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Wikipedia

Chris Ware

Franklin Christenson "Chris" Ware (born December 28, 1967)[1] is an American cartoonist known for his Acme Novelty Library series (begun 1994) and the graphic novels Jimmy Corrigan, the Smartest Kid on Earth (2000), Building Stories (2012) and Rusty Brown (2019). His works explore themes of social isolation, emotional torment and depression. He tends to use a vivid color palette and realistic, meticulous detail. His lettering and images are often elaborate and sometimes evoke the ragtime era or another early 20th-century American design style.

Chris Ware
Ware at the 2019 Texas Book Festival
BornFranklin Christenson Ware
(1967-12-28) December 28, 1967 (age 55)
Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.
Area(s)Cartoonist
Notable works
AwardsEisner Award: 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2013

Harvey Award: 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2013
National Cartoonists Society Award: 1999, 2013
Guardian First Book Award: 2001

USA Hoi Fellow grant, 2006

Ware often refers to himself in the publicity for his work in self-effacing, even withering tones. He is considered by some critics and fellow notable illustrators and writers, such as Dave Eggers, to be among the best currently working in the medium; Canadian graphic-novelist Seth has said, "Chris really changed the playing field. After him, a lot of [cartoonists] really started to scramble and go, 'Holy [expletive], I think I have to try harder.'"[2]

Career

Born in Omaha, Nebraska, Ware resides in the Chicago area of Illinois.[3] His earliest published strips appeared in the late 1980s on the comics page of The Daily Texan, the student newspaper of the University of Texas at Austin. In addition to numerous daily strips under different titles, Ware also had a weekly satirical science fiction serial in the paper titled Floyd Farland: Citizen of the Future. This was eventually published in 1988 as a prestige format comic book from Eclipse Comics, and its publication even led to a brief correspondence between Ware and Timothy Leary.

While still a sophomore at UT, Ware came to the attention of Art Spiegelman, who invited Ware to contribute to Raw, the influential anthology magazine Spiegelman was co-editing with Françoise Mouly. Ware has acknowledged that being included in Raw gave him confidence and inspired him to explore printing techniques and self-publishing. His Fantagraphics series Acme Novelty Library defied comics publishing conventions with every issue. The series featured a combination of new material as well as reprints of work Ware had done for the Texan (such as Quimby the Mouse) and the Chicago weekly paper Newcity. Ware's work appeared originally in Newcity before he moved on to his current "home", the Chicago Reader. Beginning with the 16th issue of Acme Novelty Library, Ware began self-publishing his work, while maintaining a relationship with Fantagraphics for distribution and storage. This was a return to Ware's early career, self-publishing such books as Lonely Comics and Stories as well as miniature digests of stories based on Quimby the Mouse and an unnamed potato-like creature.

In recent years he has also been involved in editing (and designing) several books and book series, including the new reprint series of Gasoline Alley from Drawn & Quarterly titled Walt and Skeezix; a reprint series of Krazy Kat by Fantagraphics; and the 13th volume of Timothy McSweeney's Quarterly Concern, which is devoted to comics. He was the editor of The Best American Comics 2007, the second installment devoted to comics in the Best American series.

In 2007, Ware curated an exhibition for the Phoenix Art Museum focused on the non-comic work of five contemporary cartoonists. The exhibition, titled "UnInked: Paintings, Sculpture and Graphic Works by Five Cartoonists", ran from April 21 through August 19.[4] Ware also edited and designed the catalog for the exhibition.

In 2017, Ware's book Monograph appeared. It is a part-memoir, part-scrapbook retrospective of his career to that point.

Style

Ware's art reflects early 20th-century American styles of cartooning and graphic design, shifting through formats from traditional comic panels to faux advertisements and cut-out toys. Stylistic influences include advertising graphics from that same era; newspaper strip cartoonists Winsor McCay (Little Nemo in Slumberland) and Frank King (Gasoline Alley);[5] Charles Schulz's post-WWII strip Peanuts and the cover designs of ragtime-era sheet music. Ware has spoken about finding inspiration in the work of artist Joseph Cornell[6] and cites Richard McGuire's strip Here as a major influence on his use of non-linear narratives.[7] Ware has said of his own style:

I arrived at my way of "working" as a way of visually approximating what I feel the tone of fiction to be in prose versus the tone one might use to write biography; I would never do a biographical story using the deliberately synthetic way of cartooning I use to write fiction. I try to use the rules of typography to govern the way that I "draw", which keeps me at a sensible distance from the story as well as being a visual analog to the way we remember and conceptualize the world. I figured out this way of working by learning from and looking at artists I admired and whom I thought came closest to getting at what seemed to me to be the "essence" of comics, which is fundamentally the weird process of reading pictures, not just looking at them. I see the black outlines of cartoons as visual approximations of the way we remember general ideas, and I try to use naturalistic color underneath them to simultaneously suggest a perceptual experience, which I think is more or less the way we actually experience the world as adults; we don't really "see" anymore after a certain age, we spend our time naming and categorizing and identifying and figuring how everything all fits together. Unfortunately, as a result, I guess sometimes readers get a chilled or antiseptic sensation from it, which is certainly not intentional, and is something I admit as a failure, but is also something I can't completely change at the moment.[8]

Although his precise, geometrical layouts may appear to some to be computer-generated, Ware works almost exclusively with manual drawing tools such as paper and ink, rulers and T-squares. He does, however, sometimes use photocopies and transparencies, and he employs a computer to color his strips.

