Lundi 30 Décembre 2024
taille du texte
   
Vendredi, 23 Septembre 2011 22:31

Gallery: How Steve Jobs Ruined Comics

Rate this item
(0 Votes)
Gallery: How Steve Jobs Ruined Comics

Before the iPhone, "This image would clearly be understood without the voice balloon, or the character's open mouth," says cartoonist Tom Pappalardo, who jokes that Steve Jobs ruined comics.

It’s kind of cool to read comics on the iPad, but Apple’s shiny gadgets have wreaked havoc on how the people who create those comics tell their stories. Just ask Tom Pappalardo.

After the cartoonist realized that drawing newfangled devices presented new problems for explaining what was happening in comics panels, he grabbed a sketchpad and started to collect his thoughts. What resulted was a series of panels (above) he put in a blog post titled “Cartooning vs. Technology: How Steve Jobs Ruined Comics.”

It’s a smart and funny read (seriously, go check it out), but the 37-year-old graphic designer and author of weekly web comic The Optimist said he hopes it’s understood he meant no disrespect to Jobs himself, or Apple’s products.

“As devices get smaller and feature less exterior detail, more overt context and visual cues need to be provided by the artist/writer to explain what the device is,” Pappalardo said in an e-mail to Wired.com. “I think Steve Jobs is responsible for the creation of beautiful, wonderfully refined objects (the title of my blog post is hopefully read with tongue firmly in cheek).”

Pappalardo’s panels don’t target just Apple devices — Bluetooth headsets and giant flat-screen TVs are also up for discussion. Throughout, he addresses an interesting problem. In a medium built entirely around flat visuals, it is pretty hard to figure out how one square slab (an iPhone) can be differentiated from another (an electric shaver).

But don’t mistake Pappalardo for a Luddite. Even though he may prefer paper comics to iPad versions, he still loves his devices.

“I think it’s interesting how certain interactions with technology are now extinct,” Pappalardo said, referring to the bygone days of VHS and answering machines. “As a joke-teller, I might miss them a little due to their uniqueness. As a human being who likes cool new tech gadgets, screw ‘em.”

Check out Pappalardo’s comic ruminations on the intersection of technology and visual arts in the gallery above. Follow the rest of his antics on his blog.

Authors:

French (Fr)English (United Kingdom)

Parmi nos clients

mobileporn