Paul Kirchner THE BUS #2

€15.00

Does it matter?

During the years 1974 to 1986, after working as an assistant to Wally Wood, Paul Kirchner created several comic strips such as Dope Rider for High Times magazine and tthe bus for Heavy Metal. In 2012, Tanibis published an anthologie of the bus strips that was nominated at the Angoulême International comics festival, proving that even a 30-year old public transportation vehicle can take part in a Grand Prix.

In 2013, Paul Kirchner surprised commuters when he decided to start working again on the bus. He fixed the old vehicle up, took it out of the garage and called its iconic passenger in the white overcoat back on duty, waiting to be taken on new, exotic adventures. The bus' unpredictable personality causes him to mimic classic pop culture icons such as King-Kong or Steve Martin while in turn analyzing or teleporting his passenger. And that's only when it's not cheating on him with other commuters.

Kirchner's new ideas are on par with the original strips, proving that his creativity didn't end with the 80's. The crazy cartoon logic of the original strips is still present, and wackiness is the norm. Some details, such as the so-called « smart » phones or the passengers' looks, root the stories in the 21st century, but Paul Kirchner's universe retains a timeless vintage aesthetic that blends eras, lending these new stories a hint of nostalgia.

Parts of the bus 2 material have previously been published in magazines in north America and in Europe.

The bus 1 is available here!

English edition published by Éditions Tanibis, 2015

Hardback

56 b/w pages

23 x 16.5 cm

  • "(…) The Bus 2, like its predecessor, is a remarkably and perhaps unexpectedly human strip. We may often identify with its passive protagonist, thrust into a world that is so often beyond our control—let alone our comprehension—but we can nevertheless dream awake. Are our visions just imaginative consolations in an otherwise mundane life? And if they are, does it matter?" - Edwin Turner, Biblioklept

  • "(…) Kirchner still draws ludicrous and hallucinogenic phenomena with staid precision, so that even the most absurd happening seems to immediately ‘belong’ to the same deadpan world as common carrier commuters, and thus is the engine of his comedy." - Joe McCulloch , The Comics Journal

  • "Kirchner is a hell of a drug." - Anonymous, 4chan

  • "(…) The mixture of the simple and the complex produces the tension in the strip that makes each one work so well. Even the ones that aren't laugh-out-loud funny are just enormously satisfying because of their construction, sort of like looking at a Rube Goldberg invention described by Professor Butts. Kirchner's comics have that same beautiful if deranged clockwork quality, like a gorgeously designed set of stairs going to nowhere." - Rob Clough, High-Low

  • "(…) the bus is a gem of philosophical cartooning, a near-perfect blend of The Far Side, M.C. Escher, Jorge Luis Borges, and Rene Magritte. " - Martin Schneider, Dangerous Minds

  • "That's some interdimensional shit." - neo7, Reddit.com

Add To Cart

Does it matter?

During the years 1974 to 1986, after working as an assistant to Wally Wood, Paul Kirchner created several comic strips such as Dope Rider for High Times magazine and tthe bus for Heavy Metal. In 2012, Tanibis published an anthologie of the bus strips that was nominated at the Angoulême International comics festival, proving that even a 30-year old public transportation vehicle can take part in a Grand Prix.

In 2013, Paul Kirchner surprised commuters when he decided to start working again on the bus. He fixed the old vehicle up, took it out of the garage and called its iconic passenger in the white overcoat back on duty, waiting to be taken on new, exotic adventures. The bus' unpredictable personality causes him to mimic classic pop culture icons such as King-Kong or Steve Martin while in turn analyzing or teleporting his passenger. And that's only when it's not cheating on him with other commuters.

Kirchner's new ideas are on par with the original strips, proving that his creativity didn't end with the 80's. The crazy cartoon logic of the original strips is still present, and wackiness is the norm. Some details, such as the so-called « smart » phones or the passengers' looks, root the stories in the 21st century, but Paul Kirchner's universe retains a timeless vintage aesthetic that blends eras, lending these new stories a hint of nostalgia.

Parts of the bus 2 material have previously been published in magazines in north America and in Europe.

The bus 1 is available here!

