Saturday, December 19, 2009

December thoughts

Yesterday the snow fell and stayed in the garden in front of my windows in Geneva. Christmas frenzy is palpable in the air as the year draws swiftly to its conslusion. 2009 had a lot of good and a lot of bad in it for me, and I think I am ready to let it go..
The blog has been feeling very lonely for a while, so here are some summarized news:
an artist-populated trip to Comitia, Japan with PJT took place in November. I didn't make it there but Dee went, so you can bug her about it and photos. The exciting part for me was that the occasion motivated the creation of an anthology - "Journeys" - for which every (or almost) member of the Japan trip contributed a short story on the theme of "travel/journey".


The After Hours Circle took part with "Hello World". I am very excited to actually see a copy myself ^^
(You can see a sample page on my dA account here: http://tacto.deviantart.com/art/Hello-World-137549958 )

For my part, I am slowly finishing things that had to be taken care of and am thinking about resolutions for 2010. One of them will be to re-start a weekly webcomic page as I miss the regular creative process a lot. As it will be something primarily for my heart and pleasure, I decided to revive Inner Edge and go on with its next chapter. Here is a pencil rough of Del (who will be very active in the 3rd chapter (again)) for starters.



More to come in 2010. :)

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Back to Switzerland

Time flew by again (or maybe I got sucked up in a temporal vortex) and somehow 2 months just happened in a blink of an eye...
To summarize, we moved to Atlanta (check), everyone survived (check) and life there was nice but here I am again in Switzerland for an undisclosed amount of time. O.o (or maybe I actually got sucked up in spatio-temporal vortex - go figure..)
Anyhow, life goes on and in the latest news Dee and I finished a short story (yay!) that is going to be printed in an anthology very soon and the whole product will kick some serious ass as some serious kick-ass artists are taking part in it! :D We shall definitely post more about it very soon.

On the other hand, I have been busy with various other non-artistic stuff but got to tour Switzerland for a couple of days with a visiting friend and suddenly re-discovered how beautiful this country is! (gasp!!)
So here are some pics to make you envious ;P
To begin with, this is the room where Einstein honed his theory of relativity

which is situated in the heart of the old town of Bern, the capital of Switzerland:

 
From there we went to the magical mountain village/town of Grindelwald where we took a train to the Top of Europe (and no, I'm not joking!) - Jungfrau joch. 

It is unfortunate that it is quite impossible to capture the beauty of the morning light in the mountains on camera in a realistic way - it looks as if paths of light steam down from the sky to the Earth, carrying mountain fairies and wind spirits in them and when you breathe it smells of life and freshness..
The view on the biggest European mountain glacier from the "Sphinx" - the high platform on the Jungfrau side was stunning - the sky was clean indigo and the immaculate snow shone with a myriad of diamond sparks - a view it is impossible to get tired of..

 
 


What is really wonderful in a mountain country is that in a matter of an hour you can go from summer to winter. From Grindelwald we traveled to Interlaken - a town between 2 lakes where we did some paragliding in the sunset... which made me miss Switzerland very cruelly ^^;

The second day we spent in Montreux - a beautiful riviera town on the Leman lake with its famous Chillion castle that inspired many artists and writers.

 
It is amazing how a trip of 2 days seems like a whole week in a completely different world. So there for a very long post! :D
Cheers!
-Tacto

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

moving, wicked, singapore

In 2 weeks Chris and I will be leaving the beautiful city of San Francisco to move to Atlanta. Even though I am a little sad that our West Coast time is over, I am also pretty excited about the change. I have never lived on the East Coast (and never actually been to Atlanta), so it will be a very new experience :D
So what do you you do in the last 2 weeks before a major move? Aside from packing (I spare you the photos of boxes and the general chaos of the apartment..), organizing the plane for the cats, looking for the new apartment, grinding away the work etc etc? Well you do what you always wanted to do in the city but never found the time to so far. So yesterday night we went to see the "Wicked" musical at the Orpheum theater and it was absolutely amazing. From the building (the ceiling inside is amazing) to the decors and costumes and , of course, the wonderful performance, it was a fantastic experience. If you have the possibility to go and see it, do it, it's absolutely worth it.

