242:« The age of reason has inflicted man with an asphyxia of the mind. We live in an age of corporate bodies. We experience collectively approved emotions on a national scale. Any deviation is considered neurotic, insane or subversive. Our individual vision has been sacrificed for an amazingly limited range of collective perceptions which we learn from childhood by repetition and limitation the way a parrot learns to swear. Our society believes in words, not people or things. We are abstract. When we perceive an object or person or feeling we see a word first, and, if we are not already too far gone, the thing later. Our world is no longer populated with trees and storms and stones and blood but the words « trees », « storms », « stones », « blood ». Our mania for equality and affluence achieved through systems of logic and order has meant that we must reject our natural chaos and all accept the same way of perceiving the so-called « real-world ». Elephant is NOT a fantasy. The modern world is a fantasy; a fantasy of our reason, our logic, our insistence on problems and solutions. Elephant is a man living subjectively, illogically and mysteriously. Elephant is a confused whimper in a corridor of steam-irons and bank buildings. Elephant is a heart in a cardboard box, its beat almost inaudible as it stands in an empty parking-lot »
287:, the book that much of Martin Vaughn-James' reputation rests on. Composed entirely of single page illustrations or panels, with short typeset pieces of text positioned at the top of each page, the book is an enigmatic story without human characters that examines a series of deserted rooms and outdoor spaces, in a seemingly post-apocalyptic landscape. The critic Domingos Isabelinho has suggested the book's main character is the image of bed that appears on several pages throughout, noting that, "The Cage is a book about our desire to communicate (in the book we were substituted by, we are made of, modern communicating, recording, and measuring devices), our struggle to perpetuate our memory, our ideas, and our feelings against something that's sublimely far bigger than ourselves: Time. We are cages trying to reach other cages. We, the cages, and our pathetic inventions, will inevitably be destroyed. Even something as grandiose as a pyramid will eventually disappear." The book has been said to be influenced by the
250:« The boovie: it is not a book, not a comic-strip, not a de-animated cartoon, not a scenario for a film. It is a new form, which, granted, like any new form owes something to those already in existence. The Boovie is primarily a visual experience. The book has been transformed into an object in its own right. It is not, any more, an abstract vehicle for ideas or feelings with no existence of its own, but a thing in itself. Unlike certain other forms (painting) it is truly democratic for it is a multiple object available to all in the same form at the same price. It exists in time, like the novel and the film, and in space, like the painting and the sculpture. Art is Anarchy of the Spirit. »
258:, with large, full-page panels and minimal text, and using many tools of the cartoonist. As the critic Andrei Molotui notes, ""Elephant," especially, can be seen as a (non-proto) graphic novel, arising directly out of the underground comix movement. Admittedly, it is experimental, and it substitutes a kind of modernist strangeness for the usual humor of the underground; nevertheless, it is in complete control of the language of comics."
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magazine. He would go on to provide monthly cartoons and comic strips (from one to eight panels without text) for the magazine until August 1980. From May, 1970, he also contributed many illustrations for articles, beginning with Myrna
Kostash's "Canada's no place to be a guerrilla".
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273:(the “you” of the narrative captions is never apparent in the images) where part of the broad-ranging, discontinuous narrative involves Vaughn-James's bald-pated stand-in traveling toward, and trying to avoid, a monolithic, meat-grinder-like projector."
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In addition to his longer comics work, during the 1970s and 1980s, Vaughn-James created several shorter comics-style pieces for various publications, as well as many illustrations and book covers. He is also the author of two prose novels.
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From the mid-1980s, Vaughn-James devoted himself primarily to painting, exhibiting regularly in France, Belgium and
Germany. He was the co-founder with the painter Hastaire of the Groupe Mémoires (1999) group of painters.
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Son of
Clifford Howard James, an itinerant teacher, and Kathleen Florence Stevens, he was born in Bristol, England on December 5, 1943. He and his family moved to Australia in 1958 where he studied for four years at the
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Also honoured on
Saturday night was Martin Vaughn-James, a British-born comics pioneer who authored a number of early graphic novels in the 1970s while he was living in Toronto.
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After returning to
England in 1977, in September 1978, they settled permanently in France in Paris. In 1991, they moved to "domaine de la Hêtraie" in
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Four pages of the book are previewed in the June, 1970 issue of The
Canadian Forum, alongside Vaughn-James' explication of the term "boovie":
130:) was a cartoonist, painter, and illustrator. After spending time in London, Toronto, Tokyo and Paris, he lived for a long time in Brussels.
