Articles from and news about the premier and longest-running academic journal devoted to all aspects of cartooning and comics -- the International Journal of Comic Art (ISSN 1531-6793) published and edited by John Lent.

Saturday, June 25, 2022

Curator’s Notes on Jim Morin: Drawing and Painting, an Exhibition of Political Cartoon Drawings and Landscape Paintings

by Martha Kennedy  

Self-Portrait, c.2017   ©  Jim Morin

Jim Morin: Drawing and Painting. Martha H. Kennedy. Ogunquit, Maine: Ogunquit Museum of American Art, May 1 – October 31, 2022. <https://ogunquitmuseum.org/exhibition/jim-morin-drawing-and-painting>

Ed. Note – When it became apparent that we were not going to get a reviewer for this show in Maine, we asked the exhibit’s guest curator, Martha Kennedy to give us some background on creating the exhibit. A long-time contributor to IJOCA, she has recently retired as a curator from the Library of Congress’ Prints and Photographs Division.

  The exhibition presents a selection of cartoon drawings and paintings by the artist that focus upon the environment and landscape. Best known as a highly acclaimed political cartoonist, Morin is also a very accomplished painter in oil. He stands out among his peers by connecting the artistic process of working in these two different media, noting “My paintings affect my drawings and vice versa...” 

During more than four decades as the editorial cartoonist for the Miami Herald, Morin won two Pulitzer Prizes in 1996 and 2017, shared another with the Herald editorial board in 1983, received the Thomas Nast Society Award in 2000, the prestigious Herblock Prize in 2007, and many other honors and distinctions. While honing his talent and skill as a cartoonist, he made time to paint in the evenings and frequently exhibited his paintings from 1982 onward.

Born in Washington, D.C. in 1953, Morin grew up outside Boston, Massachusetts, in a family that discussed politics and encouraged him to draw. He graduated from Syracuse University with a major in illustration and a minor in painting. He studied the latter under Jerome Witkin, who “saw cartoons as paintings, as art.” This perspective played into Morin’s artistic development in that strong design characterizes both his cartoon drawings and his paintings. Morin worked at the Beaumont Enterprise and Journal and the Richmond Times-Dispatch before he became the editorial cartoonist for the Miami Herald, holding the position from 1978-2020.

Works in the exhibition are arranged in three sections. Cartoon drawings in “The Environment” reveal Morin’s ability to transform keen observations of the physical world into arresting imagery that captures changes in the earth’s atmosphere, threats to the well-being and diversity of fauna and flora, pollution of the oceans, deforestation, and other shifts in the environment. He has never shied away from pointing to the impact of varied human activity on the planet. As evidence of climate change has grown and become widely acknowledged by scientists and non-scientists alike since the late 1980s, his concern has only deepened, and his imagery become more alarming. Selections include several Pulitzer Prize-winning works and graphic commentaries on major environmental disasters including the oil tanker Exxon Valdez running aground and the explosion of British Petroleum’s Deepwater Horizon oil rig. In many other examples, he also decries how unchecked development of fossil fuels adversely affects the land and human well-being.

 Another section of the show situates Morin’s drawings in the grand tradition of satirical art that arose and flourished largely in Britain and France from the late 18th into the 19th centuries. Leading artists of those times, such as James Gillray (1756-1815), Thomas Rowlandson (1756-1827), and Honoré Daumier (1808-1879), employed bold caricature in scenarios that critiqued the behaviors of leading public figures and governing bodies. Morin cites his study of Daumier’s work, both drawings and paintings, as a major influence in his artistic development. The tone and approach that he employs, for example, in caricaturing businessmen and politicians as squat, rounded figures, sinister and smugly smiling as they wield power for dubious ends, remind one of Daumier, who won lasting acclaim for his biting portrayals of the deceitful and powerful.

