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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Early life  





2 Career  



2.1  Optic Nerve  





2.2  Killing and Dying  





2.3  Album art  





2.4  Commercial illustration and The New Yorker  







3 Collected works  





4 Awards  





5 References  





6 External links  














Adrian Tomine






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Adrian Tomine
AdrianTomine2014.jpg
Tomine at the 2014 Comic Arts Brooklyn
Born (1974-05-31) May 31, 1974 (age 50)
Sacramento, California, US
Area(s)Writer, Artist

Notable works

Optic Nerve
http://www.adrian-tomine.com/

Adrian Tomine (/tˈmnə/;[1] born May 31, 1974) is an American cartoonist. He is best known for his ongoing comic book series Optic Nerve and his illustrationsinThe New Yorker.[2]

Early life

[edit]

Adrian Tomine was born May 31, 1974, in Sacramento, California.[3] His father is Dr. Chris Tomine, Ph.D. and Professor EmeritusofEnvironmental EngineeringatCalifornia State University Sacramento's Department of Civil Engineering. His mother is Dr. Satsuki Ina, Ph.D. and Professor Emeritus at California State University Sacramento's School of Education. His grandmother was Shizuko Ina, who was pictured in Dorothea Lange's photo essay on the internment of Japanese-Americans during WWII.[4] He also has a brother, Dylan, who is eight years his senior.

Tomine is fourth-generation Japanese American. Both of his parents, in spite of being third-generation Americans, spent part of their childhoods incarcerated in Japanese American internment camps during World War II.[5]

Tomine's parents divorced when he was two years old, after which he moved frequently, accompanying his mother to Fresno, CA, then Oregon, Germany, and Belgium, while spending summers with his father in Sacramento.

As a child, Tomine enjoyed reading Spider-Man comics,[6] and was inspired to experiment with drawing and creating his own stories. In an interview, he said, "Something about the medium just transfixed me at an early age".[7]

In high school, he began writing, drawing, and self-publishing Optic Nerve, which he has continued producing as a regular comic book series for Drawn & Quarterly. Tomine continued to produce the series while studying English as an undergraduate at UC Berkeley.[8][9]

Career

[edit]

Tomine began self-publishing his work when he was a teenager, but was also featured in mainstream publications like Pulse! while still in high school.

In an interview published in The Comics Journal #205, Tomine addressed criticisms of his work and discussed his influences; the magazine cover featured his self-parody of sorts, a sequence in which a hipster girl says to the reader, "I'm so cute! I love coffee and indie rock! But... I'm sad. Can you relate?"

Tomine cites Jaime Hernandez (Love and Rockets) and Daniel Clowes (Ghost World) as two of his biggest influences. He is also a fan of his contemporary Chris Ware.

Optic Nerve

[edit]

Optic Nerve is Tomine's ongoing comic series that was originally self-published in minicomic format and distributed to local comics shops in his area. Tomine published seven issues of the Optic Nerve mini; most of the stories were later compiled into a single edition, 32 Stories: The Complete Optic Nerve Mini-Comics, published by Drawn & Quarterly.

After Drawn & Quarterly became Tomine's publisher, Optic Nerve was published at standard comic book size, and the issue numbering was restarted, with the first Drawn & Quarterly-published issue renumbered as #1. These comics range from a few pages per story to the 32-page standard in later issues.

Issues #1–4 included several stories each and were later collected in Sleepwalk and Other Stories. Issues #5–8 included one story each and were collected in Summer Blonde.

Issues #9–11 were compiled into the critically praised 2007 graphic novel Shortcomings, a complete story arc in which Tomine explored Asian American racial issues directly.[10] The novel was later adapted into a 2023 film directed and produced by Randall Park, from a screenplay written by Tomine.[11]

Killing and Dying

[edit]

In 2015, Tomine's graphic novel Killing and Dying, a collection of six short stories, was released to critical acclaim and became a New York Times Bestseller.[12] It was named one of New York Magazine’s Top 10 Graphic Novels of the Year and one of NPR‘s Best Books of the Year, and was winner of The Story Prize’s Spotlight Award. Stories from the book were also honored with an Eisner Award for Best Short Story and excerpted in The Best American Comics anthology. Two stories from the collection, as well as one from Summer Blonde, were adapted into the 2021 French film Paris, 13th District.

