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Page 1 of 7 This interview is reprinted in its entirety from MOME Vol. 3.
Kurt Wolfgang, the old man of MOME, was a late
bloomer, which may be why he's the old man of MOME.
He always drew and always drew comics, but he never
read comic books as a kid, much less obsessed over them.
He read a handful of newspaper strips, but as he sagely
put it, most of the strips in the '70s were "crappy," so he
didn't read many of them — though he did manage to
take one of Joe Kubert's ancillary weekend comics courses
when he was 10 years old! His biggest influence was
probably the '70s Mad magazine; his comics were largely
parodic in nature or "slapstick nonsense." If he was utterly
impervious to the lure of superhero comics, he was
equally oblivious to underground comics: "I knew the
undergrounds existed because just being alive you learn
who Robert Crumb is, but I thought that just ended one
day. Like 1970 hit or something and everything just
ceased at that point. Everybody sobered up." He lived
blithely through the '80s without discovering alternative
comics, either. Kurt was, in short, what W.C. Fields once
called "dangerously unobservant."  From Low Jinx #2
That all changed in the early '90s when he stumbled into
a bookstore that sold alternative comics in Gainesville,
Florida, and bought an armful of "weird-looking" comics,
including Hate and Eightball. This inspired him to
focus and start producing his own minicomics: he says
he really got serious about cartooning in '95-'96, which
is when he started self-publishing his own showcase, No-
Fie (of which he produced eight issues). He attended his
first SPX in '98 where he realized "that all these other
people were doing this."
He has since become a mover and a shaker in the
mini- and alternative comics scene, printing many
minicomics for fellow artists, editing and publishing
Low-Jinx, a comic that parodies other alternative cartoonists
(the 3rd issue, a real gas, includes contributions
by Sam Henderson, Jordan Crane, Johnny Ryan, Nick
Bertozzi, Tony Consiglio and himself parodying such
cartoonists as Art Spiegelman, Jeff Smith, Ron Regé and
Johnny Ryan).
 From the Where Hats Go mini, Part One Kurt was born in 1970 in Dover,
New Jersey, which he described as
"the kind of place that has the worst
of both worlds, where you don't have
any of the culture of the city, but
pollution and crowding." His parents
moved to Florida when he was
a teenager and he dutifully moved
with them. By the time he was 10
he was living in Gainesville, famous
for a rash of student murders: "...The day I moved in, people started
getting murdered all around me."
He skedaddled back to New Jersey
where he married the girl he met
when he was 10 years old (he's
evidently also a procrastinator),
and has lived in the scenic town of
Collinsville, Connecticut for the last
10 years. He is the father of three
children, which makes his prolificacy
no small miracle.
My first exposure to his work was a
beautifully self-published (and selfprinted!)
little book titled Where
Hats Go, where, for the first time,
the formal and thematic elements
of his work cohered into a distinctive
vision — slapstick nonsense
crossed with a bittersweet fable. He
is currently working on an immense
retelling of the Pinocchio story titled
Pinokio, which, I have every reason
to believe, will be among the best
graphic novels of 2010.
This interview was conducted in
mid-November 2005, and edited by
Kurt and myself.
—Gary Groth
November 27, 2005
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