 Additional qualities that often characterize Morin’s cartoons include boldly designed compositions, varied points of view, and fine, often meticulous rendering of forms regardless of size, all perfectly balanced. Many of these qualities also distinguish his paintings. Although Morin paints a wide variety of subjects including landscapes, cityscapes, and human figures, this exhibition primarily features landscapes, which include no people. Recent examples, in particular, possess a strong sense of place underlaid by keen observation and love of nature. His paintings often feature changing atmospheric conditions and light effects in the sky and on the water, in addition to reflecting his fascination with approaching storms. Since 2013, he has chosen to live in Ogunquit with his wife Danielle Flood, a writer. He celebrates the natural beauty of the area and finds inspiration in walking, kayaking, and viewing the ocean from his house, and seeing what he calls “a daily miracle.”

 Jim Morin will discuss his work in conjunction with the exhibition, following a brief introduction of the artist by curator Martha Kennedy at the Ogunquit Museum of American Art on Tuesday, July 5th, from 5-7 p.m. The exhibition is generously sponsored by the Miami Herald.

 

Thursday, June 23, 2022

CFP: Cyberjornadas Internacionais de Histórias em Quadrinhos 2022 - International Brazilian Cyberconference on Comics

CALL FOR PAPERS (Extended Abstracts)

Cyberjornadas Internacionais de Histórias em Quadrinhos 2022 - International Brazilian Cyberconference on Comics

University of São Paulo, São Paulo - Brazil / September 27, 28, and 29 - 2022
Escola de Comunicações e Artes/ School of Communications and Arts

The Jornadas Internacionais de Histórias em Quadrinhos is the most important academic Conference in comics in Brazil, congregating from two to three  hundred researchers andstudents from all around Brazil and South American countries in past events.

Cyberjornadas is an alternative event 100% virtual for 2022. We propose to expand the
virtual debate on research related to comics in its different approaches and different manifestations (mangas, graphic novels, cartoons, comic strips, etc).

Extended Abstract Submission: June 6 to July 17, 2022

Notification: August 14

Presentation video Submission for approved works: August 15 to September

Registration fee: R$ 60 (until September 4) for approved works.

Conference: September 27, 28, 29 - 2022

We welcome proposals from scholars all around the world. Each participant may submitonly one paper. Proposals made in partnership should have a maximum of four authors(author + co-author + co-author + co-author). All abstracts are externally peer-reviewed. The abstract should contain clear information about the topic and must have a minimumof 600 and a maximum of 1400 words, including title, authorship, abstract and research results. We have a template file available as example in our website at

ATTENTION: In addition to the limit of 1,400 words, references have an extra limit of 1000 characters (equivalent to 150 words) that must be informed in a specific field on the paper's registration form.

Each abstract in the beginning of the extended abstract and also for the registration form should have a title, be between 200 and 300 words and be followed by 3 keywords, separated by semicolons. The abstracts should present, minimally, the purpose of the communication, the object or subject to be worked and the theoretical framework involved. The paper should fit into one of the following thematic axes:
 Comics and Education
 Comics and Culture
 Comics and History
 Comics and Society
 Comics and Language
 Comics and Literature
 Comics and Art
 Comics and Communication
 Comics and Market
 Comics and New Media

The papers will be grouped into different sessions and should be presented in Portuguese, Spanish or English. Each presentation has a time limit of 15 minutes, and presenters are expected to deliver the basic ideas of the extended abstract. Following a group of papers, each session will have a round of questions up to 30 minutes.

Presentation video: The presentations will be made this year with pre-recorded videos by the authors. After the presentation time there will be half an hour for LIVE debate with the authors.

Video must be recorded on any platform (Google Meet, Streamyard, Zoom, among others) and stored in a sharing application. Keep an eye on the resolution so your presentation is readable while the file size doesn't get huge.
The LINK (only the link!) from Google Drive, Dropbox or similar sharing websites must be informed by the author on the official website of Cyberjornadas, directly in the reserved area of the participating author. Due to good experience, we recommend using Google Drive. Foreign authors are allowed to send the link direct by e-mail to avoid difficulties. The deadline to inform the video link is Sunday, September 4th.

Video presentation time limit: 15 minutes.

Registration fee payment: Please, contact us by email to learn how to make the payment.

