Superb- this really moves comics to a new level. Evens is one of those creators who come along once in a while to show how limitless is the expressive potential of comics. On one level Making Of is a gentle and often very funny satire on a circle of untalented provincial artists, and their neuroses. But there are much deeper and more satisfying things going on. For one there is the way that Evens quotes high art as an ironic counterpoint - so there are sudden lapses into pointilism and cubism. The cover has a flower strewn ground that is directly quoted from the 15th century Flemish Unicorn Tapestries (at the New York Met)- as is a later page of an electrical horse walker. In the middle of the cover the 'artists' are building the frame for their ludicrous giant papier mache gnome. The scaffolding is, I suspect, another reference - this time to 'Belvedere', an optical illusion by the Dutch graphic artist Escher. If this all sounds odd, well, it is, but it works.
And then there are the transitions of view, angle and style. Objects, people and walls can be opaque, transparent or nothing more than outlines. A building becomes a cut away, revealing layers of activity. The point of view suddenly disappears into the bushes to reveal a world of insects. As characters drive through a suburb it becomes a birds eye map. These constantly changing view points seem to be inspired by the sense of the freedom you find in good story book art for young children - maybe the wilder work of Richard Scarry.
The transitions can be metaphorical- in one noteworthy example we move, in successive panels from an overview of the box of a plasterboard walled art installation, to the box of a fish tank, then the box of a room (with the fish tank in the corner)in which people are watching television, then to the box of caged birds (which are the subject of the television programme) and then back up again to an aerial view over the tv studio which, we can see, if made of multiple interlocking boxes...
It is stunning stuff- and Evens moves with such unpretentious and self confident ease through this material that you need to take a step back to see how damned clever it is...except when you remember how hard he has worked for that ease because, working in watercolour, he has had to know exactly what he is doing every time he puts brush to paper.
What can I say- superb!