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Tambet, the Emir of Zahir
by Harry Lurcher

Just take the mic. Tambet, singer and bass player with Zahir on the road to here and what's next.

published

jan 26 '10
1 comment

Tambet, the Emir of Zahir

Carbon Based Lifeforms
by Jim Sharman

“We're like a shepherd trying to herd his flock, but in our case they're machines not sheep.” Carbon Based Lifeforms talk about making music as a soundtrack for life.

published

nov 20 '09
10 comments

Carbon Based Lifeforms

Lu:k
by Marika Agu

Lu:k are sailing the flagship of Estonian alternative dancemusic. No-one has reached their level yet in this specific genre. This is the interview with an important man in Estonian alternative music - Virko Veskoja.

published

sep 13 '09
5 comments

Lu:k

Wooden Shjips
by Harry Lurcher

This San Francisoco musical quartet are groovier than the Big Lebowski's beach scene, the silver edged storm clouds of Tesla sound they produce makes them this generations Spacemen 3, Hawkwind and Can rolled up in one.

published

sep 2 '09

Wooden Shjips

Magik Markers
by Harry Lurcher

Interview with Pete Nolan, one half of the Magik Markers.

published

aug 2 '09

Magik Markers

Those Dancing Days
by Maria Juur

(For those who do not know yet:) What exactly lies behind the name Those Dancing Days? Who are those five girls and under what circumstances have they joined forces to make some catchy tunes?

published

jun 29 '09
5 comments

Those Dancing Days

Lazer's Brazilian Muses, Part III: Velhinhas
by Martin Lazarev

The ‘Velhinhas’ or old ladies from Brazil peer back at you through the lense of Lazer. Dignified and defiant, incredulous they regard the crazy white man in their midst.

published

oct 19 '09
1 comment

Lazer's Brazilian Muses, Part III: Velhinhas

Lazer's Brazilian Muses, Part II: Moças
by Martin Lazarev

Melt into the pools of the brown eyed girls of Brazil. Lazer's adventures in Brazil continue...

published

oct 19 '09

Lazer's Brazilian Muses, Part II: Moças

Lazer's Brazilian Muses, Part I: Crianças
by Martin Lazarev

Part I of Lazer's Brazilian women, the ‘Crianças’ or children, street and beach kids, with the simple sunkissed smiles of life on the brink, day to day living, kittens without mittens, who knows where they will be tomorrow.

published

oct 19 '09

Lazer's Brazilian Muses, Part I: Crianças

Decayed Youth
by Aleksander Kelpman

Pictures from the lens of one young Estonian photographer, Aleksander Kelpman, in the forests, cities and scrublands of Eesti.

published

aug 14 '09
3 comments

Decayed Youth

Gavin Watson: Raving '89
by Gavin Watson

If you were there, Gavin Watson's photo's will give you goose bumps; if you weren't, they're the closest you'll get.

published

jun 17 '09
2 comments

Gavin Watson: Raving '89

A Big Freeze in the Estonian Film Industry - “The Snow Queen” Interview with the Director Marko Raat
by Harry Lurcher

“The Snow Queen” is the first Estonian feature film release of 2010 and interpretation of Hans Christian Andersen's classic story. Director Marko Raat shares his thoughts on film making in a frozen fairytale climate and his previous works “The Knife” and “Jaan Toomik”.

published

feb 23 '10

A Big Freeze in the Estonian Film Industry - “The Snow Queen” Interview with the Director Marko Raat

Fags, Fascists & Financiers
by Harry Lurcher

Steady as she goes. Catch a week of Fassbinder's movies in Tallinn this February along with the theatre adaptation of his work: Garbage, the City and Death directed by Veiko Õunpuu.

published

feb 16 '10

Fags, Fascists & Financiers

Docpoint Tallinn 2010 - Get Edukated
by Harry Lurcher

A new International Documentary Festival in Tallinn, to chase the cold away, 17 documentaries in 3 days at 2 locations (Artis and Kumu) from January 29th-31st. Chat with Tristan Priimägi on what it is about documentaries that ring his bell.

published

jan 28 '10

Docpoint Tallinn 2010 - Get Edukated

They Call It Acid
by Harry Lurcher

The late 1980's saw the birth of a youth culture — “They Call It Acid” is the definitive document of the Acid House era.

