Climate Changed: An expansive graphic novel-style analysis of the world’s environmental woes and the policy action around them

Climate Changed


Visual learners, rejoice. French artist and journalist Philippe Squarzoni—known for his celebrated non-fiction, graphic novel-style works on politics and human rights—lends his eye and storytelling panache to an extensive work on one of the world’s most significant and controversial issues: climate change. Inspired…

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2014 Drawing Now Paris: Illustrations that transcend paper at the world’s leading dedicated art fair

2014 Drawing Now Paris


The eighth edition of Drawing Now Paris, the art fair dedicated to contemporary illustration, proved that drawing is not dead and, furthermore, showed that the medium is sprawling and verging into other forms of visual art. Evolving to include 3D objects, writing, monochrome…

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Lazy Oaf + Garfield Summer ’14 Collection: The East London label meets the godfather of grumpy cats for a colorful and nostalgic summer collection

Lazy Oaf + Garfield Summer '14 Collection


Before Grumpy Cat became an internet sensation and a meme standard, Garfield (created by American cartoonist Jim Davis) starred in feature films, garnered multiple Emmys, broke a Guinness World Record for most widely syndicated comic strip…

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Snowpiercer: The Escape: The French sci-fi graphic novel, whose film adaption will soon release in the US, finally gets its English translation 30 years later

Snowpiercer: The Escape


The 1982 French sci-fi comic “Le Transperceneige” would have remained in obscurity had film director Bong Joon-Ho not walked into a comic book shop in Seoul and devoured all three volumes in the store. Nobody could blame him. Within the black-and-white illustrations, a…

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Interview: Corinne Maier: The controversial French author behind “No Kids” and “Hello Laziness” on her newest book—a biography of Sigmund Freud told through comics

Interview: Corinne Maier


Corinne Maier—a French psychoanalyst with a background in economics and international relations from the prestigious Sciences-Po in Paris—also happens to be a best-selling author. Out of the 15 or so already under her belt, her two most controversial books encouraged readers not to…

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Two Crowd-Sourced Contests: Complete an Iron Man comic or help Shepard Fairey liven up LA schools

Two Crowd-Sourced Contests


One surefire way to inject some inspiration into a project is by opening up the objective to the world at large. We were pleased to see crowd-sourcing contests by two very different artistic enterprises—Marvel Comics and Shepard Fairey for the LA Fund—tasking illustrators and students to get in on the…

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Malaria Illustration

Coup de coeur pour Edson Oda qui a réalisé ce magnifique court-métrage mélangeant avec talent illustrations, origamis, kirigamis, timelapses et d’autres techniques pour livrer un rendu unique. Appelée « Malaria », cette vidéo narre l’histoire de Fabiano, un jeune mercenaire. L’ensemble est à découvrir dans la suite en vidéo.

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Comics Sketchbooks

The private worlds of prominent illustrators exposed in a new book

Comics Sketchbooks

“Looking through artists’ sketchbooks is like viewing those artists naked through a picture window. With 20-20 eyesight or high-powered binoculars you’ll see everything: warts, blemishes and all.” So begins the introduction for Steven Heller’s latest book, “Comics Sketchbooks.” Culling 700 private sketches from 80 artists, the collection is billed…

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After the Barbarians

A South African artist’s satirical comics take on the country’s political state
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Controversial Cape Town artist and Bitterkomix co-founder Anton Kannemeyer creates satirical socio-political comics to highlight the absurd aspects of South Africa’s post-apartheid culture. In “After The Barbarians,” his second solo show at NYC’s Jack Shainman Gallery, Kannemeyer continues to shake things up with colorful, large-scale paintings and works on paper, questioning those in economical and political power.

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His politically-charged art often criticizes conservative Afrikaans values and issues specific to South Africa, but his new work shines a spotlight on the continent at large. Named for the J.M. Coetzee poem, “Waiting for the Barbarians,” the show depicts how life in Africa has been affected by Western colonization, and the corruption that came with it.

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Kannemeyer, a well-read political pundit, nevertheless makes the distinction that he’s not a political cartoonist but, rather, an artist reacting to the world around him, free of deadlines or forced thought.

Often borrowing the simplified illustration style Hergé made famous with his “Adventures of Tintin” books, Kannemeyer turns complex issues into informative and entertaining illustrations. Case in point, his “Alphabet of Democracy,” where he uses the cast of letters to identify various issues. “B is for Blame,” which references a 19th century Giovanni Battista Casti poem, poses the question of who is actually responsible for the current climate when an “enslaved humanity” does nothing themselves.

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Kannemeyer’s provocative portrayal of post-colonial Africa opened 13 October 2011 and runs through 17 November 2011 at Jack Shainman Gallery.


Real Life Super Heroes

Découverte du photographe français Pierre-Elie de Pibrac de retour des Etats-Unis avec un reportage intitulé “Real Life Super Heroes”. Des clichés sur la vie de gens ordinaires qui vivent un quotidien extraordinaire, déguisé en héros ou se créant un personnage dans l’esprit des comics.



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zimmer

blackbird

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hell-hound

life

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tsaf













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