Indian fan boys, South Asian comics come to LACMA - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

Indian fan boys, South Asian comics come to LACMA

Share via

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

If you want to understand the meaning of comics in India, one place to start is a battered, chipped piece of sandstone from the 9th century. “Durga Slaying the Buffalo Demon,†in which an eight-armed goddess impales a part-man, part-animal monster, doesn’t bear any obvious resemblance to the X-Men or even the hipster graphic novels of Dan Clowes.

But this sculpture carved out of stone for purposes of worship represents an image that echoes through Indian culture — and fuels some of the work created today on computer tablets by companies like Bangalore, India-based Liquid Comics.

Advertisement

“You’re going to see visions of Durga all over the place,†says Julie Romain, the curator at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art who organized the new show. “In both traditional and popular form — movies, posters, comics.â€
She sees Durga and others as archetypes, figures that replicate through Indian society. This show, “Heroes and Villains: The Battle for Good in India’s Comics,†which runs through Feb 7, looks at the transformative power of the imagery of Indian mythology: figures such as Durga, an often vengeful mother goddess who is one of several forms of India’s supreme goddess Devi, as well as Rama, an avatar of Vishnu, and the mace-wielding monkey god Hanuman.

Click here for Scott Timberg’s full account of this intruiging exhibition.

Comic: By Abishek Singh, Ram Vanquishes Subaho, Ramayan 3392 AD, 2006; Pencil and ink on paper; Liquid Comics, Bangalore, India; ©2008 Liquid Comics.

Advertisement