Delights A story of Hieronymus Bosch

Guy Colwell, 1945-

Book - 2024

"An obsessive painter, working away for years in near secrecy, now reveals a magnum opus to the world -- author and subject, intertwined. In Guy Colwell's first full graphic novel in 33 years, we see one painter, Colwell himself, consider another, Hieronymus Bosch, and the story behind the latter's most notable work told in sequential panels. The known details of Bosch's life, and the commissioning of his enormous triptych "The Garden Of Earthly Delights," are scant. Colwell takes the facts of Bosch's time and setting and constructs a tale of a man and artist torn equally among piety, creativity, and commerce. In Colwell's version of Jheronimus van Aken (Bosch's real name), he is an artist paid w...ell by local dukes to paint a vision of the world before the fall, but will the religious leaders of his village see it as celebrating God's creation, or fatally corrupted by sensuality? And what of the increasing numbers of young models needed to depict pre-apple innocence? This imaginatively conceived historical graphic novel is Colwell's crowning achievement in a cartooning career, begun in the underground comix movement of the 1970s, and marked by risk-taking and political engagement. His drawing, rendering, and storytelling has never been as self-assured as in Delights."--Publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Historical comics
Biographical comics
Comics (Graphic works)
Graphic novels
Published
Seattle, WA : Fantagraphics Books, Inc 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Guy Colwell, 1945- (author)
Edition
First Fantagraphics Books edition
Physical Description
vi, 162 pages : chiefly illustrations (black and white) ; 28 cm
ISBN
9781683969525
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Painter and underground cartoonist Colwell (Inner City Romance) turns the commissioning of The Garden of Earthly Delights in late 15th-century Netherlands into an epochal struggle between faith and doubt, superstition and reason. Colwell's surprisingly philosophical graphic narrative, which he describes as "mildly plausible and fact based," follows the tumult that starts when "humble and pious" religious painter Jeroen van Aken, aka Hieronymus Bosch, is hired by royals to create a large-scale erotic painting. Jeroen resists, nervous about scandal and heresy. But the money is good--so like many artists before and since, he rationalizes. Jeroen's concept for what becomes his masterpiece is that the fall of man never happened. "I can give them naked beautiful people enjoying life," he reasons, if there was no original sin. Colwell details Jeroen's attempts to "amuse my dukes without arousing the Inquisitors" by having the characters speak aloud their every thought. It's an occasionally awkward conceit but one that fits well with the formally posed character drawings, which echo the stiff-limbed painting style of the time. Colwell's artwork is to-the-point, except for one lavishly drawn sequence where Jeroen's walk in the woods turns into a nightmarish cavalcade of Boschian creatures vocalizing his internal debate over artistic and religious integrity. The result is a thought-provoking venture into a time when art had life-or-death consequences. (Aug.)

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