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Richard Sala
Richard Sala
from Wikipedia

Richard Sala (June 2, 1954 – May 7, 2020) was an American cartoonist, illustrator, and comic book creator with a unique expressionistic style whose books often combined elements of mystery, horror and whimsy.

Key Information

Biography

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Richard Sala was born in Oakland, California in 1954.[2] He spent his childhood in West Chicago, Illinois, and his teenage years in Scottsdale, Arizona. In interviews, Sala has mentioned the influence of his childhood years on his work, particularly his visits to museums and antique shops. He has stated that his love of reading and his interest in comic books and horror films helped him deal with real-life fears. He attended college as an art major, finally earning a Master of Fine Arts degree in painting from Mills College. He then worked as a freelance illustrator, something he had begun doing while in college, and a cartoonist, publishing his first comic book, Night Drive, in 1984.

More of a reflection of his art school education than a typical comic book, Night Drive nevertheless ended up opening doors for Sala that would eventually lead to his rediscovering and embracing his childhood love of comics and monsters. The book came to the attention of several individuals who contacted Sala to request work. These included Art Spiegelman, Monte Beauchamp and Colossal Pictures and resulted in his appearances in two highly regarded comic anthologies – Spiegelman's RAW and Beauchamp's BLAB!. Colossal Pictures hired Sala to animate one of the stories from Night Drive called "Invisible Hands." This was eventually expanded by Sala and director Denis Morella into a 12-minute story about a psychic detective, a hooded criminal, taxidermy, a costume party, and a secret society of one-handed killers, all done in Sala's usual tongue-in-cheek style. Divided into two-minute chapters so it could be shown as a serial, Invisible Hands debuted on the first season of MTV's Liquid Television show, which also featured the television debuts of Beavis and Butthead and Æon Flux.

Sala has continued to be a prolific illustrator and comic book artist. Two of his books, The Chuckling Whatsit and Mad Night, began as serials. They are epic thrillers with labyrinthine plots and black humor. The Chuckling Whatsit first appeared in the anthology Zero Zero. Mad Night, which features the girl detective Judy Drood, was initially serialized in Sala's 12-issue comic book series Evil Eye, published by Fantagraphics Books. Evil Eye also introduced Peculia, a mysterious black-haired waif whose fairy tale-inspired adventures include encounters with murderous children, necrophiles, cat-women, and zombies. Evil Eye ran for twelve issues, between 1998 and 2001.

Sala has also worked on projects with Lemony Snicket, Steve Niles, and The Residents, and illustrated Doctor Sax and The Great World Snake, a script written in the 1960s by Jack Kerouac, which, like Sala's own work, makes use of pulp genre conventions such as vampires and shadowy avengers.

In 2014, Sala began writing and drawing a webcomic entitled Super-Enigmatix, which follows the investigation into a sinister super-criminal.[3] In 2016, Sala began a second webcomic, The Bloody Cardinal, also about a mystery-shrouded super-criminal.[4] The Bloody Cardinal was published in print form by Fantagraphics in 2017.

Death

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Sala died on May 7, 2020, at the age of 65 of a heart attack.[5][6][1][7]

Columbarium niche of Richard Sala at the Chapel of the Chimes (Oakland, California).

