• Contact
  • Bio
  • Mr. Fister
  • EroTech
  • Other Comix
  • Illustration
  • Paintings
  • Projects
  • Shop
  • Menu

Geoffrey Michael Krawczyk

  • Contact
  • Bio
  • Mr. Fister
  • EroTech
  • Other Comix
  • Illustration
  • Paintings
  • Projects
  • Shop
 

© 2025 Geoffrey Krawczyk

Resurrection Story with Patrons
2017

Art For Cartooning #3: Kara Walker

December 27, 2021 in Art For Cartooning

The third in a series on contemporary artists who may be of interest to cartoonists and comics makers.

Storytelling is an integral part of contemporary artmaking. Very often, its employed in such a way that allows the viewer to create their own interpretations of the work. Their viewership becomes a part of the story the artist is trying to tell. Perhaps no other artist working today employs this strategy of collaborative storytelling better than Kara Walker (b. 1969). Her work employs the use of narrative in such a way so as to subvert our ideas of the American experience. She uses tropes and symbols that are familiar but are used to explore the most uncomfortable aspects of history.

You Do Kara Walker, 1993-94

Walker first came to prominence in the mid-nineties with her graphic, wall-sized tableaus created from cut black paper. They feature imagery and figures of the antebellum American south in a medium wholly consistent with the era: the silhouette. At first glance, the scenes seem mundane but upon further inspection reveal horrific violence and exaggerated stereotypes that create an fantastical and nightmarish storybook. Walker uses the ontology of racist imagery to redefine the history of the South and the effects of slavery.

Walker’s attention to detail in these works allows for a surprising amount of readability and narrative from what could be thought of as a restrictive medium. She plays with scale and perspective by flattening the picture plane into a reductive black and white. When seen across an entire wall or gallery space, the effect is at once mesmerizing and unsettling and allude to the 360-degree historical cycloramas popular during the post-Civil War era for the depiction of battle scenes..

In these narratives, Walker portrays the white figures in an overtly “normal” way, with careful attention to the fashions and styles of the day. The black figures, by contrast are pictured in heavily racist caricature and often with animalistic mutations. In this way, she is able to fully differentiate between the heroes and villains in her alternative histories. By focusing on intricate details within the cut paper, she is able to draw the viewer in to examine the atrocities up close.

The Jubilant Martyrs of Obsolescence and Ruin (detail), 2015

“It feels like a game, this work I do. It is totally heartfelt, and I love the sticky terrain, the straight-up cartoons, how the irrepressible and icky rise to the surface. But I am not just trying to call forth bugaboos and demons for the sake of it, for fun.”
— Kara Walker

8 Possible Beginnings or: The Creation of African-America, a Moving Picture by Kara E. Walker, 2005

In the early 200s, Walker began turning her cut silhouettes into shadow puppets in animations and films. It’s a natural extension of her work, allowing for a broader range of expression and further avenues of anachronistic play. The films take on a magical realist cast, even as they wallow in the grotesquerie of the subject matter. Often, her shadow puppets are projects along with bright, garish color film gels, providing a technicolor jolt to the start black and white. As her methods have expanded, so too have her subjects, with references ranging from the genocide in Sudan to the OKC bombing.

A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby: an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant, 2014

Perhaps her best known work was also her most monumental. A Subtlety… was created in the soon-to-be-demolished Domino Sugar Factory on Brooklyn’s waterfront in 2014. The massive sphinx brings Walker’s use of racist caricature into 3 dimensions, overwhelming and overpowering the viewer. The obvious allusions to the use of harsh chattel slavery in the sugar trade are combined with the awesome spectacle of public sculpture, re-contextualizing the trope into one of mystery and power.

Also occupying the space are multiple sculptures of “blackamoors” made of cast resin or cast sugar, who introduced further dichotomies of light and dark, raw and cooked. For the duration of the exhibition, the sculpture all slowly melted and deteriorated, offering a sickly sweet coda to the inevitable destruction of the factory.

Kara Walker continues to expand her practice, both as an artist and as a storyteller. The way she combines the humorous with the horrific can offer many lessons as to effective narrative strategies, especially when dealing with difficult or controversial subject matter. Walker’s ability to navigate these waters in such an elegant and powerful way is proof positive that she is certainly one of America’s greatest living artists.

A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby: an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant, 2014

If you dug the content, feel free to let me know by commenting or sharing. You can also support me with a tip or buying some of my work (check out the links in the menu) and thanks for reading!

William Kentridge, from A Poem That Is Not Our Own

Art For Cartooning #2: William Kentridge

December 07, 2021 in Art For Cartooning

The second in a series on contemporary artists who may be of interest to cartoonists and comics makers.

In this installment, I’ll explore the diverse work of William Kentridge (b. 1955), a South African artist who works in animation, drawing, film and performance. In recent years, he has also created large-scale installation work as well as designs for opera and theatre.

(Untitled) Drawing for “Other Faces”, 2011

William grew up under apartheid and his parents were lawyers working to defend victims of the oppressive system. As such, his early work dealt heavily with themes related to South African apartheid and its effects on society. His dense, bold charcoal lines and focus on socio-political topics brings to mind the work of Käthe Kollwitz and the Mexican revolutionary printmakers.

