Sunday, February 15, 2015

Lights On


Comics are a synthesis of words and images. This synthesis though has always been a lopsided endeavor. At least intellectually. As a visual medium comic must place an emphasis on the image over the words. A natural outgrowth of this is that the words placed within a comics panel should not repeat the information given in the panel, but instead relay information independent of the artwork. To borrow a phrase from film (another medium of synthesis, this time of image and sound) comics is a show don’t tell medium.

Sarah Ferrick’s approach to comics is unique, not in that she subverts this idea, what is said and what is depicted are wholly different, but that the words themselves are turned into the primary art object being depicted. The images inside the panels are merely window dressing for the words. By turning the words themselves into an extension of the artwork each letter she chooses, and how she chooses to draw them, becomes a crucial plot point to the story being told.

There are seven words total in this comic. Almost all repeated at least once. Some right after themselves. Ferrick choose each word carefully, both for their meaning, but also for how strong and weak each word is, in the abstract and in relation to each other.


“GOD” echo’s throughout this comic, taking up almost the entire left half of the page first. Each letter of “GOD” is depicted with a tightness, although the rounder elements of O and D are given a bit of dimensionality around their corners, the actual pencil lines that make up each letter are carefully constructed to make the image of the word “GOD” appear orderly. The red coloring, which is used to highlight each letter, is also tightly packed within the linework of each letter. All this attention gives a great importance to the word “GOD” within the image, but the sound that is produced in the readers mind is not a yell or a scream, but rather a passive use of the word. Evoking the meaning behind the word, but not the brimstone.

To the immediate right of “GOD” is a series of black boxes drawn within each other. On the top left corner of each box Ferrick paints a small band of yellow and white to give them the sheen of light and an added depth of space; creating the visual affect of a hallway of sorts. At the end of this series of boxes we see the words “FUCK ME/FUCK ME” etched into the final black box in the same shade of yellow as the highlights. Due to the words perceived distance from the reader, and the cleanness of the lines that make them up, they seem almost quite, like faint whispers.

Ferrick's use of “FUCK ME” and “GOD” on the first page is interesting, because everything involved in their depiction has a silencing effect. For such strong words they don’t feel that way. The control of the letters, along with the deafening nature of her blacks, make the words barely register so that even the vulgarity of the fuck and the holiness of god are muted; creating at most a rise in the reader but not a feeling.


The next page is a response to the words spoken in the first, but the calmness of the first page is now a contrived hesitance. Beginning with a big fat “BUT” which seems to be in the process of overlapping within itself, turning each bend of the B into another corner to hide within. Unlike “GOD” “BUT” is given no primary coloring, leaving it to exist in its own translucence, making each of its twists and turns all the less effective. Every line can be seen by the reader because it has nothing to hide behind. Below it “BUT” is repeated once again, but in its stark black it resembles more a shadow of its first appearance than a new iteration.

To the immediate right of “BUT” we see Ferrick's use of commas to create a sense of stuttering for the reader. Again one of the “I('s)” is drawn with a deep black while the other is in a looser and plumper style, creating the resemblance of an echo between each other. Additionally we see the use of a comma here which, unlike a period that would have caused a stop in the readers mind, causes the reader to stammer over themselves as they read each letter in succession.

Taking up the entire right half of the second page is a giant “UH” drawn in almost complete black, sans the mild application of purple to create a bit of dimensionality. The “UH” resembles the “GOD” found on page one in its size, but the strength represented by “GOD” is devoid here. By depicting “UH” in a similar manner we see explicitly how quivering the response to the first page is, the “UH” reinforces the “BUTS[’s]” and “I[’s]” on the left side of the page, but unlike “GOD” which gives strength to the “FUCK ME/FUCK ME” this “UH” reinforces how weak they are, turning the whispers they represent into pure silence as “UH” drones on.



On the final page “GOD” is repeated once again. Ferrick’s representation though is less controlled, more reminiscent of the anger found in the words of the old testament god, rather than the new. Each letter is drawn looser, with an added depth in linework so that it looks like each letter is falling backwards in on itself. Where the red coloring on page one was exact, here it looks as if it was almost glopped on and smeared around the linework in circular motions only to be violently dashed off when Ferrick came to a straight line. Its utterance now has an anger to it.