This also compelled me to a new resolution: when we get to Atlanta, I shall make a conscious effort to start discovering/enjoying the city from the beginning! So you'll hear about it. Finally, again, courtesy of the hectic moving, the manga/comics-related updates take longer than I wish, but bear with me, we'll be back! :D

And last but not least, if you guys enjoy travelling blogs with a sense of humor, I highly recommend checking Dee's and Al's blog where you'll get to discover Singapore, its culinary highlights and dangers! - http://aldeesg.blogspot.com

-tacto

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

BD and manga on the iPhone, phones and Mac/PC!

So this time, I was rather surprised to read an article in a local Genevan paper on a new site - www.ave-comics.com - which is launching now and will be providing a selection of comics and manga for reading on the phone or computer via a special viewing software they developed. The software will be downloadable for I-Phones, I-touch, Blackberry, Sony Ericsson and Nokia phones as well as PC and Mac. The originality of this digital reader is the zoom system and the reading feature that goes from panel to panel as well as the whole page by page reading (see example here: http://www.ave-comics.com/fr/avepreview/

Different comics (BD) and manga titles will be available in french, spanish and english languages and should cost less than their paper counterparts, according to the site (however, individual volumes of the first comic in the manga category - "Eat it fresh" (I say this, since it is another european/manga hybrid, created by a french team Paka) cost 1.59Euros for 19pages (roughly 2,23USD - which doesn't seem like such a great deal for the manga format to me); on the other hand, the different color BD available range from 46 to 92 pages for 4,99Euros (circa 7USD) - which is certainly much better than the paper version for around 18USD).

The categories available are Manga, Comics, Adventure, Humor and Kids, with interestingly a selection of old US comics in english in the Comics category (in french-speaking world, the term "comics" usually designates american comics, much as "manga" designates japanese comics and "BD" refers to european style/format). The current selection is pretty small, but since the site just launched we can assume that they will be expanding it gradually.

Also, Ave!Comics apparently intends to work with any publisher who would be interested and offers the adaptation of titles for their format and installation of the titles with their reader on their own website or the website of the publisher.

As I understand it, Ave!Comics is still in a very early stage of its launch and more time is needed to see how successfully they will develop and how interesting their offer will be for the readers, content and price-wise. But this is definitely an interesting enterprise to follow.

-tacto

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

french-speaking comic/manga scene (EDIT! :D)

Since I regularly find myself in the french-speaking part of Switzerland next to the French border, I decided to try and post regular follow-ups on the happenings in the french-speaking comics (bande dessinee)/manga world.

For those who might be unfamiliar with the french-speaking comics/manga scene, I think it's worth mentioning that french-speaking comics (aka "bande dessinee") had (and still have) a big presence and role in Europe, beginning with the world-famous TinTin. Several prestigious art-schools dedicated to sequential art exist in France, Belgium and Switzerland and have produced numerous best-selling artists.

Traditionally, a standard BD volume is published full-color, hard-cover, and has around 48pages for an average price of 20USD. In the past decade, however, french-speaking BD market has seen an enormous boom of manga titles, which was largely enabled by several french TV shows for teens that aired for several years in the late 80ties - early/mid 90ties and ran numerous cult anime series (such as Dragon Ball, Rose of Versailles, Knights of Zoodiac, Lupin the 3rd, Orange Road, Golgo 13, Galaxy Express 999, Captain Harlock, Sherlock Holmes, and a good hundred of others) with an excellent voice-dubbing, which led to the creation of a whole "Generation Manga" of hard-core anime fans who naturally enabled and devoured the paper manga boom that followed in the libraries.

Currently, every big BD publisher also has a manga-publishing line. Moreover, gradually more and more french-speaking and european artists inspired by the manga style started to create their own titles and be published in BD color format but with a heavily manga-influenced style.

One of the artists (Aurore) has just seen her first title "Pixie" (scenario by Mathieu Mariolle) licensed by Tokyopop and published in a smaller format, soft-cover, full-color in the US: http://auroreblackcat.deviantart.com/art/Pixie-USA-released-112832461.

This movement is definitely similar to the OEL movement in the US, although probably more of a blend between BD and manga than its american counterpart. So this is it for an ultra-fast introductory post! Let me know if you have specific areas/questions you would like to see covered (or if you have interesting stuff to add) :D

EDIT: Amy Kim Kibuishi, the creator of the lovely "Sorcerers and Secretaries" published by Tokyopop asked me the pertinent question of whether I had more european/manga hybrid titles to recommend.


