Archive for May 17th, 2009

17
May

Comics Are Art. Just Funnier.

Museum of Comics, Ancona

We just saw these fabulous ads for the Comics Museum in Lucca on Ads of the World and we had to share them with you.  The tagline on all three is “Comics are art.  Just funnier,” and to illustrate the principle they’ve taken three masterpieces of art and made a comic strip of them.

We’re still giggling about cartoon called “The Shot” that’s a play on Mantegna’s Saint Sebastian (above).  The comic strips begins with the poor pierced saint tied to a pagan column.  To make matters worse for this early Christian martyr, a hand reaches over and places an apple on his head, making him the human target for some not-so-skilled archers who riddle his body with arrows.

Jacques-Louis David must be laughing in his grave at the Comic Museums’ version of The Death of Marat.  The comic is titled “The Bill” (below) and begins with Marat in his bathtub while a hand reaches in from the right and with a just-written bill.  In the center panel, a close-up shows us that the bill is for room service and that the total is exhorbitant.  It’s the shock of that sum that causes the death of Marat in the last panel.

Museum of Comics in Lucca

And then there’s “The Waking Up” (below), a play on Mantegna’s Dead Christ.  Christ, brilliantly foreshortened, lays in bed with a clock ticking beside him.  At 7:00, the alarm goes off and we see a close-up of Christ’s hand as he reaches over to push the snooze button.  In the final panel, we’re looking at Mantegna’s original painting and we see Christ slumbering for a few more moments before the alarm clock resurrects him again.

We don’t know much about the Museum of Comics in Lucca — called the Museo Nazionale del Fumetto e del Imagine — but we love these ads.

Advertising Agency: JWT Italia, Milan, Italy
Executive Creative Director: Pietro Maestri
Art Directors: Cristiana Boccassini, Flavio Mainoli
Copywriters: Bruno Bertelli, Paolo Cesano
Illustrator: Manlio Truscia

Museum of Comics, Lucca

17
May

Hope is Not A Crime

Hope is Not a Crime

Walking through Rome’s streets provides a sensory overload of which we just can’t get enough!  Even a short stroll challenges mind and body: while it’s challenging enough to stay upright on the uneven cobblestones, one must also look down to avoid stepping in something unpleasant while simultaneously looking up and around so as not to be hit by cars or by motorini.

As if that’s not enough, there are all those people and their beautiful (or wacky) outfits to admire, works of art and architecture that will stop you dead in your tracks, and a wealth of fragments attesting to Rome’s long history that are built into houses and shops or fenced off at the edge of the street.

If you can manage all that, you can find even more entertainment in the rich collection of streetside graffiti and pubblicita.  Taking in all the ephemeral words and images written or pasted on buildings and billboards is one of our favorite hobbies.

We were especially pleased when we came upon the poster shown above.  It’s old — a poster created in the run-up U.S. elections in November 2008 by an organization called US Citizens for Peace and Justice (that we very much admire).  We imagine that since the election season, other signs and posters have covered it but have now fallen away, leaving us to ponder once again a message of eternal importance, “Hope is not a crime.”




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