“The Crowd”
by Eric Drooker
Drooker.com
Posts by Eric Drooker
AutobioComix by Eric Drooker
Drooker.com
Disguised as a book of innocent postcards, Slingshot is a dangerous collection of Drooker’s most notorious posters. Plastered on brick walls from Brooklyn to Berlin and tattooed on bodies from Brazil to Bangkok.
84 pages, full color, 6” x 4.5”
$19 (+ shipping)
www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webs...
Look who I happened to run into in Union Square Park—a sight for sore eyes!
Drooker.com
"The Fall of Icarus”
by Eric Drooker
To come of age as an artist is to navigate a labyrinth of temptations, drawn ever closer to the shimmering lures of the metropolis. In the Greek myth, Daedalus, the master artisan, shaped two fragile wings of feathers and wax for himself and his son, Icarus.
““A Day in the Life of Eleanor”
by Eric Drooker
Published in Drawn & Quarterly (Vol. 2, Number 2)
Drooker.com
#DrawnAndQuarterly
“Gunboat Diplomacy”
by Eric Drooker
I initially designed the scene as a panel for my graphic novel, Naked City (Dark Horse Books, 2024). The story’s protagonist witnesses her mother being abducted by ICE and deported. A year later, I revised and expanded the image to depict Lady Liberty being taken into custody.
I’m thrilled to announce the French edition of my latest graphic novel, arriving this October. It’s a real honor to be working with the esteemed Paris-based art publisher Les Éditions Martin de Halleux.
Naked City: Un Conte Urbain (An Urban Tale)
328 pages · Hardcover
Drooker.com
Self Portrait, by Eric Drooker
Drooker.com
“Lower East Side Story”
by Eric Drooker
(For the New Yorker, 1994)
Drooker.com
The "B-2 Spirit Bomber," a marvel of modern technology, glides over Iran like a ghost—unseen, unheard, untouchable. Built to slip past radar and drop precision strikes from the dark, it’s not subtle about what it means: overwhelming American airpower. And here’s the kicker—each one costs $2 billion.
“Under Bridges” by Eric Drooker
As I walked along the East River one dusky winter evening searching for images, I came across two men beneath the Brooklyn Bridge. They seemed to be living there. On that cold December evening, their fire drew me in.
Drooker.com/new-yorker
“War” by Eric Drooker
Drooker.com
"Joyful Noise" by Eric Drooker
The New Yorker, February 28, 1994
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#EricDrooker #theNewYorker #theNewYorkerCover #theNewYorkerMagazine #DarkHorseComics #Masereel #StreetMusician #Busker #Busking
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“Cliff Dwellers” by Eric Drooker
In their grim ascent to the top, men in business suits inhabit an amoral realm of boardrooms and penthouses. Skyscrapers stretch upward, yearning for a closer connection to heaven—Nearer, My God, to Thee.
Drooker.com
In the studio. . . .
NAKED CITY: A Graphic Novel
336 pages, hardcover
8.75” x 6.25” Dark Horse Books
Available at bookstores everywhere.
Purchase a signed copy from the artist. Each copy includes an original hand-drawn sketch:
Drooker.com
The Mummy was buried alive three thousand years ago. In 1921, a team of archaeologists unearthed his tomb—and awakened something that should have slept forever. Since that day, he has walked the earth, relentless and undying—hunting for the woman he lost. . . .
“The Weight” by Eric Drooker
“Winter in America”
by Eric Drooker
Drooker.com/prints
Album cover for Rage Against the Machine by Eric Drooker
“All art constantly aspires towards the condition of music.”
Drooker.com
Friday, Jan 30—National Shutdown
General Strike! No Work. No School. No Shopping. Stop Funding ICE.
Migrating more than 3,000 miles from the northeastern U.S. to southern Mexico, the monarch butterfly has become a powerful symbol of the immigrant rights movement.
nationalshutdown.org
"Children's Games" by Eric Drooker
We joined the crowd heading toward Central Park. As the numbers swelled, the march spilled into the streets and moved toward the United Nations, demanding an end to U.S. involvement in Vietnam—with Martin Luther King at the front, leading the way.
“Oil Wars” by Eric Drooker
Ink on Scratchboard
Original drawing available:
Drooker.com/original-art
#EricDrooker #AntiWar #PoliticalArt
“Seasonal Delivery” by Eric Drooker
Every winter, I spotted him ringing his bell outside S. Klein’s department store on East 14th Street.
“But how will Santa get into the apartment?”
We lived on the seventh floor of a high-rise, and there was no chimney or fireplace for him to come down.