Tag Archives: illegal art

Wednesday, 7th Mar 2012

Katz

Over on the estimable Comics Reporter, Bart Beaty reports on Katz, a sort-of-parody of Art Spiegelman’s Maus where all the characters, Nazis, Jews and Poles, are drawn as cats, which has been published in France (where they take comics very seriously). It’s a curiosity, particularly as it’s not just a few pages but the whole book and it appears to have been done with professionalism and style.

Naturally, given the revered status of Maus, the lawyers are out in force and it’s being pulped, but I’m sure it’ll live on electronically. Bart reckons it has value.

The decision to appropriate the entirety of Spiegelman’s work — every page, every line of dialogue — seems central to its implicit argument that Maus, as a key text that has shaped comics culture unlike almost any other, is already an object belonging to the community as a whole. It is, this book seems to be saying, a revered work, open to challenges and contestations by others.

[...]

I would argue that it is the very thoroughness of the appropriation that makes it so compelling. Katz challenges us to see one of the most important comics ever produced with new eyes. How is that a bad thing?

He also gives us what has to be the quote of the year, at least in comics circles. “I think that Spiegelman fruitfully problematizes the potentially essentializing aspect of his representations in the pages of Maus itself.”

Perfection.

via Kenny Penman

See also Tintin: Breaking Free, a similar-ish piece of wholesale copyright infringement to make a point.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,  
Leave a comment / Permalink

Saturday, 11th Feb 2012

Raiding the Lost Ark

Raiding the Lost Ark is something of curiosity. These edits of all the “bonus features” that litter a DVD release of a film put into sequential order by a fan to create something new-ish are a relatively recent trend. Star Wars Begins, Building Empire and Returning to Jedi were the first by Jamie Benning and he just released the Raiders one this month.

I say curiosity because they exist in an area of copyright infringement which seems pretty clear. The entire piece is made of footage where the ownership is pretty clear and which has a fairly undisputed value. This is such an entirely illegal piece of work that it’s somewhat incredible that Vimeo are hosting it (the Star Wars ones were removed from YouTube a while back).

But despite this the fans go on and make them, presumably because they know the hodge-podge of rights ownerships and legal nonsense dictates it can’t be made above board. The only option is to do it, don’t make a profit and seek forgiveness should it draw attention. Waxy talked about this in his post No Copyright Intended.

Meanwhile, despite not being a fanatic about the Indy films I did enjoy this. It was nice to see clips from making-of docs I remember being broadcast at the time and the editing is slick and enjoyable. Worth a couple of hours of your time for sure.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,  
Comments Off / Permalink

Wednesday, 1st Feb 2012

Paul O’Connell’s Muppet Wicker Man

Done a few years back as a tribute to Edward Woodward, Paul O’Connell‘s photo-comic remake of The Wicker Man with Muppets is pitch perfect. There’s also a musical version.

via Timineaux

Tags: , , , , , , ,  
Comments Off / Permalink

Sunday, 22nd Jan 2012

Hippocamp Ruins Pet Sounds

One from the archives. I downloaded Hippocamp Ruins Pet Sounds in 2005 but just stumbled upon it in the unrated depths of my iTunes library. I was delighted to find it stands up to another listen (actually, I suspect my tastes have caught up with it in places) so since you probably didn’t see it the first time, and it’s still online, here’s a recommendation.

I love the self-deprecation of the title. This isn’t just fucking with the classics for the sake of it.

Pet sounds is an album that everyone should own, study, cherish, and enjoy. Hippocamp Ruins Pet Sounds is an open-ended experiment conducted out of reverence, curiosity, and awareness of the sobering fact that you can’t improve upon perfection.

There’s also a nice Metafilter thread.

Tags: , , , , , ,  
Comments Off / Permalink

Tuesday, 29th Nov 2011

Pinsent’s original Illegal Batman

Following his sequel earlier this year Ed Pinsent has scanned his original Illegal Batman comic from 1989.

Again, I’m having trouble viewing the PDF on my Mac but it works in Google Docs.

Tags: , , , , ,  
Comments Off / Permalink

Wednesday, 5th Oct 2011

Pinsent’s Illegal Batman

Ed Pinsent, part of the pantheon of great British cartoonists you’ve never heard of because Britain is a neanderthal backwater sometimes, has released a sequel to his 1989 epic Illegal Batman (review here) entitled Illegal Batman In The Moon. Given the nature of the work it’s available as a free PDF from that link. That PDF seems to be Acrobat-only though and came up blank in Apple’s Preview app, so I uploaded it to Google Docs where it did work. You can read it here.

See also my raving about Ed’s work last year.

via Dylan Horrocks.

Tags: , , , ,  
Comments Off / Permalink

Wednesday, 7th Sep 2011

Update on Andrew Colb’s Space Oddity

Remember the children’s book adaptation of Bowie’s Space Oddity that was done for a laugh and released in the wild as a PDF? The New Yorker has an update and muses on the phenomena of PDF illustrated books spreading online.

The problem in Kolb’s case was that there was at yet no book to sell. And there wouldn’t be one. As soon as Kolb’s creation became famous, it became contraband; Kolb received a letter from the song’s copyright owner telling him his use was a violation and to cut it out. Kolb’s site now features images with blurred out text, and includes [a] disclaimer.

The PDF link is gone and the whole thing is renamed “Picture Book Set In Space“. But, of course, the genie is out of the bottle. The PDF isn’t hard to find (hell, you can download it here if you like) and it’s fodder for the remix culture. Here’s what the New Yorker calls “a kind of triple-copyright infringement scenario” on Vimeo (though who know for how long).

The sad thing about all this is that it has to be illegal art to begin with. Bowie Inc had a choice, to work with a cool thing that had emerged or to stomp down hard, and then chose the dark side. Sigh.

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,  
Comments Off / Permalink

Sunday, 28th Aug 2011

Space Oddity – the children’s book

Darting around the retweetosphere today is Andrew Colb’s adaptation of Space Oddity, the David Bowie song, as an illustrated children’s book. There are three spreads there but you might not have noticed the link to a PDF of the full 30 page book. Golly.

Now, what are the odds on:

  • a) a takedown order for copyright infringement,
  • b) a publishing deal from Random House or similar.

[Update: It's the former.]

Check out the rest of his site too. There’s some lovely stuff in there.

via quite a few people.

Tags: , , , , , , , ,  
Comments Off / Permalink