For more information regarding the Cyberconference feel free to contact us at
jornadasinternacionais@gmail.com
https://www.cyber2022.jornadasinternacionais.com.br/

Friday, June 17, 2022

Comics Research Bibliography posts changing blogs next week - UPDATED

Comics Research Bibliography posts changing blogs next week.

I was speaking with John Lent, publisher of the International Journal of Comic Art this week, and brought up the idea of posting the CRB updates here instead of ComicsDC, because it finally occurred to me that John & I have worked on the bibliography together for years (publishing a version in the Journal in fact that has just been scanned) and that's a more suitable site for these daily updates than a blog devoted to comic art in the greater DC area. So as of Monday, June 20th, check here for your daily list of citations. You can subscribe to an email alert too.

 

UPDATE - this experiment was a failure with under 10 people looking at each post. Therefore, see them at the ComicsDC site instead. 

Thursday, May 26, 2022

PR: Farewell to Fumetto's Artistic Director

media release:

Farewell to Fumetto's Artistic Director
 

Dear journalists, dear partners and friends

After 11 festival editions, Artistic Director Jana Novotny of the Fumetto Comic Festival Lucerne will be stepping down at the end of August 2022. Many great exhibitions, unusual locations and international names will be remembered. The advertisement for the position of "Artistic Director Fumetto" will soon be available at www.fumetto.ch.
 
The artistic director and co-managing director of the festival Jana Novotny has shaped the content and productions of the festival since 2011. After 11 festival editions, she is now stepping down at the end of August 2022. Jana Novotny has deepened the festival's focus on current work in comics and related arts, added reflection in digital techniques and been responsible for sustainable initiatives and networking of Swiss comics work at home and abroad. Jana Novotny helped to shape and partially implement the current reorganisation of the festival, the change to digital hybrid forms of the programme and the new festival appearance.
 
Numerous outstanding exhibitions by international artists will be remembered for a long time. For example, the world's first retrospectives of Jacques Tardi (2015), Julie Doucet (2017), Joe Sacco (2016) and Joann Sfar (2019), both in cooperation with the Cartoonmuseum Basel, exhibitions with Gabriella Giandelli (2014), Joost Swarte (2016), the Swiss drawing collective Seico (2016) and the Lucerne Ampel Magazin (2022).
In a multi-year collaboration with the Museum of Art Lucerne, Jana Novotny curated the exhibitions Robert Crumb & The Underground in 2013, Robin Rhode (2014), Hariton Pushwagner (2015), Lorenzo Mattotti (2016), Bertrand Lavier (2017), Gustave Dorée (2018), Keiichi Tanaami (2019), Nathalie Djurberg & Hans Berg (2022).
In collaboration with the Lucerne Theatre, the performance "Eurydice Says" with Swiss comic artist Lika Nüssli was created in 2018.
 
The diverse creativity of the Swiss comic and illustration scene has been the core and heart of Jana Novotny's appreciation and promotion of the festival in all years. The promotion of young artists and cooperations with art schools in Switzerland (HSLU; HEAD, ZHDK) abroad have been expanded under Jana Novotny's leadership. With interactive exhibition projects such as Joann Sfar (2018) or the Swiss children's books of the Bolo Klub 2022, an emphasis was placed on cross-generational audiences.
 
Artists Jana Novotny was able to bring to the festival included Richard McGuire, Julie Doucet, Brecht Evens, Max, Emil Ferris, Ben Katchor, Frémok, Dominique Goblet, Jacques Tardi, Judith Vanistendael, Joann Sfar, Anke Feuchtenberger, Ulli Lust, Edmond Baudoin, Caroline Sury and Tom Gauld. Comic icon Robert Crumb paid his respects as a visitor to the last festival edition by Jana Novotny.
 
The exhibition "Motion Comics - The Beginning" brought together projects and artists from all over the world who develop comics in augmented and virtual reality for the first time. The first comic entirely in virtual reality was performed by the Australian artist Sutu himself in the middle of the 360° painting of the Bourbaki Panorama Lucerne. The Fumetto project moved on to Haarlem (HOL) and Zagreb (CRO) and was continued by the Amsterdam production studio "Submarine Channel" as a curated online platform.
 
