Thursday, April 19, 2018

Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow

1. What is your reaction to the text you just read?
      I was surprised that at the end Lois talked down on Superman. It seemed like she didn’t like Superman as much as I thought. Superman had loved her and protected her during the battle, and I supposed she should support him. However, it turned out that she was hard on Superman, she said, “Superman? He was overrated, and too wrapped up in himself. He thought the world couldn’t get along without him.” It made him sound like an arrogant guy. How she portrayed Superman in this comics was different from what people usually perceived of him. 

      Another unexpected thing was the twist at the end. I thought Superman would die because of battling with his foe; however, he died because he felt sad killing his enemy. I didn’t think of Superman would give up his life because of that. I thought he would be depressing for a while, but still hold a strong duty of protecting people on earth, and would eventually come back. It was surprising to see him just left. But who knows? His body was not found, so he might live on in another form (just like how Brainiac did).

2. What connections did you make with the story? Discuss the elements of the story with which you were able to connect?
      There are a lot of scenes that I got connected to. When Kent got the parcel, and a lot of mini-supermen jumped out of the parcel, it reminds me of another fictional character—the monkey king in Journey to the West. Monkey King was also kind of a superhero who accompanied a monk on a journey to retrieve Buddhist sutras from the “West.” One of the tricks that the Monkey King does is to turn himself into thousands of mini-monkey kings and deceive the enemy. The scene from Superman looks very similar to what I saw from Monkey King from my childhood, therefore the scene connected with me. I believe this technique is used in many scenes in comics and movies, so it is usual that they connect with me. 

      The character Bizzaro also connected with me. His character trait was stupid because he genocided and eventually suicided just to go against Superman. It was meaningless and absurd especially that he did the opposite of what he did—he said hello instead of goodbye just to show his opposite standpoint from Superman. However, it connected with me because in childhood we had probably all done that stupid, non-sense behavior just to hold an opposite point against someone for its sake. 

3. What changes would you make to adapt this story into another medium? What medium would you use? What change would you make?

      I would turn the comics into digital formats if I were to publish it today. I would also cut it into separate parts and release them one after another online. There are increasing online readers because people rarely read comics books anymore, so a digital version of comics would make sense. Furthermore, the readers today prefer to consume much shorter stories than before, so cutting it into pieces would fit reader’s reading habits. They would also have something to look forward to for the next time when it releases. I would cut the comics into part one would be the story about Bizarro, part II will be the story about prankster, and part III would be about the toy man, and part IV, will be when the region of super-villains visited Superman, and finally, part V will be about the final battle. From part I to part V, it gives readers one story at a time and slowly leads them to the end.

Thursday, April 12, 2018

Perry Bible Fellowship

There are some highlights of this book that I really love:
First, it has extraordinary art. The delicate patterns of the first couple pages make me feel that I’m not reading a book, I’m seeing the delicate packaging on a luxurious pastry box, and I’m having an exciting journey. The color is not childish at all, in my opinion. It didn’t use the brightest colors in the world— which is usually used in children’s book. However, this pastel colors has some delicacy and sophistication in it, while not losing the playful atmosphere. Nicholas Gurewitch is really good at using colors. It is one of those very aesthetically pleasant comics that gives me inspirations for graphic designs. 
 

Second, it is also very interesting to see four panels, single scene short story. It is precise, and just like walking in the mall, I don’t have to stick in a single store for a long time, I can browse different stores and having fun here and there. 


Third, Gurewitch is also good at using irony tones. He depicted characters with an unexpected tone. For example, he depicted Jesus more playful than that in the Bible. He also personifies butterfly with a humorous monologue of how caterpillars were scared of transforming into butterflies. Another irony was how a happy birthday is a day towards horrifying death. 
 

Superheroes Reconsidered-- Wonder Woman

I am a fan of Wonder Woman. I have never read Wonder Women comics but I have watched its movie that came out last year. I saw there were a lot of similarities between the movie and the comics piece “Wonder Woman Spirit of Truth” by Alex Ross. The character in the comics still carry the spirit of wonder woman—she is powerful, brave, save people from wars and death, especially like children, and she has the magic rope that can catch anything. The basic character traits and thread of the story are the same. 



