Artemis Draws

My musings on making a graphic novella
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    Started The Cafe Terrace

    by artemisdrawsblog on 16 April, 2010 at 9:19 am
    Posted In: drawing

    I have finally started my fifth story in the collection, based on Van Gogh’s “The Cafe Terrace At Night” – there are other titles, indicating that the cafe is in Arles, but I have shortened the working title to “The Cafe Terrace” to fit in with my storyline better. The plot is a departure from the others, as there aren’t any main characters but rather, it will home in on different characters who come into the cafe throughout the day. It may be difficult to pull off and I am already wondering if I can fit it all within my self-imposed limit of 10-12 pages or if it will stray to 15 or more. I have decided to work much more on the drawing this time, with an emphasis on setting and background detail. Also, I’m starting to experiment a little bit more with panel framing and will not use the standard rectangular boxes for all my frames. Like with all my previous stories, this will be a learning process for me.

    I am using the vintage Hunt 102 dip pens that I procured from eBay; they seem no less scratchy or liable to clog and blot than the newer versions, so maybe I’ve wasted my time hunting down vintage nibs. I really did like the one that I borrowed from Martin though. It flows much better with the thinner Liquitex ink, but I prefer the thickness of the Winsor and Newton black ink. Maybe I really do need to experiment with different inks. The good news is that Cass Arts in Soho now stock Speedball nibs and pens (Hunt 102 nibs!) – I bought a Drawing set the other day. At the rate I’m going, I think I am going to need new dip pen holders every few months!

    So keep posted, I will endeavour to update the story by at least a few pages every week so keep checking if you’re at all interested. As yet, I haven’t even completed the script for the story yet, am just ”winging it” as I go along.

    The Cafe Terrace at Night

    by artemisdrawsblog on 5 March, 2010 at 9:11 am
    Posted In: musing

    I think I have finally drawn a line under “The Dessert” and decided to call it a day as far as revisions and tweaking are concerned. I think I have clarified the story to the point where almost all ambiguity is removed from the ending, despite still being ”open-ended” in the sense that the reader does not get to see what the protagonist does, nor witness the consequences. It was an interesting exercise and generated far more debate than my previous stories. I’ve also learned a bit more about doing the artwork and am tempted to continue working in that vein, with a few variations here and there.

    For the font throughout “The Dessert”, I used “Crosspatcher”s Delight Normal”, another free font I downloaded from the internet. It’s quite a versatile font that I might reuse in some other stories. I used up almost half a bottle of Winsor and Newton black ink in the process of drawing the Dessert, but at least, I haven’t destroyed my sable brush yet! I also ordered a set of vintage Hunt 102 nibs from the USA, I’m looking forward to trying them out and hoping they’ll be considerably less scratchy than the new versions.

    I have two more ideas for short stories based on paintings, but am slightly more inclined to work on this one, Van Gogh’s very famous “Cafe Terrace in Arles, at Night”. I’ve gone from picking fairly obscure paintings to yet another instantly recognisable work, like Hopper’s “Nighthawks”… in a sense, it is cliched, but there are so many possible stories that can propagate from a single scene and they don’t have to be at all conventional nor predictable.

    Cafe Terrace at Night - Vincent van Gogh

    I am still in the early mulling/thinking stages for this story, but hopefully it won’t be a very long one and should be confined to between 10-15 pages as most of my other stories, and the focus of the story will be the cafe itself instead of any one individual and I will leave it to the reader to piece the ideas together. Perhaps I should spend more mornings at my favourite Kensington cafe working this story over, it will be another somewhat complex one to pull off and may not have immediate appeal for everyone. Still, it will be an interesting challenge!

    My thoughts on The Dessert

    by artemisdrawsblog on 26 February, 2010 at 9:04 am
    Posted In: musing
      Disclaimer:

    There are spoilers to The Dessert in here so only read it once you have read the story itself or else it will definitely ruin it for you. It has been a difficult story to craft, and I suppose a ”vignette” would be a better word to describe it. I did want a significant departure from my other stories, which all carried a twist in the plot right at the very end (or near the end). This was my first attempt at something a little different, an ending that I have seen most often in cinemas, short movies and such, a fleeting glimpse into a character’s life and then the camera pans away, often before the decisive moment occurs.

