Exhibit features the work of Briana Loewinsohn, Thien Pham, and Gene Luen Yang
Carlos Ortiz/RIT
Cartoonist and comics writer Gene Luen Yang gave RIT many of the comics he collected and some of his early chapters.
Award-winning comics artists will discuss their art, characters, and publishing careers during an exhibit opening and book-signing event at RIT.
Emelia McCalla
An exhibit at RIT features comics artists Briana Loewinsohn, Thien Pham, and Gene Luen Yang.
The Cary Graphic Arts Collection at RIT is hosting the free exhibit and talk Self-Published Worldwide: The Minicomics and Graphic Novels of Briana Loweinsohn, Thien Pham, and Gene Luen Yang, beginning at 6 p.m. on Oct. 9, in Ingle Auditorium in the Student Alumni Union. The conversation will be moderated by Daniel Worden, RIT Professor and Cary Fellow in Comics Studies.
A reception and book signing will follow on the first floor of the Wallace Library and in the Cary Collection’s Kubert Lounge and Gallery on the second floor.
The three artists got their start in the 1990s and 2000s by self-publishing their minicomics. The exhibit features comics they donated to the Cary Collection.
Each of the artists has won recognition for their graphic novels and memoirs:
- Loewinsohn is the author of the critically acclaimed Ephemera: A Memoir. Her most recent graphic novel, Raised By Ghosts, has been nominated for a Harvey Award for Best Young Adult Book.
- Pham is the author of the graphic novel Sumo and the artist of Level Up, written by Yang. In 2024, Pham’s book Family Style: Memories of an American from Vietnam received the Will Eisner Comic Industry Award for Best Graphic Memoir.
- Yang is the creator of many comics and graphic novels, including American Born Chinese, Dragon Hoops, Superman Smashes the Klan, and Dark Horse Comics’ Avatar: The Last Airbender series. His most recent work, Lunar New Year Love Story, a collaboration with LeUyen Pham, won several Eisner Awards, including Best Graphic Album. In 2016, Yang received a MacArthur Fellowship.
Contact Steven Galbraith, curator of the Cary Graphics Arts Collections, at 585-475-3961 or skgtwc@rit.edu, for details about the talk and exhibit.