Project and content management for Contemporary Authors volumes
WORK TITLE: Her Bark and Her Bite
WORK NOTES:
PSEUDONYM(S):
BIRTHDATE:
WEBSITE: http://www.jamesalbon.com/
CITY: Lyon
STATE:
COUNTRY: France
NATIONALITY: British
http://www.topshelfcomix.com/catalog/james-albon * https://jamesalbon.wordpress.com/about/ * http://comicsalternative.com/comics-alternative-interviews-james-albon/
RESEARCHER NOTES:
PERSONAL
Born in Cambridge, England.
EDUCATION:Edinburgh College of Art, graduated; Royal Drawing School, London, England, graduate study.
ADDRESS
CAREER
Artist and illustrator.
AWARDS:Gwen May Award, Royal Society of Painters-Printmakers.
WRITINGS
Contributor of illustrations to magazines and newspapers, including Diplomat, Financial Times, Guardian (London, England), New Statesman, Wall Street Journal, and Wired.
SIDELIGHTS
James Albon is an illustrator who also became a writer when he produced his first graphic novel, Her Bark and Her Bite. His journey began in England, where he was born, and took him to Scotland, where he began his training in art. Albon left Edinburgh for a year in the exciting city of Hong Kong, returned to England for graduate study, and then fled the overwhelming urban presence of London for the charming ambiance of Lyon, France. Along the way, he experienced the competing attractions of the studio, where art is made, and the gallery scene, where it is bought and sold. His novel is the story of another young artist whose journey, in many ways, mirrored his own.
Her Bark and Her Bite is the story of Rebecca, who comes to the city to make her mark as an artist. In order to do that, she must also make her mark in the social whirl of the trendy local art scene. It is a daunting challenge for the naive young woman—until she meets the suave Victor Koenig, who is far more comfortable on the party circuit than he is in the studio. Rebecca is swept away by the excitement of exhibitions, gallery openings, and social engagements. She trades her attic room for life with Victor, which includes access to a studio of her own. Her confidence improves, and Rebecca seems to be on her way to a promising career. Then Princess enters the picture and replaces Rebecca as the object of Victor’s affection.
Princess is a ridiculous fashion accessory in the form of a purse-sized pug in sunglasses. She becomes the lens through which Rebecca observes the world around her. Victor’s world is revealed as a shallow imitation of a flamboyant reality. Victor is full of creative ideas that never take shape, and Rebecca is forced to acknowledge that her own artistic muse is suffering from neglect. It may be time for her to reevaluate her priorities.
“For a work that plays with ideas of hedonism vs. hard work,” mused a contributor to Comicon.com, “Her Bark and Her Bite displays an intricate level of detail and care for composition. … You can dive deep into the themes of the book, or simply enjoy the exuberant storytelling.” Other critics voiced similar sentiments. Leroy Douresseaux observed at Patreon that the art “is scintillating and quicksilver, … not so much drawn on art board as it is something that seems to dance on the page.” He added: “The art crackles with energy and the result is a story that seems like a recollection of a real event rather than something the author contrived.”
Features writer Teddy Jamieson told readers of Herald Scotland that Albon has produced a “gorgeous” book. It is “a comedy set in a brittle, self-regarding bohemia featuring wannabe artists,” he stated, adding that “Albon has a real eye for spatial awareness. He guides the reader and his characters around the page with real panache.” Albon explained to Jamieson that the format of the graphic novel enabled him “to write about these colourful, ridiculous parties, and to draw big, exciting scenes to bring the story to life.” Booklist contributor Annie Bostrom described “this clever debut” as “a satisfying send-up of the insiders-only nature of arts communities, with a visual style that stands out from the pack.” A Publishers Weekly commentator likened the style to “a New Yorker cover spun out to a full-length story.”
The critic at Comicon.com summarized Her Bark and Her Bite as a “tale of artistic aspiration, social hedonism, and the ambiguous nightworld where the two often meet.” At Comic Crusaders a reviewer wrote: “Overall the whole tale really drew me in, and the writing seemed more like a diary and the slightly crude writing style was very pleasing.” Andy Shaw noted at Grovel that the book “leaves you in a whirl of relationship disaster.” “The characters … come to life,” he added, and “you live through the highs and lows with them as external influences and incompatibilities start chipping away at their relationship. Extraordinary stuff.”
