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Three Comic Book Exhibitions In One From Paul Gravett In Woking From The Weekend
Bleeding Cool favourite is co-curating a new comic book exhibition debuting at the Lightbox gallery in Woking, Surrey from this weekend.It will take visitors on an interactive journey through the past, present and future of sequential art.
The Story of British Comics So Far: Cor! By Gum! Zarjaz! runs from this Saturday, the 6th August through to New Year's Eve and will reveal how and why visual communication endures as a popular medium for all.
Zara and her grandfather Alan, manga-influenced comic characters especially created for this exhibition by up-and-coming designer Asia Alfasi, will lead visitors through three immersive zones which will explore the history of British comics to date.
The story will open with Cor! – a potted history of the importance of sequential art. As visitors enter the gallery they will be drawn into a 'library' of precious artefacts that will give context to the meaning of sequential art. The oldest item will be a 3,000 year old ancient Egyptian stone lent by the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology. Through hieroglyphics this stone tells the story of a man from the Family Stela of Bakenmin travelling back in time and reflecting on the different stages of his life.
Alongside the stone will be on loan from Brighton Libraries beautifully carved woodblock print from 1850 by Japanese artist Utagawa Kuniyoshi which chronicles the lives of brave Samurai warriors from yesteryear. This will be displayed with contemporary examples of comic 'heroes' so visitors can compare and contrast the old with the new.
Opposite this will be four engraved prints of William Hogarth's The Humours of an Election series (1755), on loan from The Victoria and Albert Museum. These highly detailed satirical engraved prints on paper tell the story of the election of an Oxfordshire member of parliament in 1754 and were designed to humorously expose the corruption endemic within politics at that time.
The final star piece of Cor! will be a Grayson Perry ceramic vase entitled The Village of Penians (2001). Featured as part of his Turner prize winning exhibition at Tate Britain in 2003, it depicts a tongue-in-cheek representation of a parochial village who worship the body rather than religion.
In By Gum! visitors of all ages will be able to revel in nostalgia with displays of very early and classic comics which will evoke memories of childhood. Hidden within a carnivalesque tent will be an open volume of the very first British comic strip the Glasgow Looking Glass (1825), a caricature magazine created and illustrated by William Heath that satirised the political and social life of those living in Scotland in the 1820s. Alongside will be a newsagent stocking rare comic book annuals Felix the Cat, June and Girl from Worthing Museum and Art Gallery next to vintage editions of The Beano, The Eagle and original artwork of Dan Dare by Frank Hampson. The final element of By Gum! will be a family-friendly DIY comic making area where people of all ages can create their own piece of sequential art using the materials provided. Families will also be able to build their own Egyptian stone or Hogarth jigsaw puzzle or create their own story by adding speech bubbles to copies of the prints.
To keep little ones entertained, there will be a pond filled with comic covers where they can 'go fish' for their favourite. Visitors will exit to the final zone through a time-travelling tunnel showcasing the comics of the 70s and 80s including 2000AD and Action which will transport them back to the present day.
The third exhibition zone Zarjaz! will consider to what extent societal tastes and changes have affected the content of sequential art. Rare insights by writer Ken Armstrong from the 1970s blood-thirsty shark comic character 'Hook Jaw' from Action will be contrasted with a back-catalogue of rare 2000AD editions, the British science-fiction comic that has been in production since the late 1970s, famous for being the training ground for many British artists and writers such as Alan Moore, John Wagner and Pat Mills, who in turn influenced Hollywood, American comics industry and video games. The exhibition will have an original Judge Dredd helmet from the movie Dredd from 2012 which will be juxtaposed next to an antique Japanese Samurai helmet c.1800s lent from Horsham Museum which will again highlight the influence of the past on the present. Visitors will be able to view two contrasting artists' studios, one recreated in the style of the 1930s which will show original works by Brian White, who wrote the 1930s Daily Mail strip Little Nipper, which have never been shown in public before. Next to this a contemporary artists' studio will demonstrate how techniques and processes have changed over time. Things will be brought right up to date with a bank of interactive digital desks and for the more traditional there will be comfortable lounge area with a lending library of comics and graphic novels to peruse courtesy of Surrey Libraries.
The story of British comics so far will come to a close with a wall of giant graffiti interpretations of exhibition guides Alan and Zara.
