Why Page 46?
There are a lot of other
pages I wanted to dissect, but Page 46 will be the most convenient of these,
because it is the page in which I am most aware of Spiegelman’s craft working
on the reader.
Additionally, I will refrain
from discussing the art itself. I’m much more interested in how an author sets
out to their use of the economy they have divided their page into, rather than what
they’ve chosen to portray.
The technique Spiegelman employs
here are as follows:
Firstly the formalistic aspects: for the majority of the book, Spiegelman alternates between three-tier and four-tier grids. For page 46, he uses a four-tier grid. The top half is characteristic of 4 tier grids—in which each tier is split into halves. This means the action or essence of the storytelling—tier-by-tier—functions as 1 and 2 (or, if you will, cause and effect).
Now for the action of the
page:
In panel 1 of tier 1:
Spiegelman goes from having a tranquil conversation with his psychiatrist to
panel 2 of tier 1: being given a fright by the aforementioned psychiatrist.
While there are other aspects
factors that make up a good page—such as the push and pull effect of the
characters (when the psychiatrist leans in Spiegelman jumps back)—discussing
those aspects falls under a different category altogether.
Tier 1 (or 2) Panel: Cause / Tier 1 (or 2) Panel Two: Effect
Tier two follows the same
rules, essentially.
In panel one of tier two,
Spiegelman is visually “burned out” after his fright. So what does he do in
panel two? Why, he lights a cigarette of course (some nice visual comedy). Curiously,
the camera angle changes from panel 1 to panel 2. In panel two of tier two, the
shot is in profile. The psychiatrist leans in again—although, this time it
isn’t for the purposes of scaring Spiegelman—it’s to console him instead.
Why does this happen? Well,
it’s because comedy comes in threes: the joke in the top tier actually
concludes in the first panel of the second one. Threes are very important in
comics—they permit sequences, transformations and well-timed jokes.
Now for the second half of
the page—in which threes become incredibly important. This technique is very
old, but most cartoonists I’ve encountered point to Harvey Kurtzman as the
storyteller/artist that successfully perfected it.
Threes are like the “turns” that
occur within line breaks in poetry—or a phase change between two states of
matter—a liquid to gas (or vice-versa).
Tier 3 (or 4) Panel 1: The “Turning”
begins / Tier 3 (or 4) Panel 2: The “Turning” is half-finished / Tier 3 (or 4) Panel
3: The “Turning” concludes.
Despite still being part of a
four-tier page: the second half of the page is divided into threes. Why is
this? The third tier is all about transition—about travel. Spiegelman is
leaving Pavel’s office—his session is concluding. How do we get him out of this
scene effectively (quickly but without causing confusion)? By panel 3 of tier 3
Spiegelman has gotten himself out of the door and now the story can continue to
progress forward.
In the last tier, we watch the most obvious visual gag—probably in the entirety of the book. This is classic Spiegelman. His appointment with Pavel reduces him to a childlike state—partly because his psychiatrist is older than Spiegelman and also—having encountered Spiegelman’s earlier work—for the purposes of parodying Freudian psychoanalysis.
In the last tier, we watch the most obvious visual gag—probably in the entirety of the book. This is classic Spiegelman. His appointment with Pavel reduces him to a childlike state—partly because his psychiatrist is older than Spiegelman and also—having encountered Spiegelman’s earlier work—for the purposes of parodying Freudian psychoanalysis.
The subsequent
transformation—or ego boost—Spiegelman receives after departing the offices of
his shrink is portrayed in threes. Threes are magical—you cannot with argue
them—you cannot question them—you must simply accept them happening before your
eyes.
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