Some of today’s work

Here’s a cover I whipped up for the next volume of C’est Bon Anthology. It’s dedicated to music in comics form, based on my own old project, Astoria, so it’s close to my heart in more ways than one. See, this anthology also marks my last term with C’est Bon Kultur, the collective I’ve been part of for close to three years now.

It’s been a lot of fun, we’ve traveled the world’s comics festivals together, and we published some really great comics in the anthology — but you gotta stop while you’re ahead. Not that I’m quitting comics, or art comics, or anything else you’d associate with C’est Bon. It’s just time to try my own wings. More about that in the future.

For now, working with the upcoming anthology, and the thematically related exhibition opening on October 28, has whetted my apetite for more work on Astoria. Those ideas will take some time to ferment as well, but you will hear it here first!

JUST LIKE IN THE MOVIES

A draft version of my editorial for next volume of C’est Bon Anthology, “Motion Picture”:

You know the guy. If you have ever in any social context tried discussing comics on more than a “Lil’ Abner was a durn good strip” level, chances are he was in the crowd. He’s a pretty nondescript guy, could be anybody really, but you’ll recognise him when he chips in and goes “Yeah, comics and movies are similar in a lot of ways.” And then the conversation takes a turn towards film, and it turns out he’s in cinema studies and really needs the attention. And sometimes he’s a woman. Look, I just made him up to prove a point, okay?

And there’s really no connection between comics and film, either. For one thing, comics don’t necessarily move (although some webcomics do); for another, movies very rarely work with plastic framing (since the silver screen doesn’t change its shape). Certain compositional analyses apply to both media, simply because they are both related to art theory, in which the analyses originate.

Film is the vision of a director (and a producer, and a board of CEO’s, and their daughter, and the pony she rode in on) filtered through a cameraman, a cast of actors, a sound designer, an editor, and, ultimately, a projector. Comics are the vision of a cartoonist, filtered through anything that might leave a mark on paper; the cartoonist sends her work to C’est Bon Anthology, you read it, end of line.

But there’s more: Comics are sequences of images composed and arranged to convey the passing of time graphically, and/or by juxtaposition transcend the meaning of the individual images. Which is quite exactly what the sequential images of a filmstrip can’t do without the projector, and, incidentally, in experiencing the time and space of the movie, we cease to perceive the sequence of the displayed images.

But the notion that film and comics are related on a deeper level is popular, and hard to lay to rest, much like Justin Bieber. What better way, I ask you, than to orchestrate an anthology of comics set to the tune of (no, wait, that’s our next volume!) – to the theme of Motion Picture? Read on, but be aware that we might be spoiling movies for you altogether!

The Nutrition of a Varied Diet

C'est Bon Anthology Vol 11The eleventh volume of the Anthology That Is Good has been compiled, edited, and sent to print. Preliminary date of publication is June 15th.

All content is one or another form of variation on comics that have previously published in C’est Bon Anthology  by C’est Bon Kultur members:

  • Oskar Aspman went and remixed Niklas Asker’s story Second Thoughts, originally published in CBA vol. 7.
  • Mattias Elftorp has reinterpreted an illustration by Daniel Novakovic, originally published in Publikation(34)C’est Bon.
  • Sofia Falkenhem took Martin Flink’s story The Troll for a spin, originally published in CBA vol. 7.
  • Martin Flink contributes a variation of Jamil Mani’s story Passage, originally published in CBA vol. 4.
  • Susanne Johanssons has made a photocollage of Johan Jergner-Ekervik’s story H2O, originally published in CBA vol. 6
  • Jamil Mani redid Sofia Falkenhem’s story Dawn, originally published in CBA vol. 8
  • My own contributions to this volume of CBA is SEX (after Mattias Elftorp’s story Violence, originally published in CBA vol. 3) and the cover (above), a tribute to Nathan Fox’ cover for CBA vol. 2.