Images
“May It Please the Court” – by Maira Kalman
Comic based on a panel discussion by Ivan Brunetti, Seth, and Chris Ware.
Santiago Ramón y Cajal
Notebook 2008 page 21

Bull by Pablo Picasso
Complexity means “reduction and removal of redundancy”, as first defined by the philospher John Locke (1632-1704): “Ideas thus made up of several simple ones put together, I call complex; such as beauty, gratitude, a man, an army, the universe.”, and as illustrated in art by Picasso in his famous bull drawing.
–-Jon Otto Fossum, Laboratory for Soft and Complex Matter Studies
via Vruz
Pablo Picasso created ‘Bull’ around the Christmas of 1945. ‘Bull’ is a suite of eleven lithographs that have become a masterclass in how to develop an artwork from the academic to the abstract. In this series of images, all pulled from a single stone, Picasso visually dissects the image of a bull to discover its essential presence through a progressive analysis of its form. Each plate is a successive stage in an investigation to find the absolute ‘spirit’ of the beast.
Klee: Highway and Byways 1929 ; Oil on canvas, 32 5/8 x 26 3/8 in;
“This is the most important painting to come out of Paul Klee‘s trip to Egypt, from mid-December, 1929, to early January, 1930. He visited Luxor, Karnak, Thebes, Aswan, and Cairo. The journey was nearly as great an experience as the earlier one to Tunisia. He must surely have had a fairly clear idea of what he was looking for. It is noteworthy that certain works done long before the journey exhibit similarities to the works inspired by Egypt.”
“The work was painted about six months after his journey. The pictorial ideas were left to mature until the meaning of the incomparable land could be communicated in a way hitherto unknown, until Ka, the land’s very source and substance, had entered into the picture. In this pattern of fields all is order, timeless structure, with a poetic element added – for what could be more poetic than an Egypt born again out of invented means, in twentieth-century creative language?”
Foligatto by Nicolas de Crécy
I stumbled across this comic book story in an old copy of Heavy Metal magazine I picked up in a sceond hand book shopt in the early nineties. I had never seen anything like it. The mastery of the form, the colours the expressionistic artwork that so fit the purposes of the narrative so well. Here’s some of the early pages in the story that only hint at the glories to come.
Seems like I’m not the only one who has had such an experience with the work.

“You can see the careful consideration and planning that went into every line and color and choice of this intro. This functions like the Abstract of a scientific paper, the dumb show of early theater or the overture of an opera: here is the story in miniature, veiled in symbolism, wordless. All the themes are introduced, the tone is set, the aim established.”







