Ed Piskor
Edward R. Piskor Jr. (/ˈpɪskər/; July 28, 1982 – April 1, 2024) was an American alternative comics cartoonist. Piskor was known primarily for his work on Hip Hop Family Tree, X-Men: Grand Design, and the Red Room trilogy. Piskor also co-hosted the YouTube channel Cartoonist Kayfabe with fellow Pittsburgh native cartoonist Jim Rugg. In March 2024, Piskor was accused via social media of sexual misconduct. Piskor died on April 1, 2024, at the age of 41, hours after posting a suicide note via social media, defending himself against the allegations leveled against him. Early life and educationEdward Piskor was born in Homestead, Pennsylvania, on July 28, 1982.[1] He was fascinated by comics throughout his childhood. He was a great fan of mainstream comics such as The Amazing Spider-Man, but his interest in alternative comics developed rapidly when, at the age of 9, he saw a documentary that featured Harvey Pekar reading one of his American Splendor stories. Important influences included Harvey Kurtzman, Will Eisner, Jack Kirby, Robert Crumb, Daniel Clowes, Chris Ware, Kim Deitch,[2] Gilbert Shelton, and Frank Miller.[3] After finishing high school, Piskor attended The Kubert School for a year, which he characterized as a mixed experience.[4] Returning to Pittsburgh, Piskor established contact with other local area cartoonists, including Jim Rugg, Paulette Poullet, Pat Lewis, Tom Scioli, and Mark Zingarelli.[3] CareerIn 2003, Piskor started collaborating with Jay Lynch on comics for Mineshaft, while working on his own minicomic Deviant Funnies, first published in 2004.[5] In addition, Piskor's autobiographical minicomic Isolation Chamber was published in 2004–2005.[6] During this period, Piskor began working with Harvey Pekar, his first major task being illustrating stories of American Splendor: Our Movie Year (2004), which elaborates Pekar's experience after the release of the American Splendor movie.[7] Piskor also illustrated Pekar's graphic novel Macedonia, about "a young female student that travels from the USA to Macedonia in order to try and understand how the country has survived the break-up of Yugoslavia without spiraling into civil war as its neighboring nations did."[3] Macedonia was released in 2007 through Villard Books.[4][2] Piskor further worked with Pekar on The Beats: A Graphic History, published in 2009. From 2008 to 2011, Piskor published Wizzywig, his own comic book series about a prodigy who becomes fascinated with social engineering, phone phreaking, and eventually computer hacking.[8][9][10] The collected Wizzywig was published by Top Shelf Productions in 2012. Piskor's Eisner Award-winning series Hip Hop Family Tree is a historical account of hip hop culture and the artists that have shaped the genre.[11] The project began in January 2012, serialized by Piskor on the website Boing Boing as a one-page "semi-regular ongoing feature,"[12] running, mostly weekly, until December 2015. Hip Hop Family Tree was collected and published by Fantagraphics in four books from 2013 to 2021. From 2017 to 2019,[13] Piskor wrote and illustrated X-Men: Grand Design,[6] a three-volume series focusing on the history of the X-Men, for Marvel Comics.[14] In 2020, Piskor began serializing a graphic novel titled Red Room on his Patreon page. The complete story was published over three volumes published by Fantagraphics from 2021 to 2024.[15] In January 2024, Piskor started posting a daily comic strip online, Switchblade Shorties, which followed the (mis)adventures of five mischievous girls in the 1990s. Serialization was left unfinished with Piskor's death.[16] Cartoonist Kayfabe and comics historianThe Cartoonist Kayfabe YouTube series, created by Piskor and Jim Rugg, significantly impacted the comic book community by revisiting classic comic books, discussing the processes and stories behind them, and featuring notable figures from the industry. (The term "kayfabe" is generally to refer to the portrayal of staged events within the world of professional wrestling as real, including the presentation of competition, rivalries, and personas. Piskor and Rugg shifted that approach to the comics industry.) Cartoonist Kayfabe has amassed over 1,800+ videos in its library since its creation. Cartoonist Kayfabe excelled in engaging with pivotal comic creators, thus preserving and celebrating the history of comics through rich, detailed discussions. This approach not only educated viewers about comic book artistry and storytelling but also celebrated the legacy of influential comic book series and their creators.[17] One of the standout achievements of the series was bringing together Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird for commentaries [18] on their iconic Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comics. Following Piskor's death, Rugg continued to post their backlog of previously recorded discussions online for several weeks, per Piskor's request. In July 2024, a video of the 'Ed Piskor Memorial Panel' from HeroesCon 2024 was posted. Allegations and deathIn March 2024, cartoonist Molly Dwyer accused Piskor of engaging in inappropriate communication with her via social media in 2020 while she was 17 years old. A second cartoonist named Molly Wright accused him of offering to trade an industry contact for a sexual favor in the past. Piskor deleted both his and the Cartoonist Kayfabe X accounts. He also briefly deleted the Cartoonist Kayfabe YouTube channel before restoring it with comments removed.[19][20] The accusations led to the indefinite postponement of an exhibition featuring Piskor's art that had been scheduled to run from April 6, 2024 to August 2024.[21] On that same day, a reporter for WTAE-TV news reporting on the show's cancellation visited the homes of both Piskor and his parents. The news report that aired neglected to blur out the house numbers on either home.[22] On March 30, Piskor's Cartoonist Kayfabe co-host, Jim Rugg, announced that he had decided to end his professional relationship with Piskor as a result of the allegations.[23][24] Piskor died on April 1, 2024, in Munhall, Pennsylvania, at the age of 41.[24][25] The announcement of his death came several hours after he posted a note online, insinuating his intention to kill himself.[23][24] In writing about the prior week, Piskor referred to the accusations, the cancellation of his art show, the loss of a $75,000 deal, Rugg's professional separation, and the news reporter showing up at his and his parents homes and broadcasting their addresses as being "too much".[26] He directly addressed Dwyer and those he felt had been waiting for this to happen.[26] In response to his accusers, he stated that the chats with Dwyer had been out of friendship and that the two times he had engaged in sexual intercourse with Wright were consensual and initiated by her.[26] Toward the end of his note, he addressed the people who had pre-judged him and spread gossip on the internet by stating, "I was murdered by Internet bullies."[26][27] In June 2024, Heroes Convention featured a memorial panel for Piskor, including Rugg, Piskor's sisters, Michel Fiffe, Jim Mahfood, and Chris Pitzker.[28] The inaugural Eddie P. Comic Con was announced for the following August.[29] Art styleEarly in his career, Piskor's work was characterized as "somewhat cheeky, but very accomplished alt-comics style, utilising lots of solid blacks, careful shading and only slightly off-kilter figure work. His art bears a mature signature that wouldn't look out of place in any of the finer indy comix houses of the last twenty years."[2] His work on Macedonia was criticized for being "stiff" by some reviewers[30] but praised by others for its "stylish, crisp feel".[31] AwardsPiskor was the recipient of the 2015 Eisner Award for Best Reality-Based Work for Hip Hop Family Tree Book 2,[32] and a 2019 Dragon Award for Best Graphic Novel for X-Men: Grand Design – Second Genesis.[33] In addition, he was nominated for a number of other awards:
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