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Workburger – custom made product with a flawless defect

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The Workburger International Comics Anthology features some of the finest masterworks of world-renowned artisans and craftsmen/craftswomen of the comics medium. This skillfully woven patchwork of diverse comic strip narratives, revolving around the topic of contemporary work, has been manually assembled from many serious and witty as well as provocative and investigative artistic takes on the topic.
Contributing artists, drawing from both theory and personal experience, have tackled this elusive term, bridled its creative momentum and harnessed its vast, explosive potential: one of work’s most useful and at the same time dangerous characteristics. The book, lucidly detecting and generously displaying the various permutations in the meaning of the term itself, is thusly a document of its own time while still remaining a future classic by dint of covering one of the most universal human issues from time immemorial.

“No workarounds! Only comics that really work!”
-Simon, a guy in a suit

“Someone must’ve been working out…”
-Tina, the hot yoga teacher from across the street

“I knew that there was more to life than just working the turk! A real eye-opener!”
-Peter, trust-fund baby & master procrastinator

“All work and no play makes you a bad artist.”
-Unknown, art school toilet stall

Stripburger Enterprises proudly present some 50 working class heroes, who dedicate their thoughts, views, comics, blood, sweat and tears to the concept of work.
Members of our international ad-hoc union of comics artists are: Max Andersson (Sweden, Germany), Arkadi (Germany), Kaja Avberšek (Slovenia), Malin Biller (Sweden), Bruno Borges (Portugal), Paul Ashley Brown (UK), Teresa Camara Pestana (Portugal), Anna Ehrlemark (Sweden), Mattias Elftorp (Sweden), Domen Finžgar (Slovenia), Matti Hagelberg (Finland), Jyrki Heikkinen (Finland), Eva Hilhorst (Germany), Hurk (UK), Jeroen Janssen (Belgium), Kapreles (Belgium), Matej Kocjan – Koco (Slovenia), Tanja Komadina (Slovenia), Janek Koza (Poland), Peter Kuper (USA), Olaf Ladousse (France, Spain), Capucine Latrasse (France), Matej Lavrenčič (Slovenia), Vincent Lefèbvre (France), Paul O’Connell & Lawrence Elwick (UK), Akinori Oishi (Japan), Emelie Östergren (Sweden), Alex Potts (UK), Tomáš Přidal (Czech Republic), Léo Quievreux (France), Martin Romero (Spain), Marcel Ruijters (The Netherlands), Tobias Schalken (The Netherlands), Lars Sjunnesson (Sweden, Germany), Mateusz Skudnik & Szymon Holcman (Poland), Boris Stanić (Serbia), Andrej Štular (Slovenia), Kondor Tamás (Hungary), Yann Trehin (France), Katherine Verhoeven (Canada), Estêvão Vieira (Brazil), Lasse Wandschneider (Germany), Danijel Žeželj (Croatia, USA).

With an introduction by Bojan Albahari (Slovenia). Cover art by Igor Hofbauer (Croatia), inside cover art by Daniel Bueno (Brazil) and illustrations by Miguel Carneiro (Portugal).

The international anthology Workburger is accompanied by travelling exhibition Attention, work!. It started in November 2013 in a coal mining museum in Velenje, Slovenia and continued its tour through Europe (France, Czech Republic, Germany, Italy, Austria, Finland, Croatia, Belgium, Sweden, Spain…) until 2016.

Our work here is done. Now it’s your turn, dear reader!

Warning: When you finish this book, you will never again regard work in the same light as before!

224 pages, Paperback

First published December 1, 2012

7 people want to read

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Stripburger

17 books

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Marcie Lacerte.
13 reviews
October 20, 2014
This book was visually enthralling, but I felt that the exciting artistry overshadowed the, frankly, boring content (as it is so often reduced to in the graphic novel genre). I will certainly be looking to this little collection of comics for artistic inspiration, as clearly the contributors are talented and visionary, but many of the storylines were too abstract, too timidly linked to this book's theme of "work", and, at times, a bit too obvious--if that makes any sense. (Many comics harped on the pitfalls of capitalism and expounded on the fears of the Millenial generation, which wasn't as unique or inspiring as the comics were clearly intended to be.)

Perhaps this book may be more suited for someone with less of a concrete literary taste and more of an abstract, artistic sense.
Profile Image for Sugarpunksattack Mick .
187 reviews7 followers
November 30, 2023
I really love the concept of this book, but I think it was a little bit too weird and at times abstract for me.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews

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