THE VISUAL TELLING OF STORIES

Dr.Chris Mullen

       

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

GUIDED TOUR

 

A LYRICAL ENCYCLOPEDIA OF VISUAL PROPOSITIONS

RUGGED DESIGN IN OPPOSITION TO ELEGANCE

IT'S BIGGER THAN YOU COULD EVER THINK

JUST EXPLORE - NO CLUES FROM ME

see Design Notes above

 
   

 

 

 

This site records a range of material dedicated to the study of the Visual Narrative. The original site, intended by me for part-time students and other interested parties was closed down by the University of Brighton in 2004. I was subsequently denied access to the original images most of which, however, were in my own collection. I have developed the site on a daily basis thereafter. It remains exclusively educational and is in constant use. Many thanks to those in the UK and beyond who shared my irritation at events. Contact me on

[email protected]

Wherever possible I have tried to get copyright permissions. The site is purely educational and dedicated to the understanding of the Visual Narrative. Please tell me if I need to contact you. Most of the illustrators represented retain their own copyrights. I will unhesitatingly remove any image of which you own the rights. Many of the images are scanned from scrapbooks assembled by commercial artists for their own reference, so I may not have the date or the source.

Chris Mullen

 

JULY 2012

The site is not supported by an outside institution nor by advertising. For twelve years it has been assembled entirely at my own cost, and is hosted on my own server. Many of the images have been acquired solely to make them available to those people like me who are obsessed with art and artists.

JANUARY 2015

"The British Library would like to archive your website in the UK Web Archive. The UK Web Archive was established in 2004 to capture and archive websites from the UK domain, responding to the challenge of a 'digital black hole' in the nation's memory. It contains specially selected websites that represent different aspects of online life in the UK. We work closely with leading UK institutions to collect and permanently preserve the UK web, and our archive can be seen at http://www.webarchive.org.uk/."