Von Spatz Anna Haifisch In den Hügeln von Santa Monica liegt das ‚Von Spatz Rehab Center‘. Eine Nervenklinik für Künstler und Angestellte des Showgeschäfts für deren Beruhigung der Nerven eine Schar von Psychiatern, Schwestern und Pflegern zur Verfügung stehen. Die Patienten sind dazu angehalten, sich an diesem Ort uneingeschränkt ihrer Genesung und künstlerischen Arbeit zu widmen. Hierfür stellt die Klinikleitung Atelierhäuser, einen Kunstbedarf, eine Kunsthalle und vieles mehr zur Verfügung. Die Klinikleiterin Margarete von Spatz kümmert sich liebevoll um ihre Pfleglinge, zu denen auch Walt Disney zählt, der sich im Laufe seines Aufenthalts mehr oder weniger vergeblich an verschiedenen Kunstwerken versucht. Während der zahlreichen Nachmittagsaktivitäten wie z.B. Maltherapie, Pinguindienst und Kneten sinniert Walt über sein Leben als Künstler. Wie konnte der Vater einer Maus seinen Verstand verlieren?
A strange comic about a fictional retreat or sanitarium where Walt Disney goes to stay, assuming a nervous breakdown. It's a pretty elite place where artists get personal studios, and penguins. Two other great artists, Tomi Ungerer and Saul Steinberg, are also there with Walt. Is the story about the art that pushes the artist to the brink? The art that comes with insecurity and anxiety and mood swings for most artists? Von Spatz (also the name of the rehab place) is a kind of wry love and sympathy letter from one emerging artist to her chosen profession.
An interesting text. That's not the most profound assessment, but Von Spatz is something that I'll have to reread -- or re-reread -- in order to appreciate it further. The marketing material with the book describes this as absurdist, and perhaps it is. Maybe that's an appropriate way to frame my appreciation. I like this book, but I'm not entirely sure why I like it as I do. I'll have to fish out more of Haifisch's works. We'll be discussing this on an upcoming episode of The Comics Alternative, and I'm betting a conversation on this text will enhance my appreciation.
Walt Disney, Tomi Ungerer i Saul Steinberg z objawami depresji i wypalenia zawodowego spotykają się w ekskluzywnym centrum rehabilitacji "Von Spatz". Brzmi wystarczająco abstrakcyjnie? To dobrze, bo całość to właśnie trochę śmieszna, trochę smutna, ale przede wszystkim absurdalna relacja z próby chwilowego ustabilizowania życia płodnych artystów. Po części jest to list miłosny i hołd Anny Haifisch oddany jej idolom, po części granie znanymi postaciami, by wykreować ulotną słodko-gorzką rzeczywistość, którą momentami naprawdę trudno dookreślić. Nie każda historia ma tu pointę, nie każdą da się literalnie "zrozumieć", często czytelnik musi odczytywać te miniaturki bardziej intuicyjnie niż "na logikę", ale jest coś cholernie intrygującego w tym maleństwie. Być może to efekt operowania ograniczoną paletą kolorów, która wynika z fascynacji autorki techniką sitodruku i zestawianie barw pozornie "gryzących się"? Może to te enigmatyczne postacie noszące w sobie mnóstwo zagadek i smutku? Nie wiem, ale jakaś forma snobizmu każde mi napisać, że to rzecz dla specyficznego odbiorcy, szukającego w komiksie czegoś absolutnie unikatowego, co trzeba sobie z treści i formy po kilkukrotnej lekturze dosłownie wygrzebać. Jestem zauroczony
Artist and their art. Starring Walt Disney--and other cute creations. Some episodes take a while to develop, while others are 1 page fables/anecdotes. Choosing the medium of cartoons to depict these will/would be masters was smart from as an idea--and the artist just went with it!
A very strange but enjoyable comic about a fictional rehab center which takes in famous artists, including Walt Disney, who have suffered mental breakdowns. Artists are given therapy and Prozac, but also personal studios, art supplies and pet penguins.
