Keyhole (comics)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Keyhole

Keyhole #1. Art by Dean Haspiel.
Publication information
Publisher Millennium Publications,
Top Shelf Productions
Schedule irregular
Format Ongoing series
Genre
    Publication date June 1996–December 1998
    Number of issues 6
    Creative team
    Creator(s) Dean Haspiel and Josh Neufeld

    Keyhole was a critically acclaimed black-and-white alternative comic book published from 1996–1998. A two-man anthology by cartoonists Dean Haspiel and Josh Neufeld, Keyhole was published by two different publishers, starting with Millennium Publications and ending up at Top Shelf Productions.

    Publication history

    Keyhole began as a self-published mini-comic by the long-time friends Haspiel and Neufeld.[1] Keyhole Mini-Comics ran for four issues in 1995. Reviewed in Factsheet Five, Comics Buyer's Guide, and elsewhere, it was then picked up by Millennium,[2] which published the first full-sized issue in June 1996. With its fourth issue, Keyhole was released under Millennium's new imprint, Modern Comics. Top Shelf picked up the comic for its fifth and sixth issues.

    In 2002, Haspiel, Neufeld, and Alternative Comics announced plans to publish Keyhole vol. II,[3] but the comic never appeared, and the two cartoonists have since moved on to other projects.

    Form and content

    Equally inspired by Harvey Pekar's American Splendor[4] and Los Bros Hernandez' Love and Rockets, a typical issue of Keyhole featured an autobiographical travel story by Neufeld, a Billy Dogma story by Haspiel, and short recurring features such as R. Walker and Neufeld's "Titans of Finance," Neufeld's one-page "Travel Tips," and the Haspiel/Neufeld collaborative feature "Lionel's Lament." Other stories appearing in Keyhole included short autobiographical pieces by Haspiel, and assorted collaborations with other writers (including one memorable piece with The Duplex Planet's David Greenberger).

    Legacy

    Although Keyhole only ran six issues, it was a critically acclaimed project which proved to be a launching pad for both Haspiel and Neufeld's careers. The Comics Journal characterized Keyhole this way: "Brought together in a single, independent magazine, these artists' strong, disparate talents create a broad reading experience, and a blending of artistic intentions and personal expression like very few others available today in American comix."[1]

    Haspiel debuted his existential antihero, Billy Dogma, in Keyhole, a character whose adventures have since been published by Modern Comics, Top Shelf, Alternative Comics, and Image Comics. In addition, Haspiel collected many of the autobiographical stories from Keyhole in Opposable Thumbs (2001), published by Alternative Comics, and used those stories as a jumping-off point for the Street Code stories he has been telling on DC Comics' webcomics imprint Zuda Comics.

    Neufeld, in turn, collected the "Titans of Finance" stories in a self-titled comic published by Alternative in 2001. In 2004, he collected his Keyhole travel stories (as well as subsequent ones) in the Xeric Award-winning graphic novel A Few Perfect Hours.

    In addition, both cartoonists have since become regular illustrators for Harvey Pekar and his American Splendor projects.

    Notes

    References

    External links

    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.