Ottawa Citizen

Artist’s goal was ‘to have fun and do new things’

- JOHN ROGERS

Michael C. Gross, an artist, illustrato­r, film producer and personal designer who created two of the most iconic pop culture images of the 20th century — the enduring Ghostbuste­rs logo and a dog with a gun to its head for the cover of National Lampoon — died of cancer at age 70.

Gross died Monday, Nov. 16, at his Oceanside, Calif., home, his son, Hollywood cameraman Dylan Goss, told The Associated Press.

The artist, who had survived cancer 30 years before he was given a terminal diagnosis in 2014, said he decided to forgo any life-extending efforts. Instead, he told the AP following the diagnosis, that he would “go down fighting” and launched a darkly comic anti-cancer campaign.

Gross solicited dozens of paintings and drawings from fellow artists and created some of his own, each featuring a hand with a raised middle finger. Underneath them he put the words “Flip Cancer.”

He put the works, done in various media, on display at a gallery exhibition last year. At the time of his death, he was making plans to auction them and donate the money to cancer research.

It was the type of stunt that marked key points in the career of the artist who once described his life’s goal as a quest “to have fun and do new things.”

In 1973, he was art director for National Lampoon when he put a frightened-looking dog on the cover with a gun to its head and the words, “If You Don’t Buy This Magazine, We’ll Kill This Dog.”

“We were just going to do it as a subscripti­on ad in the magazine,” he told the AP. “Then we thought the next one would be, ‘OK, we killed the dog. Now we’re going to kill the cat. We really mean it.’ ?

When he learned the magazine was planning an entire issue making fun of death, the dog was promoted to the cover. In 2005, the American Society of Magazine Editors rated it one of the 40 greatest covers of all time.

For the first Ghostbuste­rs film in 1984, Gross created the drawing of the confused-looking spirit caught in the middle of a red circle with a slash through it.

It has come to be a ubiquitous symbol in American pop culture. The logo placed first, beating out the Chrysler Building, when the prestigiou­s Pratt Institute held a 125th anniversar­y celebratio­n in 2012 and surveyed people for their thoughts on the 125 most admired icons created by its alumni and faculty.

Born Oct. 4, 1945, Michael Curtiss Gross grew up in the Hudson River town of Newburgh, N.Y. As a child he began publishing his own fan magazines and making home movies with friends.

Unable to decide which career to pursue, he attended Pratt, where he majored in fine art and eventually drifted toward illustrati­on. After working for National Lampoon, Esquire and other publicatio­ns, he became John Lennon’s personal designer.

A prolific artist, his work ranged from animation to comic strips to political cartoons to abstract expression­ist paintings. Various examples of it have been displayed in New York’s Museum of Modern Art, Switzerlan­d’s Olympic Museum and other institutio­ns.

His son recalled a childhood growing up in the company of such figures as Andy Warhol, Truman Capote and John Belushi.

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Michael Gross

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