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S'està carregant… Kabuki: Metamorphosis (edició 2001)de David Mack
Informació de l'obraKabuki Volume 5: Metamorphosis de David Mack
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Apunta't a LibraryThing per saber si aquest llibre et pot agradar. No hi ha cap discussió a Converses sobre aquesta obra. Fifth book in the series. Kabuki remains at Control Corps.She's begun talking to her doctor and is no longer kept in isolation. She interacts with the other women in the institution. Akemi and MC Square share their philosophies. Akemis philosophy of visualizing the reality you desire inspires Kabuki. This story is interwoven with the story of the other Noh operatives who have broken into Control Corps and are searching for Kabuki. One of the best in the series. The illustrations, while not multimedia like some of the other volumes, are incredibly diverse. Highly recommended 5/5 stars. An Akemi quote from the text: I practice literature as magic. All words and all works are alchemy, the great science /art of transformation When I began reading the Kabuki series back in 1997 or so, I was amazed by the artwork that David Mack created for the story. This was the first and still the only comic series that I followed very closely. This book is great in its design, layout, and story. Definitely worth the read. I got lucky and ordered directly from David's website, and this came to me autographed by the author with a little sketch inside the front cover. Sense ressenyes | afegeix-hi una ressenya
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Image Comics offers the latest collection of DavidMack's acclaimed Kabuki epic. The latest tale of the enigmatic assassinof the Noh. The book - which Mack says "represents my most diverse range offully painted and mixed media artwork, and marks my most evolved work as awriter" - collects all nine painted issues of the recent series titled simplyKabuki. The story that sets the stage for the current"Alchemy" storyline returns to print! Featuring an introduction by BILLSIENKIEWICZ and an afterward by filmmaker JOHN SAYLES, this is the largestKABUKI collection yet and still one of the most sought after! Collects KABUKI #1-9. No s'han trobat descripcions de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — S'està carregant… GèneresClassificació Decimal de Dewey (DDC)741The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawingsLCC (Clas. Bibl. Congrés EUA)ValoracióMitjana:
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I have met David Mack a couple times at Comicon, and I’ve been meaning to ask him if he always intended from the beginning for the story to be about transformation and to move from standard comic style to collage. I like to think that it’s something he came up with as he went along, and the writing of the story transformed as he developed it. That the book evolved him as the story itself evolved.
On a plot level, the story begins in rather mainstream comic fashion. Kabuki is set slightly in the future, primarily in Japan. The main character, Kabuki, is one of a group of eight female assassins called The Noh who wear iconic masks and stylized costumes. They are a team managed by the government and sent out to instill fear and kill gangsters and various corporate criminals. However ... not all is as it appears. A multi-layered conspiracy ensues. Seven graphic novels complete the story.
[b:Kabuki Circle of Blood|89816|Kabuki, Vol. 1 Circle of Blood|David Mack|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1349072657s/89816.jpg|1027]. Mack wrote and drew. Black & white. Has a grim, raw style. The art seems a bit underdeveloped to my eye. Has a bit of Sin City tone but more surreal. With more emphasis on emotions. The story is overall, fairly straightforward to this point.
[b:Kabuki Dreams|89813|Kabuki, Vol. 2 Dreams|David Mack|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1347783408s/89813.jpg|86681]. Mack wrote and drew. Takes a huge leap forward in style and has more of the Mack signature look. Collage style begins, color is introduced. Blends pencil sketching, ink drawings, painting and even photography. This is a book of interior monologue and, as the title would lead you to believe, is trippy.
[b:Kabuki Masks of Noh|743521|Kabuki, Vol. 3 Masks of the Noh|David Mack|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1347473675s/743521.jpg|729672]. Mack writes and draws some scenes, but this is primarily guest drawn. The style returns to black & white, but overall more refined, precise and graphic than Circle of Blood. Rick Mays draws a pretty phenomenal Scarab. The various artists seem to be chosen to help represent the style of each of the assassins. This sequence consists of short stories introducing us further to the other members of the Noh.
[b:Kabuki Skin Deep|89814|Kabuki, Vol. 4 Skin Deep|David Mack|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1347219865s/89814.jpg|440299]. Mack returns to both draw and write. In Skin Deep his incredible artistic skills beginning to shine. He can morph like a chameleon from cartoonish renderings to realist representational paintings to pencil sketches.
[b:Kabuki Metamorphosis|89815|Kabuki, Vol. 5 Metamorphosis|David Mack|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1347660123s/89815.jpg|18787]. Mack writes, draws, letters and designs. For the sheer brilliance on display, I think Metamorphosis is the most beautiful of the series and my favorite. The diversity of techniques is breathtaking.
[b:Kabuki Scarab Lost in Translation|98454|Kabuki, Vol. 6 Scarab, Lost in Translation|David Mack|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1347752395s/98454.jpg|94908]. An action-packed side-step featuring everyone's favorite assassin, Scarab. Illustrated in graphic black & white by Rick Mays, the coolest artist from the Masks collection. Just as the art harkens to outstanding comic illustration style, it doesn't push the envelope in content or technique. A fun diversion.
[b:Kabuki The Alchemy|3155976|Kabuki, Vol. 7 The Alchemy|David Mack|http://d.gr-assets.com/books/1347738255s/3155976.jpg|3187674]. Mack takes his signature collage style even further, using cut up items and diverse materials including envelopes and letters sent to him from fans of the series to tell the existentialist, inspirational conclusion of Kabuki's epic story. Although visually, I prefer Metamorphosis, I truly admire The Alchemy for showing the potential of comics. Yes, many artists like R. Crumb and Chris Ware have achieved fame for non-superhero stories. But Mack essentially demonstrates the potential before our eyes to move beyond the dictates of the superhero form. A series that begins with ultra-violent superhumans fighting battles for stereotypical reasons ends with artistic explorations of our inner potential as creative beings. Kabuki moves beyond standard comic book “hero” tropes into a story of heroic action as self-transformation, moving beyond the dictatorship of the system, the fear of change and the psychological control of the past. The hero is one who evolves not one who kills everything. And Mack says we each have the potential, regardless of what has come before, to evolve. Perhaps best of all, the transformation that takes place goes much further than within the narrative; it is a transformation of the form of graphic storytelling. Now that is truly inspirational.
Highly recommended!
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