BIOCRIT
PERIODICALS
Booklist, July 1, 2017, Annie Bostrom, review of Her Bark and Her Bite, p. 37.
Publishers Weekly, April 3, 2017, review of Her Bark and Her Bite, p. 61.
ONLINE
Comic Crusaders, https://www.comiccrusaders.com/ (April 27, 2017), review of Her Bark and Her Bite.
Comicon.com, http://www.comicon.com/ (February 9, 2017), author interview.
Comics Alternative, http://comicsalternative.com/ (April 24, 2017), podcast interview.
Grovel, http://www.grovel.org.uk/ (May 21, 2017), Andy Shaw, review of Her Bark and Her Bite.
Herald Scotland, http://www.heraldscotland.com/ (May 8, 2017), Teddy Jamieson, author interview.
Patreon, https://www.patreon.com/ (July 26, 2017), Leroy Douresseaux, review of Her Bark and Her Bite.
Top Shelf Productions, http://www.topshelfcomicx.com/ (January 1, 2018), author profile.
James Albon was born in Cambridge, England but lived most of his life in the north-east of Scotland, never picking up the accent and constantly being mistaken for a tourist. He studied illustration at Edinburgh College of Art, went on to a postgraduate scholarship at the Royal Drawing School in London, and was awarded the Gwen May award from the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers. As an illustrator, he has worked for the Wall Street Journal, the Guardian and published several illustrated novels with the Folio Society. He currently lives with his partner in Lyon, France, and has also failed to pick up any sort of authentic French accent.
April 24, 2017
In this interview episode Derek has the pleasure of talking with James Albon, whose new book Her Bark and Her Bite comes out this week from Top Shelf Productions. James is British artist whose illustrations have appeared in The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, WIRED, the New Statesman, The Diplomat, The Financial Times, and various publications from the Folio Society. Her Bark and Her Bite is his first graphic novel, and much of the conversation is devoted to this fact and how his work as a professional illustrator informs his graphic storytelling. The book can be described as a romantic comedy, where its protagonist artist figure, Rebecca, moves to the big city and meets Victor, a gregarious and flamboyant socialite with whom she quickly becomes smitten. Complications arise when Victor receives a young dog as a gift, and the canine becomes an unwitting rival to Rebecca’s affections. What follows is a series of faux pas and inanities that pits social acceptance against personal expression. In this interview, James shares the genesis of his narrative, its links to his own life experiences, and why fiction was the perfect platform for his inaugural long-form comic.
James Albon is a writer and illustrator from Scotland living in Lyon, France. Her Bark and Her Bite is his first graphic novel. He studied illustration at Edinburgh College of Art, went on to a postgraduate scholarship at the Royal Drawing School in London.
8th May
Graphic Content: "It made me take being frivolous extremely seriously!" James Albon on his debut graphic novel
Teddy Jamieson
Senior Features Writer
Graphic Content: James Albon on his debut graphic novel
Graphic Content: James Albon on his debut graphic novel
It’s possible you haven’t met James Albon yet. He’s a Scottish writer and illustrator who now lives in Lyon in France and works for clients as varied as the Folio Society, the Wall Street Journal and WIRED. His latest venture is a graphic novel. His first. Her Bark and Her Bite is a <
If nothing else, <
Here, James tells us about the challenge of the graphic novel form, arty hedonism and the one alcoholic product he won’t drink.
OK. Let’s begin with some introductions? Who is James Albon? Where is he from? Where does he live? What colours are his socks? What’s his alcoholic drink of choice? How did he become the man he is today?
Who is the real James Albon? The question on everyone's lips. As an infant, I was found in a basket on the banks of the upper Volga. I was raised by wolves in the nearby mountains. After learning the ways of the forest, I took my first tentative steps into the fringes of civilised society, which is to say: I studied illustration at Edinburgh College of Art. Turns out, I took to civilised society quite well, and took to illustrating extremely well - I can't imagine doing anything else with my life. I lived in Edinburgh for several years after that, then spent a year in Hong Kong, and then got a scholarship for the Royal Drawing School in London, which is where I started working on Her Bark & Her Bite.
