Digitizing the Tear Sheets in the Walt Reed Illustration Archive Revealing Visual Culture was a grant-funded project awarded by the Council on Library & Information Resources (CLIR) foundation. The multi-year...
Why Do Comics Get Banned? Comic books have sparked controversy and prompted censorship for almost as long as they have existed. The most consequential case...
Comics by the Thousands: Enhancing the Center for the Humanities Comics Collection Ten years ago, the Center for the Humanities transferred ownership of some of its materials to the Julian Edison Department of Special Collections. A portion...
Digitizing Rare Collections with the Shirley It’s Preservation Week! The Preservation and Digitization unit wanted to take this opportunity to announce an expansion of in-house digitization...
Preview of the Charles Johnson Papers We are thrilled to be adding the Charles Johnson Papers to the Julian Edison Department of Special Collections and to...
Spencer Thornton Banks and the Pokenia Comic Strip Collection Spencer Thornton Banks was a Black commercial artist. He was born on June 5, 1912, in Clarksdale, Mississippi, and moved...
Filling in the Gaps: The John Held Jr. Collection The D.B. Dowd Modern Graphic History Library (DMGHL) recently acquired the John Held Jr. Collection, an archive of material belonging...
Dowd Modern Graphic History Library Acquires the Craig Yoe Teaching Collection The Craig Yoe Teaching Collection was delivered to the DMGHL in the fall of 2020, adding historical content for comics...
University Libraries Partner with Sam Fox School on New MFA Program Washington University’s new MFA in Illustration & Visual Culture program (MFA-IVC) is giving art students the opportunity to grow as...
Acquisition Spotlight: The Rose O’Neill Collection at the D.B. Dowd Modern Graphic History Library Washington University Libraries’ acquire the Rose O’Neill Collection, which consists of original artwork and published materials.
The Black Panther: A Comic Book History The late 1960s was a tumultuous time for America both domestically and abroad. The events taking place outside U.S. shores,...
Emmett Till: What Were We Seeing Then, What Are We Saying Now? October 3, 1955: Life publishes Frank McMahon’s illustrations from the trial of Emmett Till’s murderers. Often considered the full igniting spark...