The small corridor that once housed a tight and quickly repeated “FUCK ME/FUCK ME” has also been blown up in size and is depicted in a less controlled manner. The highlights of yellow are now erratic splotches of no color. Due to the lengthening of the hallway the echo effect of GOD feels infinitely deeper now; as it reverberates down the long hallway of nothingness it seems like it never ends. The whisper of “FUCK ME/FUCK ME” seems long gone.

In the bottom left corner of the page, almost hiding from this noise and anger is a small penciled in box with the words“But. I, I, UH” inside. It continues to feel like the wrong answer.

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You can find Sarah Ferrick’s Tumblr Here. 
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*This post originally appeared on Comics Should Be Good

Thursday, February 12, 2015

{Scattershot 10}

Webcomics 




The Darling Sleeper, The Mediums alt-comics blog, has posted several worthwhile webcomics. The most important of these though, at least for me, marks the return of Michiel Budel the artist behind Wayward Girls with The Hoax. Michiel is one of the most interesting and singular artists in alt-comics and his absence over the last year or so has been very sad. I’m glad he is back.

Swim Thru pt 1. by Annie Mok & Sophia Foster-Dimino is a really interesting and beautiful take on the long scroll comic. The use of characters moving horizontally as a natural stopping point in the scroll is fascinating. I’m not sure how intentional it was, but i enjoy how it worked and i'd like to see that idea developed further. The stories about mermaids, but like most stories about mermaids it isn’t.




Subscriptions / Patrons / Other




Youth In Decline’s yearly subscription is almost over. That seems like the one must have subscription. At least for me. Sands is one of the few publishers who is able to find talents that i am completely unaware of and present them in a beautiful format every three months. 

In other almost done yearly subscription news Uncivilized Books spring season has a subscription that is in its last few days. Two of my favorite books of 14’ were released by Uncivilized so i see no reason why this year would be any different.





It’s a new year, which means one thing and one thing only: A new series of COPRA is starting up. COPRA 19 can be purchased here.

Interviews



Alex Degen , Leslie Stein and Sam Alden are interviewed at The Darling Sleeper. The most interesting aspect of those interviews is seeing the artists workspace. I don’t think the questions are particularly strong, and their repetition of a few of them across every interview makes for bland reading in some parts because of the nature of the questions.

Essays

Julia Gfrorer on Dead Astronaut Comics by Jack Teagle and Starlight Local by Lala Alberts. Gfrorer has written about the same Alberts comics as me over the last few months and every time her column comes out i feel embarrassed about how bad my essay is in comparison. 


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(sorry for being short on essays and interviews this month. For some reason i didn't bookmark that many and now i can't think of any...so...yeah)

Thursday, February 5, 2015

Media Consumed In The Month Of January


Film

Obscene
Foxcatcher
Whiplash
The Skeleton Twins
30 For 30: The U Part:2
Birdman
The Judge
Selma
Altman 
The Simpsons Season 5
Band of Outsiders
Sweet Smell of Success
John Wick
Women Aren’t Funny
Inherent Vice
The Equalizer
Bobs Burgers Season 3



Comics

Harold - Antoine Cosse
How To Be Happy - Eleanor Davis
An Age of License - Lucy Knisley
Set To Sea - Drew Weing
Fran - Jim Woodring
Before Bone - Jeff Smith
The Late Child and Other Animals - Marguerite Van Cook & James Romberger
Usagi Yojimbo v3 #39 - #85
Rage of Poseidon - Anders Nilsen
Beautiful Darkness - Fabien Vehlmann & Kerascoet





Books

On Photography - Susan Sontag

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

{Scattershot 9}

Self Promotion



I joined Alec Berry’s wonderful column for Comics Should Be Good The Orange Won’t Peel. It has no set release schedule, but we have an idea of one between us. The main thought behind the column is to talk about works we feel are important and overlooked, with a focus on small press and webcomics. Its format is based around two short reviews and a longer conversation between the two of us on a single book.

It should be noted that neither of us are paid for this column. Even though the site it is being published on is a subsidiary of CBR; which to my knowledge is profitable. This knowledge is based around it still existing along with every annoying ad i get while visiting it. I knew this fact well before agreeing to write for it and since i never signed any deal I will most likely be posting my individual essays (minus some edits) a few weeks after they appear on that site here.