I had, in some ways, an excellent time at the Royal Drawing School, but in some ways it was a frustrating time – compounded by the fact that I couldn't stand living in London. So the moment I graduated, I packed my bags and moved to Lyon, France. This brings us to the next question (the colour of my socks will remain a secret); my alcoholic drink of choice seems to be wine, because I drink huge amounts of it here, and it's extremely cheap.
As anyone reading HB&HB will guess, the book comes from a background of riotous parties. I will drink pretty much anything except Unicum, a disgusting Hungarian spirit that tastes like cleaning products.
Why did you decide to work on a graphic novel?
I'd spent a year living in Hong Kong, and then moved to London, and felt both excited and overwhelmed by these huge cities and everything they had to offer. My experience was essentially that of the protagonist of the book, Rebecca: a battle of arriving in a big city and wanting to go to these really hedonistic parties, which is exhilarating but also overwhelming, especially when she's come with intention of making it as an artist, and needing to work.
As for why I told the story with a graphic novel: I've always loved writing and drawing, and graphic novels seem to me to be the most natural way in the world for the two to come together – an opportunity <
HeraldScotland:
The other side to this is that I started to work on it towards the end of my time in the Royal Drawing School, which is quite a traditional school, where to an extent students are encouraged to follow in the footsteps of great and extremely serious British artists (Francis Bacon, Leon Kossof, Frank Auerbach, etc). It's a tradition that I couldn't fit myself into! But it helped a lot – both because it really improved my technical skills and because reacting against these fine art traditions made me realise how important it was to write something comedic and silly. It helped push me to make the graphic novel as good as it could be. It made me take being frivolous extremely seriously!
For me the biggest challenge in graphic novels is finding balance. On the one hand, especially at the start of the process, I find myself overflowing with ideas for characters and situations and images, which is incredibly fun. But on the other hand, I have to be fairly disciplined in making the story clearly structured, in keeping the ideas legible, in being ruthless in what gets kept and what gets cut out – and that's a fascinating part of the process in itself. It's a question of finding my own line between writing and drawing something wild and exciting, but also lucid and inviting for readers.
Here at Graphic Content we particularly love the way you manoeuvre your characters around and about pages and spreads. Was that the most fun aspect of the book for you?
It's true, I do take particular joy in drawing the page layouts. I learnt a lot not only from other graphic novels, but from seeing how people approach similar challenges in other visual media: I take a lot of inspiration from classical paintings, which have really richly detailed and complex composition (the likes of Bruegel, Rubens, Tiepolo), and also from cinema, because of the way that narrative is told there through a series of shots of specific size.
The really interesting challenge for me is to look at a blank double-page spread and say: "What can I do here?" The go-to method for graphic novels is often to divide your page into a dozen panels of regular size, and put a character and speech bubble in each (I call these “talking heads panels” – not a technical term). This is a really efficient way to put across dialogue and straightforward narrative, but for me it's the least exciting way to draw. I'd much rather have one enormous composition across both pages full of characters running wild!
I call these “pride pages”, by the way. Again, not at all a technical term. Once more, it's a question of balance: I want to keep every double page spread looking fresh and exciting, I want to keep the reader inquisitive. But, of course, I want to tell a story and not get lost in the hubris of endless large compositions!
HeraldScotland:
James. Be honest. Are you telling us that the art world is a shallow and vain arena best suited to egos running wild?
Hands up! You got me!
Well, yes and no. There are two worlds in Her Bark & Her Bite, a dilemma which I think a lot of artists and creative people will recognise. On the one hand there's "the art world", vibrant parties, exhibition openings, people showing off, wearing amazing clothes, listening to cool music and saying things like: "Oh it's this really great band but you've probably never heard of them" – a world where Victor is king! But on the other hand there's the world of Rebecca, our protagonist, tucked away in her little studio, wearing overalls covered in oil paint, and just sitting down and working. While they're both nominally "the world of art", they're vastly different experiences. Rebecca's main dilemma is between the need to work and to concentrate, versus the desire to join the party.
