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In the 1950s, he started drawing newspaper comic strips, political cartoons and cover illustrations for Broadway's "Playbill." Later in life, Robinson taught at New York's School of Visual Arts and was president of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists and the National Cartoonists Society. "He saw the value of comics as an art," Kochman said. In recent years, rare issues of comic books have fetched hundreds of thousands of dollars at auction. Robinson also served as a historian, authoring "The Comics: An Illustrated History of Comic Strip Art" and curating gallery exhibits, including one of the biggest at the Kennedy Library in Washington in 1973 that included all the genres of the strip comic art form. Mike Marts, editor of the Batman line at DC Comics, said Robinson was "an innovator, a pioneer in storytelling." "The streets of Gotham City," Marts said, "are a little lonelier today."
[Associated
Press;
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