Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer
Author(s)Ben Katchor
Current status/scheduleRunning
Launch date1988
Syndicate(s)Self-syndicated
Genre(s)Humor
Detail from Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer, episode 326, 1994

Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer was a weekly comic strip written and drawn by Ben Katchor from 1988 to 1998. It was first published in The New York Press and subsequently self-syndicated to various alternative weekly newspapers including The Washington DC City Paper, Chicago NewCity, Philadelphia City Paper, San Francisco Weekly, The Forward (English-language), The Village Voice and others.

Katchor embodies his love of the fading small-business community in an imaginary East Coast city in the title character, a small businessman who wanders the streets taking pictures and being sidetracked into surreal escapades. Strips often depict Knipl's chance encounters with obscure, marginal businesses (e.g. a company that distributes newspaper weights to newsstands), eccentric hobbyists, and enigmatic details of the urban landscape. There is rarely continuity between the strips, and Knipl is the only recurring character.

A collection of Julius Knipl strips was published in 1991 by Penguin Books (as a RAW One-Shot) as Cheap Novelties: The Pleasures of Urban Decay. Another collection was published in 1996 by Little, Brown and Company under the title Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer: Stories. Pantheon Books published a third volume of strips, The Beauty Supply District, in 2000. Each book includes one long story in addition to the self-contained weekly strips. Translated collections of the strip in French and Japanese have also been released.

NPR's Weekend Edition Saturday ran audio versions of several Julius Knipl stories in 1995 and 1996, narrated by Katchor and starring Jerry Stiller in the title role.

The word knipl means roughly "nest egg" or housewife hidden savings in Yiddish.[1]

Publication

In 1988 publisher Russ Smith approached Raw co-editor Art Spiegelman about comic strips for the weekly alternative newspaper New York Press. Spiegelman recommended Katchor, whom he had published in Raw. Katchor has since produced the strip weekly, and it has been carried by other alternative weeklies as well, such as The Forward and The Village Voice.[2]

When the Village Voice canceled the strip in 1995, Katchor set up an illuminated "Julius Knipl Reading Box" for the public to read his new installments, on display in the window of a B&H Dairy or outside his neighborhood Papaya King.[3]

Strips from the series have appeared in the collections Cheap Novelties: The Pleasures of Urban Decay (1991), Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer: Stories (1996), Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer: The Beauty Supply (2000).[2]

Style and analysis

Katchor draws the strip in a loose, sketchy pen-and-ink style overlaid with a gray watercolor wash. The backgrounds are detailed and drawn from a wide variety of shifting perspectives. A typical strip is made up of eight or nine panels captioned with crooked, hand-lettered boxes. The captions and drawings often follow independent narrative threads, sometimes with ironic effects, with the captions contradicting or reinforcing the visuals.[4]

The dreamlike strip displays a nostalgic tone for an imaginary East Coast city, and its working class, immigrant population in particular. The strip's city is populated with small businesses that had never existed and that are often implausible, but reminiscent of a New York in the days of large numbers of immigrants before the dominance of large corporate chains.[4]

References

Works cited

  • Aubrey, Stephen (2012). "Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer". In Beaty, Bart; Weiner, Stephen (eds.). Critical Survey of Graphic Novels: Independents and Underground Classics. Salem Press. pp. 429–432. ISBN 978-1-58765-950-8.
  • Katchor, Ben (1996). "Introduction". Julius Knipl, Real Estate Photographer. by Michael Chabon. Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 978-0316482943.
  • Gravett, Paul (Winter 2001). "After Maus: Graphic Novels Confront the Jewish Experience". Jewish Quarterly: 21–28.
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