Recurring characters and stories

 
Ware in 2009

Quimby the Mouse

Quimby the Mouse was an early character for Ware and something of a breakthrough. Rendered in the style of an early animation character like Felix the Cat, Quimby the Mouse is perhaps Ware's most autobiographical character. Quimby's relationship with a cat head named Sparky is by turns conflict-ridden and loving, and thus intended to reflect all human relationships. While Quimby exhibits mobility, Sparky remains immobile and helpless, subject to all the indignities Quimby visits upon him. Quimby also acts as a narrator for Ware's reminiscences of his youth, in particular his relationship with his grandmother. Sometimes illustrated as a two-headed mouse, Quimby embodies both Ware and his grandmother, and the duality of a young and old body. Quimby was presented in a series of smaller panels than most comics, almost providing the illusion of motion à la a zoetrope. In fact, Ware once designed a zoetrope to be cut out and constructed by the reader in order to watch a Quimby "silent movie". Ware's ingenuity is neatly shown in this willingness to break from the confines of the page. Quimby the Mouse appears in the logo of a Chicago-based bookstore "Quimby's", although their shared name was originally a coincidence.[9]

Rusty Brown

Ware's Rusty Brown focuses on the titular character, examining his life in the present and through flashbacks of his childhood, focusing on his arrested development and attachment to cultural objects. As the story expands, it diverges into multiple storylines about Brown's father's early life in the 1950s as a science fiction writer (Acme Novelty Library #19) and his best friend Chalky White's adult home life. The first part of Rusty Brown was published in book form in 2019 by Pantheon Books.[10]

Building Stories

Ware's Building Stories was serialized in a host of different venues.[11] It first appeared as a monthly strip in Nest Magazine. Installments later appeared in a number of publications, including The New Yorker, Kramer's Ergot, and most notably, the Sunday New York Times Magazine. Building Stories appeared weekly in the New York Times Magazine from September 18, 2005 until April 16, 2006. A full chapter was published in Acme Novelty Library, number 18. Another installment was published under the title "Touch Sensitive" as a digital app released through McSweeneys.[12] The entire narrative was published as a boxed set of books by Pantheon in October 2012.[13][14][15] The boxed set holds 14 different works, in various sizes and forms, weaving through the life of an unnamed brown haired woman.

The Last Saturday

Ware's latest project, The Last Saturday, a "comic novella," began appearing online every Friday at the website of the UK newspaper The Guardian, starting in September 2014. The story follows a few people in Sandy Port, Michigan: Putnam Gray, a young boy caught up in his sci-fi and space fantasies; Sandy Grains, a young girl and classmate who is interested in Putnam; Rosie Gentry, a young girl and classmate with whom Putnam is infatuated; Mr. and Mrs. Gray and Mrs. Grains. The strip also features in the newspaper's Weekend magazine.

The serialization has now apparently ended after 54 instalments. The bottom right-hand corner of the last page has a note that says, "END, PART ONE", but as of 2020, there appears to be no indication from The Guardian or from Ware that there is to be a Part Two.

Non-comics work

Ware is an ardent collector of ragtime paraphernalia and occasionally publishes a journal devoted to the music titled The Ragtime Ephemeralist.[16] He also plays the banjo and piano. The influence of the music and the graphics of its era can be seen in Ware's work, especially in regard to logos and layout. Ware has designed album covers and posters for such ragtime performers as the Et Cetera String Band, Virginia Tichenor, Reginald R. Robinson, the Paragon Ragtime Orchestra and Guido Nielsen.[17]

He has also designed covers and posters for non-ragtime performers such as Andrew Bird's Bowl of Fire and 5ive Style.[18] In October 2005 Ware designed the elaborate cover art for Penguin Books' new edition of Voltaire's Candide.

Ware was commissioned by Chip Kidd to design the inner machinations of the bird on the cover of Haruki Murakami's novel The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle.[19]

In 2003-04, Ware worked with Ira Glass of This American Life and Chicago historian Tim Samuelson to illustrate and design Lost Buildings about Samuelson and the preservation of Chicago's old buildings, particularly Louis Sullivan's buildings.[20][21] Originally produced for a live "Lost in America" stage show in 2003, Lost Buildings was later published as a book and DVD.[22] In 2007-08, he produced animations for the This American Life television series on Showtime[20] and also contributed to the show as a color consultant. Ware created poster art for Tamara Jenkins' 2007 film The Savages and her 2018 film Private Life.

