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    Contextual Studies 2009

    Joseph J. Morgan

    Changing the silence

    Wordless comics are all around us. They are within our newspapers and our T.V

    manuals in the form of diagrams; they are illustrated safety manuals on our trains and

    planes, and as storyboards to create a masterpiece Hollywood blockbuster.

    This essay will explore a brief history of the silent comic and the impact of film on

    silent comics, comparing the differences between the silent comic book artist Adolphe

    Willete before the film The Great Train Robbery (1903), and the silent comic book

    artist Shaun Tan of 2007. The reason for specifically choosing The Great Train

    Robbery as a midway point in the change of silent comics is because it was known as

    being the first short film to contain a narrative.

    A former Thomas Edison cameraman, Edwin S. Porter created The Great Train

    Robbery in New Jersey. The film contained fourteen scenes and was shot on a ten-

    minute reel. The Great Train Robbery was the first film to create new and pioneering

    ways to tell a narrative, like parallel editing1, camera movement, and jump-cuts2.

    These narrative techniques had never been seen in wordless comics before.

    1 Parallel editing lets us follow the simultaneous flow of actions at the same time from

    two different locations.2 A jump cut is a cut in film editing in which two sequential shots of the same subject

    are taken from camera positions that vary only slightly

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    Brief History

    The wordless comic itself has firm roots in human history: cave paintings,

    hieroglyphics, the Bayeux tapestry, woodcuts3, and engravings4. Several fine artists

    have also adopted the wordless comic format. A Week of Kindness (1934) by Max

    Ernst5, Hogarths series of painting Marriage A-la-Mode6(1743-1745) and Picassos

    Guernica (1937)7.

    The wordless comic also has very close connections to film. Both film and comic

    have evolved through influencing each other. The visual storytelling and symbolism

    of the silent comic has helped film create visual narratives that can be understood by

    all. Film has helped the silent comic portray perspective, timing and created mood in

    a realistic fashion.

    Before film 1885: Adolphe Willete

    Adolphe Willete (1857-1926), French painter, illustrator, caricaturist, and sequential

    artist was born in Chalonssur-Marne. Willete studied at the Ecole Des Beaux and was

    taught by the artist Alexandre Cabanel8. Willete was well known for being anti-

    Semitic; in fact, in 1889 he ran as an anti-Semitic candidate and created posters of the

    same nature. Willete created such works asLes Pierrots9(1885),Parce Domine10

    (1908) and three years before he became an anti-Semitic candidate he created a

    selection of wordless comics forLa Chat noirweekly11 (1886) seefigure 1.

    3 F. Masereel.Passionate Journey.4 Lynd Ward. Gods Man5 An artist's book composed in collage by Max Ernst.6 A series of paintings based on a play of the same name.7Guernica is a large painting depicting the bombing of Guernica.8 French painter know for painting The Birth Of Venus.9Les Pierrots is a series of illustrations for the book of the same name.10Parce Domine is painting for theLa Chat noirweekly.11La Chat noirweekly was a cabaret and weekly magazine created in 1881.

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    Analyzingfigure 1, it could be suggested that the wordless comic may have not

    changed much since film. However, looking closer there are some differences to the

    wordless comic before film and wordless comics of the present day.

    One of the most noticeable differences that stand out is the page layout. All panels of

    figure 1 are open panels; they all exist on one page and do not spread to other pages.

    This style of layout is commonplace for a silent comic of the 1880s. Silent comics

    like Adolphe Willettes Cest Un Conte noir12(1884), Theophile-Alexandre Steinlens

    Le Chat Noir13(1885) and Emil ReineckesIngratitude Is The Worlds Reward14

    12Cest Un Conte noiris a silent comic, forLa Chat noirweekly, about a windy day

    in the park.13 SteinlensLe Chat Noiris a silent comic Created forLe Chat Noir weekly about a

    black cat calling to another cat.14Ingratitude Is The Worlds Reward is a silent comic about a man sleeping while a

    burglar awakes his dog.

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    FIGURE 1

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    (1889) allexist on plain of existence. Some may have long overall story but most

    pages would be stand-alone. Will Eisner suggests this style of layout is used as a

    narrative device. The empty areas around the panels are used to convey a sense of

    space and encourage the reader to fill in the blanks15. This style of storytelling is

    created in this fashion so the reader can read random page and do not need to know

    what events in the comic happened before of after that page. Film on the other hand

    cannot do this.

    The closest film can get to this style of layout is scene structure. All films have a set

    number of shots that contain small parts of the story, when put together they create

    the full story (the scene). A viewer watching a random shot from a film may get

    confused, because they would not have any point of reference and never get the full

    picture.

    The decision to haveFigure 1 as a stand-alone story on one page may seem like a

    good idea, but it could also be its downfall. The comic contains ten panels that are

    small and very cramped, which can be very confusing to the viewer. The panels are

    so small that the viewer may miss vital parts of the story, which could result in a

    different interpretation. Modern silent comic artists like Ulf K16(1969) would most

    likely spread the panels across more pages to give a feeling of time to the panels that

    need it (panels one to three) and adding more aspect to aspect panels to the others to

    create mood.

    The narrative structure offigure 1 also differs from film. It actually has more

    15 W. Eisner. Comics And Sequential Art.p4516 Ulf K is a German comic artist known for making comic seriesHieronymus B.

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    similarities to theatre. It is noticeable thatfigure 1 concentrates on timing and eye

    level panels, which was also commonplace with comics of the same time. Eisner

    suggests this kind of angle creates the idea of realism; the idea of actually being there

    and believing it could be real17. It can also be suggested that this angle stems from

    theatre, where you can only see the performance from one perspective, your eye level.

