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Anonymous dearieme said...

But, Don, these are all ugly.

November 14, 2011 at 3:20 AM

Blogger Donald Pittenger said...

dearieme -- Indeed.

November 14, 2011 at 6:40 AM

Blogger mike shupp said...

I could imagine finding the Brian Calvin painting as one frame in a contemporary comic book -- assuming of course, it did something to move the story along.

The other two paintings are ... pointless, to be charitable. Are the people shown rich or poor? The bicyclists seem to feel despair; is "Loafers" an apt title? How old are the maidens in Kyoto Sky? 12? 20? I assume the occasion is a holiday -- are those animal shapes kites? Is the floating woman a kite? Are those city buildings in the backgrounds new or delapidated, clean or grubby? Do people die there or just go to pay taxes?

And so on. Comic book art pretty much moves the story along, some of it serves to describe settings; there isn't space for pure sportiveness or art-for-art-sake, so no, this stuff wouldn't really go well into comics. Not as this is, anyhow.

That said, let's recognize the women in Loafers are caricatures; I've known people who looked EXACTLY LIKE THIS, even though, of course, they couldn't have possibly.

Maybe Takano's indolent flower children are grounded in some reality clear to her, or contemporary Japanese. (I cheated, and looked her up in Wikipedia, which basically explains this as a burlesque of some strains in Japanese culture. So there's stuff to appreciate here, if you grew up in Japan. Which makes this art. Small-a rather than Big-A art, but still ...)

November 20, 2011 at 2:26 AM

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