Mural for 826 Valencia

Dave Eggers commissioned Ware to design the mural for the facade of San Francisco literacy project 826 Valencia.[23] The mural depicts "the parallel development of humans and their efforts at and motivations for communication, spoken and written."[24] The 3.9m x 6m mural was applied by artisans to Ware’s specifications.[23] Describing the work, Ware said "I didn’t want it to make anyone 'feel good', especially in that typically muralistic 'hands across the water' sort of way,"..."I especially wanted it to be something that people living in the neighbourhood could look at day after day and hopefully not tire of too quickly. I really hoped whomever might happen to come across it would find something that showed a respect for their intelligence, and didn’t force-feed them any 'message'."[23]

Fortune 500 cover

In 2010, Ware designed the cover for Fortune magazine's "Fortune 500" issue, but it was rejected.[25] Ware had mentioned the work at a panel at the Chicago Comic and Entertainment Expo on April 16, as first noted in an April 20 blog post by Matthew J. Brady.[26] The cover, featuring the circle-shaped humans common in Ware's more broadly socially satirical comic-strips, turned the numbers 500 into skyscrapers looming over the continental United States. On the roofs, corporate bosses drink, dance, and sun themselves as a helicopter drops a shovelful of money down for them. Below, among signs reading "Credit Default Swap Flea Market," "Greenspan Lube Pro," and "401K Cemetery," a helicopter scoops money out of the US Treasury with a shovel, cars pile up in Detroit, and flag-waving citizens party around a boiling tea kettle in the shape of an elephant. In the Gulf of Mexico, homes are sinking, while hooded prisoners sit in Guantanamo, a "Factory of Exploitation" keeps going in Mexico, China is tossing American dollars into the Pacific, and the roof of bankrupted Greece's Treasury has blown off. A spokesperson for the magazine only said that, as is their practice, they had commissioned a number of possible covers from different artists, including Ware.[27] Brady wrote in his blog that Ware said at the panel he "accepted the job because it would be like doing the [cover for the] 1929 issue of the magazine".[26]

Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives

In 2011, Ware created the poster for the U.S. release of the 2010 film Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives by Thai director Apichatpong Weerasethakul.[28] Describing the poster, Ware said "I wanted to get at both the transcendent solemnity of the film while keeping some sense of its loose, very unpretentious accessibility... This being a poster, however—and even worse, me not really being a designer—I realized it also had to be somewhat punchy and strange, so as to draw viewers in and pique their curiosity without, hopefully, insulting their intelligence."[29]

Awards and honors

Over the years his work garnered several awards, including the 1999 National Cartoonists Society's Award for Best Comic Book for Acme Novelty Library and Award for Graphic Novel for Building Stories.

Ware has won numerous Eisner Awards during his career including Best Artist/Writer in 2009 (Acme Novelty Library) and 2013 (Building Stories); Best Artist/Writer-Drama in 2008; Best Continuing Series in 1996 and 2000 (Acme Novelty Library); Best Graphic Album: New in 2000 and 2013 (Building Stories); Best Graphic Album: Reprint in 2001 (Jimmy Corrigan); Best Colorist of 1996, 1998, 2001 and 2006; Best Publication Design in 1995, 1996, 1997 (Acme Novelty Library), 2001 (Jimmy Corrigan), 2002, 2006 (Acme Novelty Library Annual Report for Shareholders) and 2013 (Building Stories)

Ware has won multiple Harvey Awards including Best Continuing or Limited Series in 2000 and 2001; Best Cartoonist in 2006 (Acme Novelty Library); Best Letterer in 1996, 2000, 2002, and 2006 ; Best Colorist in 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2002 and 2004 (Acme Novelty Datebook); and Special Award for Excellence in Presentation in 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000 (Acme Novelty Library), 2001 (Jimmy Corrigan), 2004 (Acme Novelty Datebook) and 2013 (Building Stories)

In 2002, Ware became the first comics artist to be invited to exhibit at Whitney Museum of American Art biennial exhibition.[30] With Will Eisner, Jack Kirby, Harvey Kurtzman, Robert Crumb and Gary Panter, Ware was among the artists honored in the exhibition "Masters of American Comics" at the Jewish Museum in New York City, New York, from September 16, 2006 to January 28, 2007.[31][32] His work was the subject of solo exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago in 2006 and at the University of Nebraska's Sheldon Museum of Art, in 2007.[30]

Ware's graphic novel Jimmy Corrigan, the Smartest Kid on Earth won the 2001 Guardian First Book Award, the first time a graphic novel has won a major United Kingdom book award.[33] It also won the prize for best album at the 2003 Angoulême International Comics Festival in France.

In 2006, Ware received a USA Hoi Fellow grant from United States Artists.[34]

In 2013, Ware received the for Building Stories and was finalist for Jan Michalski Prize for Literature[35] and Los Angeles Times Book Prize.

In 2020, Ware's Rusty Brown was nominated for the PEN/Jean Stein Book Award.[36]

In 2021, he was awarded the Grand Prix de la ville d'Angoulême for his lifelong achievement.[37]

Bibliography

  • Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth. Jonathan Cape. 2001. ISBN 0224062107.
  • Quimby the Mouse. Fantagraphics Books. 2003. ISBN 1560974559.
  • The Acme Novelty Library. New York: Pantheon. 2005. ISBN 9780375422959.
  • Acme Novelty Datebook. Drawn & Quarterly. 2007. ISBN 9781897299180.
  • Jordan Wellington Lint. Drawn & Quarterly. 2010. ISBN 978-1770460201.
  • Building Stories. Jonathan Cape. 2012. ISBN 9780224078122.
  • The Acme Novelty Datebook: Sketches and Diary Pages in Facsimile. Drawn & Quarterly. 2013. ISBN 978-1896597669
  • Monograph. New York: Rizzoli. 2017. ISBN 9780847860883.
  • Rusty Brown, Part I. New York: Pantheon. 2019. ISBN 9780375424328.

