Cerebus In December 1977, Sim began publishing
Cerebus, an initially bi-monthly, black-and-white comic book series. It began as a
parodic cross between
Conan the Barbarian and
Howard the Duck. Progressively, Sim shifted his narrative style to story arcs of a few issues' length. Soon he moved to longer, far more complex "novels", beginning with the 25-issue storyline
High Society which began in issue #26. The
sword and sorcery elements in the series, prominent up to that point, were minimized as Sim concentrated more on
politics.
Cerebus was published through Sim's company,
Aardvark-Vanaheim, which was run by his wife,
Deni Loubert. The two met in 1976, married in 1979, and divorced after nearly five years of marriage. In 1979, during a time when he was taking large doses of
LSD, Sim was hospitalized for treatment of
schizophrenia-like symptoms. "Arnold the Isshurian", a two-page parody of
Conan and
Little Nemo, ran in
Epic Illustrated in February 1982. Beginning with issue #65 (August 1984), Sim began collaborating with the artist
Gerhard, who drew all the backgrounds while Sim, who continued to write the series himself, drew the foreground figures. Gerhard and Sim continued to work together on
Cerebus until the series concluded with issue #300, in March 2004. Although Sim did not maintain a consistent monthly schedule for the entire run, which at times required an accelerated production schedule to catch up, he completed the
Cerebus series on schedule in March 2004. As the series progressed, it was noted for its tendency towards artistic experimentation. Sim has called the complete run of
Cerebus a 6,000-page novel, a view shared by several academic writers and comics historians. He purchased
Gerhard's stake in Aardvark-Vanaheim and has made arrangements for the
copyright of
Cerebus to fall into the
public domain following his death.
Post-Cerebus work Beginning in 2006, Sim began publishing an online comic-book biography of Canadian actress Siu Ta titled
Siu Ta, So Far. In late 2007, Sim announced two projects. One, which he initially referred to only as "Secret Project One", was
Judenhass (German for "Jew hatred"), a 56-page "personal reflection on The Holocaust" which was released on May 28, 2008. The other is
glamourpuss, a comic-book series which was a combined parody of fashion magazines (wherein Sim traces photos from real fashion magazines) and a historical study of the
photorealist style of comic-strip art, for which he did a promotional "tour" of comics-related forums online in February 2008. In 2009, Sim began publishing
Cerebus Archive, a bimonthly presentation of his work before and surrounding
Cerebus. On October 23, 2009, the first episode of the web series
Cerebus TV premiered. The show aired new episodes Fridays at 10 pm Eastern time, which then stream continuously throughout the week. Credits list Dave Sim as the executive producer. Sim was often the primary feature of the shows, either interviewing comics legends or showing behind the scenes at Aardvark-Vanaheim. As of early 2013, there were approximately 115 episodes of Cerebus TV. In 2011, BOOM! Town announced that in 2012 it would publish ''Dave Sim's Last Girlfriend'', a collection of letters between Dave Sim and Susan Alston originally intended for Denis Kitchen's Kitchen Sink Press. A collection of academic essays about
Cerebus was published in 2012 by McFarland. It appeared that the 2012 end of
Glamourpuss would mean the end of
The Strange Death of Alex Raymond, a running feature in that book. In 2013 it was announced
IDW would publish the series in a reworked edition, as well as handle a number of other projects, including a
Cerebus cover collection. In 2001, Sim and his then-collaborator
Gerhard founded the
Howard E. Day Prize for outstanding achievement in self-publishing, in tribute to Sim's mentor,
Gene Day. Bestowed annually at SPACE (
Small Press and Alternative Comics Expo) in
Columbus, Ohio from 2002 to 2008 the prize consisted of a $500 cash award and a commemorative plaque. The recipient was chosen by Sim and Gerhard from a pool of submitted works. Beginning in 2009, the Day Prize was replaced by the SPACE Prize. In 2017, Cerebus returned in a series of one-shots collectively known as Cerebus in Hell? Presents. Each title presented as a #1. In 2020, Sim ceased work on
The Strange Death of Alex Raymond. His collaborator on the project, Carson Grubaugh, finished and published the work, which saw release in 2021 through Living the Line. ==Influence==