At the same time, I don't at all want to write a moralistic, Calvinist book that says: "Beware the devils of hedonism, get back into your studio and work!" So while, yeah, Victor's world is pretty shallow and vain, and while he never finishes any of the art projects that he dreams up, he and his friends are having a great time. Everyone deserves to go out drinking and dancing if they want to, so I wouldn't want to damn him too much.
I suspect you have been to a few exhibition openings in your time? Have you ever embarrassed yourself at them?
I've been to plenty of exhibition openings; and I've been on both sides – both as the artist or organiser, and as the punter coming to talk rubbish and hoover up the free wine. I've never embarrassed myself (to my memory) though I've certainly blurred the line between "all welcome" and "invite only", and probably turned up in places that I shouldn't have.
Princess is a key figure in the story. What’s your own relationship with animals?
My mother was a vet in a small practice in rural Aberdeenshire, and when I was a teenager I worked there as a receptionist at weekends and in the holidays. But when they were short-staffed I'd sometimes have to help in the surgery.
Indirectly though, my experience working in the vet practice is linked to the book, because my mum very strongly took the attitude that dogs should be "proper dogs", healthy working dogs (collies, labradors, mongrels) who should go on long walks in the countryside, and she was filled with disdain for people who had "handbag dogs" (pugs, Chihuahuas, etc – which are bred for looks and end up with horrible genetic disorders), and people who really infantilised their dogs. So in HB&HB, Victor having a pug is really evidence of his moral failings and his vacuousness.
Are you working on anything else?
Yep! I'm working on a second graphic novel, and as a reward for reading this far, I will reveal a number of tantalising details:
– It is much longer than Her Bark & Her Bite.
– It is more serious, and not as funny.
– It features zero dogs.
– It features at least one artist.
– It will be called A Shining Beacon.
– I'm about halfway through drawing the final pages, and it will hopefully be released in 2018.
Her Bark and Her Bite, by James Albon, is published by Top Shelf Productions
James Albon was born in Cambridge, England but lived most of his life in the north-east of Scotland, never picking up the accent and constantly being mistaken for a tourist. He studied illustration at Edinburgh College of Art, went on to a postgraduate scholarship at the Royal Drawing School in London, and was awarded the Gwen May award from the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers. As an illustrator, he has worked for the Wall Street Journal, the Guardian and published several illustrated novels with the Folio Society. He currently lives with his partner in Lyon, France, and has also failed to pick up any sort of authentic French accent.
James Albon is an illustrator from Scotland. His clients include the Folio Society, The Guardian and the Wall Street Journal. He studied illustration at Edinburgh College of Art, went on to a postgraduate scholarship at the Royal Drawing School in London, and was awarded the Gwen May award from the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers in 2012.
James Albon is a British author and illustrator. His clients include the Folio Society, The Guardian, the Wall Street Journal and WIRED. He studied illustration at Edinburgh College of Art, went on to a postgraduate scholarship at the Royal Drawing School in London, and was awarded the Gwen May award from the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers in 2012.
Her Bark and Her Bite
Annie Bostrom
113.21 (July 1, 2017): p37.
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2017 American Library Association
http://www.ala.org/ala/aboutala/offices/publishing/booklist_publications/booklist/booklist.cfm
Her Bark and Her Bite.
By James Albon. Illus. by the author.
2017.80p. Top Shelf, paper, $9.99 (9781603094078). 741.5.
Rebecca is new to the city and renting a dusty attic room from her cousin, who doesn't even allow her to work on her paintings there for fear of too much mess. It wouldn't take much to charm Rebecca into a happier situation, but popular playboy Victor pulls out all the stops anyway, introducing her to all his artist friends, who worship him. Rebecca moves in, and they're giddily in love. Soon, though, Rebecca shows her work with some success, while she grows annoyed by the projects Victor's always inventing yet never pursuing, and begins to see through some of his so-called fabulous friends. When Rebecca's least favorite member of the Victor fan club gifts him with a deranged-looking pug, the end is nigh. Albon illustrates his story with a freedom that feels right, using many different page formats and a bright, vibrating, colored-pencil style in a limited palette. <
Source Citation (MLA 8th Edition)
Bostrom, Annie. "Her Bark and Her Bite." Booklist, 1 July 2017, p. 37. General OneFile, link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A499862783/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=ITOF&xid=2dab7f52. Accessed 7 Dec. 2017.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A499862783
Her Bark and Her Bite
264.14 (Apr. 3, 2017): p61.