References

  1. ^ Ball, p. xiii
  2. ^ "Building Stories: PRAISE & AWARDS" (Press release). May 2012. Retrieved June 2, 2012.
  3. ^ Chris Ware bio at Fantagraphics
  4. ^ UnInked: Paintings, Sculpture and Graphic Work by Five Cartoonists March 11, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, Retrieved March 2, 2010
  5. ^ Raeburn (2004)
  6. ^ Pantheon Graphic Novels February 5, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Ware, Chris (Summer 2006). "Richard McGuire and 'Here'". Comic Art. 8.
  8. ^ Chris Ware - On Cartooning | PBS
  9. ^ "Quimby's :: Mission". April 2004. from the original on 22 November 2006. Retrieved 29 March 2007.
  10. ^ Ware, Chris (2019). Rusty Brown. ISBN 978-0375424328.
  11. ^ Crucifix, Benoît (2017-03-27). "From loose to boxed fragments and back again. Seriality and archive in Chris Ware's Building Stories". Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics. 9: 3–22. doi:10.1080/21504857.2017.1303619. hdl:1854/LU-8636031. ISSN 2150-4857. S2CID 194415161.
  12. ^ Kashtan, Aaron (2015-09-03). ""And it Had Everything in it": Building Stories, Comics, and the Book of the Future". Studies in the Novel. 47 (3): 420–447. doi:10.1353/sdn.2015.0034. ISSN 1934-1512. S2CID 162112188.
  13. ^ "New Chris Ware project". Pantheon Books. October 13, 2011. Retrieved January 26, 2012.
  14. ^ "Chris Ware Building Stories revealed" (Press release). Pantheon Books. May 21, 2012. Retrieved June 2, 2012.
  15. ^ "Building Stories" (Press release). Random House. May 2012. Retrieved June 2, 2012.
  16. ^ Wondrich, David (January 21, 2001). "Ragtime: No Longer A Novelty In Sepia". The New York Times. Retrieved April 29, 2010.
  17. ^ Melton, Larry (October 27, 2019). "Graphic novelist Chris Ware discusses the leitmotif of Ragtime in his life and work". The Syncopated Times. Retrieved October 30, 2019.
  18. ^ "Album Artwork". Acme Novelty Library Archive. Retrieved November 26, 2012.
  19. ^ "Haruki Murakami at Random House". Random House. Retrieved 13 July 2012.
  20. ^ a b Ball, p. xvii
  21. ^ Ball, p. 13
  22. ^ Ball, p. 118
  23. ^ a b c Thompson, David (2001). "Chris Ware's new mural tells the story of the human race". Eye Magazine. Retrieved 27 May 2011.
  24. ^ . 826 Valencia. Archived from the original on 27 July 2011. Retrieved 27 May 2011.
  25. ^ ComicsBeat.com April 28, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ a b "C2E2 2010: The Pantheon panel, featuring Chris Ware and Dash Shaw".
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-04-26. Retrieved 2010-04-26.
  28. ^ "Vulture Premieres the Poster for Cannes Hit Uncle Boonmee, Designed by Chris Ware". Vulture. New York. 2011-02-08. Retrieved 26 May 2011.
  29. ^ Glaser, Sheila (2011-05-23). "Ghost Stories". The New York Times. Retrieved 26 May 2011.
  30. ^ a b Ball, p. 65
  31. ^ . The Jewish Museum. Archived from the original on 2011-05-11. Retrieved 2010-08-10.. .
  32. ^ Kimmelman, Michael. "See You in the Funny Papers" (art review), The New York Times, October 13, 2006
  33. ^ "Graphic novel wins First Book Award". The Guardian. London: Guardian News and Media Limited. 2001-12-06. Retrieved 4 October 2010.
  34. ^ USA Fellows 2006 Visual Arts: Chris Ware July 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, United States Artists
  35. ^ "Edition 2013". Jan Michalski Foundation. Retrieved September 14, 2013.
  36. ^ "2020 PEN/Jean Stein Finalists". 2020-01-17.
  37. ^ Potet, Frédéric (2021-06-23). "Festival de la bande dessinée d'Angoulême : Chris Ware, un Grand Prix très proustien". Le Monde.

Sources

  • "The Art of Melancholy". The Guardian, October 31, 2005
  • Arnold, Andrew. Time, November 27, 2001.
  • David M. Ball, Martha B. Kuhlman, ed. (2010). The Comics of Chris Ware: Drawing Is a Way of Thinking. University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-60473-443-0.
  • Onstad, Chris. "Visual Tribute to Chris Ware". Achewood, January 11, 2008.
  • Peters, Tim. . The Point, Spring 2011.
  • Raeburn, Daniel (2004). Chris Ware. Monographics Series. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10291-8.
  • Raeburn, Daniel (1999-07-04). "The Smartest Cartoonist on Earth" (PDF). The Imp.
  • Schjeldahl, Peter. "Words and Pictures: Graphic novels come of age". The New Yorker, October 17, 2005.
  • Wolk, Douglas. . Salon.com, September 2, 2005.
  • Wondrich, David. "Ragtime: No Longer a Novelty in Sepia", The New York Times, January 21, 2001.

