Considering Comics: Graphic Narratives in Ink
with Mark Thomas Gibson
PRINT 670 001 | 3 credits | $150 Lab Fee
July 28 - August 10, 2024
From their inception, comics have been complicated. They are often brash, have political use, and a special ability to record the civic passions of their time. In this course, we will consider this history and use it as inspiration to tell the stories of our own personal and meaningful experience. We will engage with techniques including starting a narrative, storyboarding, sketching, inking, lettering, coloring, and do-it-yourself publishing techniques including the risograph. We will consider the work of cartoonists and screenwriters including Eleanor Davis, Marjane Satrapi, Alison Bechdel, Ta-Nehisi Coates, and Rodney Barnes, discuss Scott McCloud’s Understanding Comics, and Will Eisner’s Graphic Storytelling and Visual Narrative, and screen Stan Lee’s How to Draw Comics the Marvel Way. In addition to a call and response activity where paired students explore their communication skills by completing an eight panel comic together, this class will culminate in a presentation of original artwork and self-published graphic novels to the Ox-Bow community.
Mark Thomas Gibson's (b. 1980, Miami, Florida) personal lens on American culture stems from his viewpoint as an artist, a professor, and an American history buff. These myriad and often colliding perspectives fuel his exploration of contemporary culture through the language of painting and drawing, revealing a vision of America where every viewer is implicated as a potential character within the story. Gibson has released two books: Some Monsters Loom Large, 2016, with funding from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts; and Early Retirement, 2017, with Edition Patrick Frey in Zurich. Gibson has been awarded: residencies at Yaddo; the Elizabeth Murray Artist Residency; a fellowship from the Pew Center for Arts and Heritage, Philadelphia; a Hodder Fellowship from the Lewis Center for the Arts, Princeton University; a Guggenheim Fellowship from the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, New York; and was named a 2022 Grantee by The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, New York. In 2023 Gibson had solo exhibitions at Sikkema & Jenkins Co. in New York and MOCAD in Detroit, and was included in the exhibition Rising Sun: Artists in an Uncertain America at the African American Museum in Philadelphia. Gibson is represented by M+B, (Los Angeles) and Loyal, (Stockholm, Sweden). He is currently an Assistant Professor of Painting at Tyler School of Art and Architecture, Temple University and lives and works in Philadelphia.