Here (comics)
"Here" is a 6-page comic strip by Richard McGuire (born 1957) published in Raw Volume 2 #1 in 1989.
In 2010, McGuire announced a graphic novel version Here (expanded to 300 pages, full-color). It was published by Pantheon Books in December 2014.
Overview
The first panel of "Here" shows an unadorned corner of a room in a house. The 35 panels that follow all show the location in space depicted in the first panel at different points in time, ranging from the year 500,957,406,073 BCE to the year 2033 CE. The panels are not ordered chronologically, and most of the panels are subdivided into multiple panes to show different points in time within the same panel. A wide variety of people, animals, and furnishings are shown passing through the space, including several recurring characters, such as a woman shown cleaning the room in 1973, 1983, 1993, 1994, 1995 and 1996. The corner of the room itself is the most enduring presence in the story; panels show the house being constructed in 1902 and sheltering several generations of occupants before burning in a fire in 2029 and being demolished in 2030. The space is shown to be a barnyard in the 19th century before the house is built, and the site of open-air band concerts after the house has been razed.
"Here" has been recognized as a groundbreaking experiment with the formal properties of comics; Douglas Wolk wrote that its "influence has echoed through art comics for decades."[1] Its influence is particularly notable in the work of Chris Ware, who wrote a lengthy essay on it in the magazine Comic Art #8. "Here" was also reprinted for the first time in that issue. It was later reprinted in An Anthology of Graphic Fiction, Cartoons, and True Stories (2006, Yale University Press).
Further reading
- Hancock, Michael W. (2013). "Storytelling in Comics: Who, When, and Where in “Here”" (PDF, 4 pages). Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy. Comics and Graphic Novels. Paper 2. <http://digitalcommons.imsa.edu/comics/2/> (abstract and additional PDF files for the Chris Ware article and the "Here" comic)
Citations
- ^ Wolk, Douglas. Reading Comics: How Graphic Novels Work and What They Mean (Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press, 2007), 84.
External links
- "Here" at Entrecomics (larger GIFs)
- "Here" at Rutgers University (smaller JPEGs, via Archive.org)