Canvas
Full Title: Canvas
Author / Editor: Alex Fellows
Publisher: Fantagraphics, 2004
Review © Metapsychology Vol. 8, No. 28
Reviewer: Christian Perring, Ph.D.
Canvas is a graphic novel
about a fourteen-year-old girl called Canvas who goes on a summer camping trip
with her parents and has her first sexual experience. While not exactly dark,
it does depict the experience as basically meaningless, part of the random and
unpleasant life of an adolescent. It starts out at a costume party in a large
middle class house where the guys are crowded around a computer and other
people are standing around while rap music blares out and one boy wearing a
Spiderman costume stands at the snack table munching on potato chips. After
the party Canvas and her friend Alison hang out with two boys they met, and
Canvas comes home with a hickey. The next morning her mother spots it but does
not freak out; she just explains that she wants Canvas to be open and honest
with her and her father, so that they know what is going on. Canvas gets on
the phone to Alison who says that she and the other boy fooled around more, and
she gave him oral sex but it was no big deal. Canvas says it sounds gross.
The following day, Canvas goes with her family to the camp ground and meets up
with Alison who is also staying there with her family. They hang out with
other teens and there are all sorts of tensions and weird dynamics, and Canvas
gets into trouble for coming back to the tent drunk and vomiting. She spends
time with an older boy and they end up fooling around. But it’s not like they
are actually dating.
Canvas and her friends are drawn
with blank eyes and mostly blank expressions on their faces, as if they were
zombies. Even stranger, Canvas’ mother and father are drawn as being a pig and
a frog with a huge mouth that goes all the way around his head. It emphasizes
the feeling that there’s a huge gap between Canvas and her parents, and that
the girl doesn’t really know what she is doing. The drawing style is strong;
even though there are clear parallels with the quirky and disturbing stories of
teen angst in Adrian Tomine’s Optic Nerve comics, Fellows’ pages are
busier and rather messier. As a portrayal of the confusion and experimentation
of adolescence, Canvas is powerful and memorable.
Links:
·
Sleepwalk
and Other Stories by Adrian Tomine
© 2004 Christian Perring.
All rights reserved.
Christian Perring,
Ph.D., is Academic Chair of the Arts & Humanities Division and Chair of the
Philosophy Department at Dowling College, Long Island. He is also editor of Metapsychology Online Review.
His main research is on philosophical issues in medicine, psychiatry and
psychology.
Categories: ArtAndPhotography, Fiction