Saturday, September 21, 2013

Illusion of Motion

While reading the textbook section on the illusion of motion in 2-D art, I was really glad to see a page from a comic used as an example. While I haven't read that particular Marvel work, I was reminded of all the fantastic examples of motion in graphic novels in general.

I took a course a few years ago on graphic novels, and motion is an absolutely essential part of the finished work. One of the most compelling titles I read was Barefoot Gen by Keiji Nakazawa. The art style showed motion without excessive lines and shading, which I often see in a lot of manga titles (my eyes just aren't able to pick out what, exactly, is going on in some of those panels!).

Here's a great example of the use of lots of clean lines and negative space:
from Barefoot Gen #1: A Cartoon Story Of Hiroshima
Another title on the class list was Alan Moore and Dave Gibbon's Watchmen. I'd never seen the movie or read the novel, so it was a surprising, depressing journey all the way through. Unlike Barefoot Gen, which is all in black and white, Watchmen is overflowing with bold, vibrant colors. The image I remember most from the latter is actually an example of an image expressing stillness rather than motion. It depicts the aftermath of the destruction of New York (hopefully I don't spoil it for anyone). 

from Watchmen, chapter XI
Time stands still here. The crowd is moving, but seems to freeze when you look at it because of the bloody doomsday clock in the center of the picture. The clock in particular seems like such a stroke of genius to me; it perfectly portrays the seriousness, horror, and scope of the event. Its detail is used as the cover for chapter XII as well:
from Watchmen, chapter XII




2 comments:

  1. You just spoiled Watchmen for me! No I'm kidding, that is one of my favorite artworks/comics.

    ReplyDelete
  2. You just spoiled Watchmen for me! No I'm kidding, that is one of my favorite artworks/comics.

    ReplyDelete