Thursday, August 27, 2009

Notes on McCloud's Understanding Comics

So I know that it wasn't a necessity to write about what we read until class time, and I'm not writing my actual post until then. But I wanted to put my notes so I would have them in class.

  • Description of comics: Juxtaposed pictorial and other images in a deliberate sequence
  • Comics is a medium.
  • Comics are not defined to techniques, styles, mediums or ideas. 
  • Comics versus films: Space vs. Time
  • Humans are self centered and see themselves in everything
  • We become things. (Example: If there's a car crash, instead of thinking the car hit the car, you think 'he hit me')
  • Concepts happen when physical form goes away and idea comes in.
  • Words are the ultimate abstractions
  • Writing and drawing are completely separate forms of art
  • Comics can leave you to finish the form. (For example, if you only see a head, you assume the rest of the body is there)
  • The breaks from panel to panel are two separate ideas that the eye transforms into a single idea
  • There are six connections that can use as little or as much of the eye and brain's closure
  1. Panel - Panel (Uses little closure)
  2. Action - Action (Again, little closure)
  3. Subject - Subject (Takes more attention)
  4. Scene - Scene (Transitions)
  5. Aspect - Aspect (Different aspects for elements of place, idea, mood)
  6. Non-Sequitur (No relationship between panels)
  • Comics are a mono-sensory medium
  • Symbols are visual metaphors 
  • Lines can be used to depict senses (Such as someone smelling based off some lines)
  • Backgrounds can set moods
  • Comics = 6 step path
  1. Ideas - Content
  2. Form 
  3. Idiom - Styes or genres 
  4. Structure - Piecing it all together
  5. Craft 
  6. Surface - Production values, finishing
  • People rarely focus on ideas or form
  • Core question about art - Why am I doing this?
  • Color depends on the purpose or moods you're setting
  • Isolation - No one can know what it's like to be you
  • No one will ever read a comic like you do
  • They'll never have the same experience
  • To understand comics you must clear your mind of preconceived notions and start from scratch
  • Pay more attention to the ideas and form than anything else
  • Comics contain the viewer involvement and identification while having the realism to capture the visible world
Aaaand those are my main notes from reading Understanding Comics.