The essence of Ware

All you need to know about what makes Chris Ware tick in one page

They’re holding their annual festival of hate over at the Hooded Utilitarian and Bert Stabler took aim at Chris Ware:

In twee there is neither humor nor horror, neither conviction nor swagger, just feelings. Feelings and nostalgia for feelings. Chris Ware was sucked into this vortex, streamlining himself into a reliable product for easy digestibility by self-styled “nerds” everywhere, and so we ended up with emo comics garbage overflowing the microcosm of craft-fair entrepreneurship and spilling into Michel Gondry, Death Cab for Cutie, and overdetermined bangs (all much to Chris Ware’s chagrin, if he has any left). True, this infantile regression might have happened anyway. Maybe it was September 11th that whetted the American appetite for saccharine melancholia, but I blame Chris Ware. What twee had to offer that was positive– androgyny, sloppiness, magic– was latent but present in his flamboyant early work. He could have made different choices, But it is lost now, lost irrevocably in the sterile, commercially lubricated navel into which his vision has apparently gone to die.

I’m not sure at all that I agree with this criticism, even if there is a kernel of truth in it, but there is an argument to be made that Ware has a limited palette as a cartoonist and keeps returning to the same themes. All of which are present in the cartoon above: the selfish and socially inept protagonist, alone in an uncaring (rather than a hostile) world, reliving childhood trauma in an atmosphere of melancholy, nostalgia and sadness. Everything else in his work is just commentary, an embellishment of the same themes.

Something nice for Wednesday

Chris Ware sketch from the Stripdagen Breda in 1999

In 1999 at one of the last comics conventions I’ve gone too somebody had flown in the cream of American alt comix: Chris Ware and Dan Clowes. I didn’t and still don’t care much for the latter, but Ware was and is another matter. I’m quite pleased ot have gotten this little sketch from him and to be able to tell him how much I loved Acme Novelty Library. To him such an encounter was of course a dime a dozen and it can’t have been too pleasant to sit in a conference hall early in the morning that only days before had held a pig auction, probably jetlagged to hall and back, but both he and Clowes were quite friendly. Meeting them was the highlight of an incredibly shitty convention that was one of the things that drove me out of comix for a while.

But at least it made for an easy blogpost twelve years later…