As an occasional writer on comics i feel it is important to discuss content and the sites that post them regarding compensation. To my knowledge The Beat, Bleeding Cool and this particular branch of CBR do not pay any of their contributors. And while Comics Alliance does, they choose to retain the copyright to every author they publish works, something from my basic understanding of writing on the web is unique.

Jonah Weiland, Heidi McDonald and Rich Johnston should be ashamed of this fact. But i’ve heard them wrap riddles around themselves defending this behavior enough times that they won’t be. No one who makes a salary off of others ever is.

I should be ashamed too, to allow myself to be taken advantage like this. To be a cog. But at least for now the thought of writing with Alec outweighs the concerns with writing for a site like this. It may change in the future. It will most likely change. God i hope it does. Because i don't think the me of a year ago and the me of next year would sit at the same table as the me of now if it doesn't.

Anyways if you want to read Alec and I on various comics you can read the column when it comes out. And if you don’t feel like visiting a non-paying yet profitable website for my writing you can wait a few weeks and see it on this blog. I am okay with either choice. I understand either choice. (My union steward grandfather would definitely be saddened by one of those choices though, along with my own)

Webcomics

X-Mas passed since the last one of these posts so here is a Patrick Kyle & Leslie Stein X-Mas comic to remind you about the joys of a month ago.

Katie Skelly returns to the Slutist with a new installment of her series Agent 9. This one has a three panel sequence that feels very influenced by Crepax that i enjoyed. I also liked the flippancy of the dialogue.





A new Connor Willumsen webcomic. It seems particularly Ben Jones-ey. I remember half staring at this book at CAB having no idea who did it and why it seemed to be housed in a manilla envelope. Turns out i probably should have looked a bit harder at it.





Lala Alberts released her previously published by Sacred Prism book Paranoid Apartment online. You can read part one here and part two here.

Interviews



Adrian Tomine announced a new book, Killing and Dying, which is a collection of the past few issues of Optic Nerve. The announcement was accompanied by a New Yorker interview.

On his use of words and images in his comics and illustration work:

“...Most of my comics are pretty evenly divided between words and pictures, and, if anything, I’ve put an emphasis on the writing over the years, letting the words do the heavy-lifting with the storytelling. So, to spend several weeks working on a single image for a cover—and thinking about how to communicate only visually—has been very instructive to me as a cartoonist.”




Essays





Annie Ishii interviewed about Massive, both the new fantagraphics anthology series and the company  of the same name. Massive also created the perfect youtube video to accompany their new book.

Tucker Stone on Demon #10.

Brian Chippendale’s year end review. It’s meandering and at times angry and pretty perfect.



Ivan Brunetti talks about his failed attempt at drawing Nancy. I don't actually mind the strips Brunetti shows, although they are decidedly more nihilistic than Bushmiller's.

Chris Ware on Richard McGuire's Here. I was shocked to find out he’d like it.


Matt Seneca’s best of 14 list. It involves multiple forms of media including best running back, although his best running back choice was pretty predictable.

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Media Consumed In The Month Of December

Film

All The Boys Are Called Patrick
Brooklyn Nine-Nine Season 1
Hard Boiled
Une Femme Est Une Femme
Regarding Susan Sontag
30 For 30: The U
Banksy Does New York
30 For 30: Rand University
Gerhard Richter Painting
Marina Abramovic: The Artist Is Present
La Chinoise
Time Is Illmatic
The Mindy Project Season 1 & 2
Bojack Horsman Christmas Special
A Brief History Of Time
Archer Season 1 - 4
30 For 30: The Price of Gold
Anchorman 2
The Muppets: A Christmas Carol
The Simpsons Season 4
The Interview


Comics

Yummy Fur #10 - #22  - Chester Brown
Ayako - Osamu Tezuka
Loveryboys - Gilbert Hernandez
Arsene Schrauwen - Olivier Schrauwen
Mathematical Solutions For A Global Crisis - Jesse Jacobs
The Shadow: Midnight In Moscow - Howard Chaykin
Through The Woods - Emily Carroll

Books

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man - James Joyce
Civil Disobedience - Henry David Thoreau
Ten Days That Shook The World - John Reed
Howl: and Other Poems - Allen Ginsberg

Friday, December 12, 2014

{Scattershot 8}

Webcomics



Michael DeForge has launched a Patreon. For $3 a month you get 12 to 20 pages of original comics every thirty days, which seems like the best deal in comics.



