Reviewed by Cassia Hayward-Fitch
Nancy Burton. Hurricane Nancy. Seattle: Fantagraphics, 2024. 112 pp. US$30 (Paperback). ISBN: 9781683969839. https://www.fantagraphics.com/products/hurricane-nancy
The presentation of Burton’s early work has an
archival tone; the comix are mounted on a black background, with many of the pages
featuring scans of the original artwork; sepia-toned and complete with stains,
rips, marginalia notes, correction fluid marks, and faint blue tracing lines.
This creates an intimate reading experience, giving the reader the impression
that they are being made privy to Burton’s private collection. The selection of
work from 1965 to 1971 begins with “Gentle’s Tripout,” a serial comic strip
about a group of friends who go on a journey to find the “Wicked Wandering Hag”
in the hope of lifting the curse that has rendered one of their number, Vera,
silent. After the comic abruptly ends with an incomplete, half-finished strip,
it is followed by a selection of artwork that resembles the psychedelic poster
art of the time. Similarly, Burton’s artwork from 2010 to the present, which
features gigantic figures who peer through house windows, larger-than-life cat
heads, lizards, and birds, bears similarities to the Alice in Wonderland-esque
poster art of the 1960s. Her style also resembles artists such as Aubrey
Beardsley in that, where most psychedelic posters utilized brilliant color,
Burton’s artwork, like Beardsley’s before her, is drawn in black ink on white
backgrounds. Across both sections, the artwork is unaccompanied by captions,
dates (except when this is indicated in the artwork itself), or contextual
information. This alleviates the feeling that a critic is breathing down the
reader’s neck, dictating the “correct” way in which the art should be
interpreted. It is only in the interview that concludes this collection that Burton
herself situates her work within the broader context of her life and artistic
influences, which, alongside the underground press movement and poster art, she
lists as art nouveau, abstract expressionism, and formline art.
Overall, this collection presents a
decade-spanning overview of an artist whose career has one foot in underground comix
and the other in poster art but who has yet to gain significant recognition
within either sphere. Burton's entire career is contextualized through the
inclusion of the introduction and interview, and the collection demonstrates
the fluid divide between underground comix and other contemporary artistic
movements, making it a valuable addition for scholars wishing to broaden discussions
of female underground artists and the nature of the underground comix movement itself.