For the 25th anniversary in 2016, Jana Novotny brought 50 artists to Lucerne and designed a large Fumetto anniversary book with them, which was individually finished and signed by the artists at the festival - a festival edition in a double pack.
 
An experience for all comics fans and festival visitors was also the opening up of unusual locations for the Fumetto exhibitions, in the entire building of the former Neubad indoor swimming pool during the renovation phase in 2013, the labyrinth of the Sonnenberg civil defence facility (2018) for the group exhibition "Shelter" 2018 or, in this year's edition, the Red House, an industrial building from 1920; the former post office tunnel under Lucerne railway station, or the Viscose site when the Lucerne School of Art and Design moved into Emmenbrücke (2017).
Even many Lucerne residents first got to know these locations through Fumetto.
 
Thanks to her engagement with art beyond the usual focal points and her investment in an extensive network of contacts, she has achieved extraordinary collaborations and projects: "Meta Magma" 2018 with comic artists from Switzerland and Brazil at the Chacara Lañe Municipal Museum in Saõ Paulo; Indian artists from various regions of the country in the exhibition "Mytholitics" 2019; group exhibitions of Swiss artists at the Comic Festival in Helsinki (2014); and exchange projects with Swiss and Russian artists in St. Petersburg and Moscow. In 2013, Jana Novotny co-curated the extensive exhibition on comics in the Arab world "Al Comix Al Arabi" with Christoph Badoux and Daniel Bosshart.
 
Jana Novotny has promoted comics and drawing as an art form in their own right, but also as a connecting medium in various inclusive comics projects. In collaboration with its founder Sharad Sharma (New Delhi) for several years, Fumetto has since 2017 provided access to drawn stories for different communities (e.g. immigrant women or children) through the Grassroot Comic Workshop, in order to manifest their voice through stylistically simple comics. Students from art schools (HSLU, ZHDK) were trained via Fumetto to become teachers of this comic empowerment in Grassroot Comic and are still active today. 
 
With "Shapereader", a main exhibition for visitors with visual impairments was the focus of attention in 2017. The large-scale exhibition by the artist Ilan Manouach (GR), designed for the sense of touch, attracted international attention. The Swiss Federation of the Blind and Visually Impaired was invited to actively participate in the exhibition's mediation.
With the projects "Maria y io" by Miguel Gallardo in 2016 and "Immer Trubel mit Ted" by Émilie Gleason in 2022, for example, it has raised awareness of autism.
In a long-standing cooperation with the aid organisation "Médecins Sans Frontières", Fumetto under Jana Novotny has invited cartoonists "into the field" every year, and at the festival, in open studios and exhibitions, to open up to the public the creation of comic reports and problems in remote areas of the world.
 
Since she took up her post, she has continuously given the 40 popular satellite exhibitions more importance and visibility. The comic markets she initiated, the "Small Press Heaven" in the festival centre for self-publishers, and the poster bazaar in the Bourbaki Panorama are annual festival highlites and are indispensable places of exchange. This year, with "Comixities - The Market", she has brought together important players in Swiss comics to form a joint Fumetto bookshop.
 
In addition to a diverse artistic programme, Jana Novotny has also promoted exchange and discourse between cartoonists and professionals. In collaboration with the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Illustration Department, she has initiated and implemented symposia, expert panels and lectures on current topics and with international guests. Since 2021, even audiences around the world have been able to participate thanks to hybrid and digital versions. Topics ranged from various comic scenes, reportage comics (with Guy Delisle and Joe Sacco), Swiss comic promotion, gender and identity in comics, insights into comics from around the world, to children's books censorship or currently Russia in comics. Through these discourses, the festival also experienced increased interest from illustration school classes and cartoonists from all over the world.
 
Promoting comics was a major concern of Jana Novotny. As co-founder of the first comics network, the Réseau Bande Dessinée Suisse, in 2017, Jana Novotny advocates for comics and illustration as an independent art form, its remuneration and promotion at federal level. She is jointly responsible for ensuring that comics produced in Switzerland have a permanent place at Europe's most important comics festival in Angoulême.
She is also committed to the comic scholarships of the German-speaking cities of Switzerland and the newly established work scholarships for comics at the Swiss Arts Council Pro Helvetia.
 