English edition published by Éditions Tanibis, 2015

Hardback

56 b/w pages

23 x 16.5 cm

  • "(…) The Bus 2, like its predecessor, is a remarkably and perhaps unexpectedly human strip. We may often identify with its passive protagonist, thrust into a world that is so often beyond our control—let alone our comprehension—but we can nevertheless dream awake. Are our visions just imaginative consolations in an otherwise mundane life? And if they are, does it matter?" - Edwin Turner, Biblioklept

  • "(…) Kirchner still draws ludicrous and hallucinogenic phenomena with staid precision, so that even the most absurd happening seems to immediately ‘belong’ to the same deadpan world as common carrier commuters, and thus is the engine of his comedy." - Joe McCulloch , The Comics Journal

  • "Kirchner is a hell of a drug." - Anonymous, 4chan

  • "(…) The mixture of the simple and the complex produces the tension in the strip that makes each one work so well. Even the ones that aren't laugh-out-loud funny are just enormously satisfying because of their construction, sort of like looking at a Rube Goldberg invention described by Professor Butts. Kirchner's comics have that same beautiful if deranged clockwork quality, like a gorgeously designed set of stairs going to nowhere." - Rob Clough, High-Low

  • "(…) the bus is a gem of philosophical cartooning, a near-perfect blend of The Far Side, M.C. Escher, Jorge Luis Borges, and Rene Magritte. " - Martin Schneider, Dangerous Minds

  • "That's some interdimensional shit." - neo7, Reddit.com

Does it matter?

During the years 1974 to 1986, after working as an assistant to Wally Wood, Paul Kirchner created several comic strips such as Dope Rider for High Times magazine and tthe bus for Heavy Metal. In 2012, Tanibis published an anthologie of the bus strips that was nominated at the Angoulême International comics festival, proving that even a 30-year old public transportation vehicle can take part in a Grand Prix.

In 2013, Paul Kirchner surprised commuters when he decided to start working again on the bus. He fixed the old vehicle up, took it out of the garage and called its iconic passenger in the white overcoat back on duty, waiting to be taken on new, exotic adventures. The bus' unpredictable personality causes him to mimic classic pop culture icons such as King-Kong or Steve Martin while in turn analyzing or teleporting his passenger. And that's only when it's not cheating on him with other commuters.

Kirchner's new ideas are on par with the original strips, proving that his creativity didn't end with the 80's. The crazy cartoon logic of the original strips is still present, and wackiness is the norm. Some details, such as the so-called « smart » phones or the passengers' looks, root the stories in the 21st century, but Paul Kirchner's universe retains a timeless vintage aesthetic that blends eras, lending these new stories a hint of nostalgia.

Parts of the bus 2 material have previously been published in magazines in north America and in Europe.

The bus 1 is available here!

English edition published by Éditions Tanibis, 2015

Hardback

56 b/w pages

23 x 16.5 cm

  • "(…) The Bus 2, like its predecessor, is a remarkably and perhaps unexpectedly human strip. We may often identify with its passive protagonist, thrust into a world that is so often beyond our control—let alone our comprehension—but we can nevertheless dream awake. Are our visions just imaginative consolations in an otherwise mundane life? And if they are, does it matter?" - Edwin Turner, Biblioklept

  • "(…) Kirchner still draws ludicrous and hallucinogenic phenomena with staid precision, so that even the most absurd happening seems to immediately ‘belong’ to the same deadpan world as common carrier commuters, and thus is the engine of his comedy." - Joe McCulloch , The Comics Journal

  • "Kirchner is a hell of a drug." - Anonymous, 4chan

  • "(…) The mixture of the simple and the complex produces the tension in the strip that makes each one work so well. Even the ones that aren't laugh-out-loud funny are just enormously satisfying because of their construction, sort of like looking at a Rube Goldberg invention described by Professor Butts. Kirchner's comics have that same beautiful if deranged clockwork quality, like a gorgeously designed set of stairs going to nowhere." - Rob Clough, High-Low

  • "(…) the bus is a gem of philosophical cartooning, a near-perfect blend of The Far Side, M.C. Escher, Jorge Luis Borges, and Rene Magritte. " - Martin Schneider, Dangerous Minds

  • "That's some interdimensional shit." - neo7, Reddit.com

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