However, the movie only shows one story about Hitler in World War II, but the comics portray wonder woman from a more International standpoint. She not only save the people from Europe or in the western world, she also save the people from other countries such as China and Muslim countries. When I saw wonder woman saving people in Europe, I appreciate her character traits; but when she dropped into the scene in China saving people from the conflict in the 50s, I was touched. “Wow,” was my first reaction; I was amazed how this powerful human being can be more powerful than the tanks and change the history. This comics really changed my perspective of seeing things, it empowers people to trust their strengths. I always think that there were way too few superhero movies that were set on an eastern background, and it is amazing to see things like that. (Monkey King doesn’t count, he gained power from magic, but I think wonder woman represents and emphasizes human power.)

Monday, April 9, 2018

This One Summer

The story portrays a lot of scenes about social tensions— the tension between Rose and the guy she admired, and the tension between Rose and her mum— an uneasy relationship with friction in every moment they interact.

The main character in the story was Rose, a teen girl went to a vacation place with her family and met with her childhood friend Windy. During the vocation, Rose met a guy at a convenient store. Although she seemed to be interested in him, she didn't dare to talk much with him but secretly finding out his stories with his girlfriend Jenny. Rose didn’t talk with him much but discussed about him with Windy from time to time during the trip. Rose even pretend that she liked scary movies to seem cool to the guy even though she did not seem to enjoy it. The feeling of social awkwardness was shown when she went to the store. 


Besides the social awkwardness she had when she saw the guy, she also had a weird relationship with her mum. Her mum refused to swim and was extremely emotional about it, and she was also scared to have intimacy with her dad— she cracked a plate when he hugged her. Rose thought her mum wanted another baby, so Rose was angry at her mum for it, Rose was also angry at her not having fun and being so tense during the vocation. Not until one night she found out that her mum had a phobia towards the sea because she lost a baby before because of swimming, Rose realized she misunderstood her mum. She understood her mum behavior because of that. 


Reading the story somehow made me uneasy because I also experienced similar social tension as a teen and it had impacted me a lot. However, it was a brilliant work with familiar scenes that readers can relate to, and it had an interesting theme too.

Wednesday, April 4, 2018

Asterios

I like the story. The story has a lot of reflection elements in it. I especially admire how the author illustrated Asterios’ attitude towards his wife in graphics. It is very hard to illustrate but he got it spot on! It is my favorite scene of the entire story.

The story is also well told with a frequent use of contrast, on the character himself and in the visual effect. At first, the character was introduced as a lazy person lying in bed in a small and dirty room. Then it introduced the character’s background as a successful architect from Oxford, surrounded by the intellectuals. Given the background shows such a big contrast between the character’s past and present, which made people feel sympathy for the character. 
The author is also very effective in depicting the disgusting sense of the environment the character was in. The scene such as meeting the homeless guy enjoy picking noses, and the one of a woman vomiting in the subway station were depicted vividly. The vomiting scene especially, it was colored in yellow which contrast with the rest of the scene and drew people’s eye to it. The visual effect is so powerful that it makes me really feel the disgusting atmosphere. 


It is a story that kept me reading till the end, and it’s interesting to see how the two scenes— past and present met together, and Asterios eventually met with his ex-wife again at the end. I like the story very much.

Friday, March 23, 2018

Ranma 1/2

Ranma 1/2 has been very very popular in China—almost every Chinese has read or at least heard about it in elementary school. Although it wasn’t the type of comics that I liked before (the ones I liked were Doraemon, Cardcaptor Sakura, and Crayon Shin-chan), I learned to appreciate more about the comics now I read it.

I think the story sets an interesting character —Ranma, who turned into a girl when he was drenched with cold water, and back to a boy when drenched with hot water. And a significant thread that re-appears throughout the comics was the kettle, and there was an iconic scene which Akane is always handling a kettle of hot water to rinse Ranma when he turned into a girl. The comic has its own characteristics and are easily recognizable. 

However, the first chapter of the story which introduced the character focuses a lot on the fighting itself. Kuno always appears and fought with Ranma for the same reason, and sometimes it makes it boring. 


