Art by Marco Bucci |
Nov 26, 2024
Alan Moore by Marco Bucci
Nov 21, 2024
Rorschach by Bruce Timm
Nov 20, 2024
Magical 71 by Francesco Frongia
Art by Francesco Frongia |
[...] since the disc or coin is sometimes called a pantacle or pentacle, you might decide to furnish your design with a five-pointed star. In this case it’s important to remember what the symbol means, namely that when the star has one point uppermost, presiding over the four points below, this stands for the supremacy of the so-called ‘fifth element’, the element of Spirit, over the four worldly elements of Fire, Water, Air and Earth. (A pentacle turned upside-down just means the opposite, with Spirit downcast and neglected, dominated by material concerns. This is not to claim that such a symbol can’t be said to be Satanic when inverted in this way, but simply that it is no more Satanic than the ordinary world about us, where material concerns predominate at the expense of soul and spirit.) [...]
Nov 18, 2024
It's Moore 71!
Art by Claudio Calia |
Nov 15, 2024
1963 Bootleg Annual
In 1993, Alan Moore wrote a love letter to the Marvel Age Of Comics. Steve Bissette, John Totleben, Rick Veitch, Dave Gibbons, Don Simpson, and Jim Valentino brought it to life. Called 1963, the six-issue miniseries was equal parts parody, tribute, satire, examination, and eulogy. Compared to the Spawns and Youngbloods that ran the world just then, 1963 flopped and has been a regular bargain bin fixture for over 30 years. To add insult to injury, the final annual chapter never came out, and the plotline that ran through every issue never reached the climax.
Zip ahead three decades, where a group of creators banded together to create a tribute. The characters are undeniably fun, and the art is gorgeous. A rip-roaring good time several years in the making, we're proud to present GIANT SIZE '63!
Featuring: Ben Perkins, Ian Mcm, Milo Trent, Jerome Cabanatan, Dan Shahin, Geoffrey Krawczyk, William Hoffknecht, Ben Granoff, Daniel Moler, Joseph Antoniello, Eli Schwab, Tony Fero, Douglas Wolk, Tony Wolf, Blake Wilde, Jim Dandy, Mike Hansen, Shane Berryhill, Max Rex, Don Simpson and more!!
Cover by Geoffrey Krawczyk!
Preorder HERE. International preorder: HERE.
Nov 13, 2024
Sussidiario di Magia
Nov 12, 2024
Incantations of the present day
Art by Steve Parkhouse |
Joe McCulloch: [...] The great virtue of this book is its accessibility; I found it a concise guide to a variety of esoteric topics, organized with a good sense of intuition.5 This is creditable to not only the authors, but its predominant visual force, John Coulthart, an artist I mostly know through his extensive involvement with Manchester's Savoy Books as a designer, illustrator and cartoonist, though he has been a consistent presence in Moon and Serpent projects though his album art for A. Moore's live performance works with the musicians Tim Perkins, David J and others (The Highbury Working, Angel Passage, etc.). Here, Coulthart is credited with the Bumper Book's overall design, its cover art, large illustrations for nine different sections and many spot illustrations throughout. Sections are differentiated often by page color — white, blue, several shades of brown — while individual illustrations repeat themselves on successive pages to prompt the readers through the authors' esoteric thickets: the image of the Tree of Life repeats page after page as the Moores run down its branches, each of its 10 emanations glowing one by one by alchemical color as they are discussed; Tarot cards are displayed both as in the Tarot de Marseille and in iconographic forms devised by Coulthart himself, running along the tops of pages for quick reference. Decorative borders on most pages pulse dim to strong on a gradient; colors glow cold under glassy digital frost, which is not my favorite look, but further imposes unity on the book as if from an aloof mechanical Demiurge. [...]
[...] the authors draw a distinction between "high" magic, "the urge towards greater understanding, transcendent experience and the ecstatic enhancement of consciousness," and "low magic ... the attempt to bring about desired changes in material reality that are to the magician's personal advantage." In advocating for high magic, the Moores urge the practice of magic for magic's sake, whereby personal, creative, intellectual boons present themselves as if guided by magic itself, "the practitioner left marveling at an abundance of results that he or she had neither asked for nor expected." Render therefore unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's, to add an inappropriate note of my own. The "Great Enchanters" of the comics in this Bumper Book are often buffeted by politics, but they are not usually individuated as activists; rather, magic itself is treated as an expression of anarchy – the promotion of unmediated self-governance vs. the compulsory obedience of doctrinal religion. That magical orders have tended to regiment into elitist fraternities and doom cults does not dim magic as "a subjective practice of the individual, a means by which a single self may come to its own understanding of and make it its own peace with the wonderful and terrible phenomenon that is existence." Importantly, the work of "material" security is a condition precedent to magic practice, because “if we do not have our material circumstances under our control it will be difficult, if not impossible, to progress spiritually.” [...]
[...] A. Moore has said that this book is “intended purely as a statement about magic, rather than as a statement about comics.” But if art is magic, and comics are art, then this is also a book about comics, one that positions the drawn image, the picture story, as fundamental to social beings. This romance feels like a way of raising the art far above the mess of its mercantile circumstances, the shell which too often defines it, the mess from which he fled, a comics that is not just cruel tricks to cop money from suckers, comics preserved in the sky with wizards to voyage far on the silver foam of dreams.
Nov 9, 2024
(Quasi) Leggere Long London
Nov 7, 2024
Fandom has toxified the world
Magic art by Caio Oliveira |
[...] I believe that fandom is a wonderful and vital organ of contemporary culture, without which that culture ultimately stagnates, atrophies and dies. At the same time, I’m sure that fandom is sometimes a grotesque blight that poisons the society surrounding it with its mean-spirited obsessions and ridiculous, unearned sense of entitlement.
[...] An enthusiasm that is fertile and productive can enrich life and society, just as displacing personal frustrations into venomous tirades about your boyhood hobby can devalue them. Quite liking something is OK. You don’t need the machete or the megaphone.
Candidly, for my part, readers would have always been more than sufficient.
The complete article can be read HERE.