Art Spiegelman : "J'en ai marre de moi" On Discovery: An Interview With Daniel Clowes. This interview is super long, so I’ll make this intro super short. Daniel Clowes is responsible for such beauteous works as Ghost World, Mister Wonderful, Ice Haven, Wilson, and, most recently, The Death Ray. He’s also partially responsible for comics being thought of as a real art form nowadays. Most important, he is responsible for the line “You guys up for some reggae tonight?” And, while I may not be up for reggae, I am up for you reading this interview! Ha-ha! TAVI: Many of your characters are kind of pathetic and lonely, but somehow your observations seem more compassionate than condescending. DANIEL CLOWES: I try not to worry about that too much, but I try to make fun of myself more than I would make fun of anybody else.
Do you find it comforting or terrifying that people can relate to characters that are closer to you? It is comforting. At the time it was just boring. [Laughs] You’d been cheated cause you didn’t get to go to Woodstock? I think about that a lot with my son. Jaime Hernandez. Early life[edit] Jaime Hernandez grew up in Oxnard, California.[1] He is the youngest of his family, with four older brothers and one sister.[2] His family embraced comics: their mother read them frequently and old issues were kept in large quantities in the house, to be read and re-read by all over the years.[2] "We grew up with comics," Hernandez said.
"I wanted to draw comics my whole life. "[3] Hernandez has a lifelong fascination with pro wrestling, especially women's wrestling, and it has been a regular part of his work. Career[edit] Jaime's main contribution to Love and Rockets is the ongoing serial narrative Locas which follows the tangled lives of a group of primarily Latina characters, from their teenage years in the early days of the California punk scene to the present day. The Hernandez brothers announced they were ending Love and Rockets with issue 50, and that they would be doing solo books from then on. Other work[edit] Awards[edit] References[edit] Sources[edit] Daniel Clowes. Kiriko Nananan. Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre. Kiriko Nananan (魚喃 キリコ, Nananan Kiriko?)
Est une mangaka japonaise née le . Présentation[modifier | modifier le code] Son œuvre, dont Blue pourrait être l'élément emblématique, traite essentiellement des tourments de la jeunesse japonaise et est parfois associée à la Nouvelle Manga. Bibliographie[modifier | modifier le code] Water - recueil d'histoires courtes / Magazine House, 1996 / (ISBN 4838710062)blue / Magazine House, 1997 / (ISBN 4838708963)Itaitashii LOVE (痛々しいラヴ ) - recueil d'histoires courtes / Magazine House, 1997 / (ISBN 4838709374)Haruchin (ハルチン) - recueil de gags en une page / Magazine House, 1998 / (ISBN 4838709676)Kabocha to Mayonnaise (南瓜とマヨネーズ ) - recueil d'histoires courtes / Takarajimasha, 1999 / (ISBN 4796616349)strawberry shortcakes / Yôdensha, 2002 / (ISBN 4396762925)Tanpenshû (短編集 ) - recueil d'histoires courtes / Asuka Shinsha, 2003 / (ISBN 4870315408) Publications en France[modifier | modifier le code]
Untitled Document. Succursale.