Coming from fine art, and then engrossed in my architecture training, I didn’t meet any other comics people for a long time. We are pretty rare creatures - not many people read comics, and fewer want to make them. I didn’t realise I was lonely until I met others who spoke the same language.
Read MoreThere is one belief that I have retained for longer than any other in my life. My belief is that ideas are tied to their speaker.
Ideas are spoken in the voice of their author. Scholarship is bound to the body of its writer. To suggest that ideas can float free of the bodies that voiced them has always sat uncomfortably with me. There are many ways that we are taught from a young age how to distance the body and voice of the scholar from the words they are speaking. The surgical excision of the ‘I’ when writing essays in high school takes a long time to heal. In fact, come to think of it, the use of ‘I’ in my writing was excised around the same time that comics were excised from my reading. It took fifteen years for me to find them both again.
Read MoreWhen I was 18 I found a comic book that rocked my tiny world.
Read MoreIt’s probably ruining my posture... but I love this process. There’s a tactile joy in scratching lead and ink onto paper which I’ve come to crave. I like to believe drawing is a metonym for thinking.
Read MoreThe concept of ‘Australian manga’ is one that few people are aware of, even if they are reasonably well-informed about the large, global subculture behind it. For many who live acclimatised to the hegemonic, Western (read: American) cultural landscape that dominates this country, it’s inevitable that they are slow to embrace Australian manga’s inclusion in the history of Australian comics.
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