    Such stories do not have universal appeal, moreover, I do not know if I have accomplished it with the graphic medium… perhaps it was always too ambitious for me right now and the storyline may have been too subtle. The stark lighting in the artwork may have also pushed readers towards expecting a similarly stark and well-outlined denouement to the story, thus my ambiguous ending may have been disappointingly anti-climactic. I did attempt the use of symbolism – the most obvious is that of the bird which signifies Virginia”s desire for freedom from her trapped state. In a sense, she feels like a caged bird, but she doesn”t really have anything to hold her – initially we feel she is bored in the marriage, that she and her husband had high expectations, but then the angst builds up and her husband is a secret homosexual. Her relationship with the bohemian free spirit, Molly, is also ambiguous; are there Sapphic undertones to their friendship, what does Molly mean when she wants to lure Virginia away from her marriage? She implies they will be ”together” but the context is unclear. Virginia vacillates about leaving, she tells Molly she wants to leave and that the suitcases are packed with the bare essentials, but at the end of her internal monologue, she is still torn about leaving, it is always “easier” to think about leaving than actually doing it. She is trapped by her own intertia, and a certain middle-class mindset. One already gets the feeling that Virginia doesn’t share Molly’s bohemian sensibilities altogether, and would really prefer a happily-ever-after marriage. However, this was not to be – and at the end of a typical day (for Virginia), the husband Paul returns home and they have dinner, where his indifferent behaviour continues throughout the dessert (it is unclear that they are having dessert though, just that they have finished dining…). Then Charles turns up, whom Virginia suspects of leading her husband astray. But Virginia”s internal monologue ends here, as she sits upstairs alone, feeling angrier by the minute… and she goes downstairs to spy on her husband and Charles. At this point, she discovers they are having a homosexual liason, and is horrified by her discovery. But perhaps it explains Paul”s indifference? Anyway, she stands in the dark, contemplative, smoking, and then suddenly hurls herself down the stairs with an almost beatific expression on her face – this has led several people to enquire whether the stairs incident was metaphorical or ”real”. I had not intended a metaphor here, but it was interesting that some people felt it might have been. Paul hears the crash from upstairs but is curiously detached as to its cause, and continues reading his book. In a way, it exemplifies his obliviousness to Virginia’s feelings throughout their marriage. Virginia, for her part, still loves Paul, and still wants him to come and ”rescue” her from the bottom of the steps as if in a fairytale ending, but instead, only the dog arrives eventually. It is at this moment that she realises that all is lost, that Paul really does not love her. The implication is that she might have forgiven Paul his infidelity if he had only arrived at that moment to offer her comfort.

    As she ascends the staircase, she sees the bird again, flapping at the window – a reminder of her desire for freedom, but then the bird seems content to shelter in the window ledge for the night? However, her nerves seem to have become becalmed after all the melodrama, and she enters the room Paul is in. Paul, indifferent to all that has happened, just enquires if she is ready to travel the next evening, and she simply replies wistfully, “The bags… are packed” while a trail of cigarette smoke drifts off in the opposite direction, into the darkness, implying an uncertain future. It is at this point the story ends, but the reader is left none the wiser about what Virginia eventually decides. Was her resolve to leave the marriage eventually hardened by Paul’s indifference towards her? Or was she still trapped in the unhappy marriage, because it still offered her shelter against uncertainty (like the bird on the ledge)?

    My thoughts (and plotting) ran along these lines as I was making up the story, nothing was set in stone until I actually sketched out the panels in pencil, and then inked it all in. Although I had planned the story (more or less), I was still free to make small alterations to the plot, script and dialogue along the way, which may or may not have adversely affected the final work. I am quite happy with the stark and dramatic artwork, but as for the story, it remains to be seen how successful I was in conveying all the emotions – I’d be very interested to know other readers’ personal interpretations of the story though. So please do not hesitate to write to me or leave a comment.

    Finished The Dessert at last

    by artemisdrawsblog on 24 February, 2010 at 9:02 am
    Posted In: drawing, musing

    Well I seem to have plowed through the starter, main course and dessert at last! After Lent began, I promised myself to sketch, ink and scan one full page every day apart from weekends, and apart from one missed day which couldn’t really be helped, it provided me with the final impetus needed to complete this short story. It’s far more experimental than my previous ones, more of a “slice of life” story that is steeped in a sense of melancholy and uncertain longing; it is also far more ambiguous than any of my other works, and I want to leave the readers still asking questions after finishing the story. I’m not completely how it will be received yet. One of the biggest problems of being a writer of such a story is that after mulling the plot for too long, it all becomes so obvious to one, but the pieces may not quite fit together the same way for the reader.

    Anyway I’m off to take a break and do something completely different for a while. Maybe wait until I find more inspiration before I begin my 5th (and final, for the Painting Stories novella) short story.

    The Dessert is up

    by artemisdrawsblog on 28 January, 2010 at 8:58 am
    Posted In: drawing

    I have just finished inking the first page of The Dessert. I have decided to go with pure black and white after all. I’m still not sure how long it’ll take me to finish this story, which should be between 10-14 pages long.

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