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2017 PWxyz, LLC
http://www.publishersweekly.com/
Her Bark and Her Bite
James Albon. Top Shelf, $9.99 (72p) ISBN 978-1-60309-407-8
Source Citation (MLA 8th Edition)
"Her Bark and Her Bite." Publishers Weekly, 3 Apr. 2017, p. 61. General OneFile, link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/A489813734/ITOF?u=schlager&sid=ITOF&xid=2f04af5f. Accessed 7 Dec. 2017.
Gale Document Number: GALE|A489813734
To Party Or To Paint? James Albon On Her Bark & Her Bite From Top Shelf
by Staff
Her Bark & Her Bite, a new graphic novel coming this Spring from Top Shelf, takes a fresh new direction in art comics from illustrator, and now cartoonist, James Albon. His first foray into the comics medium, it brings together his love for storytelling through art and his personal enthusiasm as a sometime writer. Already embarking on a second graphic novel, Albon feels he discovered a great deal about comics narrative technique in creating this<< tale of artistic aspiration, social hedonism, and the ambiguous nightworld where the two often meet.>>
Her Bark & Her Bite follows the life of Rebecca, an aspiring painter, who moves to a new city to attempt to make inroads into the local art scene, exhibit her work, and kickstart a career. That alone would make for an interesting story, but Albon has created an intriguing dance of opposites by focusing on Rebecca’s encounter with the blazing socialite Victor, and the time she spends swept up by his way of life. The title of the book refers to one of Victor’s many successive obsessions, a pug dog named Princess, who proves to be a lynchpin of difference between Rebecca and Victor.
Rebecca is our narrator, so we hear her thoughts as well as her sparkling observations of Victor’s vivaciousness and the way in which his friends interact with him. We also get to witness her perspectives change over time, which is the groundswell of momentum in the book. Albon didn’t take this narratorial decision lightly, but settled on “Rebecca’s journey” as the center of the book. He also found that Rebecca’s narrative was a very “efficient way” to tell the story. A character can say how they feel, for instance, rather than the reader having to deduce their mood from a full conversation. Albon observes: “While Hemingway would surely be turning in his grave (too bad!), it leaves more space on the page for fun drawings”.
Told in a highly fluid, sinuous style and through the soft linework of colored pencils, Her Bark & Her Bite follows the gradual unfolding of Rebecca’s personality from a somewhat closeted artistic aspirant to a much more confidant participant in life. Albon preserves an air of neutrality in presenting a hedonist’s view of life and a more work-driven perspective, and lets situations and scenes play out for the reader to consider and weigh in their own mind. Albon agrees that this opposition between two approaches to life—that of attempting to achieve specific goals vs. simply enjoying life to the full—is central to the book:
The question is whether hedonism, crazy parties, being popular, is enough to sustain us – or is there more to life? But I didn’t want to spell out a specific answer, because I’m sure all readers will bring their own perspectives to the table. I’d much rather write a book that works as an interesting jumping off point for a conversation, than a book that spells out a moral (especially the kind of moral that says “Oh hedonism might seem fun now, it’s bad for your soul, you know!”)
While I felt that there’s actually a lot of sympathy for Victor’s effervescent party-hopping attitude in the book, Albon noted that friends of his who have read the book have felt Victor’s presentation was “quite damning of him”, so that shows the range of possible interpretations in this nuanced work.
The question can be handled in a fun, light, way, or a serious and heavier way, too. It’s essentially about choosing how to balance our lives. The idea came to Albon from observing his own life, living first in the “small and calm” atmosphere of Edinburgh, Scotland, then living for a year with his partner in Hong King, which was “hugely exciting and really crazy”, and then taking on the melee of London, which felt “manageable” after Hong Kong. Though he currently resides in Lyon, France, during his time in London, Albon lived in what he described as a “hipster epicenter” off Brick Lane, where there was plenty of “fashionable buzz” surrounding “artistic activities”.
