The Ship Escaped

Fumetti (deluxe edition)

$150.00
sold out
Fumetti_cover_CROP_SC.png
Fumetti_page_01.png
Fumetti_page_02.png
Fumetti_page_03.png
Fumetti_page_04.png
Fumetti_page_05.png
Fumetti_page_06.png
Fumetti_page_07.png
Fumetti_page_08.png
Fumetti_page_09.png

Fumetti (deluxe edition)

$150.00
sold out

80pgs; Imagewrap cover, an edition of 10, printed on #100 weight archival-quality Superfine eggshell white uncoated paper stock.

2011

This edition is now SOLD OUT.

Fumetti is an Italian word – literally “little puffs of smoke” – a reference to speech balloons, the narration in comics.  Outside Italy, fumetti often refers to a specific genre: photo comics—stories told using photographs instead of drawn illustrations, with dialogue added in speech bubbles or captions.  In the past I have considered figuring out a way to bridge the gap between comics and photography.  

Fumetti pairs photos taken in the early 2000s, in a body of work that would become the collection known as The Ship Escaped, with comic books that Soter has had since he was a child. The visual relationship between the two is often ironically funny, contains similar textures or patterns or perhaps has elements or characters that repeat from the photograph to the comic frame.  

Fumetti is in the collection of the library of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Add To Cart

80pgs; Imagewrap cover, an edition of 10, printed on #100 weight archival-quality Superfine eggshell white uncoated paper stock.

2011

This edition is now SOLD OUT.

Fumetti is an Italian word – literally “little puffs of smoke” – a reference to speech balloons, the narration in comics.  Outside Italy, fumetti often refers to a specific genre: photo comics—stories told using photographs instead of drawn illustrations, with dialogue added in speech bubbles or captions.  In the past I have considered figuring out a way to bridge the gap between comics and photography.  

Fumetti pairs photos taken in the early 2000s, in a body of work that would become the collection known as The Ship Escaped, with comic books that Soter has had since he was a child. The visual relationship between the two is often ironically funny, contains similar textures or patterns or perhaps has elements or characters that repeat from the photograph to the comic frame.  

Fumetti is in the collection of the library of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.