Evan Dahm — mobydickillustrated: Ok so: I’m planning to do a...

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mobydickillustrated
mobydickillustrated:
“Ok so: I’m planning to do a large series of full-page black-and-white illustrations for Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick over the next year or so, and I’ll publish the unabridged text with those illustrations in situ in a hardcover...
mobydickillustrated

Ok so: I’m planning to do a large series of full-page black-and-white illustrations for Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick over the next year or so, and I’ll publish the unabridged text with those illustrations in situ in a hardcover edition (like the Oz thing in 2014). I’m going to post the illustrations (as nearly as I can) in order, and if you feel like doing a Very Slow read-along, well, the book is free.

To start with, I’m writing a little about why this book appeals to me, and over the next couple of weeks I’ll make a series of posts summarizing my “starting points” for this project, in terms of visual research, design, and style (think of these posts, maybe, as Extracts).

Pretty early into my first time reading Moby-Dick, it seemed clear that it wasn’t really how it had always been presented to me; it doesn’t seem like a book to be nodded politely over and easily acknowledged as the Great American Novel. It had established a reputation in my head as a too-enormous adventure story: a Novel, first and foremost. But it’s juggling a lot of different aims at once, and more and more of them once the Pequod leaves sight of land.

It’s a story about a doomed ship and her crew, and it’s an elaborate meditation on the nature of perception, and it’s a critique of religion springing from a deeply Christian substrate. It’s an encyclopedic description of a brutal, global industry that was at the heart of the early industrialized world, and which became swiftly obsolete not long after the book’s publication. It feels particularly important and almost prophetic right now: as our own global energy infrastructure, the successor to the whaling industry, propels us towards a catastrophe every bit as bluntly foreshadowed as that of the Pequod.

It’s a frantic, confusing, disgusting book. It’s an exegesis and an epic and a cenotaph and a Whale. And the corpus of writing about it is, appropriately, biblical in scope and diversity… But those are the aspects of it that are most important to me, and they’re what made me want to illustrate it.

This is daunting! It’s a book I love and it’s a book that is uniquely obsessed-over. It’s been illustrated beautifully by many other people (Rockwell Kent’s hundreds of illustrations that helped to finally bring the book into popularity in the 20s, Robert Shore’s violent, impressionistic illustrations, Matt Kish’s bewildering and obsessive drawings for every single page). I want to do this well and in a way that supports the text, and emphasizes its diversity in tone and format. I’ll share some research and preliminary work in the next posts! Thank you for reading.

evandahm

i have thought a lot about this book

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