ReportWire

Tag: illustrations

  • Graphic Novel Review: Angelica And The Bear Prince By Trung Le Nguyen

    [ad_1]

    One of our favorite things we’ve done this year was getting back into graphic novels! As longtime lovers of manga, webtoons, and digital comics, we a THP are so glad to be able to get our hands on the occasional graphic novel in print!

    Trung Le Nguyen has just released his sophomore graphic novel, Angelica and the Bear Prince. And to say we loved it would be an understatement. It has the perfect balance of cozy vibes with very real and relatable issues.

    If you needed any more convincing, we’ll give you all the deets. Here are three of our favorite things about Angelica and the Bear Prince by Trung Le Nguyen!

    Angelica and the Bear Prince by Trung Le Nguyen
    Image Source: Penguin Random House

    Book Overview: Angelica And The Bear Prince

    Content warnings: mentions of a loved one’s death, grief

    Summary: Angelica was the girl who could do it all—until suddenly, she couldn’t. Burnout hit hard. Now, after some very low moments, she’s ready to get her life back together, thanks to her friends, and one very surprising source of comfort. 

    A bear.

    Per is the mascot of the local theater. He’s been sending Angelica supportive messages from his social. They’ve become friends, and Angelica might even have . . . a crush?

    Determined to find the human behind the bear costume, Angelica gets an internship at the theater. She might never go back to being the girl who can do everything, but perhaps she is becoming the girl who can magically have it all.

    Cozy Art Style

    For starters, Angelica and the Bear Prince has the cutest, coziest art style. Set in a town where every day is a winter wonderland, we’re convinced it belongs in a snow globe, Our main character Angelica tries to keep busy with an internship at her local theater. Each of the panels are equal parts cute and detailed, especially when it comes to hairstyles. And the Bear Prince is one of our favorite characters!

    Coping With Grief

    Without the author’s letter at the beginning, we wouldn’t have thought Angelica and the Bear Prince would make us feel so many emotions. This graphic novel features two families who grieve the death of a loved one. Angelica lost her maternal grandma ten years ago. She misses her dearly but also sometimes feels guilty that she doesn’t think about her as much as before. Gable moves back in with their grandma, who continues to mourn her late husband. Both families focus on the people who are still here with them, working through their grief together, and relying on each other.

    Representations Of Love

    Another one of our favorite things about Angelica and the Bear Prince is the diverse representations of love. From the main couple, Angelica and Gable, to Angelica’s neighbors, Phil and Richard, several love stories are portrayed in this graphic novel. Angelica’s parents have raised our standards for dating, in the way Mr. Hoang isn’t afraid to be mushy in front of others. Romantic love aside, we also get glimpses of platonic love between Angelica and her bestie Christine. And we can’t forget about the familial love within the Hoang family, especially between mother and daughter.

    Trung Le Nguyen’s new graphic novel, Angelica and the Bear Prince, sailed past our expectations and delivered a work of art depicting love and grief we’ll cherish from here on!

    Angelica and the Bear Prince by Trung Le Nguyen comes out October 7th, and you can order a copy of it here!

    Did you enjoy Trung Le Nguyen’s Angelica and the Bear Prince as much as we did? Have you read the author’s first graphic novel, The Magic Fish? Let us know on Twitter. You can also find us on Facebook and Instagram!

    Looking for some audiobook recommendations? Here’s the latest!

    TO LEARN MORE ABOUT TRUNG LE NGUYEN:
    FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | WEBSITE

    [ad_2]

    Julie Dam

    Source link

  • The Joys of Moomscrolling

    [ad_1]


    For this week’s Fault Lines column, Jon Allsop is filling in for Jay Caspian Kang.


    If you were to drop by my apartment, you’d see a lot of Moomins. My girlfriend and I own all sorts of trinkets bearing their likeness: a selection of mugs, a teapot, a tea towel (that we framed and put on the wall), a bedside night light, a pair of light-up key rings, a necklace, a wallet, a plastic model from a vending machine in Japan, at least one Christmas-tree decoration, a poster, and a pair of fridge magnets that, in the absence of a magnetic fridge door, we’ve posed on either side of our fireplace. They look like heraldic bas-reliefs.