Bibliography

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References

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from Grokipedia
Richard Sala was an American cartoonist and illustrator known for his distinctive contributions to alternative comics, specializing in atmospheric tales of mystery, horror, and dark humor heavily influenced by film noir, pulp fiction, and classic cartooning. His work often featured stark black-and-white art, surreal narratives, and a recurring sense of eerie suspense, earning him a dedicated following in the independent comics world. Sala's career spanned more than three decades, beginning with early self-published work and appearances in avant-garde publications in the 1980s and continuing until his death in 2020, with some collections published posthumously. Born in 1955 in Oakland, California, Sala passed away in May 2020 at age 65. He emerged in the 1980s with contributions to Raw magazine, the influential anthology edited by Art Spiegelman and Françoise Mouly, where his early strips demonstrated his unique visual language. He went on to create notable works such as The Chuckling Whatsit, Cat Burglar Black, Delphine, The Hidden, Peculia, Mad Night, and others, many published by Fantagraphics Books, as well as the serialized Invisible Hands for MTV's Liquid Television and contributions to The Believer magazine. His stories frequently centered on resourceful protagonists—often young women—navigating bizarre, menacing worlds filled with eccentric characters and ominous undertones, drawing comparisons to the macabre sensibilities of Charles Addams and Edward Gorey while maintaining a distinctly personal touch. Sala's influence extended beyond comics into illustration, and his style became recognizable for its economical linework, dramatic shadows, and playful yet unsettling tone that captured both dread and wit. He remained an important figure in alternative comics until his death in 2020, leaving behind a body of work celebrated for its originality and atmospheric power within the medium.

Early life and education

Richard Sala was born in 1955 in Oakland, California, to a mother from a moneyed WASP background and a first-generation Sicilian father who worked as a janitor, later an antiques dealer and clock-shop proprietor. He was the middle child with an older brother and younger sister. The family moved to Chicago when he was 3, then to Scottsdale, Arizona in 1966 due to his asthma. Sala experienced bullying in Arizona and described his father as angry and violent toward the children. His parents divorced when he was 14, after which he became estranged from his father. He began at Arizona State University as an English major, hoping to write science fiction, but later switched to art. He transferred to Mills College in Oakland, where he received an MFA in Painting in 1982.

Early career and breakthrough

Sala self-published his first comic, Night Drive, in 1984. His breakthrough came with a contribution to Raw magazine #8 in 1986. This exposure led to further work in alternative anthologies like Drawn & Quarterly, Blab!, Taboo, and Zero Zero. In 1991, his animated segments "Invisible Hands" appeared on MTV's Liquid Television. He also created the Merlin the Magnificent strip for Nickelodeon magazine (1993–1995) and collaborated with Lemony Snicket on Little Lit projects.

Comics career

Sala published anthology collections with Kitchen Sink Press (Hypnotic Tales, 1992; Black Cat Crossing, 1993) and Dark Horse (Thirteen O’Clock, 1992). Notable graphic novels include The Chuckling Whatsit (serialized 1995–1997, collected 1997), Peculia (2002), Mad Night (2005), The Grave Robber’s Daughter (2006), Cat Burglar Black (2009), Delphine (serialized 2006–2009, collected 2012), The Hidden (2011), Violenzia and Other Violent Amusements (2013/2015), In a Glass Grotesquely (2014), and The Bloody Cardinal (2017). Many later works were serialized on Tumblr. Posthumous collections include Poison Flowers and Pandemonium (2021). He was a regular contributor to Fantagraphics publications.

Illustration and other contributions

Sala worked as a prolific illustrator for magazines and newspapers including Newsweek, Entertainment Weekly, Playboy, Esquire, The New York Times, and The Washington Post. He illustrated Jack Kerouac’s screenplay Dr. Sax and the Great World Snake and contributed to projects for The Residents, including CD-ROMs and album covers.

Artistic style and influences

Sala's style featured economical linework, dramatic shadows, and a blend of pulp, noir, and surreal elements with dark humor. Influences included Edward Gorey, Charles Addams, Franz Kafka, Jorge Luis Borges, Fritz Lang, German Expressionism, Hitchcock, Dario Argento, Mario Bava, and classic horror comics and films. His narratives often mixed adventure aesthetics with dream-logic horror.

Personal life and death

Sala lived most of his adult life in Berkeley, California. He was survived by his sister, Lucy Sala. He was found dead in his Berkeley home in early May 2020 at age 65. No cause of death was announced, and details on how long he had been deceased before discovery were unavailable. His last Tumblr post was dated April 29, 2020.
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