Processing

ResourceSpace
Account Menu
  • Log in
  •  Dash
  •  Featured collections
  •  Recent
  •  Knowledge Base
 All resources
Keywords
Program Category
Historical Themes
By date

 New content RSS feed

 Geographic search

 Advanced search


Log in

Username
Password


 Click here to apply for an account

 Click here if you have forgotten your password

Powered by Powered by ResourceSpace
%BROWSE_INDENT% %BROWSE_EXPAND% %BROWSE_TEXT% %BROWSE_REFRESH%
Browse by tag
Featured collections
Collections
Workflow
Browse
View all results

Joe Shuster Commemorative plaque, 2019 

Full screen preview

Resource tools

File information File dimensions File size Options

Original JPG File

8400 × 6000 pixels (50.4 MP)

71.1 cm × 50.8 cm @ 300 PPI

3.6 MB Restricted

Low resolution print

2000 × 1429 pixels (2.86 MP)

16.9 cm × 12.1 cm @ 300 PPI

577 KB Restricted

Screen

1120 × 800 pixels (0.9 MP)

9.5 cm × 6.8 cm @ 300 PPI

221 KB Restricted
  •  Add to collection
Resource details

Resource ID

7551

Access

Open

Credit Line

Heritage Toronto

Date of Creation

2019

Description

The iconic image of the comic book hero Superman was created by Toronto-born artist Joe Shuster. He and writer Jerry Siegel (1914–1996) developed the character in high school in Cleveland, Ohio, and the story was first printed in Action Comics #1 in 1938.

Shuster grew up in a low-income Jewish family in the Kensington Market area. His mother, Ida, had fled Russian pogroms and his father, Julius, was a garment worker. As a child, Shuster went to Lansdowne Public School and made his first drawings on scrap butcher’s paper. He helped support the family selling copies of the Toronto Daily Star.

The family moved to Ohio in 1924, but Toronto still inspired Shuster. The Daily Planet, where Superman works under his secret identity of Clark Kent, was based on the Star, which was located here until 1971. The architecture of Metropolis was based on Toronto and Cleveland.

Shuster and Siegel sold the rights to Superman to DC Comics in 1938 and became one of the most successful creative teams in the industry, writing and drawing the comic for nearly a decade. Today, Shuster and Siegel are recognized as the creators of Superman, a cultural icon enjoyed worldwide.

Keywords

comics, graphic arts

Program Category

Historical Plaques

Rights

Heritage Toronto

Historical Themes

Entertainment and Leisure, Faith and Religion, Visual Arts

Time Period

1900-1953

Caption

Joe Shuster Commemorative plaque, 2019

Consent management
License management
Location Data

Marker lat / long: 43.648273, -79.382474 (WGS84)

Comments