Sergio Toppi:Master of The Impossible: Guido Crepax Gianni de Luca
Sergio Toppi:Master of The Impossible: Guido Crepax Gianni de Luca
In a perfect world, Sergio Toppi would be a household name in English-speaking comics circles. For
starters, the look of modern American comic books, from Frank Miller, Walt Simonson and Bill
Sienkiewicz to Denys Cowan, R.M. Guera and Sean Murphy, would not be the same without his
massive, unmistakeable inspiration. And yet Toppi’s own work remains largely unknown beyond a
coterie of admirers. There is a sad irony that his first ever graphic novel to be finally put into
English this year - Sharaz-de: Tales from the Arabian Nights (cover illustration below), out this
week in the shops from Archaia - did not see print before his death on August 21st 2012, less than
two months before his 80th birthday. His passing prompted numerous eulogies from fan favourites
like Francesco Francavilla, who acknowledged “I will be forever in your debt”, and Ashley Wood,
who confirmed, “Mr Toppi was and is a great inspiration to me.”
So why is Toppi not better known internationally? It hasn’t helped that so little of his output has
been translated, nor that he came to prefer the freedom to create all sorts of separate projects or
one-off stories rather than be anchored to one recurring character that might have won him more
fame. On top of this, his unconventional mature approach to layout and illustration meant that he
received few commissions from mainstream American publishers. Toppi’s U.S. credits come to little
more than one Sin City pin-up for Miller (below) and five covers for Marvel’s historical sequel 1602:
New World, giving us his takes on the Hulk and a cowboy Spider-Man. According to expert David
Roach, Toppi did produce around ten strips for the British educational weekly Tell Me Why circa
1969-70 and a couple of his Italian comics were reprinted in Eagle and possibly Tell Me
Why annuals during the mid-Seventies, but aside from this Alan Moore portrait for Gary Spencer-
Millidge’s tribute book (below), that seems to be all, folks!
A self-taught artist born in Milan in 1932, Toppi did not begin his professional career as a comic
artist but spent much of the Fifties as an illustrator in advertising and animation. He would adapt
his drawing to suit commissions, ranging between documentary accuracy notably on educational
artwork for children’s encyclopedias, and caricatural cartooning for humorous books given as prizes
in promotional campaigns for products, for example starring Calimero, the cute eggshell-headed
black chicken. These combined styles suited his first professional comics job in 1960, drawing the
magical adventures of Il Mago Zurli (below), single-page episodes based on a popular presenter on
kids’ television, in the weekly Il Corriere dei Piccoli, while his thoroughly researched period
illustration lent itself to numerous historical stories such as the ‘True Story of Pietro Micca’ scripted
by Milo Milani, a biography of the 17th century soldier and Italian national hero who sacrificed
himself to defend Turin.
Toppi’s unique artistry gradually emerged, especially when he joined the weekly Messaggero dei
ragazzi and was granted more freedom. His bravura use of negative space to add potency to areas
of white and of characters and other elements breaking out of their ‘boxes’ and disrupting the
edges of the panels and pages led to his being awarded the ‘Yellow Kid’ prize for the best Italian
comic artist of the year at the International Comics Show in Lucca in 1975. It would be the first of
many accolades.
While Toppi’s artistry graced numerous fine one-shot stories, from scripts by others for the pages
of Italy’s main anthologies, it became vital for him to take control of the writing. In the
experimental monthly Alter Alter he embarked on his personal re-tellings of seven lesser-known
tales from The Arabian Nights (sample pages below), narrated by the woman Sharaz-de who must
tell a fresh story every night to save her life.
Toppi also joined the high adventure magazine Orient Express, where he devised the intriguing
exploits of The Colllector (below), a sly time-traveller in bowler hat and prominent bullhorn
moustache, who hunts down fascinating artifacts. Archaia will release this series in 2013.