As an illustrator, he got caught up on gallery openings, parties, and the like, and felt a fair amount of “pressure” to keep up the pace. Social media also played a part, interestingly, in feeling compelled to take part in activities since people present “’curated’ lives on social media”, Albon observes, and you begin to feel you are not involved enough in social activities by comparison. But as for Rebecca, Albon felt a tension between this constant round of activities and the need to be “in the studio actually drawing or painting”. He invented Victor as “this madman who actually manages to go to all the parties and who knows, and is loved by, everyone”. Rebecca’s attitudes are more closely aligned with Albon’s own feelings.
Albon did, however, want to bring a slightly edgier aspect to the question of work vs. play, or at least hint at its more frightening aspects. He explains:
More specifically, on the balance of work and play, I wanted the book to just edge into a darker place, to evoke that feeling where a party starts to turn from being a good time to being something a bit threatening; when things become more lurid. It’s difficult to describe exactly, but it’s certainly something I’ve felt personally, a sort of fine line between thrill and panic.
However, Albon still hopes that a lighter atmosphere prevails in the book, hoping that questions of “moral ambiguity” are a big part of the experience for readers and they feel the book is “funny” rather than being forced to question whether the actions of the characters are wrong or right. He noticed after finishing the book, he says, that it bears some similarity to a play that he’s a fan of—Noel Coward’s Easy Virtue, where a choice between youthful “partying” and “settling down” also hangs in the balance.
In the end, the question of deciding between social events and creative work may also seem all too familiar to comic creators, though Albon, as a new arrival on the comics scene, may not have faced exactly the same situations yet. Comics creators, too, are faced with the dilemma of whether to attend an endless whirl of comic conventions, which results in more work opportunities and interfacing with more fans, or to stay in the studio making sure their looming deadlines are met.
But it’s a universal question for those in “creative jobs”, Albon admits. And there’s no easy or singular answer. He feels that he’s begun to develop a balance in saying “no” to going out when it doesn’t suit him to do so and also allowing some more social events that may mean time out of the studio recovering. He even thinks it’s possible to come out victorious in this struggle: “I certainly think it’s possible to ‘win’ in this scenario though. For me, it’s the days where I go to the studio, get a good day of work in, and stand up and 5pm and go ‘Well, that went well, I’m going to go and have a drink with my friends now’”.
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Rebecca wears a gold-colored dress when she makes her first social foray, and at our first introduction to the blonde-haired Victor (a name which conjures up images of imperial standards), he, too, is wearing a gold shirt with a turquois, cape-like sweater or scarf. Albon’s night scenes are richly purple and blue rather than black, and his night-time cities bristle with red highlights and golden pathways. Rebecca’s progress as a socialite seems to be marked in color choices, leading up to a bright red dress. Victror’s pug, Princess, too, is golden, and for this reader, comes to represent Victor’s nature. Like Princess, Victor is fleeting in focus, good-natured, and a magnet for attention.
<
Having looked through some of James Albon’s highly varied illustration work, I think he’s shown his own capacity for change when approaching the comics medium. When you’re capable of a number of “styles” as an illustrator, how do you choose how your first graphic novel will look? Albon says:
I’ve always found the idea of choosing a “Style” (with a capital S) very strange. I think it comes from the sort of art school education I had, both in Edinburgh College of Art and the Royal Drawing School, which are quite traditional and classically-based establishments. For me, it’s really important to try to get as far away from saying “I have a Style” as possible – the marks you put on the page should be instinctive and feel natural, and inevitably, if you just draw and draw and draw, the personality of your mark-making will come through.
Albon postulates that “style” is mainly something that observers might see in an artist’s work, rather than something they always recognize. The more you produce, the more audiences might perceive a commonality among your works. He doesn’t feel compelled to consider whether his work fits into a recognizable box any more, he says. Seeing other young artists try to make this decision and commit to a personal style has made him wary, since it might lead to a “small number of types of drawings” one would feel comfortable with. It’s like “putting up a wall”, he says, to set this kind of artistic boundary for oneself. One of his motivating factors in creating Her Bark & Her Bite was the desire to “be surprised and excited” by his drawings, something which could have only happened with a more expansive attitude toward style.