    What are Moomins, you might be wondering. They’re children’s characters, dreamed up decades ago by the Finnish writer and artist Tove Jansson, that are white and rotund, with pointy ears, swishy tails, and rounded snouts; they’re sometimes likened to hippos, which is fair, even if the comparison doesn’t particularly resonate with me. (To me, they just look like Moomins, a fact that is partly because I’ve been familiar with them since my early childhood, but is also a reflection of their singular visual identity; as Sheila Heti once put it in this magazine, they are “strangely familiar, as though Jansson happened to look in a new direction and find these tender and serious fellow-creatures, who had been with us all along.”) Then again, you might not be wondering what Moomins are—they have fans all over the world, and my girlfriend and I are far from alone in having stuffed our home with their merchandise, worldwide sales of which reportedly top eight hundred million dollars per year. (The Moomin mugs, each wrapped in a gorgeous illustration, are the jewels in this crown, and are highly collectible; in 2021, one sold at auction for nearly thirty thousand dollars.) Other fans include the actor Lily Collins, a.k.a. Emily of “in Paris” fame, who not only collects the merchandise but named her daughter Tove and hosted the introductory episode of an official Moomin podcast.

    On the podcast, which premièred in the spring of 2023, Collins said that, when she first started collecting Moomin paraphernalia, it was “impossible” to find in the U.S. This has changed in recent years: alongside the podcast launch, Moomin Characters (the company that manages the rights to Jansson’s creations) and Barnes & Noble announced “a significant new partnership to make Jansson’s literature widely accessible to American audiences, both in stores and online” (including, yes, a plan to sell mugs); since then, there have been collaborations with Urban Outfitters and luxury labels including Rei Kawakubo’s Comme des Garçons. This year, which marks the eightieth anniversary of the Moomins’ début, there have been further signs of a Finnish invasion, including an ongoing exhibition at the Brooklyn Public Library—the first ever dedicated to Jansson in the U.S.—which reflects Jansson’s progressive values. She was a committed pacifist and antifascist, and, early in her career, she worked as a political cartoonist, poking fun at dictators; Linda E. Johnson, the president and C.E.O. of the Brooklyn Public Library, has noted that Jansson was also openly queer, at a time when being gay was criminalized in Finland, and that the decision to highlight her work was timed to coincide with Pride Month. “It speaks to what’s going on culturally,” Johnson said, “and lets our audience know: The Brooklyn Public Library is not backing down.” The exhibition is titled “The Door Is Always Open.” (Earlier in the summer, a Moomin public art work in London, produced in partnership with an initiative celebrating refugees, bore the same moniker.)

    An executive at Moomin Characters told the New York Times recently that Jansson’s creations “are being discovered in the U.S. by new generations, spreading word from person to person.” Of course, much of this word-spreading is happening on social media. There have long been dedicated Moomin communities on Facebook and Tumblr. The Times reported that Gen Z is intensifying the trend—posting about the Moomins on TikTok, finding old animations on YouTube (that are closer to Jansson’s drawings than more modern 3-D offerings), and, in the process, ushering the Moomins into “a global pantheon of cuteness.” This cuteness is, surely, a key driver of the Moomins’ online appeal, as is the sense that the characters have an “inherent gentle wonderment”—as one writer recently put it after visiting the Brooklyn exhibition—that offers an escape from the many anxieties of modern life. The Moomins’ association with escapism is not a new thing: Jansson once wrote that she created them when she “wanted to get away from my gloomy thoughts” and enter “an unbelievable world where everything was natural and benign—and possible.” When, in the nineteen-fifties, a London newspaper that commissioned a Moomin comic strip stipulated there be no politics, sex, or death, Jansson is said to have replied that she didn’t know anything about the government, that the Moomins can’t anatomically have sex, and that she once killed a hedgehog, but nothing else.

    And yet the books that Jansson wrote about the Moomins contain, sometimes explicitly and other times by way of metaphor, political themes—war, displacement, imminent annihilation, environmental catastrophe—that hardly serve as distractions from the many dangers of the world, then or now. Earlier this year, the author Frances Wilson wrote, in a New Statesman essay about the “dark side” of the Moomins, that “one of the oddest aspects of the Moomin phenomenon is how these complex tales of apocalypse, breakdown and disfunction have been consistently misread as cutesy celebrations of domestic life.”

    Time to box up the mugs, then? Not exactly. While some of the Moomins’ newer online fans might be ignorant of the angst—not to mention weirdness—of Jansson’s œuvre, I don’t see any incompatibility between her cute illustrations and the ambient existential dread that pervades their adventures. If anything, this juxtaposition makes the Moomins perfect guides through our muddled moment, online and off. Ultimately, we could all usefully spend a little less time doomscrolling, and a little more time Moomscrolling.

