Quick access:

Go directly to content (Alt 1) Go directly to first-level navigation (Alt 2)

For Everyday Heroes
Alltagsspionage - Comicreportagen aus Berlin

 

Alltagshelden
 
Ulli Lust studied in Berlin with many who have made a name for themselves: Mawil, Kai Pfeiffer, Tim Dinter, Jens Harder. They teamed up to found the comic art collective "Monogatari" that brings out joint reportages while they still were students. "Everyday Espionage" is one of the first volumes and appeared in 2001. It contained two of Lust’s illustrated stories. They show how a woman from Vienna adopted the city with all its outlandish aspects: by drawing.


Extracts from "Alltagsspionage":

Ulli Lust: Alltagsspionage Ulli Lust: Alltagsspionage Erlebnis Spass Center | © Ulli Lust


About the artist Ulli Lust:

Ulli Lust

For Ulli Lust, inquisitive eyes are a prerequisite for boosting our powers of perception – while travelling and in everyday life. A problem while travelling is that she doesn’t have a drafting table and nor does she has the privacy required. Her best works have not been spontaneous, produced in the excitement of the events, but later, while sitting quietly at the drawing board and after expeditious planning.


Travelpedia: Berlin

  • Lust: Alltagsspionage © Ulli Lust (Detail)
    At the turn of the millennium, more than 60 shopping centers were built in Berlin. One of them is the Gesundbrunnen Center in Berlin Mitte, Wedding district. It was opened on September 30, 1997. The center has a sales area of ​​25,000 m² and houses 110 shops and several restaurants presently. 1000 employees work in the shopping center, which receives an average of 33,600 visitors a day.

Thomas Hummitzsch on "Alltagsspionage“

Ulli Lust illustrates the scurrilous mix of sinful lingerie shops and gentlemen’s outfitters, of electronic market hells and small pet shops, of a paradise for household items, food courts and pay toilets in brutally honest and wild images."

Review
 


More Comics for everyday heros

Casa 4_3 © Calle Claus (Detail)

"Casasblanca"

Illustrator and comic book artist Calle Claus portrays Casablanca – the largest city in Morocco. A flying visit in three brief episodes: a walk through the old city, a taxi ride, then impressions, the diversity around the mosque and along the seaside promenade.

Barbara Yelin: Kairo © Barbara Yelin (Detail)

"Travel Sketches from Kairo"

Barbara Yelin was there in 2011 when the people of Egypt chased out President Mubarak and spread hope for democratic reform from Tahrir Square to the entire Arab world. Eight years later, the consequences of the demonstrations are grim. This also alters the way her comic book is received.

Making friends in Bangalore | Traffic © Sebastian Lörscher (Detail)

"Making friends in Bangalore"

Sebastian Lörscher takes his readers on a colourful and exciting #Graphic Journey. With red-edged pages, beautifully creamy paper that brings out the colours well, and harmonious typography, the book is so well designed that the Stiftung Buchkunst chose it as one of the most beautiful books of 2014. But the content is also not disappointing.


More about Graphic Travelogues

Graphic Travelogues Graphik: Dominik Wendland © Goethe-Institut New Delhi

About the artists

Learn more about our well-known artists, including Barbara Yelin, Reinhard Kleist and Sarnath Banerjee. All with proven comic expertise and sometimes with more, sometimes with less travel experience in the respective country.
 

Graphic Travelogues Graphik: Dominik Wendland © Goethe-Institut New Delhi

About Graphic Travelogues

Graphic Travelogues presents travel experiences by comic artists from different countries, illuminates and identifies recurring topics. From sketches to graphic novels, graphic diaries and travel drawings, we collect treasures here and question concepts and motivations, techniques and experiences.

Top