"I started drawing comics, and at first I was very influenced by the whole pop art movement, you know, Batman was on TV and all that pop art stuff? But then my next influence was in 1966, or maybe it was '65, I don't know. Somebody showed me a copy of the "East Village Other", which was an underground newspaper. And... it had comics in it! And they weren't superhero comics."

5 likes

Source: Interview with Kyrax2, comicsbulletin.com. May 7, 2012.

About the author

Trina Robbins

Comic Book Artist, Writer

Trina Robbins is a groundbreaking comic artist and writer known for her influential work in feminist comics and her advocacy for women's representation in the industry.

All quotes by Trina Robbins →

Same author

More quotes by Trina Robbins

See all →
Trina Robbins Comic Book Artist, Writer

"Today, although as a whole, the industry is still male-dominated, more women are drawing comics than ever before, and there are more venues for them to see their work in print. In the 1950s, when the comic industry hit an all-time low, there was no place for women to go. Today, because of graphic novels, there's no place for aspiring women cartoonists to go but forward."

Read quote
Trina Robbins Comic Book Artist, Writer

"I entered high school she[ my mother] said, "Well, you're a teenager now, and comics are for kids, so you shouldn't read them anymore," and I went, "Oh, okay," and I gave away what, of course, would now be thousands of dollars worth of comics to the neighborhood kids."

Read quote
Trina Robbins Comic Book Artist, Writer

"It's really sad that Wonder Woman is, she's really a slave. She belongs to DC. She's not a living person. And so she's at their mercy, and she's at the mercy of whoever writes her and whoever draws her."

Read quote
Trina Robbins Comic Book Artist, Writer

"I went to art school, but I didn't last because in those days you couldn't take comics as a course. And they weren't even teaching you to draw real things, they were really into abstracts, and I was not into abstracts, so art school and I did not work out."

Read quote
Trina Robbins Comic Book Artist, Writer

"I am proud of having drawn the first comic about a lesbian - and it didn't even occur to me that I was drawing a first. I just wanted to tell the story of my roommate."

Read quote
Trina Robbins Comic Book Artist, Writer

"There's a difference between sexy and hyper-sexy. The way I have drawn Vampirella, she's definitely sexy, I designed the costume. But her costume, through the years, has gotten briefer and briefer. She has been hypersexualized, but not by me. I mean, I see drawings in which she's got the 'brokeback pose'. I would never do that."

Read quote