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Kim Jung Gi tribute: Malayalam filmmaker Krishand remembers the Korean comic book artist this inktober

Do artists make other artists? How the South Korean comic book artist Kim Jung Gi, who passed away last week, impacted the life and art of a Kerala filmmaker

October 10, 2022 / 00:11 IST
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Kim Jung Gi (Illustration by Krishand RK)

It has become quite an arduous task to stick to a routine and sketch every day this Inktober (the global challenge to do an ink drawing every day for the 31 days of October). And this time, I am doing it on an iPad with my Procreate graphics editor unlike every other time in the past 10 years, when consistently I have failed to make it for all of the days of the month, but still I would do it on paper using Indian ink.

As a child who could draw, I could not harbour any hopes of a formal training. My parents decided against sending me to a drawing school because, apparently, my father thought at the time that it would kill the innate artistic intent in me. And, so, I always lacked technique. The anatomy of what I tried to create wouldn’t work, the weight would fall apart, the medium would behave the way it wanted to rather than let me be in control.

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In 2011, I was introduced to the world of Feng Zhu, the veteran American concept artist. This was also the time when social media was coming into its own, we were slowly discovering Facebook and moving away from Orkut. And when Deviantart.com (world’s largest online art gallery and community) was very popular. And all of a sudden, the likes of me started discovering a number of interesting artists. I became a member of a few communities and would take up weekly tasks.

On one such forum, I came across an artist named Kim Jung Gi. This was in 2009. And Kim would draw with brush pens. I was from an engineering background, not an art school, so I had never heard of or known a brush pen. Furthermore, I found it really hard to find them in my small city of Thiruvananthapuram. Kim’s art struck me big time. He was drawing from his memory and filling the environment with figures, poses, concept art, manga and what not. And that too with perspectives of wide-angle lenses, such as a 12mm lens. And here I was, someone uninitiated when it came to lenses, but I had seen the film Enter the Void (2009), Gaspar Noé’s psychological drama fantasy, and I had an idea that what Kim was making was not easy.