"BD Reporters": Centre Pompidou.A rose is a rose is a rose, but a bande dessinee is not a comic strip comic strip, combination of cartoon with a story line, laid out in a series of pictorial panels across a page and concerning a continuous character or set of characters, whose thoughts and dialogues are indicated by means of "balloons" containing written speech. . In the French-speaking world, the BD (for our purposes, a sequential drawing) is held to be nothing less than the Ninth Art, with a noble genealogy going back to the Bayeux tapestry Bayeux tapestry. This so-called tapestry is in fact an embroidery that chronicles the Norman conquest of England by William the Conqueror in 1066. It is a long, narrow strip of coarse linen, 230 ft by 20 in. , plus a contemporary network of theorists, critics, publishers, festivals, websites, and art-school programs. Not to mention, of course, the ever-growing numbers of artist-authors who have seized upon the BD as a hybrid zone A hybrid zone exists where the ranges of two interbreeding species meet. For a hybrid zone to be stable, the offspring produced by the cross (the hybrids) have to be less fit than members of the parent species, although this condition does not need to be met in the very first of experimentation free from the material and mental constraints of the mainstream culture industry. Indeed, the "BD Reporters" of this show's title were not comics superheroes Superheroes are fictional heroes who possess abilities beyond those of normal human beings. Superheroes may also refer to:
This ambitious itinerary began with what was at first glance the simplest of exercises: a series of original pen-and-ink drawings and commentaries from cult illustrator Edmond Baudoin's Le Chemin de Saint-Jean (Saint John's Trail), 2004, which records his walks along a memory-laden path near his native Nice. But on closer inspection (almost inevitable because of the sheer beauty of the draftsmanship drafts·man n. 1. A man who draws plans or designs, as of structures to be built. 2. A man who draws, especially an artist. drafts ) it turned out that the sketches made on the spot had been collaged onto larger sheets, extended, re-commented upon, and interpolated interpolated /in·ter·po·lat·ed/ (in-ter´po-la?ted) inserted between other elements or parts. with other drawings and observations from another series of walks, this time in what Baudoin terms the "amnesiac landscapes" of Quebec--a 4,000-mile detour that allowed Baudoin to incorporate both his home terrain and the ghosts of Canada's First Peoples into a walker's-eye view of the planet. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Still other such introspective in·tro·spect intr.v. in·tro·spect·ed, in·tro·spect·ing, in·tro·spects To engage in introspection. [Latin intr journeys were more clearly marked by the personal quests that bildungsromans are made of, as with Johanna Schipper's Born Somewhere, 2004. This autobiographical account of the Taiwan-born, French-raised artist's search for traces of her past (here transformed from published album into wall installation) juxtaposed jux·ta·pose tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast. memories and memorabilia with the vivid observations and emotions of her return to Taiwan in 2002. On the documentary side of the BD family, meanwhile, Un homme est mort (A Man Has Died), 2006, by illustrator-writer tandem Davodeau & Kris, offered an excursion through space and time alike with the story of a 1950 strike on the Brittany coast, reconstituted in a cinematic style transforming the classic format of frames and strips into a sophisticated storyboard A sequence of images and annotations for a cartoon, animation or video. Storyboards are previews of the final version and typically contain mockups rather than final art and images. Before computers, storyboards were drawn with pen and ink on lightweight cardboard. . A journalistic counterpoint to this historical reportage came from Gorazdie Bosnie, 1995, Joe Sacco's acclaimed coverage of the former Yugoslavia, presented with a remarkable selection of preparatory documents--sketches, notes, photos, scripts--that served to bring out the uncanny combination of reportorial accuracy and artistic invention that mark his inimitable in·im·i·ta·ble adj. Defying imitation; matchless. [Middle English, from Latin inimit style. And in a category best described as "all of the above" (and more), there was Le photographe (The Photographer), 2003-2006. This singular "photo-graphic novel" by Didier Lefevre ("The Photographer"), Emmanuel Guibert (writer-illustrator), and Frederic Lemercier (colorist-designer) recounts Lefevre's experiences on a 1986 Doctors Without Borders Doctors Without Borders, Fr. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), international organization that provides emergency medical assistance to people suffering from a natural or societal disaster, such as an earthquake or war. mission in Soviet-occupied Afghanistan. With its extraordinary flow of drawings, photos, and words (based on some four thousand archived negatives and more than ten hours of recorded conversations between Lefevre and Guibert), this story of what "The Photographer" saw and heard--and what he thought and felt about the war and the workings of the medical mission in addition to his own adventures and misadventures as a novice in photography and life alike--achieves the magical combination of intimacy and universality that should be the highest common denominator of art. |
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