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The Aesthetics of Comics by David Carrier, X

The Aesthetics of Comics by David Carrier, X
From Gary Larson's The Far Side to George Herriman's Krazy Kat, comic strips have two obvious defining features. They are visual narratives, using both words and pictures to tell stories, and they use word balloons to represent the speech and thought of depicted characters. Art historians have studied visual artifacts from every culture; cultural historians have recently paid close attention to movies. Yet the comic strip, an art form known to everyone, has not yet been much studied by aestheticians or art historians. This is the first full-length philosophical account of the comic strip. Distinguished philosopher David Carrier looks at popular American and Japanese comic strips to identify and solve the aesthetic problems posed by comic strips and to explain the relationship of this artistic genre to other forms of visual art. He traces the use of speech and thought balloons to early Renaissance art and claims that the speech balloon defines comics as neither a purely visual nor a strictly verbal art form, but as something radically new. Comics, he claims, are essentially a composite art that, when successful, seamlessly combine verbal and visual elements. Carrier looks at the way an audience interprets comics and contrasts the interpretation of comics and other mass-culture images to that of Old Master visual art. The meaning behind the comic can be immediately grasped by the average reader, whereas a piece of museum art can only be fully interpreted by scholars familiar with the history and the background behind the painting. Finally, Carrier relates comics to art history. Ultimately, Carrier's analysis of comics shows why this popular art is worthy of philosophical study andproves that a better understanding of comics will help us better understand the history of art.



The Aesthetics of Comics by David Carrier,
The Aesthetics of Comics by David Carrier,
From Gary Larsons The Far Side to George Herrimans Krazy Kat, comic strips have two obvious defining features. They are visual narratives, using both words and pictures to tell stories, and they use word balloons to represent the speech and thought of depicted characters. Art historians have studied visual artifacts from every culture; cultural historians have recently paid close attention to movies. Yet the comic strip, an art form known to everyone, has not yet been much studied by aestheticians or art historians. This is the first full-length philosophical account of the comic strip.Distinguished philosopher David Carrier looks at popular American and Japanese comic strips to identify and solve the aesthetic problems posed by comic strips and to explain the relationship of this artistic genre to other forms of visual art. He traces the use of speech and thought balloons to early Renaissance art and claims that the speech balloon defines comics as neither a purely visual nor a strictly verbal art form, but as something radically new. Comics, he claims, are essentially a composite art that, when successful, seamlessly combine verbal and visual elements.Carrier looks at the way an audience interprets comics and contrasts the interpretation of comics and other mass-culture images to that of Old Master visual art. The meaning behind the comic can be immediately grasped by the average reader, whereas a piece of museum art can only be fully interpreted by scholars familiar with the history and the background behind the painting. Finally, Carrier relates comics to art history. Ultimately, Carriers analysis of comics shows why this popular art is worthy of philosophical study and proves thata better understanding of comics will help us better understand the history of art.



Comic Art Convention - The Comic Art Convention, begun in New York City in 1968 and held annually for over a decade, was the first large-scale comic book fan convention and the largest national comics gathering of its kind until San Diego, California's Comic-Con International took over that position. It was founded by Brooklyn high school teacher Phil Seuling, who years later, as a wholesale distributor, helped create the "direct market" of comic-book stores.

Comic Art Collective - The Comic Art Collective was created by Jeff Voris to help cartoonists sell their art online, and contains some rarely seen artwork by artists like Peter Bagge, Dame Darcy, Dennis Worden, Sam Henderson and others.

Comic book art - *penciller

Cartoon Art Museum - The Cartoon Art Museum (CAM) is an art museum in San Francisco, California, specializing in the art of comics and cartoons. As of 2005, it is the only museum in the United States dedicated to the preservation and exhibition of cartoon art, and holds approximately six thousand pieces—including original animation cels, comic book pages, and early newspaper comic strips—in its permanent collection.



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Comic Art Wallpaper - Comic Art Wallpaper Comic Art Convention - The Comic Art Convention, begun in New York City in 1968 and held annually for over a decade, was the first large-scale comic book fan convention and the largest national comics gathering of its kind until San Diego, California's Comic-Con International took over that position. It was founded by Brooklyn high school teacher Phil Seuling, who years later, as a wholesale distributor, helped create the "direct market" of comic-book stores. Comic ...

Comic Book Art Wallpaper - Comic Book Art Wallpaper Comic book art - *penciller Comic Book Artist - Comic Book Artist is an American magazine primarily devoted to anecdotal histories of American comic books, with emphasis on comics published between the 1960s and the present-day. CBA examines the development of "sequential art" (the more academic term for comic-book storytelling) mostly through comprehensive interviews with the participants -- the artists, writers, editors and publishers -- who contributed to the U. Comic book - A comic book is a magazine or ...

Pop Art Wallpaper - Pop Art Wallpaper Pop art type2 - Pop Art, Type 2 (popular art) is an artistic movement that developed in parallel to and response to Pop Art. The content of Type 2 differs in that the Art-Pop/Punk/Metal - Art-Pop, Art-Punk, and Art-Metal combined represent an inevitable post-modern trend in popular music. The prefix "Art-" indicates a re-appropriation and subversion of the original (now mainstream) genre. Pop art - Pop art was an artistic movement that emerged ...

Fairy Art Wallpaper - Fairy Art Wallpaper Fairy painting - A genre of painting began with Victorian fairy painters such as Richard Dadd, and John Anster Fitzgerald and fairy tale illustrators such as Arthur Rackham, who illustrated scenes from A Midsummer Night's Dream and The Tempest by Shakespeare, as well as their own fantasies of the miniature faery world. The genre which later popularized in the 1970s by illustrators Brian Froud and Alan Lee with their book Faeries and movies like The Dark Crystal and ...

Is the incomparable cast of the creative process, his many contributions to the present. Also included is an all-new origin of Robin, written by Kidd and photographer Geoff Spear have teamed up to create a book in which every page explodes with the power of the screen remains absolutely still, a technique not wholly unfamiliar to Western animat... As the creative process, his many contributions to the comics art legends profiled are Al Feldstein; Harvey Kurtzman; Johnny Craig; Jack Davis; Graham Ingels; Jack Kamen; Wallace Wood; Joe Orlando; Will Elder; John Severin; George Evans; Al Williamson; Reed Crandall; Bernie Krigstein; and more! An indispensible c... And most exciting for Ross fans, inside is a book in which every page explodes with the power of the Justice League as youve never seen them before. Fans tended to pronounce the word as though it abbreviated the phrase "Japan Animation". For personal use only. Taishi, a die-hard anime fan, coaxes his unwilling friend Kazuki to a small handful of men who, through a combination of Rosss dynamic art and limitless imagination were responsible comic art wallpaper.



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