As for why Albon chose to create his first graphic novel with colored pencils, it was partly a reaction against his “very traditional fine art education” that focused on large oil paintings, and partly a desire to do something “light and funny in a non-traditional format”, he says. Pursuing the creation of a comic book rather than a large oil painting was his idea of “liberating”. This sense of released energy and creative exploration set free is certainly palpable in Her Bark & Her Bite. Albon also suggests, however, that his conception of “mark-making” comes into play in this book. While many artists think of black linework and color as two separate things, or two steps in a process, his “brain just doesn’t seem to work that way”, and creating in colored pencils allows him to express his sense of “line and color as the same thing”.
Since Albon was approaching the comics medium for the first time in Her Bark & Her Bite, he learned more about the potential of the medium as he worked, encountering new challenges from page to page. When laying out the book, he focused his experience as an illustrator and painter on certain “Pride Pages” which included large illustrations, ranging from single to double page spreads. He tried to avoid using too many “talking head” panels since he found them less “visually exciting” even though they have their merits in conveying storytelling well through dialogue, he says. The challenges he faced were real, particularly in stopping himself from rushing into final drafts of pages when several rough drafts might be necessary to reach a point he was happy with.
I was wondering what lured Albon from illustration into comics in the first place, given how relentlessly difficult the medium can be. He professes that is a late-comer to the medium, since he didn’t read comics much growing up, and his knowledge of “classic comics” he describes as “dreadful”. But late in his time at art school, he read Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi and This One Summer by Jillian and Mariko Tamaki, and that started him thinking. He “loved them”, he says, and they led to his decision to “immerse” himself in other sequential narratives, particularly European comics. It didn’t immediately occur to him that he could create comics, despite his interest in the medium, and only when he felt a desire to somehow combine his love of writing short stories and drawing did it all “come together” for him. But he’s actually happy it took a while to reach his destination. “I’ve certainly really enjoyed all the circuitous influences and routes I’ve taken to get here.”, he says.
Coming up, Albon is carefully approaching a second graphic novel, this time presented in ink, and as of yet, its contents are a secret. It’s reassuring to know that the comics medium has won Albon over thus far, and we’ll see yet more compositions from his teeming brain. He says it’s going to be “much longer” and “more serious as a story” than Her Bark & Her Bite. Just as he did in composing Her Bark & Her Bite, Albon no doubt intends to surprise himself, and readers to, with this new work.
Her Bark & Her Bite is shipping in April from Top Shelf, a division of IDW Publishing.
ISBN 978-1-60309-407-8 – Diamond: JAN17-0576
Special thanks to James Albon for participating in this feature.
REVIEW: HER BARK AND HER BITE
April 27, 2017 Kittie Pop Off Reviews,
Her Bark and Her Bite is the type of book that would catch my eye, but I would have to be in the right mood to sit down and read it. I’m very glad that I did, and I can’t say I’ve read anything like this before, at least not that my slightly-scrambled brain can remember.
At first James Albon’s work was very jarring to me, and I had a hard time concentrating on it. The story is about a girl named Rebecca, a struggling artist who dreams of better things. She resonated with me on a personal level because I grew up in houses who didn’t accept me and I felt as if my quirky and artistic nature didn’t belong. Rebecca lives in her cousin’s attic, and her cousin doesn’t allow Rebecca to paint in the house because it’s “too messy”. Always having the want to create but not the space is quite an uncomfortable predicament, and in the middle of it she finds Victor.
Victor is an aloof and eye-catching man who always goes out to parties and is quick to drop his passions as soon as he finds a new one; usually within a few weeks time. This lifestyle attracts Rebecca because it lights a fire to her otherwise dull and unpleasing situation. She meets his friends and goes out with him, but this new way of living soon makes her rethink her path and purpose in life.
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At times the physical words on the page and the very sketchy illustrations were competing for my eye, and I even had a hard time reading a lot of the words. The artwork is done in primary colors only, and while some illustrations seemed very rushed and muddy, others were simply beautiful. The complete lack of the color black made it hard to make out some of the drawings, and I really had to search to see what it was I was supposed to be looking at. Though I think as a whole the book is a very beautiful piece of art, part of me wishes it had been a bit cleaner. To be real, that’s just wasted wishing because it’s clear that being clean and precise was not James Albon’s mission. I get what he was going for, and I’m sure there are people out there who will simply adore it, and my personal preferences are just that – my own.