External links

  • Acme Novelty Archive: Unofficial database of the works of Ware
  • Stripped Books: A Comics Panel – comics-form adaptation of a panel featuring Chris Ware, Seth and moderator Ivan Brunetti
  • of Ware by designer Chip Kidd
  • Chris Ware's mural for 826 Valencia's facade
  • The Last Saturday. A comic novella posted in weekly instalments on the website of UK newspaper The Guardian
  • Jeet Heer (Fall 2014). "Chris Ware, The Art of Comics No. 2". The Paris Review.

chris, ware, franklin, christenson, chris, ware, born, december, 1967, american, cartoonist, known, acme, novelty, library, series, begun, 1994, graphic, novels, jimmy, corrigan, smartest, earth, 2000, building, stories, 2012, rusty, brown, 2019, works, explor. Franklin Christenson Chris Ware born December 28 1967 1 is an American cartoonist known for his Acme Novelty Library series begun 1994 and the graphic novels Jimmy Corrigan the Smartest Kid on Earth 2000 Building Stories 2012 and Rusty Brown 2019 His works explore themes of social isolation emotional torment and depression He tends to use a vivid color palette and realistic meticulous detail His lettering and images are often elaborate and sometimes evoke the ragtime era or another early 20th century American design style Chris WareWare at the 2019 Texas Book FestivalBornFranklin Christenson Ware 1967 12 28 December 28 1967 age 55 Omaha Nebraska U S Area s CartoonistNotable worksAcme Novelty Library Jimmy Corrigan Building Stories MonographAwardsEisner Award 1995 1996 1997 1998 2000 2001 2002 2006 2008 2009 2013Harvey Award 1995 1996 1997 1998 2000 2001 2002 2004 2006 2013National Cartoonists Society Award 1999 2013Guardian First Book Award 2001 USA Hoi Fellow grant 2006Ware often refers to himself in the publicity for his work in self effacing even withering tones He is considered by some critics and fellow notable illustrators and writers such as Dave Eggers to be among the best currently working in the medium Canadian graphic novelist Seth has said Chris really changed the playing field After him a lot of cartoonists really started to scramble and go Holy expletive I think I have to try harder 2 Contents 1 Career 2 Style 3 Recurring characters and stories 3 1 Quimby the Mouse 3 2 Rusty Brown 3 3 Building Stories 3 4 The Last Saturday 4 Non comics work 4 1 Mural for 826 Valencia 4 2 Fortune 500 cover 4 3 Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives 5 Awards and honors 6 Bibliography 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksCareer EditBorn in Omaha Nebraska Ware resides in the Chicago area of Illinois 3 His earliest published strips appeared in the late 1980s on the comics page of The Daily Texan the student newspaper of the University of Texas at Austin In addition to numerous daily strips under different titles Ware also had a weekly satirical science fiction serial in the paper titled Floyd Farland Citizen of the Future This was eventually published in 1988 as a prestige format comic book from Eclipse Comics and its publication even led to a brief correspondence between Ware and Timothy Leary While still a sophomore at UT Ware came to the attention of Art Spiegelman who invited Ware to contribute to Raw the influential anthology magazine Spiegelman was co editing with Francoise Mouly Ware has acknowledged that being included in Raw gave him confidence and inspired him to explore printing techniques and self publishing His Fantagraphics series Acme Novelty Library defied comics publishing conventions with every issue The series featured a combination of new material as well as reprints of work Ware had done for the Texan such as Quimby the Mouse and the Chicago weekly paper Newcity Ware s work appeared originally in Newcity before he moved on to his current home the Chicago Reader Beginning with the 16th issue of Acme Novelty Library Ware began self publishing his work while maintaining a relationship with Fantagraphics for distribution and storage This was a return to Ware s early career self publishing such books as Lonely Comics and Stories as well as miniature digests of stories based on Quimby the Mouse and an unnamed potato like creature In recent years he has also been involved in editing and designing several books and book series including the new reprint series of Gasoline Alley from Drawn amp Quarterly titled Walt and Skeezix a reprint series of Krazy Kat by Fantagraphics and the 13th volume of Timothy McSweeney s Quarterly Concern which is devoted to comics He was the editor of The Best American Comics 2007 the second installment devoted to comics in the Best American series In 2007 Ware curated an exhibition for the Phoenix Art Museum focused on the non comic work of five contemporary cartoonists The exhibition titled UnInked Paintings Sculpture and Graphic Works by Five Cartoonists ran from April 21 through August 19 4 Ware also edited and designed the catalog for the exhibition In 2017 Ware s book Monograph appeared It is a part memoir part scrapbook retrospective of his career to that point Style EditWare s art reflects early 20th century American styles of cartooning and graphic design shifting through formats from traditional comic panels to faux advertisements and cut out toys Stylistic influences include advertising graphics from that same era newspaper strip cartoonists Winsor McCay Little Nemo in Slumberland and Frank King Gasoline Alley 5 Charles Schulz s post WWII strip Peanuts and the cover designs of ragtime era sheet music Ware has spoken about finding inspiration in the work of artist Joseph Cornell 6 and cites Richard McGuire s strip Here as a major influence on his use of non linear narratives 7 Ware has said of his own style I arrived at my way of