The Artist_s Magazine 2016-03__

(avery) #1

50 http://www.artistsmagazine.com


comic-book baby—Superman. An alien crash-


landed on earth, integrated into society


but still at the fringes, Superman has been


revisted time and again as a hero’s story in


which we can all i nd our own redemption.


h is is a superhero both Yang and Lemire


have touched during their careers. “Writing


Superman has been incredibly gratifying


and incredibly intimidating,” says Yang.


“Superman is one of the few characters popular


and powerful enough to have established his


own genre. Every superhero is patterned in


some way after Superman.”


“It can be fun to work in a bigger, shared


universe after spending so much time doing


more personal projects,” says Lemire of his roles


with DC and Marvel superhero comics. “I don’t


change my art style at all to draw characters


like Batman or Superman. h ese characters are


so recognizable that they can survive various


interpretations. I think seeing these characters


i ltered through dif erent artists’ styles is part


of the fun—I want my Batman to look like my


Batman.” Yang adds, “Superman’s legacy is rich


and varied. We think of him in this one way—


as everyone’s favorite uncle—but really, he’s


gone through multiple eras.”


He’s also


performed on


multiple stages,


including i lm, a


medium not unlike


graphic novels. “I


think I approach


comic storytelling


with a more


cinematic style,”


says Lemire. “I


was as inspired by


cinematographers


and i lm directors as I was cartoonists.


h e more I drew comics though, the more


I started to embrace the unique things that


page layouts and comic book storytelling


can do that i lm can’t.” Padua provides an


example. “When I started drawing comics,”


she says, “I’d draw a ton of panels, getting


a character from point A to point B in a


logical way, much like a i lm’s storyboard.


With comics, I realized that you just need a


panel at point A and a panel at Point B, and


the reader i lls in the rest.” Let’s rejoice in


that; the i lling-in part is not only where we


readers discover a novel’s secrets and intrigue,


ABOVE:Lemire’s 2016

release,Roughneck,

demonstrates his

careful use of color.

RIGHT:Ayoung

Chinese girl in Gene

Luen Yang’sBoxers

&Saintsencounters

astoryfromanother

culture—the story of

Joan of Arc.

Jeff Lemire recom-

mends Sumi ink

for its deep color

and because it’s

waterproof. He’ll

often use water-

color on top of the

ink, as he does

in Roughneck

(above). “The

blue evokes the

stark cold of the

novel’s Northern

setting and the

red represents

violence and inner

turmoil,” says

Lemire.

©171 Studios, Inc.
Free download pdf