Scaffold
Author | V. A. Graham & J. A. Eisenhower |
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Language | English |
Publisher | self-published (Most Ancient) |
City | Oakland |
Date | 2012-2015 |
Pages | 16, 16 |
Format | 21.6 x 23.5 cm |
Fabrication | Digital printing, silkscreen covers, handbound |
E-book |
Graphically, Scaffold is a strange object. The pages of the series' books are entirely composed of different sets of quasi-architectural formations and various sets of unfolding landscapes mostly depicted frontally. The sequence follows an implicit, oulipian rule that the two artists agreed upon: no world location can ever be revisited or depicted again once it is left. They manifest the artists' desire to produce a system for conveying movement through sets of fixed structures where storytelling, consisting mostly in commonplace dialogues, is just a byproduct of these rigid superstructures. Scaffold reads like a post-human narrative; the reader is left to contemplate something similar to the sidescrolling of a platform video game. No main characters are present. No action takes place. Scaffold thematizes the narrative impact of the background layer. It is a demonstration of comics' intermedial referential capacities in regards to other media, here video games.