But now with technology I could sit down and do a bunch of character drawings and scan them into a computer, and the computer using my exact style could bring it into life, where it would have been edited by various human beings before.
— Bill Griffith
Yes, but personally I was never a big acid head.
Everyone says how Calvin and Hobbes is about a real kid, to me there's nothing real about it; it's an adult using a kid's body as a mouthpiece.
Looking back Little Lulu was an early feminist, but at the time I just thought she was a really feisty developed comic strip character.
She encouraged any artistic impulse I had, and my father discouraged any artistic impulse I had. They took out their problems with each other on me and my sister.
Well, I've done a lot of strips since I've been here about Zippy and me being in Connecticut.
My first character was Mr. Toad.
I had a very diametrically opposite set of parents.
I think Zippy is part of me, but I'm not Zippy.
Are we having fun yet?
Their scrambled attention spans struck me as a metaphor for the way we get our doses of reality these days.
What I do is draw but if you make an animated feature obviously it takes a whole team of people, and Zippy is my work. I felt that turning it over to a team of people would be wrong.
I guess if you take yourself seriously as an artist there starts either the problem or the beauty of doing good artwork.
I hate Calvin and Hobbes. I think its a big re-hash of formula kid strips.
I went to an art school in Brooklyn and painted Fine Art, if that's what you'd call it for eight years in New York, until I saw the first underground comics in the East Village Other.
I had a mixture, my father was a career army man and my mother was a writer.
The down side of Americans being obsessed with pop culture is that they kind of like it light.
Unfortunately what came out of it was also kind of an imitation community with a lot of mindless conformity.
Comics is a language. It's a language most people understand intuitively.
Zippy accepts chaos as what it is, which is the real order of everything.
Frivolity is a stern taskmaster.
When I was an art student in the early 60's before the acid scene began I was smoking pot just like anyone else who was an artist.
Mike Judge, who I've become friends with over the years never took himself seriously as an artist.
Everybody that loves Nancy loves it in a slightly condescending way. Nancy is comics reduced to their most elemental level.
Then I abandoned comics for fine art because I had some romantic vision of being like Vincent Van Gogh Jr.
If something is going on in my life, it winds up getting into my strip.
Jazz, rock and roll, movies and comics are the culture of America.
I always thought of Levittown as a joke.
A full, rich drawing style is a drawback.
Zippy is living in the moment.
I just became one with my browser software.