Six Novels in Woodcuts by Lynd Ward
Long before graphic novels earned a dedicated section in bookstores — indeed, before the term “graphic novel” was even coined — the American wood engraver and illustrator Lynd Ward (1905-85) created six enduring examples of the form. Ward was one of only a handful of artists in the world who bucked literary convention by eliminating all words but the title from standard narrative works. His novels often contained more than 100 pages, with one image per right-hand page. The pictures, influenced by German Expressionism, were dark and melodramatic, as though taken directly from an early film noir storyboard. Ward’s thematically related sequences and cinematic pacing bridged the divide between mass comics and the more rarefied illustrated book. Now this groundbreaking work, originally published between 1929 and 1937, has been collected in “Six Novels in Woodcuts,” the first graphic fiction from the Library of America.OMG. Pre-ordered!
Expressionist woodcuts, which...turn influenced by Russian Futurist book designs and...
Woodcuts, 2010. ‘Long before graphic novels earned a dedicated section in bookstores – indeed, before the term ‘graphic...
I want this! His prints are amazing!
Sometimes the line between want and need becomes too blurry to bother. Into the wishlist it goes.
OH FUCK YES.
Six Novels in Woodcuts by Lynd Ward Long before graphic novels earned a dedicated section in bookstores — indeed, before...