    Technically, it isn’t quite right to say that this year marks the eightieth anniversary of the Moomins’ début. Jansson first drew a Moomin-like creature (intending it to be ugly, not cute) when she was a child, sketching it onto an outhouse wall following an argument with her brother about the merits of Immanuel Kant; later, her uncle would caution her against raiding the cupboards for a midnight snack by warning that, if she did, the “Moomintrolls” that live behind the stove would press their cold snouts against her legs. At some point after Jansson started contributing satirical cartoons to Garm, a Finnish magazine, she began drawing a character resembling a Moomin as part of her signature. In one cover illustration, it can be seen peering out from behind the “M” of “GARM.” A caricature of Adolf Hitler is perched on the “G.”

    During the Winter War—which began when the Soviet Union invaded Finland in November, 1939, and would go on to drive hundreds of thousands of Finns from their homes—Jansson started work on what would become the first Moomin book, known today as “The Moomins and the Great Flood,” though it wouldn’t be published until 1945. War was the reality from which Jansson would later say she wanted to escape, but as Heti noted in her review of a pair of works about Jansson, the “Great Flood” is “fascinating for how un-escapist it seems.” The book begins deep in a forest, where a young character named Moomintroll and his mother are searching for “a snug, warm place where they could build a house to crawl into when winter came.” Their subsequent adventures have a dreamlike quality, with each salvation (coming across a garden of lemonade and candy, for example) quickly giving way to a fresh peril (tummyache, in the case of the candy). The gravest danger comes from the titular flood, which drives people from their homes; it would be presentist to read this as a parable for the climate crisis, but it clearly resonates as such. And the illustrations have yet to take on the vibrant, rounded aesthetic that defines the modern Moomin brand. The characters’ snouts are more pronounced. Clean lines sometimes dissolve into washes of dark ink.

    The “Great Flood” has often been considered apart from the subsequent Moomin canon: Jansson later referred to it as “a banal story without any personality”; it was translated into English only in 2005, after she died. But similar themes run through the later books. “Comet in Moominland” (1946) can be read as an allegory for the fear of nuclear apocalypse (a resonance that must have eluded me when I read the novel as a child, realizing it only years later during a trip to an exhibit at the Moomin museum in the Finnish city of Tampere). Wilson describes the sixth Moomin book, “Moominland Midwinter,” as containing “the most devastating account of depression in 20th-century literature,” and notes that, in a later comic strip, a psychiatrist puts Moomintroll on meds that shrink him out of existence. The last of Jansson’s Moomin novels, “Moominvalley in November,” sees the Moomin family go missing, and a variety of side characters reflect on their elusiveness. Wilson and others have likened it to “Waiting for Godot.”

    This is not to say that the Moomin books are depressing. Some of them have overtly happy endings: the flood leads to a new home for the Moomin family; the comet misses. And they are funny, able to find levity in impending disaster. (When one character defines the word “catastrophe,” another counters that it is, “in other words—‘fuss.’ ”) Over all, my abiding memory of the books is that they are full of life, despite the world’s complications. “It would be awful if the earth exploded,” a different character says, in “Comet.” “It’s so beautiful.” This philosophy, I think, is what keeps the Moomins in my heart (and my home). If the underlying themes can be anxiety-provoking, then the Moomins themselves are anchoring presences—whatever may happen to the world, and whether or not we can control it.

    [ad_2]

    Jon Allsop

    Source link

  • Wallifyer Fairy Garden Collection Launch on Aug. 5, 2019

    Wallifyer Fairy Garden Collection Launch on Aug. 5, 2019

    [ad_1]

    Sandra Tornroth of Wallifyer Announces the Fairy Garden Collection, an Original Selection of Hand-Drawn, Nature-Themed Clipart Files for Creative Art and Design

    Press Release



    updated: Aug 2, 2019

    Designer Sandra Tornroth of the Finland-based graphic design company Wallifyer is pleased to present her newest collection of digital art, the Fairy Garden Collection. This creatively designed selection of hand-drawn floral and woodland-themed clip art is available exclusively through the artist’s website.

    About the Collection

    The Fairy Garden Collection features the slogan “Wrap Yourself in Fairy Magic,” evoking a magical touch of whimsy and imagination. The exclusive collection of digital art includes JPEG, PNG and PAT files for instant download. The designs can be used as digital clipart, digital papers, and digital stamps for card making and scrapbooking.

    The hand-drawn art in the Fairy Garden Collection is drawn in a vintage fairytale garden style with inspiration from fall gardens, autumn leaves and enchanted forests. Themes from poetry by Edgar Allan Poe are represented in the Halloween sets. The seasonal collection features a dusty pastel color scheme, with softly muted fall colors including brown, beige, mustard yellow, dusty pink and pistachio green.

