Drawn from the mythology of myriad cultures and the ever creative minds of the artists
within, we are taken from the fog of Niflhelm to the frescoes of Florence in a worldwide collaboration of yarn-spinning talent.The Biblical creation myth proposes ...
La Casa Encendida presents this publication dedicated to a group of Madrid-based performing artists. Since
2003, the group has been involved in the centre's programme which is focused on new contemporary languages and exploring their boundaries. Although the group's creations ...
In-depth interviews with comics art legends reveal the secrets of translating comics script to graphic
storytelling for the first time. Technique, style, layouts, approach, pencilling, inking... no facet of the artist's craft is left unexplored, and this is just the ...
In this new spinoff of the hit manga, a newbie Red Blood Cell is one
of 37 trillion working to keep this body running. But something’s wrong! Stress hormones keep yelling at him to go faster. The blood vessels are ...
The comics within capture in intimate, often awkward, but always relatable detail the tribulations and
triumphs of life. In particular, the lives of 18 Jewish women artists who bare all in their work, which appeared in the internationally acclaimed exhibition ...
Allen Ginsburg’s legendary and groundbreaking epic poem, Howl, is now a graphic novel—a tie-in to
the major motion picture starring James Franco. Featuring graphics by acclaimed New Yorker cover artist Eric Drooker, Howl is a magnificent visual interpretation of a ...
Heard the one about the dying father? In this savagely brilliant graphic novel by slam
poet Daphne Gottlieb (Final Girl) and Hothead Paisan creator Diane DiMassa, a 19-year-old woman named Sasha loses her father to cancer and takes a job ...
Longform Annual presents stories that subvert conventional narrative; stories about ordinary people; autobiographies; travel tales
- and through these stories establish comics as a permanent feature on a reader's shelf. The name 'Longform' is inspired by a Joe Sacco essay ...