Her Bark and Her Bite was witty, artistic, inspiring, and had some moments of equal satire and sadness. It was a very unprocessed story, and I’m very much inspired by the use of only shades of red, blue, and yellow. It’s one of those books that I will recommend only to some people as it’s certainly not for everyone. But for the people out there who are yearning for something sketchy, creative, and human, you’ve found yourself a winner in James Albon’s beautiful solo work.
Story: 4 Stars
Artwork: 4 Stars
Colors: 5 Stars
Cover: 5 Stars
by James Albon
Publisher: IDW Publishing/Top Shelf Comix
Her Bark & Her Bite
Posted on May 21, 2017 by Andy Shaw
Her Bark & Her Bite by James AlbonOne of the things I truly love about graphic novels is that there’s always a chance of stumbling across the kind of story that you just wouldn’t find anywhere else. Her Bark & Her Bite is a great example. It’s the story of a toxic relationship that’s doomed to failure, as two young people meet, fall in love with each other, proceed through a perfectly reasonable early romance filled with parties and drinking, but find their differences mushrooming as their lives stop revolving around each other and return to reality.
James Albon has produced the entire book, both writing it and drawing the pictures. The illustration is beautiful, created entirely in coloured pencil, which gives it a pastel, light air. The lines and shade flow through the panels, bringing the story to life as if it were caught in a breeze. The darkness of parts of the story contrast sharply with the whimsical drawings, echoing the undertow of the relationship we’re reading about.
Her Bark & Her Bite by James AlbonIt’s an extraordinary book that <
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HER BARK & HER BITE - An I Reads You Review
TOP SHELF PRODUCTIONS/IDW – @topshelfcomix
CARTOONIST: James Albon
EDITORS: Chris Staros
ISBN: 978-1-60309-407-8; softcover with French flaps – 5 4/5 x 8 1/3 (April 25, 2017)
72pp, Color, $9.99 U.S.
Ages 16 and up
Her Bark & Her Bite is a comic book from award-winning Scottish illustrator James Albon. Published by Top Shelf Productions, this 2017, full-color graphic novel is the story of young painter, her charismatic lover, and the ugly dog that comes between them.
Her Bark & Her Bite opens shortly after Rebecca, a budding young painter, arrives in the big city. She movies in with her cousin who does not like it when Rebecca paints. Rebecca meets a charismatic young man named Victor Koenig. Although he is initially standoffish with Rebecca, he eventually embraces her. The two fall madly in love, and Victor plunges Rebecca into a socialite world filled with glamorous parties where Victor is the center of attention.
Soon, being with Victor pays off, and Rebecca has a studio where she can a paint. Life among the layabout debutantes and dilettantes means meeting people who allow Rebecca to show off her work at exhibitions and in galleries. Eventually, however, something comes between Rebecca and Victor and threatens to upend their relationship – a pug named “Princess.”
I often wondered what it would be like if someone who was a cartoonist for The New Yorker (or for a comparable publication) produced a comic book or graphic novel. I found something like that a few years ago with the illustrated short novel, After the Fall, by Victoria Roberts. I found something closer with the new short graphic novel, Her Bark & Her Bite.
Her Bark & Her Bite's creator James Albon is certainly on the level of a New Yorker cartoonist, having produced work for newspapers such as The Guardian and the Wall Street Journal. Albon's artistic educational credentials are certainly impressive. Her Bark & Her Bite is his graphic novel debut, and is impressive; it certainly makes me think of cartoons found in high-end and high brow periodicals. I think Charles Addams, had he produced a comic book, would have created something not that far from James Albon's lively graphical storytelling in Her Bark & Her Bite.
I am not sure what color medium Albon uses to produce the art for Her Bark & Her Bite – color markers, color pencils, pastels? The result <
I cannot imagine that readers who like to experience the breath and width of alternative comics and the modern graphic novel would not want to read this. It's bark is flashy, but its bite is substantial. Her Bark & Her Bite is an exceptional debut.
A
9 out of 10
jamesalbon.com
topshelfcomix.com
Reviewed by Leroy Douresseaux a.k.a. "I Reads You"