As his distinctive voice matured, so did his ideas. Toppi deserves credit as one of a triumvirate of
Italian innovators, the others being Guido Crepax and Gianni De Luca, who started in the Sixties
and Seventies radically reinventing how the pages of comics operated. Toppi’s innovations included
liberating his comics from their typical regulated sequential structure, from the need to organise a
page with borders, gutters and grids. Instead, he emphasises the bigger picture, the total, overall
interaction of panels, producing a heightened impact and contrast and the space and time for
appreciation and contemplation. He somehow seems to sculpt forms, faces and figures out of a
dazzling choreography of marks, lines and crosshatching of different weights and finishes, with just
the right amount of details exquisitely composed and placed among solid blacks and open white
spaces. No wonder Frank Miller praised him as “...a Maestro, a Master of the Art. He does the one
thing that separates the good from the astounding: Toppi makes the impossible look easy.”
To take one example, his 32-page story ‘Blues’ (above) from the March 1990 issue of Corto
Maltese magazine follows a black saxophonist named ‘Honeylips from his faded photograph pinned
to the wooden wall of his abandoned shack and back again. The ghost-like musician literally steps
out of the photo and across the rugged countryside to a scrap-yard, its wrinkled manager and a
disturbed killer. Along the way, any animal or object can become a chorus of commentators, from a
weasel, bird and dragonfly to an old mailbox or a broken petrol pump. The boldly designed pages
have an uncanny abstract geometry to them. In one full-page panel, the saxophonist is reduced to
a small figure top left while most of the page is filled with the locale of a field and two mice
perching on grain, while the next page is constructed around a tall telegraph pole stood right in the
middle, an example of why Toppi has been hailed as ‘the poet of verticality’.
It’s obvious that Walt Simonson was an early convert to Toppi thanks to the few imported editions
he discovered at American conventions in the Seventies. Among them was a copy of Sharaz-
de (above) which remains a touchstone throughout his career, as he reflects in his introduction to
the Archaia edition: “...the book is filled with beautiful drawing, wonderful design, captivating
imagery, unique characters (including the lovely narrator), and a driven imagination displayed with
all the gifts of a mature artist. I have looked though the book innumerable times, seeking and
finding inspiration. Whenever I feel myself running dry, revisiting old graphic thoughts and
solutions, Sergio Toppi is one of the artists to whom I return again and again to refresh myself, to
remind myself about what is possible, to relearn exactly how far drawing can take you.”
Toppi’s influence on Dave McKean is also clear at early stage in his whole-page designs, narrow
vertical panels and ornate patterning in Arkham Asylum and elsewhere. In McKean’s view, “You
could reduce the four or five basic elements of a Toppi illustration to just abstract colour and shape
and you’d still know it was him, his sense of tension and balance was exceptional and very
particular. He could also draw anything and give it a solidity and sense of movement that made
him ideal for telling stories in graphic novel form.”
During the early Nineties almost all of Italy’s once-vibrant anthology comics magazines folded,
removing a vital market for Toppi’s experimental one-shots. Luckily, the French publisher Mosquito
began issuing translations in 1995 and building a fresh readership in France. In 2004 Mosquito
started to commission new material from him, such as a sequel to Sharaz-De, a fifth album of The
Collector and extra thematic short stories to complete others already made for Italian magazines.
Additionally, in 2002 Mosquito introduced books of his illustrations, one of which on Scenes from
the Bible is also due from Archaia. In all, Mosquito have published over thirty books by Toppi, with
nearly twenty more planned for the coming years and he is being translated in America, Germany,
Spain, The Netherlands, Poland, Serbia and once more in Italy! China has also recently embraced
his work. A major touring exhibition opened in Beijing in October 2011 and will tour for three
years. It was shown in May 2012 at the CICAF festival in Hangzhou, visited by two million people in
five days, where Toppi won the Golden Monkey Award for comics.
Toppi left behind several unrealised projects, such as illustrating the Finnish Kalevala saga and
Mahler’s songs, but he has left us a wealth of wonders in his legacy. Till the end, Toppi was
passionate about not repeating himself but always to challenge and renew himself. “My drawing
pages are truly battlefields. I am fighting against the paper…” Out of these battles, Toppi emerges
triumphant.
Posted: December 22, 2012
This Article originally appeared in Comic Heroes Magazine No. 15, November 2012