Italian comics magazine (1980–2008)
FrigidaireCategories | Comics magazine |
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Founded | 1980 |
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First issue | November 1980 |
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Final issue | 2008 |
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Country | Italy |
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Based in | Rome |
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Language | Italian |
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Website | Frigidaire |
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Frigidaire was a comics magazine published in Rome, Italy. The magazine had significant effects on graphic design, illustrations and written speech in the country during the 1980s.[1] In 2008 it folded, and from 2009 it became a supplement of Liberazione, a defunct communist newspaper.
History and profile
Frigidaire was established in 1980.[1][2] The first issue appeared in November.[3] The founders were Vincenzo Sparagna, Stefano Tamburini, Filippo Scòzzari, Andrea Pazienza, Massimo Mattioli, and Tanino Liberatore.[4][5] The magazine had its headquarters in Rome.[2]
In addition to cartoons Frigidaire featured avant-garde reportages and interviews[1] and covers articles on visual art.[2] It also included investigative reports.[2] Over time the magazine became a mouthpiece for left-wing counterculture in the country.[2]
At the beginning of the 2000s the frequency of Frigidaire was switched to bi-monthly.[3] In 2003 Vincenzo Sparagna sold the publisher of the magazine,[6] which was temporarily ceased publication from April–May 2003 to 2006.[3]
In 2005, Sparagna moved the magazine's headquarters from Rome to a rural area near Giano. The estate, dubbed the 'Republic of Frigolandia', housed the magazine's museum. The estate acted like a micro-country, and was established with a constitution that values inclusion.[7]
On 25 April 2009 the magazine began to be published as an insert of Liberazione, a communist daily.[3]
In September 2002, the covers and some selected pages of the magazine were exhibited at the 7th International Comics Festival in Athens.[1] Frigidaire’s archives are housed at Yale's Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library.[7]
In 2020, a local right-wing party attempted to evict Sparagna from the Republic of Frigolandia, threatening the museum and its archives.[7]
See also
References
External links