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Dori Seda

Underground comix artist


Summary

Underground comix artist

FieldValue
imageDori Seda 1982 San Diego Comic Con.jpg
captionDori Seda on the Women In Comics panel at the 1982 San Diego Comic Con
birth_nameDorothea Antoinette Seda
birth_dateJune 22, 1951
death_date
nationalityAmerican
cartoonisty
aliasSylvia Silicosis
notable worksLonely Nights Comics
awardsDori Seda Memorial Award for Women

Dorothea Antoinette "Dori" Seda (22 June 1951 – February 25, 1988) was an artist best known for her underground comix work in the 1980s. She occasionally used the pen name "Sylvia Silicosis." Her comics combined exaggerated fantasy and ribald humor with documentation of her life in the Mission District of San Francisco, California.

Career

Fine Arts

Seda was originally a painter and ceramics artist, graduating from Illinois State University with a B.A. in art. Seda emphasized that she was primarily invested in "pure" art forms, having business cards printed to read, "Dori Seda--ARTIST--San Francisco." Seda was creating a lot of fine arts content in 1979 and 1980. Some of her notable art works include Punch Bowl (with cups and ladle), The Wreck in Heaven, Vibrator with 3 Attachments for ceramics and Jaded Fish and The Vampire Painting for acrylic on canvas.

Comics

To pursue her interest in comics, Seda took a job as a janitor at the San Francisco publisher Last Gasp, and soon after became a bookkeeper there. (This work was primarily viewed as a financial necessity to Seda, her true passion being the "pure arts.") Seda worked exclusively night hours and was known as "The Vampire Bookkeeper."

Her first published comics work was a strip titled "Bloods in Space", written by Kevin Lambert, which appeared in Robert Crumb's anthology magazine Weirdo, issue #2, in 1981. Seda's comic work was centered around taboo sexual subject matters, including swinging and bestiality. Her work intended to push boundaries that individuals upheld as communal prejudices. The reaction of Seda's audience is "less an affirmation of community standards than a kind of self-righteous consumerism." She submitted her work under the pen name "David Seda" but was published in the magazine under her true name. She was subsequently published in Wimmen's Comix, San Francisco Comic Book, Viper, Yellow Silk, Prime Cuts, Cannibal Romance, Weird Smut Comix, Tits & Clits, Twisted Sisters, and her solo book Lonely Nights Comics (which was banned in England upon its release).

In 1999, her work was collected in the book Dori Stories, which also includes memorial tributes. This body of work almost was not published due to legal troubles regarding the reproduction of Seda's work. Ultimately, Dori Stories won a 2000 Firecracker Alternative Book Award in the Special Recognition/Wildcard Category "Books about Gap-Toothed Deceased Female Cartoonists with Smelly Dogs".

In 1988, Last Gasp established the Dori Seda Memorial Award for Women. The first recipient was Carol Tyler.

Film

Seda was featured in the short documentary Gap-Toothed Women by Les Blank, a tribute to women with the commonality of a gap between their two front teeth. Seda was originally cut from the film, as her interview answers were seen as bland, so Seda requested that she be given a second chance and preplanned a response that would gain greater reaction. Seda explained how she was not inherently "valuable" because she was not beautiful because of her "funny teeth." She attributed her value to the work she had done in spite of her gap saying, she was "kind of glad that [her] teeth are like this, because if I had nice straight teeth, I might never have done anything.” She created a poster for the film.

Notes

References

  • Yronwode, Catherine and Trina Robbins. Women and the Comics (Eclipse, 1983)
  • Crabb, Kate. "Dori Seda — A Remembrance," The Comics Journal #121 (April 1988), p. 39.
  • Amazing Heroes #141 (1988)
  • Blank, Les, Gap-Toothed Women (documentary film) (1988).

References

  1. link. (February 19, 2012 .)
  2. "California Death Index, 1940-1997," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VPMR-QPY : 26 November 2014), Dorothea Seda, 26 Feb 1988; Department of Public Health Services, Sacramento.
  3. "''Lonely Nights'' Artist Dori Seda Dead At 37," ''The Comics Journal'' #121 (April 1988).
  4. "Who's Who bio".
  5. (1999). "Dori Stories: The Complete Dori Seda". Last Gasp.
  6. ''[https://www.lambiek.net/artists/s/seda_dori.htm lambiek.net]''. Retrieved 2017-03-11.
  7. Pizzino, Christopher. (2016). "Arresting Development: Comics at the Boundaries of Literature". University of Texas Press.
  8. "Dori Seda on Grand Comic Database". Grand Comic Database. various.
  9. {{ill. Leslie Sternbergh. ca. "...there's a way, or, My Dinner With Olga", ''[[The Comics Journal]]'' #154 (November 1992), reprinted in ''Dori Stories: The Complete Dori Seda'' (Last Gasp, 1999) {{ISBN. 0-86719-375-1.
  10. "Firecracker Alternative Book Awards". ReadersRead.com.
  11. (July 1988). "Dori Seda Award for Women".
  12. filmmaker., Blank, Les, ''Gap-Toothed Women''., {{OCLC. 945762329, retrieved 2018-12-03
  13. "Dori Seda". IMDb. Retrieved 2017-03-11.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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