On the other hand, I found that gender transformation is a re-occurring theme, especially in the Japanese comics or animation. I remember there was another popular movie that centers on the same theme— Your Name, and was also very popular. 

Papyrus The Anger of the Great Sphinx

It’s a story about the prince who took an adventure to look for the princess who sleepwalked out of their palace. The comics greatly reflects the Egyptian arts and culture, and the social context at that time in that culture.
I especially appreciate the art of it. It brings the traditional Egyptian architectures and characters into the story. 


The theme of the story itself —human against nature, also reflects the perspectives of ancient culture, because of their dependency on the environment itself. 







Furthermore, the story incorporates a lot of mythological symbols such as the dragon, the "human storm," the gods who speak, the spirit. All of them show the belief of Egyptian at that time. Unlike the modern comics, the story also teaches people a moral about the consequence of betrayal by showing the bad results of the dragon and the "human storm." 


In general, it is an interesting comic, and I learned a lot about the Egyptian culture, which is very similar to the ancient cultures from other countries. 

Monday, March 12, 2018

March by John Lewis, Andrew Aydin, and Nate Powell

The comics March introduced a memoir about a congressman's grown up as a black child and his involvement in the Civil Right Movement afterward. The comics used narration interspersed with flashbacks, sharing short stories such as his experience when he raised chicken in the farm, his first time taking an elevator in a mall, and going to school as a black kid, etc. The short stories in between the conversations made the comics more interesting. It won’t be the same if the narrator talked about his story from the beginning to the end, which might be boring, but the inserted narrative only catches the highlights and made it more to the point and interesting. 

I also like the silhouette effect throughout the story especially when he was recalling his memories. In this image, the angle and use of big black space present a sneaky feeling, which made the audiences felt like something bad is going to happen. It also constructed a depressing atmosphere. Surprisingly, the black and white silhouette doesn’t only tell what the story is about, it also conveys the mood through shadows. 


It is also very interesting to see the second story when the narrator talked about his experience going to the city and seeing the elevators opened his eyes. It is a common experience that many people could relate to as a child; the portray of the mall and the elevator looks exactly the same from my childhood memory. Moreover, the word and image work together very well. There isn’t one driving another— they each tell different information that my eyes need to go from pictures to texts. For example, when he was talking about his first experience riding an elevator, the word described what had happened while the image showed his facial expression of surprise and curiosity.


In general, this memoir was interesting  and it broke my impreesion of memoirs in general, especially ones relate to politics. The story feels more personal and emotionally connected to people.

Saturday, February 24, 2018

Maus by Art Speigelman

First of all, when I saw the naming of the title, I think it was pretty interesting. The pronunciation of "Maus" sounds similar to "mouse," which is the character in the story. The story was written by the comic artist Art Spiegelman after World War II, about what the Nazis did to the Jews, and how did it affect their lives afterward. I think the storytelling approach that Spiegelman took was interesting. Instead of showing vivid blood and tortures from the war, he used cute animals mouses to be the characters, and pigs for the German soldiers in the camp. All of the characters were in minimalistic drawing style, and the environment was, too. I understand the author's intention to not use the visuals of real people but a metaphor of mouse instead-- because it would be too brutal to see those cruel scenes. The minimalistic images gave an emotional break for the readers, so they can read it in an emotionally less intense level, just like watching animations. Also, I think the comic is more words driven than visual driven, the words tell a big part of the story, but the visuals were supplementary. 

In the second part of the comic, his dad Vladek talked about his experience in the Nazis concentration camp. I was surprised to see that Vladek met a "nice" German soldier who saved him a couple of times. Vladek taught the soldier English language; in return, the soldier gave him a fitted pair of shoes, clothes, and decent meals (which to him was banquet meals almost). 

He also told a lot of stories about the little things that happened in the camp which I think was interesting, because I didn't see it elsewhere. Most of the movies portrayed the more significant impact of the war but ignored the details, but the comics showed it out. The scene I liked the most was when Vladek brought his friends a belt and a pair of fitted shoes from the soldier-- he didn't forget his friends even if he receives something. It was the little things that Spiegelman portrayed that were very touching. 