    Film on the other hand has an advantage: the viewer can be given angles that could

    never be given by theatre. Scene two of the film The Great Train Robbery is a good

    example,where we see the robbers hiding behind the railroad water tank as the train

    they are about to rob pulls up on the other side of the water tank. This all happens in

    the same shot, which results in a shot that could never be imitated on stage, and was

    never thought to be used in silent comics.

    2008: Shaun Tan

    Shaun Tan (1974 to present) was born in Perth, Australia. He graduated from the

    university of WA in 1995 with joint honours in fine art and English literature and now

    works in Melbourne as a freelance artist and illustrator.

    Tans first jobs as an illustrator was creating images for small press science fiction and

    horror magazines. Since then he has created childrens picture books (The Rabbits18

    2003, The Lost Thing192000), mature picture books (The Red Tree202003, The

    Viewer21 2003), and wordless bookThe Arrival22 (2007). Tan has also created

    17 W. Eisner. Comics And Sequential Art. P9318The Rabbits is about anthropomorphic rabbits over colonizing an area of a forest

    that doesnt belong to them.19 In The Lost Thinga young boy finds a strange large object while scavenging for

    bottle tops on his local beach.20The Red Tree is a book that experiments with the relationship between random textand random image.21The Vieweris about a boy who collects strange electronic artefacts from the past.22 In The Arrivala foreigner arrives in a strange city to save money for his family

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    concept for the filmsHorton Hears a Who (2008)and Pixars Wall-e (2008). His

    workThe Lost Thinghas been turned into a short animated film and his wordless

    bookThe Arrivalhas been created into a theatre performance (seefigure 2).

    Studyingfigure 2 it is possible to see an influence from film. We can see a more

    varied amount of shots, perspectives and new narrative tools compared tofigure 1,

    like aspect shots23, establishing shots24, close ups and aerial shots.

    Whilefigure 1 is about layout and timing,figure 2 is about establishing the

    surrounding area. Looking closely it is possible to see that panel two is an exterior

    establishing shot25(which we find in most comic books), but withfigure 2 Shaun Tan

    has decided he would like to create more emphasis on the area, so he adds panel three

    to five, Mccloud suggests these panels are fragments of the area that when put

    back home.23 Transitions from one aspect of a place, idea or mood to another.24 An establishing shot sets up, or "establishes", a scene's setting and/or its

    participants.25 A establishing shot that is outside.

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    FIGURE 2

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    together in the mind of the audience, creates a theoretical establishing shot without

    showing it on the page26 (Mccloud calls this closure). These types of shots are normal

    for film; you will find them in most films, from the opening scenes from Hitchcocks

    Rear Window to the aspect shots of the main protagonists H.Q in Frank Millers

    version ofThe Spirit.

    Conclusion

    Looking at Willete and Tans silent comics. It is possible to see the similarities and

    differences between them. Bothfigure 1andfigure 2 have elements of real life, arealistic style and comment on human behaviour. They both have these in common,

    but they do it in different ways. Figure 1 is about layout and timing andfigure 2 is all

    about establishing an exterior scene. Figure 2 has a slightly more realist style of

    drawing tofigure 1 and uses more film style narrative tools, compared to the theatre

    style offigure 1.

    It could be suggested that film has played a big part in the progression of silent

    comics. However One could comment on the fact thatfigure 2 could be different to

    figure 1becauseFigure 1 was created in 1880, figure 2 was created in 2007 and it

    was just a slow progression over time. However this cannot be true, becausefigure 2

    would be very different without the progression of the narrative tools of film. These

    tools were only ever imagined because of film technology, like camera positions,

    zoom functions, and scene to scene cuts. Over time the silent comic book artists have

    adopted and modified these tools to their advantage and used them in their work.

    Adapting from film is what has kept the silent comic book new and exciting. As long

    as film keeps making new and creative narrative tools, the silent comic will never26 S. Mccloud. Making Comics. P166

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    fade away.

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    Figure 1

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    Books:

    The Language Of Comics Words and Image. Edited by Robin Varnum and Christina

    T. Gibbons University Press Of Mississippi, U.S.A, 2001 P2/P3/P4

    Wordless Books The Original Graphic Novels. Edited by David A. Berona Harry N.

    Abrams, inc, New York, U.S.A, 2008 P2

    Eisner, Will. Comics And Sequential Art, W.W. Norton, New York, U.S.A, 2008

    10

    Figure 2

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    P4/P5

    Mccloud, Scott, Making Comics, Harpercollins, New York, U.S.A, 2006 P7

    Tan, Shaun, The Arrival, Arthur A. Levine Books, New York, U.S.A, P6

    Ulf K.,Hieronymus B., Top Shelf, Marietta, U.S.A, p4

    Web:

    http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Leon_Adolphe_Willette [Accessed 22/02/08]

    P2/P3

    http://www.artchive.com/artchive/P/picasso_postww2.html [Accessed 01/02/09] P2

    http://www.dropbears.com/a/art/biography/Theophile_Alexandre_Steinlen.html

    [Accessed 22/02/09] P4

    http://www.filmsite.org/grea.html [Accessed 05/03/09] P1

    http://books.google.com/books?id=nwgIAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA1&dq=

    %22William+Hogarth%22&as_brr=1&ie=ISO-8859-1#PPP1,M1[Accessed01/02/09] P2

    http://www.iment.com/maida/family/mother/vicars/alexandrecabanel.htm [Accessed

    02/03/09] P2

    http://www.shauntan.net/about.html [Accessed 02/03/09] P6/P7

    http://www.tcj.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=813&Itemid=48

    [Accessed 02/03/09] P6/P7

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    http://www.tcj.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=813&Itemid=48http://www.tcj.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=813&Itemid=48
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