W. Maxwell Prince Murders Your Favorite Works of Art in The Electric Sublime
Main Art by Martín Morazzo & Mat Lopes
If you imagine the world just outside the frame of the Mona Lisa to be a peaceful renaissance setting, The Electric Sublime’s Arthur Brut sure has a surprise in store for you. Debuting next month from writer W. Maxwell Prince, artist Martín Morazzo and colorist Mat Lopes, The Electric Sublime follows Margot Breslin, newly anointed director of the Bureau of Artistic Integrity, a not-so-secret agency tasked with policing “art crime.” When famous works of art start ending up…different, she’s forced to call upon Arthur “Art” Brut, a special consultant whose relationship to the art world makes him an invaluable resource—and lands him in a mental institution.
Prince gave Paste an early look at the first three issues of the upcoming IDW series, packed with murderous Warhol idolaters, fine-art sacrilege and the most interesting wooden drawing model in the western canon. Check out the interview below to learn more about the head-tripping series’ take on the intersection of creativity and mental health, as well as a first look at Morazzo and Lopes’ interior art.
Paste: The Electric Sublime is all about art, so let’s start by talking about Martín Morazzo and Mat Lopes’ contributions to the book. Between the bizarre real-world crimes and the surreal dreamscapes “inside” these works of art, Morazzo is stretching a wide range of artistic muscles. How’d you connect and how has working together influenced your approach to The Electric Sublime?
W. Maxwell Prince: I had made a shortlist of a handful of artists that I considered to be very good, but for some reason weren’t currently doing published work. Martín was the first and only person to respond to my emails, and I think that was probably for the best. (I found out later he’s got some very specific family history that drew him to the pitch—the sort of stuff that makes him a natural at visualizing a world where art history and mental illness meet.) Mat was recommended to me by another colorist, and, as the story often goes, there’s really no other team that could have worked on this book.
Between Martín’s Quitely-meets-Crumb style, and Mat’s delicate treatment of Martín’s lines, we’ve wound up with something here that, to my mind, is the perfect execution of art-about-art.
As for my approach, I find myself now conceiving scenes in their precise tag-team delineation, which I think has freed me to write a lot more ambitiously; I know that whatever I scribble down, the two of them will knock it out of the park.
The Electric Sublime Interior Art by Martín Morazzo & Mat Lopes
Paste: In your announcement interview, you talked a bit about tackling the complex reality of mental health. Do you plan to explore the contrast between the manic Art Brut of the “real” world and the much more focused, capable Art Brut of the Electric Sublime? Is Brut’s mental state an inevitable consequence of breaching that divide?
Prince: That’s a good question, and you’re hitting it right on the head: every second Arthur spends in The Electric Sublime makes him more unfit to operate in the real world. One arm of the thesis of the book is that capital-A Art can act as a sort of salve to madness. It’s a therapy that so many people exercise. But for Arthur, it’s paradoxical: every second of his “therapy” just destroys his rational mind more and more. He has to jump into paintings, but it’s ruining him in the process.
Paste: Brut connects with the Electric Sublime via painting—will future issues or arcs reveal the worlds within other media?