Jack Edward Jackson (May 15, 1941 – June 8, 2006), better known by his pen name Jaxon, was an American
cartoonist, illustrator, historian, and writer. He co-founded
Rip Off Press, and some consider him to be the first
underground comix artist, due to his most well-known comic strip God Nose.[1]
Early life
Jackson was born in 1941 in
Pandora, Texas. He majored in accounting at the
University of Texas and was a staffer for its Texas Ranger humor magazine, until he and others were fired over what he called "a petty censorship violation".[2][3]
Career
In 1964, Jackson self-published the one-shot God Nose, which is considered by some to be the first
underground comic[1] in the modern sense, discounting “
Tijuana bibles”. He moved to San Francisco in 1966, where he became art director of the dance-poster division of the
Family Dogpsychedelic rock music-promotion collective. In 1969, he co-founded
Rip Off Press, one of the first independent publishers of
underground comix, with three other Texas transplants,
Gilbert Shelton, Fred Todd, and Dave Moriaty. Despite this, most of his underground comics work (heavily influenced by
EC Comics) was published by
Last Gasp, including frequent contributions to the Last Gasp anthology Slow Death. (Jaxon left his affiliation with Last Gasp in c. 1991.)[4]
In addition to Slow Death, Jackson contributed to a selection of other underground comix, including Barbarian Comics (California Comics) and Radical America Komiks (Radical America Magazine). In the 1980s Jaxon contributed historical comics to
Fantagraphics' Graphics Story Monthly and a number of
Kitchen Sink Press titles, including BLAB! and the 11-part, 126-page "Bulto… The Cosmic Slug," about a space creature's effect on the people of the ancient Southwest, which was serialized in Death Rattle. Jackson did freelance work for
Marvel Comics as a colorist from 1988 to 1991.[4]
Jackson was also known for his historical work, documenting the history of
Native America and
Texas, including the graphic novels Comanche Moon (1979), Recuerden El Alamo (1979), Los Tejanos (1982), The Secret of San Saba (1989), Lost Cause (1998), Indian Lover: Sam Houston & the Cherokees (1999), El Alamo (2002), and the written works like Los Mesteños: Spanish Ranching in Texas: 1721–1821 (1986), Indian Agent: Peter Ellis Bean in Mexican Texas (2005), and many others.
Flags Along the Coast: Charting the
Gulf of Mexico, 1519–1759. Austin, TX: Book Club of Texas/Wind River Press, 1995.
Shooting the Sun: Cartographic Results of Military Activities in Texas, 1689–1892. Austin, TX: Book Club of Texas/Wind River Press, 1998.
(ed., with trans. John Wheat) Texas by Terán: The Diary Kept by General
Manuel de Mier y Terán on His 1828 Inspection of Texas. Austin, TX: University of Texas Press, 2000.
Indian Agent:
Peter Ellis Bean In Mexican Texas. College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press, 2005.
Kim Thompson and
Gary Groth, "Devoured By His Own Fantasies", introduction to Optimism of Youth: The Underground Work of Jack Jackson,
Fantagraphics, 1991.