Friday, February 23, 2018

Underground Comics: Mr.Natural

The comics Mr. Natural basically surrounded this one character--Mr. Natural and his journeys. First I read the Mr. Natural's 719th meditation, I realized how he actually wrote in the language of mindfulness meditators. He used a lot of words such as "karma," "raise awareness of higher-self," etc. It tapped into the meditation culture well, but it was somewhat cynical towards the people who meditate or the religious groups who believe in higher-self. 

Mr. Natural's characterization is funny, when he was going to refuse the offer by the meditator, he said, "I left a pie in the oven; otherwise I would..." At the same time, he was kind of annoying because he messed up the meditator guys' practice. It seemed like wherever he went, there would be a drama and a mess. His visual characteristic is also pretty iconic-- bald, long white bear, a gown, fat and short body. It's easily recognizable, and I think it might be one of the reasons why he got so famous. 

There were black people in some of the characters in the comics, and they weren't portrayed nicely. One story centered on how a group of black people robbed a beggar's money and required him to give them more later on. They were portrayed as rude and violent. Even the visuals of the black people were portrayed as animals. I don't quite like the stereotypes about the black people here. 

There is another story from Mr. Natural-- Little Johnny Fuckerfaster in the Mr. Natural's comics. It showed a young boy teasing a girl from the street and forced her to perform oral sex for him. The girl seemed to be obedient and ignorant and did so. She was portrayed as a retarded adult baby. I don't like how it portrays women in the context, and I think the visuals are pretty nasty. I don't appreciate how the novel portrays the sex scenes; I think they are pretty disgusting. 

I also took a glance at some other underground comics such as Harold Hedd No.1 and Air Pirates Funnies. The Air Pirates Funnies seemed like a re-creation of Mickey Mouse's stories. The majority of the underground stories contained a lot of sexual violence elements and added a "ruffian mood" in them. It is almost a counter-cultural comics at that time. 

Graphic Novels: A Contract with God by Will Eisner and Blankets by Craig Thompson

I read A Contract With God after reading Donald Duck, and I found that the two are so different from each other. In Donald Duck, the background setting is mostly in the rural area, where there are forest, small houses, etc. However, the setting of the stories in A Contract With God is all in the city, in people's apartment. And the approach, is surprisingly realistic, just like the mood of the magazine Humans of New York, talking about the drama of urbanization. There are a couple things that I found interesting from his novel: 
  • In the first few pages, there were words intervene with the graphics instead of limited in a box, and the whole page stands out like a poster. The experience is more interactive, and I appreciate it
  • The character’s faces changed in different situations. For example, when Frimme's mistress asked him to sell his old building, her face was suddenly so ugly, showing all the little details of his dislike emotions.
  • The theme about immigrants and religions is unique. It’s less like the type of funny, entertaining novels, but a more serious one that reflects a social context. But he made it interesting. 
  • One of my favorite sentences is “friends came offering comfort words which he accepted in stony silence.” It was said when the main character's family died, and I think the sentence is constructed nicely. It won't have the same effect if it says "friends came to comfort him, and he didn't say a word." The word "stony silence" describes the atmosphere of heavy and depressing very well. 
After researching, I found that Will Eisner's graphic novel usually tell the history of New York's immigrant communities, particularly Jews, including the novels The BuildingA Life ForceDropsie Avenue and To the Heart of the Storm. Moreover, the Stories reflected the community and society at that time, rather than stories focus on the character styles. 


Wes Craig Craig’s graphic novel Blankets, on the other hand, tells people a lot about the narrator’s psychological thoughts, shown in the stories of his brotherhood and schooling. It is interesting to find out that they were actually based on his brother and his real experience. And a lot of people who have siblings like me can relate to the childhood experience that he wrote about.


Interestingly, both of Craig's and Eisner's novels include the theme of religions. Christianity definately played a role in their novels. Craig had once said, “I'm playing with Islam in the same way I was playing with Christianity in Blankets, which proved that the topic of religion isn't just in one of his novels-- it is a big element in his work. 


In general, I appreciate Craig's graphic style which has exaggeration which presents the characters vividly and brought out the stories. I also like Will Eisner’s topic of the immigrants because they were unique, and they reflect humanities that I haven't see elsewhere.