working as a way of visually approximating what I feel the tone of fiction to be in prose versus the tone one might use to write biography I would never do a biographical story using the deliberately synthetic way of cartooning I use to write fiction I try to use the rules of typography to govern the way that I draw which keeps me at a sensible distance from the story as well as being a visual analog to the way we remember and conceptualize the world I figured out this way of working by learning from and looking at artists I admired and whom I thought came closest to getting at what seemed to me to be the essence of comics which is fundamentally the weird process of reading pictures not just looking at them I see the black outlines of cartoons as visual approximations of the way we remember general ideas and I try to use naturalistic color underneath them to simultaneously suggest a perceptual experience which I think is more or less the way we actually experience the world as adults we don t really see anymore after a certain age we spend our time naming and categorizing and identifying and figuring how everything all fits together Unfortunately as a result I guess sometimes readers get a chilled or antiseptic sensation from it which is certainly not intentional and is something I admit as a failure but is also something I can t completely change at the moment 8 Although his precise geometrical layouts may appear to some to be computer generated Ware works almost exclusively with manual drawing tools such as paper and ink rulers and T squares He does however sometimes use photocopies and transparencies and he employs a computer to color his strips Recurring characters and stories Edit Ware in 2009 Quimby the Mouse Edit Quimby the Mouse was an early character for Ware and something of a breakthrough Rendered in the style of an early animation character like Felix the Cat Quimby the Mouse is perhaps Ware s most autobiographical character Quimby s relationship with a cat head named Sparky is by turns conflict ridden and loving and thus intended to reflect all human relationships While Quimby exhibits mobility Sparky remains immobile and helpless subject to all the indignities Quimby visits upon him Quimby also acts as a narrator for Ware s reminiscences of his youth in particular his relationship with his grandmother Sometimes illustrated as a two headed mouse Quimby embodies both Ware and his grandmother and the duality of a young and old body Quimby was presented in a series of smaller panels than most comics almost providing the illusion of motion a la a zoetrope In fact Ware once designed a zoetrope to be cut out and constructed by the reader in order to watch a Quimby silent movie Ware s ingenuity is neatly shown in this willingness to break from the confines of the page Quimby the Mouse appears in the logo of a Chicago based bookstore Quimby s although their shared name was originally a coincidence 9 Rusty Brown Edit Ware s Rusty Brown focuses on the titular character examining his life in the present and through flashbacks of his childhood focusing on his arrested development and attachment to cultural objects As the story expands it diverges into multiple storylines about Brown s father s early life in the 1950s as a science fiction writer Acme Novelty Library 19 and his best friend Chalky White s adult home life The first part of Rusty Brown was published in book form in 2019 by Pantheon Books 10 Building Stories Edit Ware s Building Stories was serialized in a host of different venues 11 It first appeared as a monthly strip in Nest Magazine Installments later appeared in a number of publications including The New Yorker Kramer s Ergot and most notably the Sunday New York Times Magazine Building Stories appeared weekly in the New York Times Magazine from September 18 2005 until April 16 2006 A full chapter was published in Acme Novelty Library number 18 Another installment was published under the title Touch Sensitive as a digital app released through McSweeneys 12 The entire narrative was published as a boxed set of books by Pantheon in October 2012 13 14 15 The boxed set holds 14 different works in various sizes and forms weaving through the life of an unnamed brown haired woman The Last Saturday Edit Ware s latest project The Last Saturday a comic novella began appearing online every Friday at the website of the UK newspaper The Guardian starting in September 2014 The story follows a few people in Sandy Port Michigan Putnam Gray a young boy caught up in his sci fi and space fantasies Sandy Grains a young girl and classmate who is interested in Putnam Rosie Gentry a young girl and classmate with whom Putnam is infatuated Mr and Mrs Gray and Mrs Grains The strip also features in the newspaper s Weekend magazine The serialization has now apparently ended after 54 instalments The bottom right hand corner of the last page has a note that says END PART ONE but as of 2020 update there appears to be no indication from The Guardian or from Ware that there is to be a Part Two Non comics work EditWare is an ardent collector of ragtime paraphernalia and occasionally publishes a journal devoted to the music titled The Ragtime Ephemeralist 16 He also plays the banjo and piano The influence of the music and the graphics of its era can be seen in Ware s work especially in regard to logos and layout Ware has designed album covers and posters for such ragtime performers as the Et Cetera String Band Virginia Tichenor Reginald R Robinson the Paragon Ragtime Orchestra and Guido Nielsen 17 He has also designed covers and posters for non ragtime performers such as Andrew Bird s Bowl of Fire and 5ive Style 18 In October 2005 Ware designed the elaborate cover