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Comic experimentMarch 7, 2007
I have always enjoyed reading comics. I started when I was about 7 or 8, with Disney comics and Archie and Tintin and Beano then in puberty progressed on to underground comix by Crumb and Bodé and Hernandez Bros. etc. In the last few years I have been into Seth, Ben Katchor, Jason and Kochalka. I have never particularly enjoyed super hero or fantasy comics. I like small stories that reflect reality in an interesting way. I am often struck by how little does happen in these stories and I wonder to what extent this is a reflection of the enormous amount of work involved in making comics. If you have to learn to draw so well and then draw so much to tell a story, do you lose the opportunity to have a life? There are so many comix about guys who have no life, no girl, no clue and I wonder if that's a reflection of their creators' experience or lack thereof. Anyway, I have decided that I will work in this form for a little while, just to strech myself. It is a difficult assignement as it violates so many of the rules I have set up for drawing over the past decade or so. It means drawing from my imagination rather than from observed reality, by and large. It is also takes a certain amount of forethought and planning. And you have to be reasonably neat, or at least a lot less loose than I am. This first comic tells the the story of a recent incident in which, while walking up 6th Avenue with my family on a Sunday afternnoon, I got a huge gash in my head from a hockey puck. As you can see, the comic is pretty awful. It's so tiny ( I drew it in my teeny moleskine) and cramped and ill-planned and messy. Still, for me, it sort of captures the event in a way that 's more satisfying than my usual approach of just drawing a puck and then surrounding it with calligraphy. ![]() I am starting to turn the members of my family into characters that can be drawn over and again in different poses and be recognizable from frame to frame. Again, this is so dffferent from how I normally work. I am drawing in sumi-ink and working very small. My lettering virges on the indicipherable for which I apologize. Write me with strenuous complaints. I imagine that comics aren't your cup of tea. Still, think about them and how they could effect your own journaling. They offer a good way to use drawing to tell a story and force you into some dfficult design and drawing problems that may teach you something. |
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A record of my exploration into all aspects of drawing, illustrated journaling, creativity, and the inspiring aspects of art. By the author of "Everyday Matters," "The Creative License", and "An Illustrated Life" and other books.
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Comments
Comics are very much my cup of tea! These are fun. Sorry about the puck injury. Yowch.
Posted by: Tabitha Dial | March 7, 2007 09:33 AM
Hi Danny - I just wanted to say I think the comic format is a great way to capture some of the more ironic/neurotic/comic aspects of everyday life. It really captures live action in a still. I'm glad you thought of it - I'll be looking at my life with a comic strip in mind now. I hope your head is healing well! Jeanne
Posted by: Jeanne | March 7, 2007 09:41 AM
Neat stuff, Danny! Comics have always been my cup of tea more than journaling (not that I really have the discipline to do either). I look forward to more. And maybe even some color comics at some point down the line!
Posted by: Jason Das | March 7, 2007 09:49 AM
What the puck kind of drawing is THAT? Oh God I could do better than That.
You're so swishy in your .........
Posted by: patricia gregory | March 7, 2007 10:20 AM
Comics are harder than they look - that's for sure. A hint is that several illiustrators draw comics twice - or even three times - larger than they will be when reproduced in print.
Posted by: Thomas Ecclestone | March 7, 2007 12:54 PM
This is so cool!!! I couldn't believe it when I went to your page today and saw it. I just bought a book called "Masters of American Comics" last night. It is the book that accompanied an exhibit that was at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles last fall. It includes comics from people like George Herriman all the way up to Chris Ware. It's something to see for sure. It really is interesting to think about what might come out of working within the constraints presented by the comic strip form. Can't wait to see more of your strip!
Posted by: Melinda Bilecki | March 7, 2007 01:55 PM
Hi Danny
Have you noticed the comic strip format showing itself in the increasingly popular format of Graphic Novels? There is a section at my local bookstore solely for them. I received one last Christmas called Ethel and Ernest by Raymond Briggs. It is the story of the author's British parents from the time they met to their deaths. Take a peek at the book's illustrations through the publisher's website (easily Googled). The dialogue and illustrations are amusing, poignant and honest.
Sorry to hear about your injury...
Posted by: Lisa Mason | March 7, 2007 09:05 PM
quel changement de cap ! Bonne chance dans cette nouvelle voie...
Posted by: jalexis | March 8, 2007 02:50 AM
hey danny, i am actually leading a workshop on this subject in just a few weeks. (you can see a couple of my own comics here ::: http://www.ramahughes.com/youloveit.html ::: if you're curious.) i look forward to pointing the attendees towards your example.
Posted by: rama | March 17, 2007 02:58 AM