We're sad to report that comic artist and story-teller Sam Kieth has passed.
Kieth was the original artist on The Sandman, one of the greats of post Watchmen comics - basically originating the look and feel of the series before the comic strategically changed artists each storyline.
He moved on to join the Image explosion of the early 90's, launching The Maxx - a series that's been sadly mostly forgotten but was one of the best artist/writer creations of the era, deconstructing superheroes and their environment while telling a complex story about, essentially, what we'd now call mental illness on the fringes of society.
To give the kids an idea of how different things were in the 1990's, MTV turned it into a cartoon using Kieth's actual artwork and dialog.
Kieth has done work the past two decades, though not at the same rate or with the same acclaim as his 90's output. But it was always a pleasure to see what he'd take on.
In an era where what "good" comic art was being redefined on a weekly basis - The Maxx was hitting the stands alongside Liefeld, Jim Lee, Alex Ross and others who refused to work in a house style - he managed to bring a kind of soul to comics that much of the hyper-masculine and sexualized artists of the era favored, imbuing characters with quirks and personality via cartooning and allowing characters to - ironically - feel more real than photocopies of humans with different pockets on their uniforms.
But, also, man, Sam. I'm sorry to hear about the legal issues around The Maxx. That seems grossly unfair.

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