Young & Old
Amy Longo
See it On Campus: Level 2
Visitor InfoAward Recipient
- John C. Kerr Chancellor Emeritus Awards for Excellence in Visual Arts – Honourable Mention
- Opus Art Supplies Graduation Award BFA – Honourable Mention
Hysterical weeping has accidentally become a recurring visual in my comics. I didn’t plan it, it just happened. I’ve drawn a lot of children and elderly women, and that wasn’t quite intentional either. I’m attracted to expressive faces, that is, faces that aren’t always required to be attractive. So the weeping probably came first, followed by the young kids and old women, then the old stories, and my attempt at a new (young?) perspective on those stories. A theme develops…
Thanks for checking out my work, I hope you enjoy it!
Content warning: Some violent and/or sexual content. Discussion of bigotry, mental illness, death.
“‘She’s like an old baby.’ Yes! That is the perfect description of what I am. Very old, and baby-like.”
– Maria Bamford
Out to Pasture
Out to Pasture
10 pages
Graphite, ink, digital painting
This comic is definitely fiction, but it was inspired by the experience of listening to my elders describe their childhoods. Some elements of light horror, humor, drama, and history have been added, to make it into its own story. It’s about the absurd contrast that is possible between the lived experiences of a family, even just a couple of generations apart. More simply put, it’s about a kid and his great-aunt trying to relate to one another. Read the full comic here
They’re to Eat You
They’re to Eat You
7 pages
Ink, collage, graphite, digital photography, digital painting
This comic is a nonfiction essay, combining elements of folklore, history, autobiography, and psychology, and trying to find meaning in that combination. To keep things interesting, I broke from traditional panel structure to experiment with how images could be separated on the page, and how to guide the reader’s eyes through the composition. Read the full comic here
Strega
Strega
4 pages
Ink, digital painting
In this fantasy comic, I thought about the genre in the context of escapism and loneliness – personal fantasy, and the needs it can serve. The urban setting hopefully helps to flesh out this idea. Read the full comic here
Confessional
Confessional
12 pages
Ink, collage, digital painting
This comic is another nonfiction essay – a look at mental illness and misogyny in the alternative comics of the last half-century, and my relationship to them as a neurodivergent lady comics-reader. Autobiography, literature, comics history, feminism, racism, and religion are discussed. It’s about asking why and how we love problematic art. Read the full comic here