"Drew Friedman: Vermeer of the Borscht Belt" — documentary tracing the artist's evolution from underground comics to the cover of The New Yorker

Renowned for his detailed and satirical portrayals of forgotten Hollywood stars, vintage Jewish comedians, and quirky characters, Friedman has dedicated his life to capturing the essence of American pop culture with a unique blend of humor and nostalgia.

Drew Friedman: Vermeer of the Borscht Belt is an in-depth exploration of the life and work of artist Drew Friedman, This film, directed by Kevin Dougherty, takes viewers on a journey through Friedman's career evolution from his roots in underground comics to his prestigious position as a cover artist for The New Yorker. — Read the rest

From underground comix to Oscar nominations: Terry Zwigoff's career celebrated in new Drew Friedman portrait

The amazing Drew Friedman, author and illustrator of many of my favorite books, including Old Jewish Comedians, Heroes of the ComicsMore Heroes of the Comics, and  Maverix and Lunatix: Icons of Underground Comix, just released a new fine art print in an edition of 10 of director and musician Terry Zwigoff, best known for directing the documentary Crumb. — Read the rest

Out now — Drew Friedman's great new book of profiles of underground cartoonists

My favorite book of 2022 is Maverix and Lunatix: Icons of Underground Comix, by Drew Friedman. It contains 101 incredible full-page portraits/capsule bios of artists, writers, publishers, and editors of the underground comic book revolution of the 1960s.

I grew up reading the work of these artists, but I'd only seen photos of a handful of them (Crumb, Spain, Shelton, Bodē, Kominsky, Griffith, Spiegelman, Mavrides, Pekar, Robbins), so it was a treat to see what everyone else looked like. — Read the rest

Drew Friedman's amazing portrait of Jared Kushner for Netflix's "Dirty Money"

Drew Friedman says:

The Netflix documentary series Dirty Money, season two, debuted with a profile of Jared Kushner (titled "Slumlord Millionaire") directed by Morgan Pehme and Dan DiMauro (who also made the Roger Stone documentary).

The filmmakers filmed me for the episode, sent cameras up to my my home studio to interview me about Kushner, (who I did 50 covers for back when he published the NY Observer), and also filmed me over a course of three days creating an illustration of Jared channeling Dorian Gray, with the exposed picture being his father-in-law).

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