Showing posts with label review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label review. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 August 2013

Wu Wei (Or: my friends are WELL talented, innit?)

So.

Let’s just gloss over the fact that I haven’t posted in about 9 months. (Except to say this: no, I did not have a baby). Instead, let’s talk Wu Wei.

“What is Wu Wei?” I hear you ask. Well, the online dictionary (though not the OED, as that slammed its doors in my face once I stopped being a student), defines it thusly:

noun (in philosophical Taoism) action accomplishing its purpose in accordance with the natures of things and events. 

So obviously that clears things up then. 

...

Hmm? Still don’t get it? Well that’s OK. Because within the confines of this blog post, you don’t really need to “get it”, as such. All you really need to know is that Wu Wei is a new comics anthology, pulled together by the ever-industrious Mike Medaglia, with contributions all around the theme of spirituality. A very grown-up subject matter indeed, and one that has clearly been mulled over carefully by the various contributors.


Contributions range from the quiet and contemplative (see Tim Hassan’s piece), to the visually arresting (Christian Ward's colourful centre page is just stunning), to the downright chortle-inducing (John Riordan. Meditato. ‘Nuff said). What becomes immediately clear when leafing through this beautiful book (and it really is beautiful) is just how personal “Wu Wei” is. Each interpretation is different. Each shines a little light on the creator. And each makes you think that little bit harder about what your take on “Wu Wei” might be. This is a book that is deeply contemplative, and inspiring of contemplation as a result.


Nowhere is this clearer than with Andy Poyiadgi’s origami comic. When I was speaking to Mike about it, he said he hoped people would “take a quiet moment” to construct the comic, and I find it hard to imagine anyone doing otherwise. When I sat down to tackle mine, I found it required a certain kind of focus: prompting me to go into tunnel vision, shutting out everything else. By the time I had intricately pulled it together and could spend some time turning the corners to read it, I was in a pensive mood, taking in the beauty and sadness of the story with a new kind of absorption.
A similar experience washed over me as I read Howard Hardiman’s contribution to Wu Wei. Something about the repetition and the regular and reflecting lines lulled me into a different mode of reading than I’m used to. I didn’t charge through Wu Wei. I didn’t power my way through with the kind of voracious appetite that people associate with “page turners”. And in making me take the time to think about what I was reading, it was so much better and more valuable for it.

I wish I could take the time to talk through every wonderful contribution to Wu Wei, but that would be a very long blog post and I fear my fingers would fall off from all the typing. And it becomes very difficult to bake when you don’t have fingers.

SPEAKING OF BAKING (see what I did there?), whilst I was not a “contributor” to Wu Wei itself, I like to think I was a “contributor” to its birthing into the world. (…please immediately banish any mental images of someone birthing a book. I apologise for putting them out there). Here’s the deal: there was a launch party for Wu Wei last Friday at Gosh - the home of all good launch parties* - and I agreed to make a cake for it. A special, spiritual cake.

Hmm.

As a person who doesn’t, admittedly, think about spirituality a huge amount (sorry, I mostly think about comics and cake and nerdy things), the natural and most obvious direction for me to go in with this was a yin and yang cake. SORTED. And actually, bar a couple of slight obstacles, I think it turned out pretty well:


I decided to make life slightly complicated for myself, and rather than just ice it like the yin and yang, make it yin and yang all the way through – cakey innards and all. Because, you know…easy is boring, and all that jazz. So come with me now on a journey through time and space my cake crafting process.

Step one: Sketch out the cake in my brain. Who needs pen and paper? ...What’s that? Most sensible people, you say? PFFT, I say. PFFT. But for the sake of illustration, here’s what the sketching process in my brain looked like:


Step two: Pick a recipe. EASY. This one, from the trusty folks over at BBC Good Food, is one I’ve made before, and it always goes down well. Fret around for a while about how to adapt that recipe to make two different coloured cakes (the yin and the yang). Ultimately decide to add cocoa powder to one cake to make it dark (with some twiddling around with other ingredients for flavour and SCIENCE).

Step three: BAKE TWO CAKES. This part also comes complete with step 3b: LICK TWO CAKE BOWLS. And – because I’m nice – also allow housemate to lick cake bowls.


Step four: Whilst cakes are cooling, make a very sophisticated stencil from some fairly sturdy cardboard. Try to make the halves as even as possible. You could probably do this properly with the help of maths and stuff, but I gave up maths after GCSEs. I used my eyes instead, as they generally work out OK for me.


Step five: Delicately place stencil on top of cake(s) and slice around with a knife. This results in 4 (almost even) curvy halves.


Step six: Whip up some tasty cream cheese frosting (thank you, Hummingbird Bakery) and use to sandwich together the bottom halves – one dark next to one light. Cover those with a layer of the frosting, then repeat the process (delicately, now) with the other two halves, placing them on top. Finally, use the rest of the frosting to cover the top of the cake.


Step seven: Painstakingly roll out some regal icing, and use the aforementioned stencil to cut out a circular topper – a little bigger than the size of the cake tin, as it needs to droop down over the sides a TINY bit. Manhandle that onto the top of the cake without breaking anything.

Step eight: Using more rolled out regal icing, cut around the half-size stencil to create a yin/yang. Again, make it a little bigger than the stencil itself. Then use a cookie cutter to punch out a circle in the bulbous part of the yin/yang.

Step nine: Paint the punched out circle and the yin/yang (damnit, I’m going to have to research this now so I can stop writing yin/yang…hold on…)…the YIN with black food dye. This would’ve been a lot easier if the Little Waitrose on my way home from work deigned to sell black regal icing, but NO. Sigh. Various hours (and layers of food dye later), gently lift the painted icing onto the top of the cake, using a little water to stick the layers of icing together.