Monday, January 29, 2018

The Comic Books: Carl Barks & Tintin

After looking at Carl Barks’s paintings of Donald Duck and some research about it, I found something interesting. Donald Duck has traits of a stingy and rigid personality. It seemed like an unpopular personality, but people like its character. I think it is the most successful part of the character recreation— it turned a character with a lot of negative traits into a popular character, through humanization and humor. Donald Scrooge’s character has an outstanding trait that he loves money to an extreme degree. He never forgives any opportunities to find golds. He doesn’t find money only to live a wealthy life, the money he owns surpassed that—it becomes his aspiration to find money, like chasing his dream. He could go sailing or mining for finding golds and doesn’t care whatever he does. As long as he can swim in the sea of gold and money, it makes him feel good; money is his spiritual support. I think it is truly an interesting character how persistent he was. Just like what the social commentaries said: “the character shines through his persistence despite the obstacles.”

Tin Tin on the other hand, usually tells stories about the unexpected things happened in another country. Tin Tin is different from Donald Duck’s stories which he brings people on adventures and opens a whole new word for the readers. But Donald Duck is more about how unusually but funny the characters are, how Donald Duck reacts to the situations, and the interactions between his nephews and him also become the highlights. 


From my observation about the comic books and comic strips, I think comics strip focus on small pieces of stories while the comic books focus on a certain topic or genre as a whole and the type of content is consistent throughout. 

Friday, January 19, 2018

Peanuts and Flash Gordon Dailies (1959)

My favorite of all the comics for this week is Peanuts. Unlike the others, Peanuts has a particular format in which it tells a story within four panels or a page. Although there are many pages, there never be repeated stories. The stories are precise and fun, which reminds me of how advertisements usually are--quick and to the point. Another interesting thing is that I could see how the character develops over a period (I read Peanuts Vol 1 1950-52), and throughout the time, Charlie and Lucy went from action-directed stories--some short stories didn't even have words, to conversation based stories. There are more contents and shows more of their personalities. 

Another story I read was the Flash Gordon Dailies talked about Flash Gordon, who committed missions of protecting the earth and killing Skorpis in space. After he completed a task in space, Gordon came back as a celebrity among the astronauts. However, he has to go on another trip—which he said was the last trip. Before he went on the last trip, he proposed to Dale, but he met Ellta, a woman he fell in love with before. He didn’t get together with her again, but he was fallen on a weird planet. On the journey, he found more Skorpis and went on a battle with the Skorpis with his army. He faced a tension that he and his army might be killed there; it was Ellta who saved him and his staffs from the place to the earth. Upon their arrival, Ellta threatens Gordon to not marry his fiancĂ©, or she would ask her army to destroy the earth. An incident happened that they found a lot of Skorpi spies on earth and so Ellta decided to move on and fight for another battle with the Skorpis, but it didn’t stop the new Skorpis landing on earth. 

I think the story plot is pretty common. It was mostly about the fighting against the Skorpis, and the romantic parts with his fiancĂ© when he came back. The tension was usually when Gordon and his army was risking death before they killed the Skorpis. The art, on the other hand, is surprisingly very detailed, the characters’ faces are semi-life-like. However, I can imagine that it would be a popular story in the 50s because going into war, fighting against the enemies, and soldiers returning for the start of romantic stories are the prevalent themes. 



Sunday, January 14, 2018

Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud

I think the information presented in this comics is by far one of the most critical knowledge I learned at school. It mainly talked about six aspects of comics, from its definition, how it works, why it engages the viewers naturally with its form, the language of comics, types of transitions between panels, and the six elements of comics. I think they will be beneficial in my future working in the art and design field, and I would like to summarize the ideas in the following paragraphs and write some of my thinking about them. 

Definition & essence 
Unlike the other arts or designs, comics was called sequential art. However, the name was very controversial, so the name has changed to sequential visual arts, juxtaposed pictorial and other images in deliberate sequence, etc. People eventually decided to change it to a new name-- Comics. I think it is brilliant to create a whole new abstract new instead of a name describing the form or characteristics of comics, that way people can bring in their imagination of what comics is, and people can also change its form creatively. 