The board appreciates Jana Novotny's contribution to the Fumetto Festival, especially her wealth of ideas and her ability to inspire others for comics and for her projects. With a big thank you, Fumetto says goodbye to its long-time, committed and go-getting artistic director.
 
--
The advertisement for the position of "Artistic Director Fumetto" can be found at www.fumetto.ch.

If you have any questions, please contact Annette Schindler and Marco Schmidiger. Please make appointments by email at info@fumetto.ch.

 
Fumetto 2023 takes place at april 18th to 26th

Sunday, May 22, 2022

The complexity of walking to the corner with someone: A Swedish book review

 by Gerald Heng

                                          Walk me to the corner     

                                              Anneli Furmark  

                                            Montreal: D&Q

Somewhat by whimsical chance, I picked up Anneli Furmark's Walk me to the corner at the Stockholm library Seriebiblioteket. Anneli Furmark is a well known Swedish painter and comic artist who has a few books (mostly in Swedish) under her belt including Red Winter, one of 2016 Angouleme official selection. She is based in northern Sweden. You can take a look at her works at her website. Seriebiblioteket is one of Stockholm's public libraries, but is dedicated to the world of comics and comics scholarship, and is where I go to get my irregular dose of new comics-reading materiel. I have been meaning to read her book for a while now, but had not got around to it. It has now been two weeks since I checked it out and it is a beguiling book. I been going back to different sections of the book again and again. I might have to get my own copy of the book, as it is almost time to return it to the library. I don't think I will be done exploring this book thoroughly for a while yet, maybe because it is touching on something that is weighing heavily on my mind at the moment.

The book's main protagonist, Elise, shows her thoughts and her desire for Dagmar, and the subsequent consequences of that on her marriage to Henrik. The book also follows Elise's logic and thinking including her selfish reactions to Henrik's rejection of her ideal world, where her desire for Dagmar should have no impact on her marriage, because she still loves him the most. The story-lines wander through dinner with girlfriends, walks with her son, sessions with a therapist and frustration with a Swedish flyttkartong*, are all wonderfully engrossing. The ending part, 'Amusement Park,' is spot on in its analogy.

I am not sure if the story-lines in the book come from her life or from other sources, but Furmark has done a masterful work putting the age-old delicate twin topics of love and desire down on the pages. I keep going back to this question, "What is love?" The desire part is pretty much laid out in the book as Elsie's relationship with Dagmar, but the love part is quite unclear. Elise claims she love both Dagmar and Henrik, but to varying degrees. This gets more convoluted later on when Henrik told Elise he has started his own romantic relationship with someone which leads to Elise falling apart, unable to deal with this revelation.  Maybe the question is intended to be unanswered in the book. This is probably something everyone will have to decide for one's self due to its very nebulous and capricious nature. Maybe it is human nature -- to love oneself the most -- finally at the end of that question.  There is a self-centered duality hinted at in Elise's dinner with her girlfriends where she tells of the wonderfulness of having a passionate relationship with someone she completely connects with, but yet she still needs the long term comforting safety of her marriage with Henrik. So it's apparently a question with no one correct answer, excluding major religions' thinking about fidelity.

Her use of ink, pencil, watercolors washes, more pencil shading, color pencils to tell the story leaves me in awe. The artwork is a mishmash of different techniques but its use to tell the story is perfect. It gels so well for me. If you haven't read it yet, I recommend it highly.


* A wonderful cardboard moving box which comes flat, but builds into a box without any tape and has its own subculture in Sweden and is highly sought after in South Africa, as I discovered when I moved there for work.



