Ralph Steadman was the artistic yin to Hunter S. Thompson’s literary yang. (Or maybe it was vice versa.) They were collaborators and friends for 30 years, Steadman providing exquisitely outrageous illustrations that were perfectly suited to Thompson’s gonzo writing.
Steadman’s world renown as an artist stems in part – but hardly in total – from that long creative relationship. A special exhibition at the Kansas City Public Library,
Ralph Steadman: A Retrospective, explores the full range of his inimitable work, including illustrations for
Alice in Wonderland and George Orwell’s
Animal Farm; images of extinct, endangered, and imaginary birds created for the books
Extinct Boids and
Critical Critters; and of course, Steadman’s exquisitely grotesque artwork for
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas and other writings by Thompson.
Exclusive to the exhibition’s stay in Kansas City: more than a dozen of Steadman’s images from his coverage of the 1976 Republican Convention in KC, where he worked with former White House counsel and key Watergate figure John Dean for
Rolling Stone magazine.
Approximately 100 of Steadman’s original works are featured in the exhibition at the downtown
Central Library, 14 W. 10th St. The Kansas City Public Library is one of a limited number of venues nationwide chosen to host the retrospective, which is sponsored by
United Therapeutics,
Flying Dog Brewery, and
Audible.
More about the exhibit
Merchandise
From
books and
collectors' pins to
t-shirts and Dr. Gonzo-emblazoned
socks, a variety of retrospective merchandise is available for purchase at the Central Library's first-floor customer service desk
during operating hours.
A portion of sales benefit the Library.