People here apparently don’t read much even when they’ve got pictures to look at.
— Harvey Pekar (no David Letterman, nos anos 80).
People here apparently don’t read much even when they’ve got pictures to look at.
— Harvey Pekar (no David Letterman, nos anos 80).
I’ve dealt with comic book industry lawyers asking if Queen Elizabeth I’s alchemist was still alive today.
— Alan Moore (Bleeding Cool)
I really admire Apple’s design, and feel that the general idea and driving principle behind it almost since their inception is to make information tactile. They’re finally getting to this point now where one can manipulate information with the hands and the body. As designers, they’re also so sensitive in ways that I don’t think any other computer makers understand, as their chief designer knows it has to do with very measured, combined subtleties of tactility and weight and gesture and materials. In a way, they’re almost a nineteenth century company, more sensitive to the world of nature than to technology, or at least respectful of it. I can certainly see reading comics electronically, with the possibilities for inter-penetrability of story and image, but I think comics will have to develop into something completely different before that happens.
— Chris Ware (NYC Graphic)
I do believe that cartooning, a very memory-based art, has something fundamental to do with a constant sort of revision of ourselves and our lives, the same sort of resorting and refiling that goes on when we’re dreaming.
— Chris Ware (NYC Graphic)