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Graphic Novels Invade Hirshhorn’s ArtLab+

This post was written by Sarah Imholt, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Library Volunteer.

Among the many offerings for teens at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Gallery, ARTLAB+ gives teens a place to express their creativity via technology and art. One analog way teens connect with art is through graphic novels.

"VA and Janae have been eating up the graphic novels! It’s like a library in here, everyone's reading!"
“VA and Janae have been eating up the graphic novels! It’s like a library in here, everyone’s reading!”

 

Graphic novels have been around for a while but there is still confusion about what they are — silly or serious? Kids’ stuff or adult literature? Boxy comic panels or fine art? It is helpful to think of graphic novels as a format that can be all of these things. Graphic novels are different from picture books or illustrated books. They use sequential art — the integration of image and text to tell a story — in book form. That said, there are graphic novels that use little, if any text, and others with far more words than pictures. Welcome, experimentalists!

Sequential art is a different type of reading with its own set of structures. One must slow down and take in each individual panel or page. Read the images! What does the expression on that character’s face mean? What about the overall color scheme? Does what’s being said in the text match what’s being shown? And what the heck is happening in the background?

 

Graphic Novels 2

 

Stories in graphic format are not all kapow-bam-boom superhero stories. They have infiltrated all genres, from the glorious fantasy/space opera mashup of Brian K. Vaughan and Fiona Staples’s Saga, to thoughtful memoir (Can’t We Talk about Something More Pleasant?, where Roz Chast relates how she deals with aging parents). Jim Ottaviani writes about scientists. High schoolers read Persepolis, by Marjane Satrapi, in their history classes; it is about growing up in pre- and post-revolutionary Iran. Neil Gaiman’s epic Sandman combines fantasy, myth, history, and horror, among other things. Shakespeare has been adapted into graphic format. All topics, all media (painting, digital art, Sharpie, etc.), and all kinds of great stories are here for the reading.

FYI: Just like any book, some graphic novels are better suited for adults than children.

 

Visit ARTLAB+ at the Hirshhorn!
Drop-in hours  Monday-Friday, 3-7pm  for teens aged 13-19.
Visit the website to view the weekly schedule and find out more information.

Want reading suggestions?

Wikipedia list of comics awards
The 6 Best Moments from Graphic Novels, Picked by Scott McCloud
Amazon Best Sellers Graphic Novels
YALSA’s Great Graphic Novels for Teens

 

One Comment

  1. Anne E

    Great post!

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