The Mariner
I graduated with a bachelor’s degree in art, but in the art world, that degree is only worth as much as the paper it’s printed on after you draw something on it. There are no guarantees.
That twisted cliché is what runs through my head as I put .5mm mechanical pencil to Canson brand comic book art board. Page 1, panel 3, of my first issue of the Tales of the Mariner series, The Demon Purse. Wait…panel 3, that’s a bit of an odd place to start?
Nope. It aint. Not at all.
The Mariner sits at the bar, cradling a shot of rum. Nobody sits near him, his slouched posture, his ratted gray mane, his odd dress. His shabby exterior does not invite guests in this crowded establishment. He does not belong. The bar buzzes with tales from the mundane to the magnificent and he merely listens. A witness, an observer, a consumer from his bar stool as the crowd around him continues their entertaining chatter. They tell their tales. Tales of humor, tales of violence, tales of debauchery. Tales of triumph. Tales of failure. Tales of the shared human experience. Tales that invite others to listen. Tales that engage. Tales that repulse. Tales to entertain any who would listen.
And he does, he listens. There are countless stories to be told. Each offers its own vantage point. Each offers its own perspective. Each has merit, but not necessarily an audience. Tell the right tale to the wrong individual and it falls on deaf ears. Tell the wrong tale to the right individual and interest fades. It’s a roll of the dice, but stories are made to be told.
And in the next panel, the Mariner takes his shot.
And in the next, he stands to find his audience.
That is how it begins.
Pencil to paper. Page 1 panel 3.
And rightly so…
–chris