Thursday, May 12, 2022

Fumetto Opens Up Again in 2022, But Underwhelms: A Review Essay

by Wim Lockefeer; photos by Nick Nguyen

Founded in 1992 as the Luzern Comix Festival, the Fumetto International Comics Festival can rightfully call itself one of the most important comics events in Europe, along with the Festival Internationale de la BD in Angoulême (France), Lucca Comics and Games in Lucca (Italy), and the Erlangen Comics Salon (Germany). Over the years, many internationally-renowned creators attended the festival, including Edmond Baudoin (the Festival’s first creator in residence), Jack Kirby, Daniel Clowes, Ulli Lust, Robert Crumb, Jacques Tardi and Emil Ferris. Additionally, the Festival has proven to be instrumental in bringing comics scenes from various Swiss language communities together.

Pandemic

As a direct result of the Covid-19 pandemic and national and international measures to counteract its spread, the Festival had to cancel its 2020 edition, as was the case for most public gatherings of that time. The 30th anniversary of the festival was celebrated in a hybrid format, with events organized in the city of Luzern, as well as online with the Comic Chat Café and a virtual exhibition.

This year’s edition (2022) was supposed to be a joyous return to form, with a full-fledged festival all across the city of Luzern. Whether the organization would be able to pull this off remained uncertain until about two weeks before the starting date, when program information was finally published on the Festival’s website. Most likely this delay was as a result of the uncertainty regarding international Covid-19 measures, and how this might affect the possibility of international guests to even attend the Festival. After all, only days before the opening, Switzerland radically reduced its pandemic regimen, but even so, various international visitors were unable to attend.

Kornschütte

More than ever, the Festival was centered around the Kornschütte, an old official building in the center of the city that is often used for cultural events. The building hosted the main information hub, as well as a small bookstore with selected new comics, predominantly from Switzerland and Germany, including Strapazin, Switzerland’s leading comics magazine. The room also hosted a craft market, where small press publishers, printmakers and other creative types hawked their wares. In a corner cartoonist Julietta Saccardi presented her Tiny Tragedies project, a series of  minicomics based on true stories of sexual abuse and harassment.


Julietta Saccardi's Tiny Tragedies

Five exhibitions were housed in and around the inner city, with two smaller ones devoted to the Swiss comics magazine Ampel and French Edelporn publisher BD Cul (which, true to form, was designed as the aftermath of a very dodgy party, with empty bottles, condom wrappers and assorted paraphernalia strewn around the room). Similarly small in size was the exhibition on French cartoonist Emilie Gleason, this year’s artist in residence.

A bit more ambitious was the presentation in the Kunstmuseum of a selection of video artworks by the Swedish duo Nathalie Djurberg and Hans Berg, famous for their idiosyncratic, rowdy and often disturbing stop-motion animation centered around desire, lust, and the inevitability of human decline. Their work typically features grossly deformed personas that prey upon one another, are taken apart and then reassembled or simply wander around to their impending doom, accompanied by soundscapes that, thanks to the setup of the exhibition, blended together in an almost hypnotic, alienating experience. Even though its link with comics as such may have been tenuous, it was a strong show, both artistically and in terms of message. 

Zorro

Plenty of comics content was present in Peter Poplaski’s The Curse Of Zorro exhibit, the Festival’s main event and housed in a rather dilapidated old warehouse. For his show, the American cartoonist selected a large number of items from his personal collection, as well as original artwork from himself and other cartoonists, to sketch an alternative history of the (super-) hero as the typical archetype of the Twentieth Century. While Poplaski’s main argument, that modern superheroes are the direct descendants of ancient gods' pantheons and of the characters from late medieval chivalry, and play the same role as aspirational examples, may be tenuous, disputable and quite likely very American-centered, the show itself was interesting and entertaining, with numerous old editions of Zorro stories (Poplaski’s personal favorite and obsession), as well as board games, action figures, movie posters and the like. 

 

Peter Poplaski's The Curse Of Zorro

The long list of additional features and events on the Festival’s program proved to be mainly showcases of artists or books in various shop windows around the city, mostly without any context or information, and often so small you walked past looking for them before you knew it. One notable exception was the tiny but exquisite exhibition of original artwork that local cartoonist Pirmin Beeler had assembled with pages from his latest graphic novel, Das Leuchten Im Grenzland (The Glow in the Borderlands, Edition Moderne, 2022). With his delicate lines and subtle pastels, Beeler is a name to keep track of.

