Disa Wallander is a Swedish cartoonist living and working in Stockholm. She loves to make zines and experiment with bringing collage and 3D materials into her comics. In her early twenties she read some philosophy books that suggested that nothing was real and ever since then she has made comics with the compulsion to affirm the existence of the world inside her head. Her sporadic comic strip Slowly dying features an array of nameless characters that also appear in the long-form books The Nature of Nature and Becoming Horses. Her work has been featured in various anthologies such as NOW, ku !, Drunken Boat, and Nobrow Magazine.
"A fantastic exploration of movement and form. Evokes equal parts
Jules Feiffer and Tove Jansson."--Michael DeForge, author of
Leaving Richard's Valley. "I wish Disa Wallander's images could be
eaten or stolen or inhabited. Because I find them so beautiful it
hurts to have to settle with just looking at them. But the greatest
thing about her book is that it talks about exactly that--the fact
that we humans would sometimes like to inhabit works of art or
become horses, and that these desires are as comforting as they are
painful."--Julie Delporte, author of This Woman's Work "Wallander's
work in Becoming Horses strikes a lot of notes that modern
cartooning seems to have eschewed... A style of cartooning that
embraces the unknown and is comfortable with ambiguity. There's a
simplicity of line that is juxtaposed with emotional complexity.
It's a cartooning style that lets readers fall into themselves.
It's a style that makes Becoming Horses both familiar and
powerful."--Solrad "Wallander's ideas about art are provocative,
and her illustrations are incredibly striking in this memorable
debut."--Thomas Batten, Library Journal "This wry meditation on art
and self-expression... and gently philosophical ramble is likely to
appeal to creative types who periodically get stuck on the question
of what creativity is for."--Publishers Weekly "[T]he mixed media
adventure that this book provides is a very serious and lively
demonstration of play."
--The Quietus
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