Ratings5
Average rating4.6
**Tutorial, Graphic Novels, Memoir:**
The idiosyncratic curriculum from the **Professor of Interdisciplinary Creativity** will teach you how to draw and write your story
*Hello students, meet Professor Skeletor. Be on time, don’t miss class, and turn off your phones. No time for introductions, we start drawing right away. The goal is more rock, less talk, and we communicate only through images.*
For more than five years the ***cartoonist Lynda Barry*** has been an associate professor in the University of Wisconsin–Madison art department and at the Wisconsin Institute for Discovery, teaching students from all majors, both graduate and undergraduate, how to make comics, how to be creative, how to not think. There is no academic lecture in this classroom. Doodling is enthusiastically encouraged.
***Making Comics*** is the follow-up to Barry's bestselling ***Syllabus*** , and this time *she shares all her comics-making exercises*. In a new hand-drawn syllabus detailing her creative curriculum, Barry has students drawing themselves as monsters and superheroes, ***convincing students who think they can’t draw that they can***, and, most important, encouraging them to understand that a daily journal can be anything so long as it is hand drawn.
Barry teaches all students and believes everyone and anyone can be creative. At the core of Making Comics is her certainty that **creativity is vital to processing the world around us.**
Reviews with the most likes.
Lynda Barry's Syllabus shows Barry's first steps at a curriculum for comic-making; her work of five-years as a professor at a university comes to fruition here in Making Comics.
She encourages all the necessary tasks: loosening up students; allowing students to set aside judgment about good and bad art; drawing a lot; drawing badly; breaking down a story into panels; using simple forms.
I think this is the book for those who might want to create comics.
This is less the kind of book you read straight through, and more the kind of book you pick up here and there, and flip to a page at random.