How it works and why it engages the viewers naturally? 
Comics are made of mostly pictorial icons, and they are less detailed than the real images. The simplified icons eliminate the unnecessaries, and it amplifies an effect by focusing on a specific part. With a simplified version of the icon, it also makes the viewer project themselves onto the character (the masking effect) and engages the viewers that way. Comics also engages us in both the realm of the concept such as the story and the realm of the senses such as the experience of driving a car (in which the car becomes part of our identity). It reminds me of Shaun Tan’s illustrations in The Arrival. The character arrived in a fictional city-- it is beautiful, complicated, and very much simplified to show the concept of his inner psychological world.

Comic as a language
The language of comics is seen as a pictorial vocabulary composed of words and icons, closure and gutter. A beautiful metaphor is that "visual iconography is the vocabulary, closure is the grammar; closure is the blood, gutter for the vein."It also mentions that to create a unified language of comics is to make pictures and words equal. It meant to make pictures more abstracted from "reality" and required greater levels of perception (more like words); while to make words are more direct and require lower levels of perception and are received faster (more like pictures). It reminds me of how most of the trends of advertisements are-- it needs both to complete the concepts. 

Types of Transitions Between Panels
There are six types of transitions between panels: moment-to-moment, action-to-action, subject-to-subject, scene-to-scene, aspect-to-aspect, and non-sequitur. Most of the Comics in the West and the East has more action-to-action panels while Japanese tends to use more subject-to-subject and aspect-to-aspect panels than the Western comics. Action-to-action comics convey the concept in a concise and efficient way. On the other hand, aspect-to-aspect transitions present a mood or sense of space. Time seems to stand still in this quiet moments. I think some of the Japanese comics with that tells stories by switching different perspective gives the viewers to read from the “God's perspective,” someone who can transit from aspect to aspect. 

The six elements of comics
The six elements are purpose/idea, form, idiom, structure, craft, and surface. The book called in "the six steps of comics" while I would like to call it the six elements because I see it from an analytical perspective and I think the comic is complete with the six elements. Artists start from the surface to the craft, to the structure, the idiom--which is unique to the artist, and eventually, the artist picks either the conveying purpose/idea effectively or creating innovative form because doing both may result in "car crash" in the comics. However, when both of artist with innovative form or with purpose/idea, question themselves "why am I doing this?" to innovate from the most fundamental setting in Comis. 
I think the six elements help us to see beneath the crafts and discover the science behind comics and even design. When facing some difficulties in creating comics, I believe it can help us to analyze and assess our work in a systematic way and find a way to build up methodologies to revise our comics. I can't wait to try it on my work. 

Saturday, January 13, 2018

The Arrival by Shaun Tan

Shaun Tan’s The Arrival is a story about a man’s immigration to a new country. He had to separate from his family from home; he saw everything new—new words, new animals, new food, etc. He faced some struggles, but fortunately, he met his group of friends, he eventually found a job and reunion with his family at the end. The ending is very touching— his family, who eventually became the local people, helped the new immigrants, just like people who had helped them. I think The Arrival is a very compelling story. The novel depicted human interactions and character’s inner feelings very well.

One thing very interesting was the moment when the man arrived at the immigration, and right after he got the stamp on his book, he was put in a box, and the box flew further and further away in isolation. He wasn’t physically put in a box, but the graphic vividly portrayed his inner feeling. From my understanding, it expressed the fact that he came to a realization that he had left his homeland and the feeling of isolation became concrete in his heart. I think it portrayed his feeling very well when there is only graphics presented.
Another interesting example was when he first opened the luggage, the first thing he saw from the luggage was not his necessities but the scene of his family eating dinner at the table. It expressed the character’s psychological feelings directly. Furthermore, the first thing he put up in his room was not other but his family portrait, which clearly presented the character’s traits that he cared about his family a lot.
I used to think that psychological feeling is hard to express through graphics without the help of words. I am surprised how Shaun Tan presented the character’s psychological feelings by graphics. His way of surrealistic expression approach is also fascinating and is definitely something worth trying.