Posts Tagged “Japanese comics”

Review: Manga Kamishibai: The Art of Japanese Paper Theater and The Art of Osamu Tezuka

0John Seven31st Dec 2009Art Articles, Book Articles, Comics, , , , ,

mangakamishibaiTwo recent art book releases from Abrams wrap beautiful fantasy images within the history of post-war Japan and the popular culture that mended the wounds of World War II.

Eric P. Nash’s “Manga Kamishibai: The Art of Japanese Paper Theater” is a fascinating archeology of a lost form of entertainment that dominated Japan from the 1930s to the early 1960s — well-remembered in its country of origin but entirely unknown anywhere else.

Kamishibai was a form of public storytelling that utilized printed artwork in the action. Imagine someone pulling out the illustrations of a children’s book and acting out the narrative before a live audience, and that’s essentially what kamishibai was. The form was so influential that at times of war — and occupation — it was steered by official bodies for propaganda purposes, since it was a reliable way of reaching a massive audience of citizens as well as children.

The storytelling is gone with the decades, but what we have left is the astonishing artwork that embellished the words, and Nash’s book does an absolutely beautiful job at presenting this material.

Complete stories are contained in the book, ranging from the over-the-top adventures of the Golden Bat to the jarring Hiroshima examination “Pledge of Peace from Children of the Bomb,” and just about any genre or tone between the two. Much of the art is breathtaking and filled with the sort of pluck that such lively theater must have demanded in order to compete with the storytellers. (more…)

Review: Bat-Manga

0John Seven28th Dec 2008Book Articles, Comics, , , , ,

As both a labor of love and an unabashed public display of total goofiness, “Bat-Manga” is the result of designer Chip Kidd’s quest to uncover something that hasn’t been seen by fans in our country in decades — if ever.

Back in 1966, Japanese comic book publishers got a license to publish original comic stories while the TV show was a major hit on Japanese television. Kidd has gathered as much of this material as he can find into this collection — which means some of the stories are incomplete, although it honestly doesn’t put a damper on the reading at all.

Nowadays, the darker, more brooding Batman has seized control of all others — it started 25 years ago, and it’s been the rule for the character in all venues. Not only gone are the days of the vibrant pop art of the television show, but also the science-fiction strangeness that infected the comic in the 1950s. “Bat Manga” is a literary time machine back to those days, a resurrection of a little corner that we didn’t know existed as filtered through great book design. (more…)