art for Penguin Books new edition of Voltaire s Candide Ware was commissioned by Chip Kidd to design the inner machinations of the bird on the cover of Haruki Murakami s novel The Wind Up Bird Chronicle 19 In 2003 04 Ware worked with Ira Glass of This American Life and Chicago historian Tim Samuelson to illustrate and design Lost Buildings about Samuelson and the preservation of Chicago s old buildings particularly Louis Sullivan s buildings 20 21 Originally produced for a live Lost in America stage show in 2003 Lost Buildings was later published as a book and DVD 22 In 2007 08 he produced animations for the This American Life television series on Showtime 20 and also contributed to the show as a color consultant Ware created poster art for Tamara Jenkins 2007 film The Savages and her 2018 film Private Life Mural for 826 Valencia Edit Dave Eggers commissioned Ware to design the mural for the facade of San Francisco literacy project 826 Valencia 23 The mural depicts the parallel development of humans and their efforts at and motivations for communication spoken and written 24 The 3 9m x 6m mural was applied by artisans to Ware s specifications 23 Describing the work Ware said I didn t want it to make anyone feel good especially in that typically muralistic hands across the water sort of way I especially wanted it to be something that people living in the neighbourhood could look at day after day and hopefully not tire of too quickly I really hoped whomever might happen to come across it would find something that showed a respect for their intelligence and didn t force feed them any message 23 Fortune 500 cover Edit In 2010 Ware designed the cover for Fortune magazine s Fortune 500 issue but it was rejected 25 Ware had mentioned the work at a panel at the Chicago Comic and Entertainment Expo on April 16 as first noted in an April 20 blog post by Matthew J Brady 26 The cover featuring the circle shaped humans common in Ware s more broadly socially satirical comic strips turned the numbers 500 into skyscrapers looming over the continental United States On the roofs corporate bosses drink dance and sun themselves as a helicopter drops a shovelful of money down for them Below among signs reading Credit Default Swap Flea Market Greenspan Lube Pro and 401K Cemetery a helicopter scoops money out of the US Treasury with a shovel cars pile up in Detroit and flag waving citizens party around a boiling tea kettle in the shape of an elephant In the Gulf of Mexico homes are sinking while hooded prisoners sit in Guantanamo a Factory of Exploitation keeps going in Mexico China is tossing American dollars into the Pacific and the roof of bankrupted Greece s Treasury has blown off A spokesperson for the magazine only said that as is their practice they had commissioned a number of possible covers from different artists including Ware 27 Brady wrote in his blog that Ware said at the panel he accepted the job because it would be like doing the cover for the 1929 issue of the magazine 26 Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives Edit In 2011 Ware created the poster for the U S release of the 2010 film Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives by Thai director Apichatpong Weerasethakul 28 Describing the poster Ware said I wanted to get at both the transcendent solemnity of the film while keeping some sense of its loose very unpretentious accessibility This being a poster however and even worse me not really being a designer I realized it also had to be somewhat punchy and strange so as to draw viewers in and pique their curiosity without hopefully insulting their intelligence 29 Awards and honors EditOver the years his work garnered several awards including the 1999 National Cartoonists Society s Award for Best Comic Book for Acme Novelty Library and Award for Graphic Novel for Building Stories Ware has won numerous Eisner Awards during his career including Best Artist Writer in 2009 Acme Novelty Library and 2013 Building Stories Best Artist Writer Drama in 2008 Best Continuing Series in 1996 and 2000 Acme Novelty Library Best Graphic Album New in 2000 and 2013 Building Stories Best Graphic Album Reprint in 2001 Jimmy Corrigan Best Colorist of 1996 1998 2001 and 2006 Best Publication Design in 1995 1996 1997 Acme Novelty Library 2001 Jimmy Corrigan 2002 2006 Acme Novelty Library Annual Report for Shareholders and 2013 Building Stories Ware has won multiple Harvey Awards including Best Continuing or Limited Series in 2000 and 2001 Best Cartoonist in 2006 Acme Novelty Library Best Letterer in 1996 2000 2002 and 2006 Best Colorist in 1996 1997 1998 2000 2002 and 2004 Acme Novelty Datebook and Special Award for Excellence in Presentation in 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 Acme Novelty Library 2001 Jimmy Corrigan 2004 Acme Novelty Datebook and 2013 Building Stories In 2002 Ware became the first comics artist to be invited to exhibit at Whitney Museum of American Art biennial exhibition 30 With Will Eisner Jack Kirby Harvey Kurtzman Robert Crumb and Gary Panter Ware was among the artists honored in the exhibition Masters of American Comics at the Jewish Museum in New York City New York from September 16 2006 to January 28 2007 31 32 His work was the subject of solo exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago in 2006 and at the University of Nebraska s Sheldon Museum of Art in 2007 30 Ware s graphic novel Jimmy Corrigan the Smartest Kid on Earth won the 2001 Guardian First Book Award the first time a graphic novel has won a major United Kingdom book award 33 It also won the prize for best album at the 2003 Angouleme International Comics Festival in France In 2006 Ware received a USA Hoi Fellow grant from