The Near-Sighted Monkey
As part of Lynda Barry’s term as UW-Madison Art’s Institute Artist  in Residence this spring  semester, she’s inviting some of  her favorite  artists to join her in presentations that are free and open to  the  public.
The first one takes place on Wednesday, February 15, 2012 at 4:30 PM.
Visiting Artist Talk:
Ivan Brunetti:  Through a Cartoonist’s Eye:
Room L160 Chazen Museum of Art (Elvehjem Building)800 University AvenueMadison, WI 537064:30 p.m. - 5:45 p.m.
Before Ivan Brunetti’s talk he will be joined on stage by Chris Ware and Lynda Barry for a brief discussion about comics.
Last summer, Lynda Barry wrote a little piece for The Guardian about a new book by Chris Ware called ‘LINT’
It is the Near-Sighted Monkey’s first pick for “Most Mind Blowing Comic Book Ever Gave”
Here is what she said:
LYNDA BARRY on CHRIS WARE   
July 8, 2011Chris  Ware is an American cartoonist whose work is so unusual that some  hesitate to call what he is doing ‘comics’. When I read his work I get a  Wright Brothers feeling of being in something big, right as it’s being  invented – a new way to shoot through space. Eventually we will know  what to call what he does, but for now ‘graphic novel’ is all we have.  And it isn’t the right term for what Chris Ware is doing at all. It’s  like calling an ambulance a ‘graphic vehicle’. Some  think what is happening in his work might be literature and they think  this is a compliment. There are books about how to read comics in a  serious way as if they were literature, how to take them apart  to find out what makes them go.  If you do this with Chris Ware’s comics  you’ll find the complicated structure you’ve been told is there, but  you’ll miss everything else. Looking at a diagram of an airplane is not  the same as being able to glide as one. LINT, his newest book of comics, was Kitty Hawk for me. It’s like the time machine my nephew once wished for, “It flys and it has a turning knob for future, past and also meanwhile.” And when you turn the ‘meanwhile’ knob on this particular machine you will see through time. You’ll see through to middle of the heartbreaking things and know  just how they all came about, and why this is the only way to say it.

As part of Lynda Barry’s term as UW-Madison Art’s Institute Artist in Residence this spring semester, she’s inviting some of her favorite artists to join her in presentations that are free and open to the public.

The first one takes place on Wednesday, February 15, 2012 at 4:30 PM.

Visiting Artist Talk:

Ivan Brunetti:  Through a Cartoonist’s Eye:

Room L160 Chazen Museum of Art (Elvehjem Building)
800 University Avenue
Madison, WI 53706
4:30 p.m. - 5:45 p.m.

Before Ivan Brunetti’s talk he will be joined on stage by Chris Ware and Lynda Barry for a brief discussion about comics.

Last summer, Lynda Barry wrote a little piece for The Guardian about a new book by Chris Ware called ‘LINT’

It is the Near-Sighted Monkey’s first pick for “Most Mind Blowing Comic Book Ever Gave

Here is what she said:

LYNDA BARRY on CHRIS WARE   

July 8, 2011

Chris Ware is an American cartoonist whose work is so unusual that some hesitate to call what he is doing ‘comics’. When I read his work I get a Wright Brothers feeling of being in something big, right as it’s being invented – a new way to shoot through space. Eventually we will know what to call what he does, but for now ‘graphic novel’ is all we have. And it isn’t the right term for what Chris Ware is doing at all. It’s like calling an ambulance a ‘graphic vehicle’.

Some think what is happening in his work might be literature and they think this is a compliment. There are books about how to read comics in a serious way as if they were literature, how to take them apart to find out what makes them go.  If you do this with Chris Ware’s comics you’ll find the complicated structure you’ve been told is there, but you’ll miss everything else. Looking at a diagram of an airplane is not the same as being able to glide as one.

LINT, his newest book of comics, was Kitty Hawk for me. It’s like the time machine my nephew once wished for, “It flys and it has a turning knob for future, past and also meanwhile.” And when you turn the ‘meanwhile’ knob on this particular machine you will see through time. You’ll see through to middle of the heartbreaking things and know just how they all came about, and why this is the only way to say it.


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