
Tag: Art
Santa Claus and the Christmas Tree — A 1907 Illustrated Cut-out
Christmas in the Brothel — Edvard Munch

“A Christmas Thought” — Barry Hannah


Reflections — John William Godward

I’m Dreaming of a Black Christmas — Richard Hamilton

Merry Christmas from Winsor McCay

Reading in the Forest — Eva Gonzales

Mourning — Umberto Boccioni

Noel — Salvador Dali

Reading a Story — James Tissot

Sorrow — Vincent van Gogh

The Bride’s Last Encounter with Her Lovers — Kristine Moran
Reading Chris Ware’s Building Stories / It All Happened So Fast

As seems to be the case more often than not in this series of write-ups on reading Chris Ware’s Building Stories, I’ve taken the title from the first line of the first panel (below); you can see the scale of this chapter in folded broadside in the pic above (which also reveals the heart of this episode).

This particular episode focuses again on Lonely Girl/Married Mom/The Amputee, who has slowly emerged as the protagonist of Ware’s novel. Here, she deals with the news of her father’s illness, an event that brings her back to her childhood home repeatedly. The motif of homes and buildings evinces again too, of course—it’s a subtle but omnipresent device in Building Stories:


And as always, Ware’s genius shows in the way he conveys so much truth in the smallest detail. Below he illustrates Lonely Girl’s disconnected relationship with her architect husband in just a panel:

“It All Happened So Fast” is a fair name for this chapter—Ware’s panels illustrate the way that our lives (and the narrativizing of those lives) can become radically compressed, how our memories fail us, how seemingly trivial details anchor themselves to the emotional strata of our personalities even as concrete fact slips away. Still, another title could come from this panel:

I’ll close this out by offering three panels that strike me as so utterly real, so wonderfully truthful, that I won’t bother to comment further:



Books #3 — Dmitry Samarov
The Return of Ulysses — Giorgio de Chirico

The Bard and the Bird (Shakespeare Portrait) — Bill Sienkiewicz