United States Artists 34 In 2013 Ware received the 2013 Lynd Ward Graphic Novel Prize for Building Stories and was finalist for Jan Michalski Prize for Literature 35 and Los Angeles Times Book Prize In 2020 Ware s Rusty Brown was nominated for the PEN Jean Stein Book Award 36 In 2021 he was awarded the Grand Prix de la ville d Angouleme for his lifelong achievement 37 Bibliography EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items October 2018 Jimmy Corrigan The Smartest Kid on Earth Jonathan Cape 2001 ISBN 0224062107 Quimby the Mouse Fantagraphics Books 2003 ISBN 1560974559 The Acme Novelty Library New York Pantheon 2005 ISBN 9780375422959 Acme Novelty Datebook Drawn amp Quarterly 2007 ISBN 9781897299180 Jordan Wellington Lint Drawn amp Quarterly 2010 ISBN 978 1770460201 Building Stories Jonathan Cape 2012 ISBN 9780224078122 The Acme Novelty Datebook Sketches and Diary Pages in Facsimile Drawn amp Quarterly 2013 ISBN 978 1896597669 Monograph New York Rizzoli 2017 ISBN 9780847860883 Rusty Brown Part I New York Pantheon 2019 ISBN 9780375424328 References Edit Ball p xiii Building Stories PRAISE amp AWARDS Press release May 2012 Retrieved June 2 2012 Chris Ware bio at Fantagraphics UnInked Paintings Sculpture and Graphic Work by Five Cartoonists Archived March 11 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved March 2 2010 Raeburn 2004 Pantheon Graphic Novels Archived February 5 2009 at the Wayback Machine Ware Chris Summer 2006 Richard McGuire and Here Comic Art 8 Chris Ware On Cartooning PBS Quimby s Mission April 2004 Archived from the original on 22 November 2006 Retrieved 29 March 2007 Ware Chris 2019 Rusty Brown ISBN 978 0375424328 Crucifix Benoit 2017 03 27 From loose to boxed fragments and back again Seriality and archive in Chris Ware s Building Stories Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics 9 3 22 doi 10 1080 21504857 2017 1303619 hdl 1854 LU 8636031 ISSN 2150 4857 S2CID 194415161 Kashtan Aaron 2015 09 03 And it Had Everything in it Building Stories Comics and the Book of the Future Studies in the Novel 47 3 420 447 doi 10 1353 sdn 2015 0034 ISSN 1934 1512 S2CID 162112188 New Chris Ware project Pantheon Books October 13 2011 Retrieved January 26 2012 Chris Ware Building Stories revealed Press release Pantheon Books May 21 2012 Retrieved June 2 2012 Building Stories Press release Random House May 2012 Retrieved June 2 2012 Wondrich David January 21 2001 Ragtime No Longer A Novelty In Sepia The New York Times Retrieved April 29 2010 Melton Larry October 27 2019 Graphic novelist Chris Ware discusses the leitmotif of Ragtime in his life and work The Syncopated Times Retrieved October 30 2019 Album Artwork Acme Novelty Library Archive Retrieved November 26 2012 Haruki Murakami at Random House Random House Retrieved 13 July 2012 a b Ball p xvii Ball p 13 Ball p 118 a b c Thompson David 2001 Chris Ware s new mural tells the story of the human race Eye Magazine Retrieved 27 May 2011 Our Facade 826 Valencia Archived from the original on 27 July 2011 Retrieved 27 May 2011 ComicsBeat com Archived April 28 2010 at the Wayback Machine a b C2E2 2010 The Pantheon panel featuring Chris Ware and Dash Shaw Fortune Magazine Rejects Satirical Chris Ware Cover Archived from the original on 2010 04 26 Retrieved 2010 04 26 Vulture Premieres the Poster for Cannes Hit Uncle Boonmee Designed by Chris Ware Vulture New York 2011 02 08 Retrieved 26 May 2011 Glaser Sheila 2011 05 23 Ghost Stories The New York Times Retrieved 26 May 2011 a b Ball p 65 Exhibitions Masters of American Comics The Jewish Museum Archived from the original on 2011 05 11 Retrieved 2010 08 10 Kimmelman Michael See You in the Funny Papers art review The New York Times October 13 2006 Graphic novel wins First Book Award The Guardian London Guardian News and Media Limited 2001 12 06 Retrieved 4 October 2010 USA Fellows 2006 Visual Arts Chris Ware Archived July 18 2011 at the Wayback Machine United States Artists Edition 2013 Jan Michalski Foundation Retrieved September 14 2013 2020 PEN Jean Stein Finalists 2020 01 17 Potet Frederic 2021 06 23 Festival de la bande dessinee d Angouleme Chris Ware un Grand Prix tres proustien Le Monde Sources Edit The Art of Melancholy The Guardian October 31 2005 Arnold Andrew The Depressing Joy of Chris Ware Time November 27 2001 David M Ball Martha B Kuhlman ed 2010 The Comics of Chris Ware Drawing Is a Way of Thinking University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 60473 443 0 Onstad Chris Visual Tribute to Chris Ware Achewood January 11 2008 Peters Tim Chris Ware s ANL 20 The Point Spring 2011 Raeburn Daniel 2004 Chris Ware Monographics Series Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10291 8 Raeburn Daniel 1999 07 04 The Smartest Cartoonist on Earth PDF The Imp Schjeldahl Peter Words and Pictures Graphic novels come of age The New Yorker October 17 2005 Wolk Douglas The inimitable Chris Ware Salon com September 2 2005 Wondrich David Ragtime No Longer a Novelty in Sepia The New York Times January 21 2001 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chris Ware Acme Novelty Archive Unofficial database of the works of Ware Stripped Books A Comics Panel comics form adaptation of a panel featuring Chris Ware Seth and moderator Ivan Brunetti Interview and evaluation of Ware by designer Chip Kidd Chris Ware s mural for 826 Valencia s facade The Last Saturday A comic novella posted in weekly instalments on the website of UK newspaper The Guardian Jeet Heer Fall 2014 Chris Ware The Art of Comics No 2 The Paris Review Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chris Ware amp oldid 1142018619, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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