My thanks to NetGalley and Abrams ComicArts for an advance copy of a graphic novel that works as a biography of a photographer who helped change the way Americans view nature, helped design and create early postcards, after traveling the world, and a memoir on artistic talent and how it runs through the generations from great-grandfather to great-grandson.
My grandfather was a little bit of poet people tell me, though I never would have thought it. My Father wrote great letters, to my Mom especially, letters that showed a skill that was quite surprising. My brother works in publishing writing for others, and doing quite well. My Mom and her mom were both very good artists, but being women were never told they were good, except my father, my brother and I. Which has always made me wonder about the creative gene and how it runs in families. If say one's great-grandfather was both an artist and a photographer of great renown, would a great-grandson inherit those skills also? What makes a person become in artist, encouragement, perseverance, doggedness. And does art keep one going when everyone has left you, knowing there are still things one has not shared, painted or drawn. Which is why I really loved this graphic novel, for this book asks all these questions, while profiling an amazing life. Photographic Memory: William Henry Jackson and the American West written and illustrated by Bill Griffith is a look at the life of a man whose pictures changed laws, created post cards, allowed him to travel the world, always looking for beauty, but in many ways isolating him from those around him.
William Henry Jackson was born in New York in 1843, and grew up in Vermont with a skill for painting and drawing, but was quickly developing an eye for photography. A stint in the Civil War showed him a world outside his quiet New England, as well as using his skill at art for friends, family and the war effort. Things were going well with a burgeoning business in studio photography, until a relationship got in the way and Jackson headed west working with cattle, which after a few years grew to be to much. Jackson returned to photography and was hired first to take photos of train lines, and soon the lands of the west. Jackson's photos of the Yellowstone area made Congress call for the area to be protected as a National Park. Jackson traveled across the wilds of America and soon the world, on a trip around the globe, for a doomed expedition. Bill Griffith looks at the works of Jackson and wonders what made the man travel so much, what drove him, his art, a wandering spirt, or something more. Griffith looks at his own career and his art for answers, all while sharing much a bout a man I knew little about.
Bill Griffith is a cartoonist famed for his Zippy daily strip, but in recent years has taken his pen and looked back at his life to see what made him an artist. I knew nothing about William Henry Jackson, a man who should be better known. I really enjoyed this story, something I think only could be told in a graphic format. Griffith really captures Jackson, the emotional moments making him flee west, getting ripped off by publishers, not understanding how a wife might be upset by a husband taking a three-year trip around the world, without his family. The writing is very strong, a good biography with lots of information on taking photos in the wild, plates, and the storage. Even injecting himself in the narrative makes sense, and works as a connection between Jackson and Griffith that looks at creativity and what it can do. The art is amazing. A mix of realistic depictions of photos, trains, geysers, train tracks and people. I kept looking at pages wondering how one person could create the art for al this. A really beautiful book.
Everything a graphic novel can be. A great story, a strong narrative, excellent art and a work that stays with readers. I can recommend this enough. A strong contender for an Eisner award.