items.  This is only his comix collection.  It does NOT include fanzines, underground newspapers, rock posters.  Those are still in the hands of Bruce Kennedy (brother) and are NOT part of the bequeath 

dr_s

When I last spoke to jay, he told me that he had over 15,000 items.
p.s. Good to see you back thill

wpbooks

Makes me wish I still lived in Columbus......