I started to wonder what Ethan Riley has been up to, and after a quick google search i found that he had a few short comics on his site which i have not read. So heres a link to those.

A compilation of every Same Hat scan.

Subscription Drives

(Preamble: 2014 is almost over which means, as has now become a sacred event over the past two years in alt-comics, every small press publisher will begin opening subscriptions to their 2015 publishing slate. It makes sense to do this at the start of the year, it really does, but the drawback is that 15-20 different publishers are offering the same service at the same time and it begins to get overwhelming, at least for me. So the general idea behind this section is to keep a rolling list going to make things slightly organized.)

Youth In Decline (Ends 2/14/15)

Interviews


Experimental manga (and comics in general) heavyweight Seiichi Hayashi was interviewed at Varoom.I think this is the first interview i’ve ever seen with him. I guess that may be a pitfall with Holmberg dropping definitive histories to every book he translates in the leadup to their publication.

This is a bit old, (as in 6 months old) but Jog interviewed Jean Pierre Dionnet for TJC. Dionnet seems like a world class talker, but since i know so little about him this isn’t a problem.

In this excerpt he talks about finding Jack Kirby:

“And then I found an Iron Man begun by Gene Colon and finished by Jack Kirby. And I found the Thor story where he goes in the Inferno. I was hooked, because suddenly I realized that he [Kirby] was the master of that new form called comics. Not coming from a good copy of comic strips like some others, because of a bunch of EC reprints or whatever. It wasn’t something reminiscent of Alex Raymond. Al Williamson was very friendly. But with Kirby, I discovered a guy who, for me, opened the door and closed it. After, everything is postmodern, including Watchmen, which for me is the tomb of comics, built on the body of Ditko.”


Olivier Schrauwen interviewed at Pastebin. A short interview, but much better than i was expecting.

Bart Beaty talks about his book on Archie. As Beaty mentions early in the interview i’m glad he, and his publisher, moved away from the “greatest” hits aspect that most academic writing on comics tends to fall into. Maus and Fun Home are fine (or Fun Home is fine, i have issues with Maus) but when every book on comics revolve around them it seems a bit...reductive. I get that it’s a “new” field but imagine if every academic book on cinema was about Citizen Kane. It’d be laughable.

Essays/Reviews


Matt Seneca returns from his self inflicted retirement to review the presumptive book of the year Richard McGuire’s Here. 
By way of thaleslira a link to a composite list of some of the articles written for the now defunct Comets Comets. The comment sections also seem to be intact which is really great.

Ryan Holmberg on Baby Boom at Comics Comics. This is really interesting in that Holberg discusses a fatigue with Yokoyama clean worlds and a wanting for him to evolve, which he seems glimmers of in Baby Boom. Based on his work published in the US after this article though it seems like it was just that, a glimmer and a hope.


Gabriel Winslow-Yost writes a pretty great essay on Tardi’s two books dealing with the First World War, It Was and War Of The Trenches and Goddamn! This War!. The hardest part with writing about those books is conveying Tardi’s anger with the forces that sent those young men to die needlessly, and also his sympathy for those sent.

Other

Mr. Oliver Ristau posted his top 20 comics list (top 5 with 15 honorable mentions). It’s in german, but you can give the list itself a glance since each title mentioned is in english. Plus if you’re feeling bold you run the article through google translate and get the gist of each piece.

Killer Mike and EL-P discuss the filmography of Steven Seagal. Blind devotion to action stars / films is something i can deeply relate too. Seriously talk to me about Roadhouse and Nic Cage with me sometime.



Four images of Ken Kagami SnooPee

Benjamin Urkowitz posted his best of list on his tumblr, which google docs doesn’t allow me to hyperlink to so heres that link in full: http://----comix.tumblr.com/post/104539620043/comics-2014-i-am-going-to-alter-what-you-are


Ryan Sands is selling a digital edition of Prison For Bitches, his and Michael DeForges (in their first collaboration) Lady Gaga fanzine for $1.50. I think this is a trial run to figure out price points on future digital editions of Youth In Decline work. That particular fanzine is interesting because its contributors list is pretty much a who’s-who’s of alt-comics today in one single place, five years ago.