And this definitely sparked my interest... because I don't really know much about them! So I am setting out on a crusade to discover the hybrids over Europe and bring them to light! :D

In that sense, I feel that I cannot close this post without mentioning the excellent work of Yishan Li, a chinese artist based in UK with already an impressive number of titles under her belt. I shall definitely come back to her work later on, but would just like to mention that you might well already know her, since she has taken over the "Adventures of CG!" in Cosmogirl from 2007 to 2008, the page strip started by Svetlana Chmakova: http://www.cosmogirl.com/funandgames/manga/

Cheers!

-tacto

Friday, June 26, 2009

east coast adventures

Once again, I made the now almost traditional several days stop in Boston on my way over to Geneva. Aside from putting Dee hopelessly behind on her packing for the big move to Singapore there was, of course, plotting for comics, the amazing food orgy with the now traditional coconut shrimp, a killer lemon cake, some delicious sushi and breakfast waffles etc etc. Needless to say, I was glad they don't make you pay extra on the plane for your own extra weight afterwards.... >_<;

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Of course, it's impossible to sum up all the good stuff that happened but I am going to focus on 2 highlights: Onikimono pages and a flash 1,5 day trip to NYC.

Indeed, I had the immense privilege to go digging through (under the cover of packing it) Dee's original pages and illustrations for her webcomic "Onikimono,the Detectives of the Orient". Of course I already knew Dee's amazing inking and toning skills, but I have to say that seeing actual original inked pages was a very unique, moving and humbling experience. So I forced her hand a bit and made some pics for your enjoyment too - here is the first (!!!) Onikimono page evar with the traditionally applied japanese screen-tones (!!!!!) and some pages from a side story about Kamrauch's childhood (which has not been seen by anyone except the author, which is, in my view a huge shame) and finally some great backgrounds of japanese-styled houses.

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I am sure that Onikimono fans will be as moved as I was and if you haven't read the story yet, do yourself a favor and go read it on Wirepop now - www.wirepop.com (but don't tell Dee I said that or she'll get mad..>.<)!!!!dscn1398


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Finally, on a whim of a not too bad weather we took off for a 1,5 day to go to NYC and visit the remains of the World Fair 1964 in the Corona Park in Queens. We wondered there for several hours looking for vestiges of the past, comparing the now and then and imagining stories along the way. For me, the most impressive thing was definitely the Unisphere, but the Tent and Towers of Tomorrow (see Men in Black) were very amazing too.

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We had also a great meal in a very nice japanese restaurant that we discovered with the merry manga-tribe during our trip to NYCC this February (where we had to figure out a technique to eat whole grilled fish without its bones..) If you get a chance to pass by NYC, definitely try Donburi-Ya on the 47th street! :D

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and a big, big highlight for me: the Vagabond mural by Takehiko Inoue in NYC Kinokunya! Gasp!!! @__@



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dscn1464Last but not least.... you remember I found a Spiderman on a Genevan wall? .. well, I _do_ suspect that he follows me around.. LOOK!!!! in NYC!!!! :O

So that's it for now about the Boston stop. Some missed planes and traveling hours later, comic news from Geneva will be coming up later this WE! :D


Cheers!

Saturday, June 6, 2009

coffee junkee (2)

cofee21I somehow caught myself on the fact that most of my main characters are men. I wonder why is that? So now I make a conscious effort to pay more attention to my female heroes.

Have you a preference in identifying yourself in your stories? A dashing knight? A tomboy? A Teddy Bear?? :D

Sunday, May 31, 2009

coffee junkee (?)

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Ha! Finally a sketch on the blog! :D This is a character for one of the current 2 candidates for the short story Dee and I are going to do for an anthology. "Coffee Junkee" is the temporary title I'll go by for now (usually Dee makes fun of my ability to come up with lousy titles/names, so don't get attached to it! XD)

Actually, we have a good drawer of sketches from the project we have been working on for the past year, but after deliberation we decided to post only new fresh stuff, so here we go. Cheers! ^^

Saturday, May 30, 2009

back from vegas!

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I just came back from 2,5 days in Las Vegas where we went to celebrate Chris's new "Dr" status. It was my second time visiting the place and again, it felt like a whole different planet. :D I am not at all a gambler, but the sight of the giant Black Pyramid of the Luxor and the illuminated strip extending to the horizon from the room on the 31st floor does something to me - I feel a bit like Axel! :D

It was pretty hot too, and after the foggy cold of San Francisco these past weeks it definitely felt very good. And of course, since Las Vegas is about entertainment, we have seen/done some crazy stuff... like the Tournament of the Kings - which is a dinner in a huge arena where you witness "kings" fighting while galloping full speed and interacting with a re-make of King Arthur as you eat a complete dinner with your fingers shouting every now and then "Huzzzaaaaah!!!!"

