Friday, March 14, 2014

New Engineering by Yuichi Yokoyama

New Engineering by Yuichi Yokoyama - 232 pages

Whereas the two books by Yuichi Yokoyama I've previously posted here (Garden and Travel) were each complete graphic novels, New Engineering is a collection of shorter works.  Most of these shorter scenes focus on the creation of some odd and imaginative work of engineering: Workers create a mountain out of rocks, astro-turf, and fake trees and paint rivers down the sides.  A man photo copies another man's clothes and creates his own outfit by taping together the copies.  In the title story, workers create a glass room at the bottom of a a lake, and then celebrate their achievement.

A large minority of shorts in the collection focus on highly kinetic and acrobatic fight scenes and gymnastic feats featuring a similar cast of characters to GardenNew Engineering adds to the "myth" of  Garden (if you could get away with using a word like "myth" to describe such avant garde compositions) by showing how some of the highly geometric and decorative masks and costumes  from the latter were "engineered."  It's almost as if the "stories" are a fun "how-to" on creating sculptural and architectural forms that have no real purpose other than their beauty and the rewards of the process of creation.

Like with the other books, I am again blown away by the way Yokoyama distills actions and movement into brisk procedural bursts.  One highly mechanic one page short is merely the requisite actions and exchanges of a man buying a drink from a vendor.  "Characters" in his works are merely anonymous role players who are either building something, breaking something, or admiring such works.  Who knows and who cares why they do it.  The process of creation and the beautiful architectural forms are their own reward.  As three of his anonymous characters put it after completing their underwater room, "The planned action has been competed.  The view is beautiful.  The project is a success."

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