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is perhaps his best known work, the subject of critical study, including a monograph by French critic
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In 2006, after selling their
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He is best known for a series of graphic novels he published while living in Canada in the 1970s:
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157:(Impressions Nouvelles, 2002), and has been reprinted in several editions in French and English.
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While living in
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has been reprinted several times in France and was reprinted in 2013 by Coach House.
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combining the words "book" and "movie". In Vaughn-James's words from the ad:
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Kotash, Myrna (2 May 1970). "Canada's no place to be a guerilla".
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in Sydney. On May 3, 1967 he married poet Sarah McCoy (Noddy), in
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1975 - "Image, Word, Sequence" - Art
Gallery of Ontario, Toronto
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690:"The Ghost of a Character: The Cage by Martin Vaughn-James"
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Giants of the North: The Canadian Cartoonist Hall of Fame
628:"comment on The Proto-Graphic Novel: Notes on a Form"
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Vaughn-James, Martin (2 September 1968). "cartoon".
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307:Martin Vaughn-James was posthumously inducted into
261:Vaughn-James' next book was published by Toronto's
230:In the same issue appeared an ad for Vaughn-James'
592:Vaughn-James, Martin (2 May 1970). "Elephant ad".
503:Vaughn-James, Martin (1986). "Le Non-scénario de
499:No. 59, septembre-octobre 1984, p. 63.
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269:is "a novel-length story told in a dissociated
609:Vaughn-James, Martin (June 1970). "Elephant".
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511:. Éditions de l'université de Bruxelles.
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326:1982 - Galerie Art Contemporain, Paris
214:He died in Provence on July 3, 2009.
626:Molotui, Andrei (20 October 2009).
329:1984 - Librairie Macondo, Bruxelles
323:1976 - Gallery Cocorocchia, Toronto
196:, and then to "La Cour Rabault" in
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204:. They returned to Paris in 1995.
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700:from the original on 24 July 2011
276:Coach House also released 1972's
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185:In 1968, the couple emigrated to
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112:Canadian Cartoonist Hall of Fame
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291:writers of the 1950s and 60s.
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283:In 1975, Coach House released
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721:"Martin Vaughn-James S'Evade"
653:Rogers, Sean (16 July 2009).
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507:". In Peeters, Benoit (ed.).
384:The Projector: A Visual Novel
33:The Projector: A Visual Novel
688:Domingos Isabelinho (2004).
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827:National Art School alumni
807:Canadian graphic novelists
655:"Martin Vaughn-James, RIP"
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155:La construction de la cage
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285:The Cage: A Visual Novel
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35:by Martin Vaughn-James
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122:(December 5, 1943 in
817:Artists from Bristol
669:on 26 November 2011
632:comicscomicsmag.com
278:The Park: A Mystery
172:National Art School
120:Martin Vaughn-James
21:Martin Vaughn-James
659:walrusmagazine.com
509:Autour du scénario
126:– July 3, 2009 in
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441:L'Enquêteur
315:Exhibitions
145:(1972) and
78:Nationality
63:3 July 2009
781:Categories
762:21 October
732:23 October
726:Libération
673:23 October
663:The Walrus
638:23 October
545:References
371:New Press
352:Publisher
194:Doudeville
189:, Canada.
176:Kensington
91:cartoonist
47:1943-12-05
535:ignored (
525:cite book
517:0770-0962
311:in 2010.
265:in 1971.
236:neologism
165:Biography
698:Archived
461:The Cage
422:The Cage
403:The Park
367:Elephant
293:The Cage
232:Elephant
198:Calvados
151:The Cage
149:(1975).
147:The Cage
143:The Park
141:(1971),
137:(1970),
135:Elephant
128:Provence
102:The Cage
71:Provence
704:6 April
505:La Cage
303:Honours
187:Toronto
124:Bristol
87:Area(s)
54:Bristol
515:
358:Notes
349:Title
180:London
108:Awards
457:2013
437:1984
418:1975
399:1973
380:1971
363:1970
355:ISBN
346:Year
339:Books
256:comic
764:2018
734:2018
706:2006
675:2018
640:2018
537:help
513:ISSN
60:Died
41:Born
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