American comics artist (1947?2022)
Diane Robin Noomin
(
nee
Rosenblatt
, May 13, 1947 ? September 1, 2022) was an American
comics artist
associated with the
underground comics
movement. She is best known for her character DiDi Glitz, who addresses transgressive social issues such as
feminism
, female masturbation,
body image
, and
miscarriages
.
[2]
[3]
Noomin was the editor of the anthology series
Twisted Sisters
, and published comix stories in many underground titles, including
Wimmen's Comix
,
Young Lust
,
Arcade
, and
Weirdo
.
[4]
She also did theatrical work, creating a stage adaptation of DiDi Glitz.
Early life and career
[
edit
]
Noomin was born the elder of two sisters in
Canarsie
. The family moved to
Hempstead
,
Long Island
, in 1952, and then back to Canarsie in 1960.
[5]
She attended
The High School of Music & Art
,
[6]
Brooklyn College
, and the
Pratt Institute
.
Noomin's first comics work was published in 1973 in
Wimmen's Comix
#2, and soon after had stories in
Young Lust
and
El Perfecto
. The first DiDi Glitz story, "Restless Reverie", appeared in
Short Order Comix
#2 (Family Fun, 1974). Noomin's work appeared in all seven issues of
Arcade
, co-edited by
Bill Griffith
and
Art Spiegelman
.
In 1975, Noomin and
Aline Kominsky
left the
Wimmen's Comix
collective due to internal conflicts that were both aesthetic and political.
[7]
Kominsky and Noomin put together a 36-page
one-shot
issue of
Twisted Sisters
in 1976, published by
Last Gasp
, which featured their own humorous and "self-deprecating"
[8]
stories and art.
In 1978, Noomin edited the
Print Mint
one-shot
Lemme Outa Here
, a comics collection of stories of life in mid-century American suburbs, featuring Noomin, Michael McMillan,
Robert Armstrong
, Griffith,
Robert Crumb
,
Aline Kominsky
,
Kim Deitch
,
Justin Green
,
Mark Beyer
, and
M. K. Brown
.
In 1980, Noomin collaborated with
Les Nickelettes
, a San Francisco-based women's theater group, to produce a
musical comedy
based on DiDi Glitz.
I'd Rather Be Doing Something Else ? The DiDi Glitz Story
featured Noomin's costumes and scenery, and sets by Deitch,
Paul Mavrides
, and Griffith. A
cabaret
version of the show, titled
Anarchy in High Heels
, was later performed at New York City's
Westbeth Artists Community
.
[6]
In 1984, after a ten-year hiatus, Noomin returned to the pages of
Wimmen's Comix
; her work appeared in almost every issue from that point forward. She was also a regular contributor to
Weirdo
from 1985?1993 (a period in which
Weirdo
was edited by Kominsky-Crumb, whose editorial tenure was informally known as "Twisted Sisters").
[9]
In 1991, Noomin edited and put together a 260-page trade paperback anthology which she called
Twisted Sisters: A Collection of Bad Girl Art
(
Viking Penguin
), featuring the work of herself, Kominsky-Crumb, and 13 other female cartoonists, including many former
Wimmen's Comix
contributors. All the work in the collection had been previously published, most of it in anthologies such as
Weirdo
and
Wimmen's Comix
.
[8]
The success of that book led to
Kitchen Sink Press
publishing a four-issue
Twisted Sisters Comix
limited series
in 1994, also edited by Noomin, with each issue featuring 44 pages of new comics by a number of female contributors. The limited series was subsequently collected in 1995 as
Twisted Sisters, vol. 2: Drawing the Line
.
Personal life and death
[
edit
]
Noomin's first, marriage, was to photographer Alan Newman; it lasted four years.
Her
pen name
, "Noomin", was derived from her original married name.
[1]
Noomin was long involved with cartoonist
Bill Griffith
, whom she first met at a
New Year's Eve
party in
San Francisco
in 1972.
[11]
She and Griffith lived together in San Francisco from 1972 to 1998, first in an apartment on Fair Oaks Street, and then their own house on 25th Street in
Diamond Heights
.
They were married in Las Vegas in 1980.
They lived together in
Hadlyme
,
Connecticut
, where they moved in 1998 after many years in San Francisco.
[14]
She died from
uterine cancer
on September 1, 2022.
[1]
[15]
A memorial service, hosted by the
School of Visual Arts
, was held for Noomin on November 10; speakers included Griffith,
Art Spiegelman
,
Phoebe Gloeckner
,
Hillary Chute
,
Jennifer Camper
, and others.
