Posts Tagged ‘Scott McCloud’

How Messing with Mr. In-Between May Make Gutter Talk More Interesting

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

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Speculating on the positive nature of negative space, an erudite person said,

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There is nothing there there,

which is where there is.

The Positive Nature of Negative Space

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http://www.mcescher.com/Gallery/recogn-bmp/LW446F.jpg

MC Escher – Metamorphossis – 1967 — 1968

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Figure/ground, also known as positive and negative space, is at work in all facets of graphic design. In the design of logotypes and symbols, the distillation of complex meaning into simplified but significant form thrives on the taut reciprocity of figure and ground. In posters, layouts and screen design, what is left out frames and balances what is built in. Similarlly, in time-based media, including multipage books, the insertion and distribution of space across time effects perception.

From Graphic Design: The new Basics by Ellen Lupton and Phillips Jennifer Cole

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Nothing is Everything

But Everything is NOT nothing.

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Thirty spokes meet in the hub.

But the empty space between them

Is the essence of the wheel.

Pots are formed from clay

But the empty space within it

Is the essence of the pot.

Walls with windows and doors

Form the house.

But the empty space within it

Is the essence of the home.

Lao Tze

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It was Johnny Mercer who sang these lyrics in the 1940’s:

You’ve got to accentuate the positive

Eliminate the negative

And latch on to the affirmative

Don’t mess with Mr. In-Between

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The lyrics ring true when they refer to personal relationships and attitudes towards life, however take a moment and extend the meaning to photography and other means of visual storytelling.

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Messing with Mr. In-Between

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In Understanding Comics, Scott McCloud clearly observes the importance of the space between frames. The space between frames is called the gutter. It is highly charged seemingly negative space. However the space contains energy. The creator of a story in  sequential art forms such as comics and graphic novels know that the gutter may suggest time among other things. For example, frame one may show a cave family warming in front of a fire eating some roasted critter. Frame two may depict a present day family sitting down for a turkey dinner on Thanksgiving. The gutter allows a transition of thousands of years and the mind’s eye completes a story through participation with the viewer. Each viewer/reader will fill that space in with their own experience giving power to Mr. In-Between. No two readers will describe that space in exactly the same way.

McCloud says, “…comics asks the mind to work as a sort of in-betweener — filing in the gaps between panels…”

According to McCloud, when the reader/viewer fills in the gutters, he or she creates closure.

In what ways may a still photographer create closure? He or she may create a graphic novel or short story using frames. Or photographers may apply what isn’t there to create participation. Which concept will get more participation from viewers — the photograph that includes everything that you might possibly know including what happened or what is about to happen or the picture leading up to the climax of the story where the viewer is invited to complete it in their mind’s eye? The amazing collaboration between Robert and Shana ParkeHarrison consistently include what is not there.

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Robert and Shana ParkeHarrison

Lucid Dream

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Robert and Shana ParkeHarrison

From their Website

Counterpoint Series – New Work

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Thinking about how to wrap up this topic, I realized that there is no way to wrap it up.

There isn’t any there there, is there?

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The Man Who Wasn’t There

William Hughes Mearns 1899

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I saw a man upon the stair But when I looked he was not there He wasn’t there again today Oh, how I wish he’d go away.

This verse, titled “Antigonish” was written by William Hughes Mearns in 1899.

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I receive a Daily Dose of Flavorpills Every Morning – Get Yours

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

I have been a subscriber to The Daily Dose for about a month.

There is always something included to hold my interest and to help keep me current.

You may recall my Heartstorming articles about  graphic novels or Zak Smith’s fully illustrated version of Gravity’s Rainbow.

The following is an excerpt from this morning’s Daily Dose.


The Daily Dose

Presented by Flavorpill


Flavorpill’s Daily Dose is a jolt of cultural inspiration, delivered fresh to your inbox every weekday morning to help jump-start your day.

Our mission is simple: to provide a quick look at what’s new in music, print, art, film, and online,

by offering worthwhile culture to explore right from your screen.




Britten & Brülightly

Painting each page of a graphic-novel noir

Hannah Berry’s debut graphic novel, Britten & Brülightly is enough

to turn any residual comic-phobes into aficionados of the medium.

It’s existentialist noir. The story of world-weary private investigator Fernández Britten

and his unconventional partner Brülightly

has the philosophical wit of Bill Watterson and the whodunit chops of Raymond Chandler.

Berry strikes a pitch-perfect tone. When Britten is hired by Charlotte Moughton, the beautiful fiancée of an apparent suicide victim

, the detective is thrust into a comically sinister world of murder and revenge.

Set in a perpetually rain-soaked quasi-London, the dark and often grotesque characters are stylized to fit the story’s coy-yet-macabre tone.

The artwork was painstakingly painted. Berry, a graduate of Brighton University’s illustration program,

spent more than two years hand-painting each panel of the story.

Read a recent interview with Berry, check out The Oregonian’s review with sample illustrations, and buy the book.

– Chelsea Bauch


If you want cultural events, head over to Flavorpill.

For an up-to-the-minute culture fix, check out Flavorwire.

Scott McCloud Speaks at TED Conference

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

Why you should listen to him:

If not for Scott McCloud, graphic novels and webcomics might be enjoying a more modest Renaissance. The flourishing of cartooning in the ’90s and ’00s, particularly comic-smithing on the web, can be traced back to his major writings on the comics form. The first, Understanding Comics, is translated into 13 languages, and along with Reinventing Comics and Making Comics, its playful and profound investigations are justly revered as something like the Poetics of sequential art.

McCloud coined the term “infinite canvas” — for the new comics medium made possible by web browsers. He’s an avid user of the medium: My Obsession With Chess was widely popular online, as was The Right Number. Back on the printed page, he wrote and illustrated Zot!, a colorful response to then-trendy grimness and gore in comic books. (He describes the book as “a cross between Peter Pan, Buck Rogers and Marshall McLuhan.”)

“With Scott McCloud’s Understanding Comics the dialogue on and about what comics are and, more importantly, what comics can be has begun. If you read, write, teach or draw comics; if you want to; or if you simply want to watch a master explainer at work, you must read this book.”

Neil Gaiman

More About Scott McCloud:

Scott’s website

Scott’s Books:


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Reinventing Comics
(2000)


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Understanding Comics
(1993)


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Making Comics
(2006)

Related Links:

Heartstorming Archives: The Graphic Novel

All About Ted

Thanks to Ron Diorio for calling my attention to this video.

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