published

dec 2 '09
2 comments

They Call It Acid

Robert Bresson – Patron Saint Of Cinematography
by Veiko Õunpuu

Having given up painting on doctor's orders (it supposedly made him too agitated) Bresson made his first short film at the age of thirty-three

published

nov 26 '09
1 comment

Robert Bresson – Patron Saint Of Cinematography

The Revolution That Wasn't
by Harry Lurcher

Director Aliona Polunina's talks about her award winning film about revolutionaries in modern day Russia and the challenges of making a true documentary in her home country.

published

nov 22 '09
2 comments

The Revolution That Wasn't

The Temptation Of St. Tony

“Midway upon the journey of our life I found myself within a forest dark, For the straightforward pathway had been lost.”
Dante Alighieri, “Divine Comedy.” Inferno, Song I

published

jun 14 '09
3 comments

The Temptation Of St. Tony

Last Days of the Roman Empire
by Vadim Wilniewczyc & Andrei ‘Jack’ Jakovlev

From 2003-2007 Nightpeople magazine recorded the glamour and excess of Moscow's ultra-elite. The inheritors of the ‘eastern Roman Empire’ captured at play in a pyramid apex system that governs and behaves in ways familiar to scholars of ancient Rome.

published

dec 31 '09

Last Days of the Roman Empire

Stone Bridge Over The River Emajõe
by Michael Walsh

The story of the magnificent stone bridge, Kivisild, built in Tartu (Estonia) by Catherine the Great then blown up, bit by bit, by the German and Russian armies during WWII, along with 60% of the city...

published

jun 17 '09

Stone Bridge Over The River Emajõe

Going down in Riga
by Harry Lurcher

On a sunny summer Saturday morning in Riga there was a new kind of cop on the beat - Riga's riot police were out in force wearing elbow, shin, knee and chest plates, part man part robo turtle...

published

jun 14 '09

Going down in Riga

If You Go Down to the Woods Today
by Okeiko

Okeiko, the girl with the sun in her hair, creates other worlds inspired by the Estonian landscape and travels down under.

published

jan 14 '10
4 comments

If You Go Down to the Woods Today

A One Night Stand
by Olga Temnikova

Olga Temnikova's exhibition ‘A One night Stand’ uses sexual behavior patterns for metaphors of the Artist and Public communication.

published

jan 14 '10
1 comment

A One Night Stand

Heikki Leis
by Harry Lurcher

‘The people are different figures in Estonian culture - here we have musicians, singers, actors, poets, directors etc.’, Heikki Leis on his recent exhibition of graphite drawings of the heads and hands of Estonians who have moved or inspired him...

published

oct 12 '09
6 comments

Heikki Leis

Jasper Zoova
by Hanno Soans

The sweet popglam of Zoova's drawings might repel some people, or is not acceptable due to the subject matter, the way he draws is free of the clichés characteristic to Estonian graphic art or drawing tradition

published

aug 31 '09

Jasper Zoova

Christian Saldert
by Olga Temnikova

‘Take your time and get yourself in to the best of all art schools. Very simple and boring advice, but also very true.’
The art and advice from painter Mr Christian Saldert of Stockholm

published

jun 14 '09
2 comments

Christian Saldert

A Mighty Fortress Is Our God
by Tristan Priimägi

‘The comic book city is not a place with regulated crossroads and window-shopping, but a maze of shadowy alleyways that are occupied by characters from the edges of imagination.’ - Tristan Priimägi on life in a metropolis for the comic book character

published

sep 14 '09
3 comments

Now reading A Mighty Fortress Is Our God

Offgrid: Going Down the Rabbit Hole
by Michael Gallagher

Do you want to take the blue pill and wake up in your bed or the red and see how deep the rabbit hole goes?

published

sep 9 '09

Offgrid: Going Down the Rabbit Hole

Upriver with Heikki's Lens: Travels along the Mekong
by Heikki Leis

Heikki Leis, photographer, sculptor and artist takes us on his trip along a portion of the Mekong, the worlds 12th longest river, as he travels from Thailand up through Laos.

published

feb 3 '10

Upriver with Heikki's Lens: Travels along the Mekong

Kola Powder Part I
by Andrei ‘Jack’ Jakovlev & Oskar Voit

Mining for Powder — Travels to the Top of the World Part I

published

nov 7 '09
1 comment

Kola Powder Part I

From The Freezer To The Cooker: Lazer's Adventures In Brazil
by Harry Lurcher

Evocative interview with Estonian photographer and designer Martin ‘Lazer’ Lazarev enjoying being exotic on and around the beaches of Brazil

published

oct 14 '09
2 comments

From The Freezer To The Cooker: Lazer's Adventures In Brazil

Timberjack's #2: Coffee Table
by Jack

published

feb 12 '10

Timberjack's #2: Coffee Table

Cuprocking
by Marika Agu

published

sep 9 '09
4 comments

Cuprocking

Timberjack's #1: Shelving Unit
by Jack

Timberjack teaches us how to make a simple shelving unit in his first tutorial for divedivedive.

