Today I checked out the Pasko ng Komiks Komiksibit in U.P. which is part of an event co-organized by our group. Along with prints of artwork by icons of Filipino comic art like Nestor Redondo, the exhibit also features a lot of great talent from up and coming local artists.
However I did notice several pieces which particularly struck me because they were so different from everything else in the exhibit, whether classic or contemporary. These pieces were a set of photographs, which, taken together, looked closer to a fashion spread than a comic. I was wondering if it was a CLAMP homage of sorts. It turned out to be something else altogether–images from the gallery of a virtual band named Mistula. The images were very pretty, make no mistake about it. However, I can’t help but think about the photographs’ collective significance as a comic. That is: Is it really a comic or a photo story? In an effort to understand, I checked their website and found more photo stories rather than what I would consider to be traditional comics.
This essay does not dismiss the exhibit of Mistula on Pasko ng Komiks. Professor Vim Nadera has his reasons why these images were placed there. What I want to focus on is an exploration of the possibilities of comics, the boundaries that many follow and the creative freedom that people may sometimes abuse. On one hand, we have comics such as Gerry Alanguilan’s Elmer. On the other end, you have photographs that come with what might be considered dialog, and, for lack of examples, we have this from Mistula.
It is interesting how digital media has transformed the comic art form in different ways. In fact I do find this process interesting, using different media to make an unconventional comic.
Maybe this shot by Mistula would definitely qualify as a comic spread as defined by more traditionalist perspectives. Digitally drawn and colored illustrations have become ubiquitous in the field of graphic arts and design. Comics is in the process of evolution, both as an art and a literary form. I am not quite sure if the combination of graphic design, composition, digital photography, and mascots would constitute a comic, however, or that people who practice this sort of art–and I do believe it is art–would qualify as comic artists, at least not in the way that I think Carlo Vergara and Andrew Drilon are comic artists.
Maybe it’s because I’m a purist. Maybe it’s because having read and listened to many sob stories of my favorite mangaka and artist friends, I always felt that a comic will always be governed by a cohesive and solid narrative, bound by the geography of panels, colors, ink, illustration, and the corresponding limits the confluence of these elements necessarily impose. Tezuka could have just photographed a boy wearing a cone on his head and placed a caption in his photo saying “Hi! I’m Atom”. But Tezuka did it differently. He drew his story of a robot boy with human feelings within the universe of a storyboard.
I think I may be placing undue importance on the intersection between story and illustration and how they fit together in a panel. Without a story, without something resembling an illustration, a comic is not a comic but simply a photo story, or what in Japan would be considered as a light novel. I mean, there must be a valid reason why a light novel in Japan would never receive a Tezuka award despite being gorgeously illustrated. Light novels also contain images that support the narrative, right? What makes the likes of Griffin and Sabine not a comic but an art book? So here’s me trying to understand — what makes Mistula’s work a comic when it’s closer to a photo story? Are graphic design and fashion photography now to be considered as valid forms of comic art? Would you consider a family album that contains artistically executed shots taken in sequence and then placed with captions in flickr as a valid comic?
Scott McCloud defined comic as a “Juxtaposed pictorial and other images in a deliberate sequence, intended to convey information and/or produce an aesthetic response in the viewer.1 “. With the wealth of sequential images online that produces responses from viewers (just check flickr!), anything could already be the comic that McCloud has defined. I mean, if Mistula did it, why shouldn’t other art forms based on similar premises be considered as comics?
I have a feeling that Pasko ng Komiks and our exhibit have inadvertently run headlong into an old debate regarding the definition of comics. These are my two cents about it, but I’d like to hear your thoughts on what you think. Do you think storybooks or photo stories should be part of a general definition of comics?
This post was done for the regular Comics/Graphic Novel feature of Read or Die. You can also check out that page for some of my blogs for them. This entry presents only my opinion not of the group.
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- Understanding Comics. New York: Kitchen Sink Press. 1993. Page 9. [↩]
Well, this isn’t really manga related, but it is related to reading. I know you and I have the luxury to read, but many Filipinos don’t even have an access to a book. Two years ago my friends and I decided to start a book club of sorts named Read or Die. Yes, we are otakus this way, but it’s really just a book club! After some while, we discovered that the Philippines has a big literacy problem. Sure, the market has books but not everyone can afford it. More so, the books available are not extensive. 80% of books in Manila are ripped off from the NY Times Bestseller list. If we want variety, we probably won’t get it.
So we decided to launch initiatives. First, is to encourage literacy. We tried provide books for the common masses to read. And not just any book, but books of great intellectual or cultural value. Second is to culture a nurturing community of readers and writers, one wherein readers would understand the world of the writer, and the other for writers to receive inspiration from their readers.
Last year we managed to conduct a successful Read or Die convention wherein writers had an opportunity to meet their readers. There were also lots of books donated and gathered from different institutions. It was a successful event and we’re hoping to bring more events like this to Filipino readers and writers in the future. But to pull this off, we need your help.
We’re opening a Christmas Donation drive and we’re hoping to earn as much as $2,000 dollars by the end of December. If you guys have a spare dollar and would like to give high school kids a chance to read great books and well, for my cause, great comics and mangas that could teach them valuable lessons in life, then please donate a dollar or two to our cause. You can check the widget at the side bar saying “Read or Die” and click “Chip In!” and donate to our cause. Please. :3
You can read more about Read or Die and our initiatives at our website.
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