    About the Company

    Wallifyer, owned by artist Sandra Tornroth, is located in the Aland Islands, Finland, situated in the Baltic Sea between Sweden and the Finnish mainland. The woodsy greenery of the Aland Islands inspires Sandra’s original ink pen drawings of nature-themed clipart which she digitizes for scrapbooking, card making, and papercrafts.

    The Fairy Garden Collection is available exclusively at https://wallifyer.com

    Wallifyer can also be found on the following social media platforms:

    http://facebook.com/wallifyer

    http://instagram.com/wallifyer

    http://pinterest.com/wallifyershop

    Subscribers to the Wallifyer VIP email list at http://eepurl.com/goXnnb will receive a 20% discount code to use in the shop, along with sneak peeks, special sales and exclusive coupons for members only.

    For more information about the Fairy Garden Collection or to interview Wallifyer owner/artist/designer Sandra Tornroth, please email admin@wallifyer.com.

    Media high-resolution photos are available upon request.

    Source: Wallifyer

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Wallifyer Signature Collection Launch and Grand Opening on April 30, 2019

    Wallifyer Signature Collection Launch and Grand Opening on April 30, 2019

    [ad_1]

    Wallifyer, a Scandinavian Digital Art Company, Proudly Presents the Launch of their Signature Collection and the Grand Opening of their Newly Designed Retail Website for Digital Downloads of Original, Hand-Drawn Floral and Fantasy Themed Clipart for Creative Paper Crafting

    Press Release



    updated: Apr 29, 2019

    ​Designer Sandra Tornroth of Wallifyer is pleased to announce the release of her Signature Collection of hand-drawn floral and fantasy clip art at the grand opening of her newly designed retail website at https://wallifyer.com on April 30, 2019.

    Wallifyer is the digital art company owned by artist and designer Sandra Törnroth in the Aland Islands, Finland. The Aland Islands are situated in the Baltic Sea between the Finnish mainland and Sweden.

    The beautiful outdoor woodland scenes in the Aland Islands inspired Sandra, a lifelong artist, to create a series of ink pen drawings of fairytale-inspired clipart which she has digitized for crafting, card making and scrapbooking.

    After having worked as a bank clerk for many years, Sandra made a bold decision to pursue her dream to become an art historian and artist. Already married and with two sons, Sandra went back to the university to earn her second degree, a Masters in Art in 2017. She now freelances as an illustrator, art historian and fine artist.

    Inspired by woodsy nature scenes and enchanting fairytale creatures, Sandra draws her signature doodle illustrations with ink pens on paper. She then digitizes her original ink pen drawings to sell as digital download files for creative use by crafters and designers. Her art style is whimsical with a shabby chic twist.

    As a Scandinavian artist, Sandra gives her drawings a minimalist vibe as well, often featuring geometric patterns and swirly lines. Her favorite subjects to draw are fairytale woodland animals, floral wreaths and whimsical creatures.

    Speaking of her personal connection to the art of pen and ink, Sandra states, “For me, drawing is meditative and makes me calm and lets me escape into a magical whimsy world.” She seeks to share her art online to allow her customers to feel the same joy in using her whimsical clipart drawings in their own creative paper crafts.

    As a way to enhance the crafting experience for other creative artists and designers, Sandra’s brand ideal is all about mindfulness and creativity. Her personal desire is to bring the enchanting magic of digital art with a whimsical fairytale touch into her fellow crafters’ lives.

    The Signature Collection features the phrase, “Step into Your Enchanted Garden” and includes JPEG, PNG and PAT files to download as digital supplies for card making and scrapbooking. The art style is whimsical/doodle, and the color scheme for the collection is pastel pinks, blues and greens, along with black and white ink pen drawings.

    Wallifyer – For Creative Hands and Hearts proudly launches its brand new retail website which launches at https://wallifyer.com on April 30, 2019.

    Social media:

    http://facebook.com/wallifyer

    http://instagram.com/wallifyer

    http://pinterest.se/wallifyershop

    For more information about the Signature Collection or to interview artist/designer Sandra Törnroth, owner of Wallifyer, please email admin@wallifyer.com.

    Media high-resolution photos are available upon request.

    Subscribers to the VIP email list at http://eepurl.com/goXnnb will receive a 20 percent discount code to redeem in the Wallifyer online shop at https://wallifyer.com.

    Source: Wallifyer

    [ad_2]

    Source link