A Week of Writing with Pictures: Bernard Caleo’s MWF diary

Bernard Caleo has been making – writing, drawing and publishing – comics since 1990. He collaborates on comics with friends, creates solo books and – since 1997 – has compiled, edited and published the giant Australian romance comics anthology Tango via his own imprint, Cardigan Comics. He also runs comic classes and workshops. You can visit his website at www.cardigancomics.com. Bernard shared his MWF itinerary with MWFblog.

So, okay, I’m pretty much always reading comics or making comics or talking about comics or thinking about comics (that is, when I’m not making theatre for museums), but this week is HUGE!

On Wednesday and Thursday I will be sharing MWF stages with other fine makers of comics, as part of the Schools Program.

From 12.30 to 1.15pm, Pat Grant and I will be discussing the topic of ‘Seeing the World Differently‘ in an illustrated talk.  Pat is one of the most dedicated cartoonists I know, both in the time he spends at the drawing board but also in his thinking about comics: comics theory, I guess.  It’s no surprise that he is doing postgraduate study through Macquarie University and that a long comic book (‘graphic novel’, if you’re a fan of the term) will be the outcome, with a thesis examining the process of making the book submitted alongside.  Go, Pat!

We’ll be talking about the way that the mode of drawing things in a comic – the simplifications involved – can amplify meaning. Also the way that the sequencing of pictures (we call them ‘panels’) in a comic builds a world in a different way to a single complex picture.

We’ll be talking about the difference between drawing:

And comics:


(two versions of me by me)

These are interesting questions for cartoonists but also for people who read comics: just how do these things WORK? So, a bit of comics theory for kids…

On Thursday 2 September at 11:15am, I will be discussing The Alternative Hamlet with Nicki Greenberg. Nicki’s graphic adaptation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby (2006, Allen and Unwin) was a knockout, and her version of Shakespeare’s Hamlet (published this year) – as the cover says, ‘staged on the page’ – will literally knock you out if it is hurled at you. 420 pages! Massive! And she has created incredible worlds on those pages, both of the action of the play and of the inky actors who play the parts. It is the connection between these two worlds which I particularly look forward to discussing with her.

From the great speech. Words by William Shakespeare, pictures/comics adaptation by Nicki Greenberg © 2010

I’m striking out on my own with an MWF presentation called Picture This!‘ at ArtPlay from 12.30 to 1.15pm.  In this one I’ll be show-and-telling about the different forms of comics – comic strip, comic book, graphic novel. These formalities out of the way, I’m hoping that we’ll be able to make a large comic strip together, with me drawing up the front on a big piece of paper. My experience with these things is that they usually end up being about death or poo, sometimes both, so I’m looking forward to that.

Later that very night it’s off to the launch of Going Down Swinging #30. This is of interest because GDS has been incorporating comics into its lit lineup for many a year, and good on them for that, and this issue features the ‘graphic novella’ (I like the humility of that term, whereas ‘graphic novel’ seems a bit jumped-up and fancy-pants, don’t you think?), Itinerant Fighting Monk by Michael Camilleri. Now yes, Michael is a very close friend, but that does not influence me in the slightest when I say that this story/comic/illustrated fictional blasphemous autobiographical tale is the greatest statement on fatherhood and subjectivity that I have ever seen.

On the Saturday afternoon for MWF, I will be launching a long comic book by Gregory Mackay, Francis Bear, which is also being published in French this year by, well, by a French comics publisher, The Hootchie Kootchie.  Fear not however, my monolingual friends: the version I am launching is in English. And pictures. The venue is Feddish, in Federation Square, launch time is 2.30pm, with me doing a bit of a hoo-hah around 3pm. Come and pick up this book, ‘an intriguing study of an inventive drunken bear’s pathway to oblivion’. Gregory has been drawing the misadventures of Francis for many a year, and doing some fine work with comic book rhythms along the way – I can’t wait to see Francis tackle oblivion. It will no doubt be hilarious.

From there I will go to work (I’m a projectionist) on Saturday night – and, you know, relax.

What a week: comics, comics and comics – pretty darn fine.

Posted on 31 August 2010, in Guest posts and tagged , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a Comment.

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