Zanimiv umetniški strip, ki pa me je pritegnil bolj s samosvojo avtorsko ilustracijo in povsem neznačilno barvitostjo kot zgodbami, ki zelo variirajo - od pretencioznih ezoteričnih splošnih mest do liričnih miniaturnih mojstrovin.
What if Walt Disney had a breakdown and was sent to a rehabilitation centre? Haifish proposes an answer to that question in this interesting, well drawn book.
Puzzling scenes from the artist's retreat / psychiatric home, as a conversation between Walt Disney, Tomi Ungerer, and Saul Steinberg. Maybe I don't know my relevant art history as well as I should, but I actually have no idea why these three in particular were embodied in the story, as they seem more or less like arbitrary avatars of the artists grappling with creation. Nice low-key but well-composed art and color though.
The life and process of the artist as both carefree leisure and dysfunction in need of treatment. Haifisch's settings are perfectly playful and ever so slightly soulless. There are single page gags, slow wandering vignettes and almost an overarching narrative. It's not as beautiful and poetic as Drifter (her masterpiece) but it holds us better as a book than The Artist.
- Very weird, hard to follow, much nonsense (debatable minuses), why does this book exist? Some lame humour, 'inside' jokes
+ Artsy, creative, imaginative, kind of interesting, explores depression/burnout/mental health, features the 'Wolf, Goat and Cabbage Problem' in a rather droll way, 'inside' jokes
*From reading others' reviews, I feel I may not be 'visual artist' enough to truly appreciate this. It is perhaps more of an artists' art piece than a lay-reader's, but I did get some enjoyment and thoughtfulness from the work.
Walt Disney, Saul Steinberg and Tomi Ungerer walk into a rehab center... No, it's not the setup for an obscure joke aimed directly at, um, me. It's the premise of Anna Haifisch's brief, fragmented graphic novel, which explores the vagaries of the creative life through a distinctly surreal lens. There are some wonderful passages here, some stuff that I'm still chewing on and some stuff that flat-out doesn't make sense to me - all of which leads me to want to check it out again sometime soon.
Vseeno pa dajem stripu nižjo oceno, ker se nekako ne strinjam z novo reklamo za psihiatrijo. Stripu uspe prikazati, da ljudem v stiski uspešno pomaga psihiatrična pomoč. Menim pa, da je pri tem preveč posploševanja, denimo psihiatrična pomoč se predstavi kot najbolj super stvar na svetu, brez nekega kritičnega uvida v tovrstno pomoč. Ravno tako se zdi, da bi se opisane stiske dalo 'pozdraviti' tudi brez uporabe farmacije.
This was a pretty pointless graphic novel, I think I just may have missed the point. Walt Disney goes to a rehab facility where he meets other artists. The plot was incoherent, the art style was very strange and it was kind of too short. No thanks!
Der relativ minimalistische, ulkige, bunte Zeichenstil hat mein Interesse geweckt. Aber ich hab's einfach nicht gecheckt. Was ist hier die Geschichte?? Muss man irgendein Hintergrundwissen haben, um was zu verstehen? Ohne war es absolut langweilig und zusammenhangslos.
I really like Anna Haifisch's art. But I didn't really get the narrative here. If I hadn't read the introduction, I'm not sure I would have gotten it. And even having read the introduction, I still didn't get it. But I liked it.
Fouš sem ljudem ki takole sproščeno rišejo, no vsaj izgleda neobremenjena risba. Zgodba pa je tudi zelo... lebdeča, ne vem če sem čisto vse zastopil, ma se da prebrat. Mi je pa zelo všeč haiku 2 - Slab umetnik sem. Celo mojim risbam gre na jok. Krasno!
Although i enjoy the idea of this book (Walt Disney goes through an artistic melt-down and has to visit a therapy rehab clinic) it's actual contents fail to impress.