We also visited the Secret Garden in the Mirage Hotel and I must say that I was pretty amazed at the quality of the facility and the care to animals of the stuff.

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They have a huge pool for dolphins (several of which were born there) and it was completely amazing and moving to see the kind of interaction the dolphins have with their caretakers. If I had several lives, I caught myself thinking that I would have loved to work at a place where they take care of the animals and reinsert them in their natural habitat. They also have amazing white tigers (the size.. the size!!!!!!!!) - did you know that they have a big white dot behind each ear? It is super cute! :D

So that's it for now - back to work for me!!! :D

PS: I totally borrowed the pics from the net - forgot my camera..... arrrg!!!! XD

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

20th century boys broke my brain

20thcentboysEver since I read Naoki Urasawa's 20th Century Boys I've been insane over Expo '70 (leading to a freaky fascination with the 1964-65 World's Fair in Flusing Meadows, which... I'll share all my links about that later, what a journey...) and the Tower of the Sun which has a WEBCAM which I obsessively load up several times A DAY:

http://www.expo70.or.jp/e/park/livecamera.html

(Osaka is +13hours so a lot of the time it's dark but I do it anyway :D;;;)

Sunday, May 10, 2009

a drifting life of a mangaka

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During my visit to a Bostonian comic book store with Dee, I came across the impressive volume of manga entitled « A Drifting Life » by Yoshihiro Tatsumi. As I had never heard of the title or the author before (shame, shame on me!!), I might well have overlooked it altogether if the cover had not caught my eye - a young man drawing a manga page sitting on the grass. For an aspiring comic book creator wannabe that was enough to spark my interest. I am sure that other people will (or already have) done much better reviews of it elsewhere (this manga has won the 13th Tezuka Osamu's Cultural award this year alongside "Ooku: the inner chamber" by Fumi Yoshinaga), but here I would like to relate what particularly stroke cords in my aspiring artist heart.

The book follows the journey of a young boy, fan of Osamu Tezuka's works when Tesuka-sensei was still attending medical school, as he starts drawing postcard manga for contests in Manga Shonen magazine, as he gets his first beginner success, then creates his first short story and slowly becomes a professional mangaka in a still young publishing industry. Aside from the universal thrill of the beginning struggle to create something that will be recognized and noticed (yes! He felt that way too!) one of the most fascinating things to me was the realization that the book tells the story of one then several manga creators who want to draw and publish stories in an environment that has no solid publishing structure or market for them. Not very much unlike the situation of an aspiring original manga/comic-book creator in the US today. For me, it was as if I could magically glimpse the way creators battled their way through similar problems that beginner creators face today in the US, only some 50-60 years ago in Japan. Right away, several things were striking to me, the first being the productivity rate: I tried to summarize it here.

When Hiroshi (Tatsumi-sensei) starts drawing short stories as a not even high school student, he completes 4 short stories 96 pages worth total over winter/spring of 1951. Then he completes his first "full-length" story, "Happily adrift" over his summer vacation (1951) and moves on to another 80-pages story "The jolly film crew" and a 96 pages story "Manga television". In summer of 1952 he works on a sequel to "Happily adrift" - "Childeren's island" which will then be picked up by a publisher. In the meantime, Hiroshi also wins a house-wife manga contest in which he participated under his sister's name. I could go on and on but I think this is enough to translate the awe I felt while reading this: a drive so powerful combined with an amazing persistence in a boy who barely started high school... Later in the book, when Hiroshi with several other creators have organized the "Gekiga workshop", another creator lists the amount of work he has to turn in during that month (without any assistants): "18pages-short story for "Shadow" magazine, 20p ss for "City", 19p ss for "Labyrinth", 27p ss for "Hot Blooded Boys" and 18p ss for a "City" supplement" - are you counting? Well, I did the math too - it comes to 102 pages in 1 month... >__<

I do not really understand how this is possible, or rather, I do, when I read that those young men had almost no life left outside of what they created and had oftentimes no time to create what they really wanted, but this still amazes and humbles me immensely.

