At Large  March 9, 2026  Cynthia Close

Comics Enter the Fine Art Market at David Zwirner, London

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Keith Haring painting the backdrop for the Palladium nightclub, 1985. License

Once relegated to cheap newsprint created only as casual entertainment to be consumed primarily on Sundays—or alternatively, more transgressive subject matter hidden behind the counter—cartoons and comics have now entered the hallowed halls and white cubes of the high-end art market.

An acknowledged guru of the genre, satirist R. Crumb (b.1943) has a new comic book. After a 23-year hiatus, Tales of Paranoia was recently released by Fantagraphics, known as the publisher of many of the world’s greatest cartoonists. To complement the event, original drawings from the book were exhibited at the high-end David Zwirner Gallery in NYC through January 2026. Mixing memoir, essay, polemic, neurosis, and conspiracy across 12 short comics drawn by Crumb, with a script written with his partner Aline Kominsky-Crumb before her death in 2022, Tales Of Paranoia was already sold out in early 2026 after being published in late 2025.

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Robert Crumb at Lucca Comics & Games 2014. License

A more comprehensive exhibition, R. Crumb: There’s No End to the Nonsense is at David Zwirner, London until the 14th of March. Crumb is riding the wave of respect also being showered on others in the genre like graphic novelist and MacArthur “Genius Grant” awardee Alison Bechdel (b.1960) whose work grew out of her weekly syndicated cartoon, Dykes to Watch Out For, and has been exhibited in museums across the country. Her graphic memoir Fun Home (2006) won a Tony Award for Best Musical in 2015.

By presenting original drawings, framed as one-of-a-kind examples of Crumb’s undeniable skills as a master draftsman and ribald satirist, Zwirner is interested in building the artist’s reputation and marketability to a class of collectors who might also own 18th and 19th century artists like William Hogarth (1697-1764), who made popular comic strip series of engravings like The Harlot’s Progress. Sexuality and nonconformity are earmarks of Hogarth, Crumb, and Bechdel. Even without art gallery bona fides, Crumb had established a proven track record regarding collectability. Original cover art from his comic book Fritz the Cat (1959), a cornerstone of the counterculture era, sold at auction for $717,000 in 2017, the highest price paid till that point for American cartoon art. 

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First panel from a story published in R. Crumb's Head Comix, 1968. License

Known as “the Godfather of fantasy art”, Frank Frazetta (1928-2010) was a child art prodigy. Filmmaker and creator of Star Wars, George Lucas, is a fan and collector of Frazetta’s work. The Los Angeles-based Lucas Museum of Narrative Art is scheduled to open in fall 2026 and announced it would display four Frazetta originals from Lucas' personal collection. Egyptian Queen, a 1969 oil painting by Frazetta for the cover of the horror-comic magazine Eerie was sold through Heritage Auctions in 2019. The buyer paid 5.4 million U.S. dollars. Frazetta’s iconic Conan (Man Ape), which is reminiscent of Francisco de Goya (1746-1828), was sold on September 12, 2025 for $13.5 million, also by Heritage Auctions, setting a new world record for a Frazetta painting and for original comic book art sold at public auction.

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Frank Frazetta, Self-Portrait, 1962. License

Appropriation of comic book style, commercial printing processes, and cartoon characters by artists in the “fine” art world of galleries, museums, and auction houses is certainly not new. American artist Roy Lichtenstein (1923 –1997) is largely credited with contextualizing comics as art and ushering in the Pop Art movement in early works like Look Mickey from 1961. At 48 x 69 inches, the scale and the medium, oil on canvas, dictate that it is meant to be hung on a gallery or museum wall. 

Two years later, Lichtenstein painted Drowning Girl (1963), riffing on a frame in the DC Comic Secret Love #83. It employs the text balloon and mimics Ben-Day dots, design elements used in printing comics. It is considered one of his most significant works. Lichtenstein saw cartoons as an entry for cultural satire. He once said, I was very excited about, and interested in, the highly emotional content yet detached, impersonal handling of love, hate, war, etc. in these cartoon images.”

Soon after Lichtenstein’s debut, other artists continued to question the line between “high” and “low” culture through the 1960s and 70s. Some, like Andy Warhol (1928-1987) and Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988), included famous superheroes in their work. Keith Haring (1958-1990) adorned public spaces in New York with his bold dancing cartoons. Today, there is no shortage of living artists using comic-style animated characters as source materials for their work. A short list might include Kenny Scharf (b. 1958), Yoshimoto Nara (b. 1959), Takashi Murakami (b. 1962), KAWS (b. 1974), and Kristen Liu-Wong (b. 1991), among others.

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 Roy Lichtenstein, Drowning Girl, 1963. License

Coming full circle brings us to the publication in April 2026 of Art & Beauty: Drawings by R. Crumb. This chronologically arranged book, a retrospective of sorts, combines Crumb’s drawings accompanied by quotations from artists like Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519), George Grosz (1893-1959), Willem de Kooning (1904-1997), Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882), and fellow cartoonist, Harvey Kurtzman (1924-1993). Crumb brings art history, literature, and philosophy down to earth, to be accessed and appreciated by all who choose to look.

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R. Crumb: There's No End to the Nonsense
Start Date:
January 29, 2026
End Date:
March 14, 2026
Venue:
David Zwirner, London
City:
About the Author

Cynthia Close

Cynthia Close holds a MFA from Boston University, was an instructor in drawing and painting, Dean of Admissions at The Art Institute of Boston, founder of ARTWORKS Consulting, and former executive director/president of Documentary Educational Resources, a film company. She was the inaugural art editor for the literary and art journal Mud Season Review. She now writes about art and culture for several publications.

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