Step ten: CAKE.

Picture courtesy of Mauricio Molizane De Souza

I managed to store the cake at work during the day without anyone from my office eating it (victory), and lugged it across to Gosh in the evening, where it lasted all of 5 minutes once I’d started cutting it up and serving it.

I think it went down well. At the very least, it was endorsed by Jack McInroy (one half of South London Hardcore) – a hard man to please:

Me: So? Was it alright then?
Jack: Yeah, it was really nice! I thought it was going to be too dense when I saw it…but no, it was nice!

High praise if ever I’ve heard it.

You can go and read all about Wu Wei over here, and have a look at some of the beautiful photos shot at the launch party by the very talented Mauricio Molizane De Souza here. And once you’ve done all that, you should really just go and buy the comic, shouldn’t you? I mean…come on now. That’s where this is heading, isn’t it? Best just to give in.

Monday, 24 September 2012

Teapot Therapy and On Reflection: An Andy Poyiadgi special!

It’s always a bit of an awkward moment when someone you know offers to send you their work to look at. Even if you insinuate yourself into creative, artsy circles like I do (bribing creators to be my friend with cake), there’s nevertheless a risk that you will open up said link or email and find something that isn't your kind of thing at all.

Mercifully, when the lovely Andy Poyiadgi said he would send me a story of his (a suggestion which - appropriately enough for this blog – came from a shared love of tea, biscuits and cake) I opened up the link and was blown away. The piece in question was Teapot Therapy, which can be found here. In 4 short pages, it does something that many comics struggle to achieve: it connects on an emotional level, and is incredibly moving. The heartache that forms an undercurrent to the comic gradually seeps into the story, never becoming melodramatic or trite, but rather striking a recognisable and convincing chord. I won’t go into the story too much as, frankly, you should just go and read it for yourself. (It's only 4 pages, don't be lazy now). Suffice it to say that it is a thing of quiet beauty. Something which can also be said of Andy’s art, which somehow manages to match the tone of his narrative perfectly. Soft, clean lines and muted colours (aided by the clever use of actual tea for the backgrounds, I believe) seem at first comforting, but then with the gradual reveal of the story take on a different meaning. For me, they speak to a muted every-day life: not grim or unbearable, but somehow sapped of those things that had once made it vibrant and engaging.

Formally, Andy plays with the conventions of panels and structure in a way that is interesting but never distracting, with each new shape or sequence adding another subtle level of meaning to the story. And you can’t deny that it’s beautiful to look at. I mean, seriously now, just look at this page:


Sigh. Lovely stuff. If you're a fan of more traditional panels, Andy's also got a 6 page story in  ink+PAPER #2On Reflection. Rather like Teapot Therapy, the tone is quiet and thoughtful, with sequences given over to individual moments to allow each one the space and weight it deserves.


Compositionally, it is perhaps more conventional than Teapot Therapy, but it is nonetheless an intriguing one to pore over. Without giving too much away (again, you should be going out and buying yourself a copy of ink+PAPER #2 here, or at your local comic shop), take a moment whilst you're reading this to enjoy the way in which reflection permeates not just the content of the panels, but also the structure of the page.

What a lovely thing it is to discover just how talented one of your friends is. Having seen what Andy can do in a shorter piece, I'm now eager to find out what he could do with a longer story. One to watch, I have no doubt!

Saturday, 2 June 2012

Buffy Season 8, Volume 5: Predators and Prey


I have been determinedly trudging my way through Buffy Season 8, largely because season 9 sounds interesting and I'm not one to skip large chunks of storyline. However, it hasn't exactly been easy going. Much as I am loathe to criticise anything from the Whedonverse, the whole of season 8 that I've read so far seems to be playing fast and loose with the cheap thrills and the staid clichés. Everything's just that little bit too ridiculous, and everyone is that little bit too attractive. *cough* Xander *cough*. Thankfully I only have 3 volumes to go before I can get to season 9 where, I'm reliably informed by CBR, the plan is to "dial back the widescreen action from “Season Eight,” returning to the character’s roots as well as the level of interaction fans can expect between the various Buffyverse titles". 

Without giving too much away in terms of spoilers, Predators and Prey had yet more of what I tended to dislike in the earlier volumes: Dawn's character arc serving as little more than an excuse to try out surreal story lines, somewhat unconvincing monsters that are just there to be hacked to bits, and the whole "slayer army" arc that I find a bit irritating...unfortunately, the series thus far feels as though it's lost the character-centric feel and dry wit that made Whedon's Buffy so appealing to me in the first place.

The art itself is nice enough, though I must admit it all feels a bit too familiar. I think it's a shame when artists are hampered by trying to recreate a real-life actor on the page: far better, in my humble opinion, to use your own style to capture the feel of a character, than to painstakingly try to recreate every physical curve and line. Take, for example, the art of Fábio Moon for Dark Horse's own FCBD Serenity comic. The style is freer and more dynamic than that found in the Buffy books, and I think the comic benefits greatly from it.

      

(Left: Fábio Moon's art from the Dark Horse FCBD Serenity comic; Right: Georges Jeanty's art from Predators and Prey)

Ultimately, thanks to Whedon's original work I am dedicated enough to these characters to stay with them  (for now), but I can't help but feel somewhat disappointed at the direction Season 8 has taken. I will, however, be looking to read more comics featuring the work of Mr Fábio Moon - now there's a style I really do like.