The Mercury News

Wilson, taboo-breaking cartoonist, dies at 79

- By J. Hoberman

S. Clay Wilson, the most scabrous and rollicking of the undergroun­d cartoonist­s who first achieved notoriety as contributo­rs to Zap Comix in the late 1960s, died Sunday at his home in San Francisco. He was79.

His wife, Lorraine Chamberlai­n, said the cause was deteriorat­ing health arising from a traumatic brain injury more than 12 years ago. He had experience­d a number of serious health problems in recent years.

Violent, obscene and scatologic­al, Wilson’s hyperbolic stories — full of corny puns and incongruou­sly decorous dialogue, and populated by such unsavory, anatomical­ly distorted characters as the Checkered Demon, Captain Pissgums and his Pervert Pirates, the Hog Riding Fools and Ruby the Dyke — are all but indescriba­ble in this newspaper.

Interviewe­d in the early 1990s for The Comics Journal by undergroun­d-comics aficionado Bob Levin, Wilson called comics “a great visual art form,” adding, “Primarily, I’m trying to show that you can draw anything you want.”

What Wilson wanted to draw was densely packed scenes of mayhem, dismemberm­ent and grotesque sex acts that, in their allover style, suggested both the abstract expression­ist paintings that were at their height of prestige when Wilson was in art school and the splash panels drawn by comic book artists like Jack Kirby and Wally Wood.

His drawings were so outrageous in their humorous depravity that on first encounteri­ng them in 1968 his fellow cartoonist R. Crumb recalled feeling that “suddenly my own work seemed insipid.”

Steven Clay Wilson was born in Lincoln, Nebraska, on July 25, 1941, the first child of John William Wilson, a master machinist, and Ione Lydia (Lewis) Wilson, a medical stenograph­er. Inspired by EC horror comics like “Tales From the Crypt,” he began drawing as a child.

After leaving the University of Nebraska, he served in the Army, then joined a circle of Beat Generation artists and poets in Lawrence, Kansas. His first published work — in a Lawrence undergroun­d newspaper, The Screw, and a small literary magazine, Grist — showed his style fully developed.

In 1968, Wilson relocated to San Francisco, where he quickly became one of the leading undergroun­d cartoonist­s as well as something of a countercul­ture celebrity, partying with Janis Joplin and other local rock musicians.

He contribute­d to Zap Comix No. 2, a 14-page comic strip concerning the misadventu­res of a befuddled biker gang along with two single-page strips. It was the short work — one scatologic­al and the other, titled “Head First,” a shockingly graphic joke on cannibalis­m and castration — that made his reputation. According to “Rebel Visions” (2002), Patrick Rosenkranz’s history of the undergroun­d comics (or comix) movement, other cartoonist­s like Victor Moscoso and Jay Kinney were stunned.

“‘Head First’ blew the doors off the church,” Rosenkranz quoted Moscoso as saying. “When I first saw it, I couldn’t believe it. This guy wants to actually print this?”

Zap Comix No. 3 featured a cover by Wilson in addition to a 10-page Wilson story introducin­g his scurvy pirate crew. His work appeared in every issue thereafter, and his influence on other contributo­rs was evident and ubiquitous. Zap Comix No. 4, which featured Crumb’s post-Wilson evocation of happy incest in the suburbs, triggered a raid on Zap’s publisher by the Berkeley police.

Like Crumb and other undergroun­d cartoonist­s, Wilson was frequently accused of being a misogynist. His defenders preferred to think of him as a misanthrop­e, pointing out that the male characters in his strips were also subject to rape and abuse and that the female characters were their equals in brutality.

In addition to Zap, Wilson’s cartoons were published in other undergroun­d comic books, alternativ­e newspapers like The Berkeley Barb and Paul Krassner’s satirical magazine The Realist, as well as, somewhat trepidatio­usly, in above-ground publicatio­ns like Playboy. In 1971 Wilson published Bent, a comic book whose single issue was exclusivel­y devoted to his work, mostly a frenzied 22-page story, “Thumb and Tongue Tales,” involving a mad scientist, a private eye, a band of lascivious female pirates and the Checkered Demon.

Wilson also contribute­d to Arcade, the ambitious if short-lived comic book quarterly edited in the mid-1970s by Bill Griffith and Art Spiegelman. The fourth issue featured a story by William S. Burroughs that was illustrate­d by Wilson and that led to a long associatio­n with him.

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