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How to draw hair in Alex Raymond style

How to draw hair in Alex Raymond style

To cite the great Beppe Viola: I’d be willing to have 98,96°F fever all my life in exchange for the skill in drawing hair in this manner. 

UncleJ quote

Art Alex Raymond from Flash Gordon 11 – 19 – 1939

Xtina, message by a fan?

Xtina, message by a fan?

Xtina comic strip – who me?

Centered on the life of Xtina, in her work as assistant in a Museum, Xtina’s chronicles the daily challenges of a worker. At work, we follow xtina as she copes with friends, relationships, and the day-to-day trials of a working woman living life in the 21st century.

Xtina sophisticated comic strip?

sophisticated comic strip

The qualifying word “possibly”, above, is important because defining the qualifications for being considered a “surrealist strip” is difficult. The epithet “surrealist” can have different meanings. It has been a label applied to strips of vastly different kinds – particularly examples about dreaming, or featuring unexpected juxtapositions, but also strips about psychedelic or hyperreal consciousnesses. In terms of more scholarly taxonomies and typologies, definitions have tended to emphasise formalist qualities, such as an aesthetic that is “anti-narrative”. Also, the notion of a “first” is controversial, and dependent on context and definitions (added to which, there may have been other examples of surrealist comic strips that this writer is not aware of).

The picture is complicated by the fact that certain fine artists working in a surrealist tradition have produced sequential narratives that might be considered “comics”. Max Ernst, for example, produced his A Week of Kindnessin 1934: a “visual novel” in five booklets done in the form of a collage. It may count as the first surrealist comic, depending on definitions, though it was not “anti-narrative” and many surrealists would have derided its novelistic aspirations on the basis that the notion of the novel was bourgeois and redundant.

These caveats aside, this essay will concentrate on the intentions behind Wokker, which means looking in detail at the biographies of its creators. This approach itself is questionable, and acknowledgement is duly made to the warnings of Roland Barthes and his followers about “the death of the author” (Barthes, 1977, p.142-148). Rather, what is at stake here is a verifiable connection between Wokker and what was going on in Paris in the 1920s, and the way in which its mode of expression can be traced to the tenets of the original French surrealists.

Wokker typically appeared in stories told in four or five panels, and was designed as an open-ended series. Wokker trundles round his environment on wheels, but is no kid’s toy. Sometimes he takes on the personality of a mischief-maker, sometimes an ingénue, and sometimes a cynical observer. His frustration level is low, and he is apt to exclaim “Wokkit!” when things don’t go his way. His adventures follow a logic of their own – which sometimes means no logic at all. Created in 1966, Wokker’s publication history is complex. After its high point as a weekly strip in the Times Educational Supplement (hereafterTES), it appeared in three less well known magazine publications – Knuckleduster Funnies (1985-86), The Truth (1987-89) and The Whistler(1995-99).

Historical graphic novel seeks artist

Historical graphic novel seeks artist

Historical graphic novel, Italy, 15th century.

We love Enrico Marini‘s art but any style is accepted.

Xtina comic strip wrong way

Xtina comic strip wrong way

Centered on the life of Xtina, in her work as assistant in a Museum, Xtina’s chronicles the daily challenges of a worker. At work, we follow xtina as she copes with friends, relationships, and the day-to-day trials of a working woman living life in the 21st century.

Comics Vintage ADV Braccobaldo

Comics Vintage ADV Braccobaldo

Braccobaldo is the Italian name of Huckleberry Hound.

The French is Roquet belles oreilles

Year: 1964 

Publisher: Arnoldo Mondadori Editore

Montly

Pages: 64 

Color

Price: 120 > 200 italian lira

Comics goes to movie and TV and…

Comics goes to movie and TV and…

Encyclopedia/dictionary dedicated to comics that were adapted into films, TV serials, TV movies, cartoons, radio serials, theater pieces.

How many are the Blueberry spin-offs ?

How many are the Blueberry spin-offs ?

Blueberry is a Western comic series created in the Franco-Belgian bandes dessinées (BD) tradition by the Belgian scriptwriter Jean-Michel Charlier and French comics artist Jean “Mœbius” Giraud. It chronicles the adventures of Mike Blueberry on his travels through the American Old West. Blueberry is an atypical western hero; he is not a wandering lawman who brings evil-doers to justice, nor a handsome cowboy who “rides into town, saves the ranch, becomes the new sheriff and marries the schoolmarm.” In any situation, he sees what he thinks needs doing, and he does it.

The series spawned out of the 1963 Fort Navajo comics series, originally intended as an ensemble narrative, but which quickly gravitated around the breakout character “Blueberry” as the main and central character after the first two stories, causing the series to continue under his name later on. The older stories, released under the Fort Navajo moniker, were ultimately reissued under the name Blueberry as well in later reprint runs. Two spin-offs series, La Jeunesse de Blueberry (Young Blueberry) and Marshal Blueberry, were created pursuant the main series reaching its peak in popularity in the early 1980s.

Xtina fifth birthday

Xtina fifth birthday

Xtina published for five years every week. And five volumes published.

Centered on the life of Xtina, in her work as assistant in a Museum, Xtina’s chronicles the daily challenges of a worker. At work, we follow xtina as she copes with friends, relationships, and the day-to-day trials of a working woman living life in the 21st century.

Created by Monica

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