A panel from "Maiden Voyage" by Kazu
Kibuishi (collected in Flight, Volume One) |
One of the greatest joys of the web is that it provides unprecedented access to art. The range and scale of projects online grows daily, and artists who might otherwise have been unable or unwilling to start out in print now have new options. Some seem content to stay and play in the digital space, while others can build their online reputation into a means to rise in the print world. Such was the case for the artists and writers of Flight: Volume One. Editor Kazu Kibuishi has amassed a wide range of art styles, stories, and characters, if a slightly smaller range of quality. The volume showcases twenty-two young comic artists, all early in their careers in 2004 when it went to print. While 'flight' is not always explicitly featured in the stories, themes of childhood, adventure, and fantastical whimsy pervade each one.
As short stories, most comics in the volume left me hanging
in some fashion. The stronger works had me wanting more, curious about the
characters and their worlds; others felt a little bit less finished, more
perplexing than thought-provoking. A select few felt elegantly complete, and
these left me the most satisfied while still curious to see more.
In the first category were “Maiden Voyage” and “Copper”, drawn from Kibuishi's own
webcomic (also called Copper) about
the eponymous boy and his talking dog, Fred. The pair construct a plane and embark on an adventure across wild and fantastic countryside, with a human/animal
partnership in the tradition of Calvin
and Hobbes or Charlie Brown and Snoopy. This standalone story is
representative of Kibuishi’s online work, which also tells of unconnected
stories about the pair. With warm, muted tones, Kibuishi's art appears almost
animated – and familiar to anyone who's picked
up his Amulet series of young adult
comics. Friendly and appealing without being cutesy, “Copper” is an intriguing, if safe approach to the 'boy and his
dog' trope. It was enough to send me in search of his webcomic, which has unfortunately
been on hiatus since 2009.
As if to contrast it with his own work, Kibuishi follows his
entry in Flight with another
young-boy-on-a-fantastic-adventure-with-animal-companions story: “Hugo Earheart” by Jake Parker. While
readers may detect superficial similarities off the bat, Parker's work ramps up
from the tranquil to the perilous faster, sending the title character on a
delivery mission though the skies. Hugo and his companions feel a bit more
fleshed out and his world a bit more expansive, although Parker’s art felt a
bit juvenile after Kibuishi's polished entry. I would still have loved to see
more from these characters, but if things like flying whales, talking pigs and
sky pirates aren't your style, then Flight
does include more sombre works, from Catia Chien's bleak one page entry “Fall” to Clio Chiang's supernatural fable “The Bowl.” Both
wordless and satisfyingly self-contained, they command multiple readings to
catch every detail of their unsettling narratives.
One of the standouts, in both visuals and narrative, is “Paper and String” by Jen Wang. A girl
out kite flying bumps into an old high school acquaintance, the kind of person
you've seen, occasionally, because they're popular or attractive or noisy or
something, but don't really know. It
turns out the two girls have a love of kites and art in common, and their
simple chat on a windy day becomes a cleverly illustrated marvel. Paper
cutouts, oil pastels, paints, old photos – several mediums appear practiced and
elegant in Wang's hands, blending seamlessly into a scrapbook motif that both
serves the story and delights the eye.
Another hauntingly beautiful entry comes from Khang Le, whose story “Outside My Window” somehow makes alien child abduction seem whimsical. Soothing pastels and light, sketchy lines create the peaceful atmosphere where young Donna awakens, with her mother nowhere to be found – but a slender metal giant stands outside her home. I can’t help but draw parallels with Hayao Miyazaki (of Spirited Away fame), between the visual style of the creature and the scenario of a young child falling into an uncanny other world. Yet Le puts a unique signature to it, with subtle choices of colour and typeface that seem carefully crafted for the comic medium. Each page comes together effectively, making this one of the volume's more complete works.
From Khang Le's "Outside My Window" |
Another hauntingly beautiful entry comes from Khang Le, whose story “Outside My Window” somehow makes alien child abduction seem whimsical. Soothing pastels and light, sketchy lines create the peaceful atmosphere where young Donna awakens, with her mother nowhere to be found – but a slender metal giant stands outside her home. I can’t help but draw parallels with Hayao Miyazaki (of Spirited Away fame), between the visual style of the creature and the scenario of a young child falling into an uncanny other world. Yet Le puts a unique signature to it, with subtle choices of colour and typeface that seem carefully crafted for the comic medium. Each page comes together effectively, making this one of the volume's more complete works.
The remaining stories range from dark and moody to snappy
and comical, and the volume concludes with a tongue-in-cheek, but nonetheless
slightly presumptuous epilogue by Scott McCloud. He touches on the key
successes of the work through a fictionalized retrospective from the year 2054. I enjoyed McCloud’s works on comic art (Understanding
Comics and Writing Comics) and
this piece could have benefited from the comic book style used in those works;
some visual humour might have softened the tone somewhat. As only text, I found
McCloud’s review a shade more assertive than need be, his arguments
overshadowed by arrogant claims of the artists’ supposed future successes.
While he’s clearly going for an optimistic and complimentary summation, it came
across as more heavy-handed than I suspect he intended, dulling some of the
satisfaction I had from the works preceding it.
The series has now concluded with its eighth volume,
released in 2011. Subsequent volumes see the return of many of these artists,
though not all continue their tales from the original. Kibuishi also started a
new series, Explorer, in early 2012.
Collections like Flight bring the
fancy free world of webcomics to the page with bright success. Not your gritty,
grounded graphic novel, Volume One serves as a good intro to those who
prefer their books the old fashioned way, but their stories a little more
modern and magical.
– Catharine Charlesworth is an avid lover of books, the web, and other inventive outlets for the written word. She has studied communication at the University of Toronto while working as a bookseller, and is currently employed in online advertising in downtown Toronto.
– Catharine Charlesworth is an avid lover of books, the web, and other inventive outlets for the written word. She has studied communication at the University of Toronto while working as a bookseller, and is currently employed in online advertising in downtown Toronto.
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