His work developed through the 80s and by the early 90s, he was creating animated films. These works employ a unique technique in which a single charcoal drawing is repeatedly erased and redrawn to create the successive frames of animation. The film becomes a record of the sequential drawing process, even as the drawing surface itself becomes scarred with the artist’s mark-making and rough charcoal implements.

These films often focus on two characters, Soho Eckstein and Felix Teitlebaum, portraying them as part of an ongoing and fragmented narrative set in a dystopian and bureaucratic landscape.

From “Five Themes”, MoMA Retrospective, 2010

In other works, Kentridge employs sequential art to make connections and juxtapositions of imagery to further explore his political and social subjects. Objects and figures interact and transform, often on top of found surfaces and literature that deal with the history and culture of South Africa, both before and after Democracy.

His work is also laced with a dose of theatricality and surrealism, in which time and memory fade and intertwine. It lends his work an unsettling, dreamlike quality which offers many lessons on mood and atmosphere.

Drawings for “Tango for Page Turning”, 2013 (detail)

These works in particular draw the line directly through sequential narrative, with drawings situated on pages of literature that advance and interact with the printed text as you turn pages. Here we find a ready connection with the comics medium, though employed in a more abstracted way. These works feel archaic and nostalgic, recalling the objective depiction of motion from Edward Muybridge’s photo experiments. It centers Kentridge firmly in the realm of sequential art, with a tangible focus on the interactivity of the reader, not just creating animated frames.

Drawing from Stereoscope, 1998-99

If you dug the content, feel free to let me know by commenting or sharing. You can also support me with a tip or buying some of my work (check out the links in the menu) and thanks for reading!

Wangechi Mutu, The Seated I, II, III, and IV, 2019

Art For Cartooning #1: Wangechi Mutu

November 23, 2021 in Art For Cartooning

The first in a series on contemporary artists who may be of interest to cartoonists and comics makers.

Today I’ll explore the work of the brilliant Wangechi Mutu (b. 1972). She’s a Kenyan-born artist who currently lives and works in New York City. She has been exhibited extensively and has work in major museums and collections around the world.

One Hundred Lavish Months of Bushwhack, 2004

Wangechi Mutu’s collages, sculptures, installations, and performances deal with the themes of femininity and blackness and are firmly rooted in the tradition of Afro-futurism. Hers is a fiercely defiant world, in which the women display their bodies and spirit with provocative daring. Their sinuous limbs and attire recodify the trappings of mainstream beauty ideals. There is also a subtle violence just under the surface, which makes the viewer slightly unnerved even as they are taken in by the grace and fragility of the line.

Her collages and drawings bring to mind fairy tales and a surreal Magical Realism. The figures she constructs have a grotesque beauty that swirl and dance with a wonderful sense of movement. Cultural and societal trauma twists and contorts these bodies and imbues them with the weight of history. Similarly, the color palette is one of juxtapositions: earthy brown and oranges clash with explosions of blood red and acid yellow, struck through with garish gold and silver. These collages are often created on Mylar, which allows the ink to pool to create the luminous blobs.

“I try to stretch my own ideas about appropriate ways to depict women. Criticism, curiosity and voyeurism lead me along, as I look at things I find hard to view – things that are sometimes distasteful or unethical.”
— Wangechi Mutu

All Rosey, 2003

In recent years, Mutu’s interests have expanded to sculptures and installations, broadening her works ambition and scope. In 2020, she was commissioned by The Met in NYC and created four bronze sculptures for the façade of the building (these are seen in the header image above). The use of traditional African jewelry and adornment mixed with the bold graphic and stylistic garments bring to mind the psychedelic landscapes of Moebius and one could easily see these imposing and stoic figures on guard in one of his crystalline deserts. Some of her other recent large-scale sculpture work uses surface patterns that draw from totemic and ritualistic sculpture of ancient cultures and bring to mind the slick bio-organisms of H.R. Giger and nightmarish visions of Polish illustrator Zdzisław Beksiński.

Crocodylus, 2020

She’s Egungun Again, 2005

One of the most striking lessons cartoonists can take from Mutu’s work is an experimentation with materials. Her collaged elements blend with her watercolor and ink to create a cohesion of form. Additionally, she outfits her women with mind-dazzling costumes and clothing which gives them character and personality. Her use of mark-making allows for a broad range of textures in her work. It’s a master class in costume and character design as well as world-building and attention to detail.

In some ways, Mutu’s works can also be seen through the lens of superhero narratives. Gargantuan female furies, transformed into mystical, other-worldly goddesses and warriors. They operate within a narrative of resilience and could either aid in the fight for truth and justice or exact revenge on their enemies. The power of her work comes from this tension between beauty and brutality. We fell the energy and power of her super beings, though their focus is beyond that simple framework. Mutu invents her own unique universe, in which feminine blackness becomes a superpower and the heroes are all at once familiar and terrifying.

Snake Eater, 2014

If you dug the content, feel free to let me know by commenting or sharing. You can also support me with a tip or buying some of my work (check out the links in the menu) and thanks for reading!

Geoffrey’s Blog

Musings on art, life, the universe, and everything.


Archive:

  • December 2021
    • Dec 27, 2021 Art For Cartooning #3: Kara Walker Dec 27, 2021
    • Dec 7, 2021 Art For Cartooning #2: William Kentridge Dec 7, 2021
  • November 2021
    • Nov 23, 2021 Art For Cartooning #1: Wangechi Mutu Nov 23, 2021