Chris Ware
Chris Ware’s compositions in his comics and graphic novels
enable him to express his major themes of Time & Memory.
The composition of comics can be explained as ‘Raccord’ this
is the ‘continuity in the textual/spatial surface of the page’ 1 The layout of the comic with its format
and composition relates directly to how it is read and understood, features
such as arrows text and other icons enable continuity and linkage of the story
told on the page.
Chris Ware’s stories have a linear narrative but his comics
have unusual layouts and complex patterns which change the way the otherwise
straight-forward narrative is understood. Ware enables understanding by using colour to
join together themes, objects and people, he also uses similar motifs in various
places to make connections for the reader. He evokes memories and produces
feelings by making the reader choose their own interpretation of the story in a
way that makes sense to them and thus he sympathetically harmonises with his
reader’s past experiences.
He uses diagrammatic compositions to communicate large amounts of information and give an all-encompassing view of the various story elements.
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Double page from ‘Jimmy Corrigan’(2000) Chris Ware
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In this section of ‘Jimmy Corrigan: The Smartest Kid on Earth’2 the double page spread shows the history of the Corrigan family. Diagrammatic symbols such as arrows and lines have been used to link certain features of the story similar to a flow chart. Different members of the family, generations and places of origin are represented throughout the pages. These are separated by their positioning but kept together by lines and similar imagery i.e. a man holding a letter, a woman crying or a baby. The light blue colour gives another pathway for the eye to follow linking characters’ thoughts, journeys and plans along with the repeating motif of the light blue ship. The diagram doesn’t focus on certain family members but serves as a reminder of perspective, there are many elements , the unseen past and the unknown future that influence the story but it is our perspective that provides significance to certain events and characters. This is a clear example of Ware’s application of time and memory. The concept of time is left to the readers’ interpretation and previous knowledge of history. Features of buildings and the use of greyscale show time changes but every life is shown simultaneously communicating how intrinsically they are all woven together.
Chris Ware’s work tries to emulate time flow in real life
unlike mediums such as film which, according to philosopher Henri Bergson, is
limited as it is, in a basic sense, a succession of fixed frames.
‘Condemned to itemize time image by image, instead of
grasping it as a whole’ 3
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Film poster for ‘Tokyo Story’(2008) Chris Ware
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This is shown in Chris Ware’s film poster for ‘Tokyo Story’ by Yasujiro
Ozu. He shows three scenes where time has passed between to represent the
entire film. This reflects how important events and occasions stand out in our
memories. The image forces the reader to compare past and present4 he exaggerates the
wife’s absence in the last panel by keeping the rest of the image almost the
same, time might not have passed at all apart from the wife is now missing.
This gives greater meaning to the middle panel as the viewer is left
questioning what has happened between the two normal seeming homely images.
This reflects the human thought pattern the thinking back and remembering which
helps readers connect sympathetically with the two characters visible.
References
1.
Ernesto Priego
2.
Chris Ware
3.
Henri Bergson
4.
Roberto Bartual
Bibliography
Bartual, Roberto. (2012). TOWARDS
A PANOPTICAL REPRESENTATION OF TIME AND MEMORY: CHRIS WARE, MARCEL PROUST AND
HENRI BERGSON’S “PURE DURATION”. SCANDINAVIAN
JOURNAL OF COMIC ART (SJOCA). 1 (1), 51-54.
Bergson,Henri. 1959.La pensée et
lemouvant.Paris:PressesUniversitairesdeFrance.
Priego,Ernesto. (2012). Shade: Raccord as Media-Specific
Reverb.Available: http://blog.comicsgrid.com/2012/02/shade-raccord/. Last
accessed 05th Oct 2014.
Ware,Chris (2000). Jimmy Corrigan, The Smartest Kid on
Earth. New York: Pantheon Books.


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