>  Ganzdex, Glasses Are Free
1.16.2004
>  Ganzdex, A Tribute to Steig
10.16.2003
>  Angela Riechers, 100 Felons
9.8.2003
>  Ganzdex, Salute Satch
8.11.2003
>  Stephanie Krause, When Toast Attacks
7.1.2003
>  Leah Singer, Leah at Barney's
6.11.2003
>  Alex Kalman, untitled
5.20.2003
>  Ganzdex, Draw movie
5.20.2003
>  Ganzdex, From Our Pages: Hairy Who
4.8.2003
>  Ganzdex, From Our Pages: Tony Sarg
4.8.2003
>  Graham Roumieu, Scrimshaw
4.8.2003
>  Ganzdex, Pioneer 10 Whispers Its Last Breath
3.7.2003
>  Ganzdex, Germans und Cowboys
2.6.2003
>  Lauren Redniss, Dancing
1.15.2003
>  Ganzdex, Bodoni Jonas
10.23.2002
>  Nate Pommer, Eye Am Your Eye
9.13.2002
>  Stefan Gruber, A Nautical Stereoptical Sport to Try
8.01.2002
>  Eun-Ha Paek, Eun-Ha, How Did You Get Your Name?
7.1.2002
>  Ganzdex, Cresser's Brush Store, Edinburgh
6.12.2002
>  William van Roden, William van Roden Enjoys His Sleep
5.15.2002
>  Ganzdex, The Ganzfeld Gets Modern!
4.4.2002
>  Ganzdex, Mexican Fotonovelas
4.3.2002
>  Ganzdex, Quadratino
4.2.2002
>  Peter Blegvad, Imagined, Observed, Remembered
4.1.2002
>  Ganzdex, Adamson
4.1.2002
>  Ganzdex: Bill Holman  launch feature
  Seemingly stuck in the Vaudeville tradition, Bill Holman drew a slapstick, nonsensical world where every social norm was gently tweaked. These panel cartoons from the late 1930's show him at his manic best -- every object a possible gag, every word a potential pun.
For more information, see The Encyclopedia of American Comics, Ron Goulman, Ed. No plugins required.
>  Ganzdex, Snickles
3.1.2002
>  Ganzdex, The Ganzfeld (unbound)
04.09.03