[Sequential: Canadian Comics News & Culture] Krazy! Comic Art Show Opens in V...

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Bryan

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May 21, 2008, 2:13:20 AM5/21/08
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Vancouver, and specifically the Vancouver Art Gallery, is the place to be this summer for comics fans, as Art Spiegelman and Seth co-curate the comics and graphic novels section of the multi-curator, multi-medium art show, KRAZY! The Delirious World of Anime + Comics + Video Games + Art. Dumb but accurate title aside, the comics section of this exhibit looks interesting, with work from Chester Brown, Lynda Barry, and Harvey Kurtzman on display, with the added bonus of some Japanese cartoonists and related work in the field of animation (early Winsor McKay, etc).

There has been a flurry of coverage of this event in the mainstream press recently.

Globe and Mail: Seth and Spiegelman interview
Global TV: Spiegelman profile

In addition to the exhibit, there will be a series related events, beginning with "Comic Demonstrations" running on Sundays (July 6, July 13, August 3, August 10), from 2pm-5pm in the Gallery rotunda. Local comic artists will be appearing for workshops and discussions. As well, on Thursday, August 7, at 7pm, Alywn Spies, assistant professor of Creative and Critical Studies at UBC, gives a special tour of KRAZY!'s manga artworks for an event called "Teaching Manga."

From the press release:

For the first time, the Vancouver Art Gallery will bring the worlds
of anime, comics, cartoons, video games, manga, graphic novels and contemporary
art together in one exhibition. Offering an innovative and dynamic survey, KRAZY!
The Delirious World of Anime + Comics + Video Games + Art reveals the uniqueness
of each medium, while uncovering their histories, interrelations and future
trajectories. On view from May 17 to September 7, 2009, the exhibition is cocurated
by some of the art forms’ most influential artists and cultural producers,
including Maus author Art Spiegelman, The Sims creator Will Wright, comic artist
Seth and animated feature film director Tim Johnson. Conceived and developed by
Vancouver Art Gallery senior curator Bruce Grenville, the exhibition will travel to a
New York City arts institution in March 2009.

"The Vancouver Art Gallery is committed to fostering new and dynamic
understandings of visual culture. With the exhibition KRAZY!, we seized a tremendous
opportunity to forward the study of some of the world’s fastest growing art forms,"
said Kathleen Bartels, director of the Vancouver Art Gallery. "Despite the pervasive
presence of these media, little has been done to assess the ties that bind them. By
offering an interdisciplinary account in a major survey exhibition for the first time, we will illuminate their importance as a sustained cultural force."

One of the largest exhibitions ever organized by the Gallery, KRAZY! will occupy two
entire floors of gallery space and is designed in collaboration with Tokyo-based
architectural firm Atelier Bow-Wow—a design team renowned for their understanding
of informal culture and ability to enhance communal visual experiences. Divided into
seven sections defined by medium, the exhibition takes viewers through everchanging
gallery environments, which include a mini-theatre for viewing animated
cartoons and anime, immersive video spaces and innovative reading environments
for visitors to experience a deluge of manga, graphic novels and comics. Built to
ensure visitors are exposed to the full breath of the media, the exhibition comprises
more than 600 artworks, including original sketches, concept drawings, sketchbooks,
storyboards, production drawings, films, video games, animation cels, three
dimensional models, sculptures, books, manga and much more.

The artists and works in the exhibition were selected by a group of co-curators,
including Bruce Grenville, the exhibition's coordinating curator and curator of the
visual arts section; Tim Johnson, curator of animated cartoons; Kiyoshi Kusumi,
curator of manga and anime; Seth, curator of comics and graphic novels; Art
Spiegelman, curator of comics and graphic novels; Toshiya Ueno, curator of manga
and anime; and Will Wright, curator of video games. Each curator was invited on the
strength of their unique knowledge of their particular field, favouring practitioners,artists and cultural producers who are highly regarded for their work. Using their strong historical knowledge, each curator was asked to select a small group of artists who had made a significant contribution through a particular work or body of work. To give the overall selection historical context, curators selected precursors in their respective fields,artists who had established their given genres and artists who are leading the way to the future.
"The co-curators, who are also co-authors in the publication that accompanies the exhibition, are among the most active and sought-after practitioners in their respective fields. Despite their own vigorous workloads they shared their extraordinary insight and experience of this art," said curator
Bruce Grenville. "No one person could have selected the work in this show, but collectively we have drawn a new map of the world of visual culture."

KRAZY! is a rare opportunity to see artworks that have shaped the history of contemporary visual culture, including Art Spiegelman's drawings for the first three-page version of his Pulitzer prizewinning Maus; George Herriman's last three drawings for Krazy Kat; Lotte Reiniger's 1927 The Adventures of Prince Achmed, the first feature-length animated cartoon; a sneak preview of Will
Wright's groundbreaking video game Spore; and an extraordinary selection of drawings from Yuichi Yokoyama's latest manga, New Engineering. The exhibition also includes works by Moyoco Anno, Lynda Barry, Marcel Broodthaers, Chester Brown, Cao Fei, Milt Gross, Pierre Huyghe, Ichiro Itano, Tim Johnson, Yoko Kanno, Satoshi Kon, Harvey Kurtzman, John Lasseter, Roy Lichtenstein, Christian Marclay, Winsor McCay, Sid Meier, Shigeru Miyamoto, Junko Mizuno, Mamoru Nagano, Claes Oldenburg, Mamoru Oshii, Katsuhiro Otomo, Nick Park, Raymond Pettibon, Seth, Iwatani Toru, Chris
Ware, Masaaki Yuasa and many more.


The PR lists the manga co-curators as:

Kiyoshi Kusumi (Curator – Manga and Anime)
Kiyoshi Kusumi is a freelance writer and cultural critic. He was formerly the editor-in-chief of the Japanese art journal, BT Magazine. Kusumi is currently the editor of the Japanese manga magazine Comickers and is credited with identifying and naming the Nouvelle Manga movement. He is an established art critic and cultural theorist and is considered a global authority on manga.

Toshiya Ueno (Curator – Manga and Anime)
Toshiya Ueno is a sociologist, media theorist and critic who lives and works in Japan and Amsterdam. He is currently an associate professor in the Expressive Cultures Department at Wako University, Tokyo. He has written numerous articles, essays and reviews on media, rock/pop music, film, contemporary art, architecture and urban design.

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Posted By Bryan to Sequential: Canadian Comics News & Culture at 5/21/2008 02:00:00 AM
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