[16]
Awards
[
edit
]
Noomin was presented with an
Inkpot Award
in 1992.
[17]
The
Twisted Sisters
anthologies were nominated for
Eisner Awards
for Best Anthology in 1992 and 1995.
[18]
[19]
Bibliography
[
edit
]
Books and solo works
[
edit
]
Comics stories
[
edit
]
DiDi Glitz
[
edit
]
- "Restless Reverie",
Short Order Comix
#2 (Family Fun, 1974) ? later collected in
Titters: the First Collection of Humor by Women
(Macmillan, 1976).
- "She Chose Crime",
Wimmen's Comix
#4 (Last Gasp, 1974).
- (with
Bill Griffith
) "Bottoms Up!" (Claude 'n DiDi),
Young Lust
#4 (Last Gasp, 1974).
- "Bingo Bondage",
Arcade
, the Comics Revue
#1 (Print Mint, Spring 1975).
- "A Bitter Pill",
Arcade
#2 (Print Mint, Summer 1975).
- (with
Aline Kominsky
) "DiDi 'n Bunch in Hot Air",
Twisted Sisters
(Last Gasp, 1976).
- "The Fabulous World of DiDi Glitz",
Twisted Sisters
(Last Gasp, 1976).
- "DiDi Glitz and the 3 Bears",
Arcade
#5 (Print Mint, Spring 1976).
- "A Perfectly Divine Vision with DiDi Glitz",
Arcade
#6 (Print Mint, Summer 1976).
- "I'd Rather Be Doing Something Else" (The DiDi Glitz Story),
Lemme Outa Here!: Growing Up Inside the American Dream
(Print Mint, 1978).
- "Stupid Cupid",
Young Lust
#6 (Last Gasp, 1980).
- "Mix & Match",
After/Shock: Bulletins from Ground Zero
(Last Gasp, 1981).
- "Utterly Private Eye",
Wimmen's Comix
#9 (Last Gasp, May 1984).
- "Puttin' On the Glitz",
Weirdo
#13 (Last Gasp, Summer 1985).
- "DiDi Has an Orgasm",
Weirdo
#17 (Last Gasp, Summer 1986).
- "Glitz to Go",
Weirdo
#18 (Last Gasp, Fall 1986).
- "Glitz Tips",
Wimmen's Comix
#11 (Renegade Press, Apr. 1987).
- "A Blonde Grows in Brooklyn",
Wimmen's Comics
#12 (Renegade Press, Nov. 1987).
- "Don't Ask",
Wimmen's Comix
#14 (Rip Off Press, 1989).
- "I Had to Advertise for Love",
Young Lust
#7 (Last Gasp, 1990).
- "Lesbo-a-Go-Go with DiDi Glitz",
Real Girl
#1 (Fantagraphics, Oct. 1990).
- "I Married a Hypochondriac",
Wimmin's Comics
#17 (Rip Off Press, 1992).
- "Lava My Life",
Young Lust
#8 (Last Gasp, 1993).
- "Baby Talk: A Tale of 4 Miscarriages",
Twisted Sisters
#4 (Kitchen Sink, 1994).
- "Back to the Bagel Belt, with DiDi Glitz",
Weirdo
#28 (Last Gasp, Summer 1993).
Other stories
[
edit
]
- "Home Agin",
Wimmen's Comix
#2 (Last Gasp, 1973).
- "The Agony and the Ecstasy of a Shayna Madel",
Wimmen's Comix
#3 (Last Gasp, 1973).
- "The Happy Couple Take Acid, or, Higamous, Hogamous, Love is Lobotomous",
El Perfecto Comics
(Print Mint, 1973).
- "Frozen Creeps in Space",
Arcade
#3 (Print Mint, Fall 1975).
- "Brillo 'n Burma",
Arcade
#4 (Print Mint, Winter 1975).
- "Some of My Best Friends Are",
Arcade
#7 (Print Mint, Fall 1976).
- "Rubberware",
Wimmen's Comix
#10 (Last Gasp, Oct. 1985).
- "Bare Despair" (Brillo & Burma),
Weirdo
#16 (Last Gasp, Spring 1986).
- "What Big Girls are Made Of",
Weirdo
#18 (Last Gasp, Fall 1986).