In its review of Killing and Dying, Wired magazine called Tomine “one of the most gifted graphic novelists of our time.” English author Zadie Smith praised the collection saying, “[Tomine] has more ideas in twenty panels than novelists have in a lifetime.”

Comics artist Chris Ware said of the compilation: “As a serious cartoonist, one secretly hopes to create ‘That Book’: a book that can be passed to a literary-minded person who doesn’t normally read comics: one that doesn’t require any explanation or apology in advance and is developed enough in its attitude, humanity, and complexity that it speaks maturely for itself… Adrian Tomine‘s Killing and Dying may finally be That Book, and I’m amazed and heartened by it.”

Album art

[edit]

Tomine has contributed to several rock bands‘ album packaging design, including liner notes and album art for Eels' Electro-Shock Blues, "Last Stop: This Town", "Cancer for the Cure", and End Times; Yo La Tengo's 2006 covers albums Yo La Tengo Is Murdering the Classics and Murder in the Second Degree; The Softies' It's Love; and The Crabs' What Were Flames Now Smolder.

Commercial illustration and The New Yorker

[edit]

Tomine regularly works in commercial illustration. He frequently contributes illustrations and has done several magazine covers for The New Yorker; his first was the sequence entitled "Missed Connection". Tomine also illustrated the "Alpha Teens," a group of cartoon characters who appeared in commercial bumpers for Noggin's teen block, The N.[13]

Collected works

[edit]

Awards

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ O'Reilly, Seams (August 25, 2020). "Loneliness of The Long-Distance Cartoonist: Adrian Tomine's life and career". The Irish Times. Retrieved April 21, 2022.
  • ^ a b Kaneko, Mina (November 11, 2012). "Adrian Tomine's New York". The New Yorker.
  • ^ Adrian Tomine (2002). 32 Stories: The Complete Optic Nerve Mini-Comics. Drawn & Quarterly. p. 99. ISBN 9781896597003.
  • ^ 8
  • ^ Melissa Hung (Oct 16, 2002). "Geek Chic". East Bay Express. Retrieved 2006-09-17.
  • ^ Tomine, Adrian (July 21, 2020). "Fresno, 1982" (PDF). The Loneliness of the Long-Distance Cartoonist.
  • ^ Sinclair, Mark (March 13, 2009). "Q&A: Adrian Tomine". Creative Review. Archived from the original on 2015-03-19. Retrieved 2009-11-10.
  • ^ Spiegler, Marc. "Striking a Nerve". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. Retrieved 2022-04-25.
  • ^ Nguyen, Viet Thanh (2020-10-15). "Escaping Loneliness: An Interview with Adrian Tomine". The Paris Review. Retrieved 2022-04-25.
  • ^ Windolf, Jim (November 11, 2007). "Asian Confusion". The New York Times.
  • ^ D'Alessandro, Anthony; Patten, Dominic (2022-12-07). "Sundance Film Festival Lineup Set With Ukraine War, Little Richard, Michael J. Fox, Judy Blume Docs; Pics With Anne Hathaway, Emilia Clarke, Jonathan Majors; More". Deadline. Retrieved 2023-06-24.
  • ^ Rollman, Hans (20 October 2015). "In 'Killing and Dying', Drama Is Hidden Between the Lines of Profile Art and Dialogue". PopMatters.
  • ^ Neihart, Ben (March 20, 2005). "DGrassi Is tha Best Teen TV N da WRLD!". The New York Times. The alpha teens were created for The N by Berkeley-based comic-book author Adrian Tomine
  • 9 Lindberg, Melissa “Her Name is Shizuko”—A Mother’s Influence (May 5, 2021). Library of Congress May 5, 2021.

    [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Adrian_Tomine&oldid=1236356983"

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