Aside from the productivity point, another theme really resonated with me: from early on, Hiroshi started searching for a different way to express the stories he really wanted to tell - "a manga that isn't manga". Being very much influenced by the cinema, he strived to re-create the film-like feeling and simultaneous time perception on his pages. Only to come up against initial criticism: "you don't need all those pages to tell this story" - says his brother. I could not help but smile when thinking about how manga is described today - a high paced story-telling that leaves a lot of room for atmosphere creation - exactly what Hiroshi was trying to achieve. Nowadays though, a story with too full panels and not enough breathing space would be easily criticized as non-manga. Everything comes in circles afterall.. ^__^

Finally, the young creators encountered another problem: their short stories anthology was criticized for being not suitable for children due to its theme and violence. Indeed, it was presented in stores as "manga" - or "irresponsible pictures" together with books for kids and that was not the audience they were creating for. This dilemma ultimately led to the creation of the term "gekiga" - "dramatic pictures" in an attempt to differentiate their work from the then known traditional "manga". Somehow, this immediately made me think about the discussions that have surrounded the term OEL (Original English Language) manga and the usage of term "manga" for works created by non-japanese creators but inspired by the manga style. Ultimately, after reading the journey of the Japanese creators, I felt that in that regard the important thing for the artist is to be able to convey the identity of their work - what they aspire to - to the reader. For Japanese mangaka of the 50ties it was to say that they now used the comic-book format to tell different stories in a different way from before; for non-japanese creators inspired by manga today, it can be that they tell their own stories in a manga-influenced way thus calling it "manga", and for others, just telling their stories trying to develop their own, particular style in a "graphic-novel" format.

There would be so much more to say about this book but given the length of this post I will spare you and say just this: if you get a chance, read this manga about manga creators and their lives, and if you are a creator yourself, it is certainly one more reason to do so.

Friday, April 24, 2009

dee. for demented.

On my way back home from Geneva I stopped by my favorite east-coast stopover – at Dee’s ! :D

So it was another excuse to have some great time, eat delicious food (coconut shrimp, I’ll never forget you!!) and …even do some shopping! (yes, yes, it’s Dee hiding behind the shopping bags – a one in a lifetime sight delivered by Tacto, the stealth photographer of wild life on the East Coast).

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Wednesday, April 22, 2009

why is spiderman here?

You know sometimes you don’t see the things that are under your nose unless you pay attention? Well, I certainly never saw Spiderman on Genevan walls before… but here he is!!!

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CHOOOOOOCOLATE

choc2What would be Switzerland .. without the amazing chocolate??? :D

I found this amazing “chocolaterie” and the ladies inside were kind enough to let me take some tasty pictures (and no, I am not telling you how much money I actually spent at the place before that..)
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And of course they also had those typical ribbon-decorated Easter eggs filled with chocolate… yum...

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Manga shopping in Geneva

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Today I paid a visit to one of the two major manga comic shops here. I wish I could locate a purely manga store like this somewhere in San Francisco – they have a larger manga collection than any other book store or chain by far and I am always amazed at the number of titles I have never heard of before and also amused by the different cover designs of the french versions as compared to what we see in the US (wait.. this looks familiar.. what?? Vampire Knight??! But this cover…. XD).

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Plus, I really like the way they organized their space – aside from the thousands of titles arranged by alphabetical order on the shelves they have a good hundred of new issues and titles on display on two huge tables in the middle of the room which is really smart since one can just scope the whole table and pick up the title by cover art and/or name depending on one’s tastes - great sales technique if you ask me (proof here with an anime girl reading one of the volumes in the middle!)

I also did a small search for OEL titles and sure enough, there were the 3 vol of “The Dreaming” french version by Queenie Chan right here on the shelf! You go, Queenie! :D

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Curiously enough though, I was unable to find any other OEL titles…mystery… am probably going to ask the owner about this the next time I go back. Next target – the big bookstore chains’ manga section! *stealth ninja <.<*

Sakura in Geneva

Hi to all, Tacto here! Welcome to the AHC blog! It took us some time but we are finally up and running!

AHC site is still in its baby period and will be growing and learning how to speak steadily in the next months with regular blogs about manga, making comics, art, friends and life in general as well as a bunch of cool art and some new manga stories - so come back often ^__^

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And to start this off, here are some news from Switzerland (not to confuse with Sweden!..) where I am staying for a week.

Today I took a walk in the city of Geneva, currently under the blooming sakuras attack!