Noah Van Sciver


Noah Van Sciver is an independent American cartoonist. He currently resides in Columbia, South Carolina.

Early life

Van Sciver grew up in a large family in New Jersey. A self-taught artist, he was influenced by many comics, including Ralph Snart Adventures and comics by Joe Matt and R. Crumb. He and his family were members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, but he is no longer a member. His brother Ethan is a comic book artist and an internet personality.

Comics

Van Sciver began producing his one-person anthology Blammo in 2006, originally selling them for one dollar. His 4 Questions strip in Denver's alternative weekly, Westword, helped publicize his work when he started publishing it in 2007. After four issues, Kilgore Books & Comics published subsequent issues. His short story "Abby's Road," which originally appeared in Blammo #6, was selected for the Best American Comics 2012 anthology. He stopped publishing 4 Questions in 2015. Since December 2011, Van Sciver's work has appeared in Mad magazine, and has been featured in The Comics Journal, Mome, and Mineshaft.
In October 2012, Fantagraphics Books published The Hypo: The Melancholic Young Lincoln, a narrative biography of Abraham Lincoln that spans the years 1837–1842. The Hypo, Van Sciver's first full-length graphic novel, earned positive critical praise, and made it onto several "best-of" lists for 2012, including MTV Geek, Boing Boing, Publishers Weekly Critic's Poll, and was ranked as one of the Best Graphic Novels of 2012 by the Library Journal. In 2015, Fantagraphics released two Van Sciver graphic novels, St. Cole and Fante Bukowski. Van Sciver stated in an interview that he based the character Fante Bukowski's experiences partially on his own experiences. The character Fante Bukowski is an aspiring writer hungry for recognition, and his name is a combination of the surnames of John Fante and Charles Bukowski. In a 2018 interview, Van Sciver said that he did not have plans to draw more Fante Bukowski books.
Also in 2015, Kilgore Books released Van Sciver's autobiographical mini comic My Hot Date, which won the 'Best Story' Ignatz Award at the Small Press Expo. For the 2015–2016 school year, Van Sciver was a fellow at the Center for Cartoon Studies in White River Junction, VT. In Van Sciver's autobiographical comic, One Dirty Tree, he examined his childhood. He reported that his family was not happy with the comic, and Van Sciver felt bad for making his father a villain, when his father suffers from mental illness. John Wenzel at The Know described the comic's imagery as "uncanny, deceptively casual."
Van Scriver drew the artwork for the graphic novel Grateful Dead Origins, which was written by Chris Miskiewicz. The book tells the story of the early days of the rock band the Grateful Dead. It is scheduled to be published by Z2 Comics in 2020.
Van Sciver uses Photoshop along with traditional media like radiograph pens, Higgins inks, colored pencils and watercolors. He keeps regular hours drawing, working each day from 9am until 5pm. He has used social media like Patreon and Twitter in the past to get immediate feedback on his work. He moved to Columbia, South Carolina, in 2018.

Awards

In addition to his Ignatz win, Noah had been nominated for the award seven times:
In 2016, his graphic novel Fante Bukowski was nominee for a Best Writer/Artis Eisner Award.
Van Sciver has been nominated for two Association for Mormon Letters: in 2015 for My Hot Date and 2018 for One Dirty Tree. He received the AML Award for One Dirty Tree.

Interviews