Skip to main content
CNN.com International
The Web    CNN.com      Powered by
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
ON TV
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Entertainment

Spiegelman's ghostly New Yorker cover

By Todd Leopold
CNN

New Yorker cover
The 9/11 cover of The New Yorker, September 24, 2001 (contrast heightened for detail).

NEW YORK (CNN) -- Art Spiegelman's black-on-black September 11 New Yorker cover was actually a "side thought," he says.

"I was trying to fix something I thought was better," he says, holding up a poster depicting the towers covered in a black drape looming over the finely detailed prewar apartment blocks of a blue-sky downtown New York.

"[But] this was just wrong. ... So I was beginning to dim the sky down to gray and make the buildings gray ... and Francoise [Mouly, his wife and The New Yorker's arts editor] is saying 'This isn't working.'

"And I [thought] ... what's the least that could be said. So black on black," he recalls. "And then I thought that was one of my many temper tantrums and was going to get back to work, and Francoise said, 'No, you've got it. Let it go.' "

The other cover was eventually used for a book, "110 Stories."


Story Tools
Click Here to try 4 Free Trial Issues of Time! cover
Top Stories
Review: 'Perfect Man' fatally flawed
Top Stories
EU 'crisis' after summit failure

CNN US
On CNN TV E-mail Services CNN Mobile CNN AvantGo CNNtext Ad info Preferences
SEARCH
   The Web    CNN.com     
Powered by
© 2005 Cable News Network LP, LLLP.
A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines. Contact us.
external link
All external sites will open in a new browser.
CNN.com does not endorse external sites.
 Premium content icon Denotes premium content.