Even though separately these shows and events certainly were not without value, on the whole the Festival left this visitor rather unsatisfied, and constantly checking the program to see if he wasn’t overlooking anything, after all? Was this really everything, not just in numbers, but also in quality? Indeed, with the possible exception of the Djurberg-Berg presentation, none of the Festival’s offerings really went beyond just acceptable in terms of content, presentation or urgency. At the FIBD in Angoulême, the Poplaski show would at best have been an also-ran, a nice addition to the Festival’s main events.


Pirmin Beeler' beautiful artwork
 

Narrow?

It is unclear whether this year’s Fumetto attracted the 40,000 visitors that it boasted ten or fifteen years ago. We visited the Festival, which was said to run from April 2-10, during its first weekend when, indeed, there were some people around. The presentation of this year’s Stipendien (or grants) filled a small auditorium, and visitors did show up for the exhibitions. But there were no lines for the ticket booth or information stands, no throngs to wade through to see that one piece, no presence in the streets. On Monday, the Festival was basically dead.

Restarting a public event after a long and difficult period like the Covid-19 pandemic is a hard and risky endeavor. In the coming years Fumetto may indeed grow again to dimensions on a par with its reputation. The question, however, is whether that is the Festival’s current direction. 2022’s Festival clearly showed a narrow, quite exclusionary view on comics. Except for the book store, mainstream comics, and even literary comics aimed at a larger audience, were completely absent, while this year’s awards went to niche or activist cartoonists.

This analysis, of course, may be just Hineininterpretierung (German for interpreting in meaning that doesn't exist) from an unprepared guest who did not have the right expectations, or it could be an explicit, and doubtlessly meritorious view on what the Festival should be. Maybe the Festival’s directors feel that the Festival’s future in changing times, and a changing landscape, is not so much in inclusion, but rather in focus on specific audiences and themes, a smaller scale and an explicit view on artistic politics. But in my personal view, it would be unwise to limit the scope of one of the most venerated comics festivals in Europe to just that, especially in a time when the importance and weight of the medium as we know it is not what it used to be.

 A version of this review will appear in print in IJOCA 24:1.

Wednesday, May 11, 2022

IJOCA electronic issues and subscriptions available

(apologies for cross-posting)

 

For the first time in its 22-year history, IJOCA is offering digital versions of some of its issues thanks to original layout editor Jae-Woong Kwon and digital conversion editors Mike Rhode and Simon Wigzell. By the end of the summer, we plan to offer all 46 issues.

 

If you're not a subscriber, and wish to buy issues at $20 each (at least a 10% savings from the print version), Paypal John Lent at jlent@temple.edu specifying which issue(s) you're buying in your text. When you get your receipt, send it to mrhode@gmail.com and you'll be sent Dropbox links to download the files. Print subscribers and contributors have been sent the links to the first issues converted; if you contributed to an issue and want a digital version, please let us know.

 

If you also need the very large original file as used by the printer, as opposed to the reduced size version which may be best for the average user, let us know.

 

We have the following issues available (links go to the table of contents).

 

The earliest issues we no longer have the production files for and are scanned:

 

Vol.1, No.1

 

Vol.4, No.2 


The following are from the original layout files:

 

Vol.15, No.1

 

Vol.15, No.2

 

Vol.16, No.1

 

Vol.16, No.2

 

Vol.17, No.1

 

Vol.17, No.2

 

Vol.18, No.1

 

Vol.18, No.2

 

Vol.19, No.1

 

Vol.19, No.2

 

Vol.20, No.1

 

Vol.20, No.2

 

Vol.21, No.1

 

Vol.21, No.2

 

Vol.22, No.1

 

Vol.22, No. 2

 

Vol.23, No. 1

 

Vol.23, No. 2

 

Feel free to write with any questions.

 

Mike Rhode

Ass't editor

mrhode@gmail.com

http://www.ijoca.net/

http://ijoca.blogspot.com