- Cover and
paper dolls
illustration, "Puttin' on the Glitz" (2 p.),
Wimmen's Comix
#11 (Renegade Press, Apr. 1987).
- "Coming of Age in Canarsie",
Wimmen's Comix
#15 (Rip Off Press, 1989).
- "Meet Marvin Mensch",
Wimmen's Comix
#16 (Rip Off Press, 1990).
- "The C Word",
CHOICES
(Angry Isis Press, 1990).
- "From Jawbreakers to Lawbreaker",
Mind Riot: Coming of Age in Comix
(Simon and Schuster, Apr. 1997).
- "I Was a Red Diaper Baby" (
The Comics Journal
Winter Special
, 2003).
Editor
[
edit
]
- —, ed. (Oct 1978).
Lemme Outa Here
.
Print Mint
.
? contributors included Noomin, Griffith,
Michael McMillan
,
Robert Armstrong
,
Robert Crumb
,
Aline Kominsky
,
Kim Deitch
,
Justin Green
,
Mark Beyer
, and
Mary K. Brown
[20]
- —, ed. (2019).
Drawing Power: Women's Stories of Sexual Violence, Harassment, and Survival
.
Abrams Books
.
ISBN
9781419736193
.
References
[
edit
]
Citations
[
edit
]
- ^
a
b
c
Green, Penelope (September 11, 2022).
"Diane Noomin, Who Helped Bring Feminism to Underground Comics, Dies at 75"
.
The New York Times
. Retrieved
September 11,
2022
.
- ^
Noomin, Diane (2011).
Glitz-2-Go
. Fantagraphics Books.
ISBN
978-1606994818
.
- ^
Kaminer, Michael; Lavay, Nate (5 March 2012).
"Talking Comics with Diane Noomin"
.
Forward.com
. Retrieved
5 March
2012
.
- ^
"The Grand Comics Database - Diane Noomin search"
.
The Grand Comics Database
. multiple.
- ^
Rudick, Nicole.
"'I Felt Like I Didn’t Have a Baby But At Least I’d Have a Book': A Diane Noomin Interview"
,
The Comics Journal
, May 8, 2012. Accessed December 27, 2017. "[Q] How much does her lifestyle resemble that of Canarsie, where you grew up? [A] It wasn't personally similar. I moved to Canarsie when I was twelve, going on thirteen, and I had to learn how to be a teenager in about two weeks because the mores were so different in Brooklyn".
- ^
a
b
Noomin profile
Archived
2016-06-23 at the
Wayback Machine
, UF Conference on Comics & Graphic Novels 2003: Underground(s)].
University of Florida
. Retrieved on 2008-01-30.
- ^
Williams, Paul.
The Rise of the American Comics Artist: Creators and Contexts
(Univ. Press of Mississippi, 2010), p.
139
.
- ^
a
b
Noomin, Diane. "
Wimmen's and Comix"
, a transcript of Noomin's presentation at the 2003 UF Comics Conference. Accessed July 26, 2016.
- ^
Weirdo
page at Last Gasp website.
Archived
2010-01-06 at the
Wayback Machine
Accessed Dec. 14, 2008.
- ^
Griffith, Bill
(2012).
Lost and Found: Comics 1969-2003
. Fantagraphics Books. p. ix.
- ^
Battista, Carolyn. (July 11, 1999).
"Q&A/Bill Griffith; Exploring The State With Zippy and Griffy"
.
The New York Times
.
- ^
Degg, D. D.
"Diane Noomin - RIP"
.
dailycartoonist.com
. Retrieved
2 September
2022
.
- ^
"A tribute to the legendary comics artist and editor, Diane Noomin"
, Youtube @svabfacomicsbfaillustration (Nov. 10, 2022).
- ^
"Comic-Con International's InkPot Awards"
.
Comic-Con International
. Archived from
the original
on 2011-07-25
. Retrieved
2008-01-30
.
- ^
"1992 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees and Winners"
.
Comic Book Awards Almanac
. Archived from
the original
on 2008-01-07
. Retrieved
2008-01-30
.
- ^
"1995 Will Eisner Comic Industry Award Nominees and Winners"
.
Comic Book Awards Almanac
. Archived from
the original
on 2008-01-07
. Retrieved
2008-01-30
.
- ^
Fox, M. Steven (2013).
"Lemme Outa Here! Only Printing / October, 1978 / 36 pages / The Print Mint"
.
ComixJoint
. Retrieved
Mar 18,
2024
.
Sources
[
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]
External links
[
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]
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