After this relocation, Terry Zwigoff released Crumb (1994), a documentary film about her father and their family. Zwigoff later commissioned Sophie to prepare some original drawings for inclusion in his 2001 comedy drama Ghost World, an adaptation of Daniel Clowes' comics serial of the same name.
After completing her secondary education in France, Crumb studied acrobatics and clowning at a French circus school. While living in Brooklyn in the mid-2000s, she sold her comics on the street and apprenticed herself to a tattoo artist. At another stage, she earned a living by teaching English as a foreign language.[4]
She lives in the south of France with her husband (a construction worker) and their son Eli, who was born in 2009.[2][5] She had an older half-brother, Jesse, who died in 2017 from injuries he sustained in a car accident.[6]
Published work
When Crumb was a child, her parents published some of her drawings in their comics anthology, Weirdo; she later contributed to their comic book series Dirty Laundry Comics, originally published from 1977 to 1992.[7] Her artwork as a six-year-old was also featured in Wimmen's Comix #11 (Apr. 1987).
Crumb illustrated a sketchbook for the American film Ghost World (2001).[4] Her drawings were meant to reflect the personality and inner life of Enid Coleslaw (Thora Birch), the film's protagonist.
In 2002, Fantagraphics Books and Oog & Blik published Crumb's first comic book, Belly Button,[4] followed by Belly Button Comix #2 in 2004. She contributed multiple pieces to installments of Mome published between 2005 and 2008.
Her development as a graphic artist are documented in Sophie Crumb: Evolution of a Crazy Artist (W.W. Norton, 2010).[3][8][9] Her debut solo show, which featured more than 20 drawings and giclée prints, coincided with the book's publication.[10] The show ran from November 4 to December 30, 2010, at DCKT Contemporary, Dennis Christie and Ken Tyburski's contemporary art gallery in New York City.