published

aug 13 '09
1 comment

Timberjack's #1: Shelving Unit

Tartu-flette
by Maiken Urmet

published

feb 5 '10
1 comment

Tartu-flette

Slowing Down and Doing More than Just Sniffing the Roses
by Michael Gallagher

“It is said that without the culinary arts, the crudeness of reality would be unbearable.”

published

dec 23 '09

Slowing Down and Doing More than Just Sniffing the Roses

nAnO - Underground Upmarket Eaterie
by Harry Lurcher

A small, beautifully formed space to get inspired about food, good company and explore the more essential things in life.

published

dec 17 '09
2 comments

nAnO - Underground Upmarket Eaterie

Warm Potato Salad With Hot Smoked Salmon
by Maiken Urmet

published

nov 4 '09
3 comments

Warm Potato Salad With Hot Smoked Salmon

West End Lane Books Recommendations Part I
by West End Lane Books

Sometimes you visit a place and just know, ‘I will be back‘. West End Lane Books an independent book shop in West Hampstead, London is one of those places. Take a peek at some of their book reviews they kindly shared with us.

published

nov 23 '09

West End Lane Books Recommendations Part I

Struve and the Tartu Meridian
by Michael Walsh

F.G.Wilhelm von Struve, astronomer and initiator of the Struve Geodetic Arc, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

published

dec 22 '09
1 comment

Struve and the Tartu Meridian

The Mighty Ural
by Michael Walsh

The secret “Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact” German Russian Non-Aggression Treaty in 1939, facilitated technology transfer and the USSR was licensed to copy the BMW R 71

published

aug 14 '09
1 comment

The Mighty Ural

Underground Music Scene Flyers: Estonia, Part I
by Martin ‘Qba’ Kaares

Few flyers handpicked by Qba, a grand old man of Estonia's drum and bass community.

published

dec 27 '09
1 comment

Underground Music Scene Flyers: Estonia, Part I

Italian Law & Order
by Harry Lurcher

On the streets of Verona, Rome and Milan with the cops and priests in their finest livery.

published

aug 25 '09

Italian Law & Order

Heikki Leis

I'm freelance artist. I have been doing mainly hyper-realistic pen- and pencil drawings and i have been active in phtotgraphy and sculpture.

since

feb 3 '10
1 contribution

Heikki Leis

Okeiko

a photographer and artist based in Tallinn Estonia. Drawing her inspiration from nature her photographs are heart warming and charming, sneaking into your subconscious to play mischievously.

since

jan 14 '10
1 contribution

Okeiko

Vadim Wilniewczyc & Andrei ‘Jack’ Jakovlev

Vadim Wilniewczyc - a photographer and graphic artist. One of a kind, not to be repeated. Andrei Jakovlev, (Jack) - a freelancing Art Director. Just an old school snowboarder.

since

dec 31 '09
1 contribution

Vadim Wilniewczyc & Andrei ‘Jack’ Jakovlev

Martin ‘Qba’ Kaares

Being an artist and a DJ at the same time, his name is known by especially those Estonians who have chosen to reside on the alternative side of both local communities.

since

dec 27 '09
1 contribution

Martin ‘Qba’ Kaares

Veiko Õunpuu

a writer, artist and film director, sometime lecturer, ex-carpet salesman (never made a sale)

since

nov 26 '09
1 contribution

Veiko Õunpuu

West End Lane Books

established 1994, is an independent bookshop in the heart of West Hampstead

since

nov 23 '09
1 contribution

West End Lane Books

Jim Sharman

His career and personal life centre around a desire to improve and develop communication between people...

since

nov 20 '09
1 contribution

Jim Sharman

Andrei ‘Jack’ Jakovlev & Oskar Voit

Andrei Jakovlev, (Jack) - a freelancing Art Director and Oscar Voit - a professional hairstylist since 1996.

since

nov 7 '09
1 contribution

Andrei ‘Jack’ Jakovlev & Oskar Voit

Maiken Urmet

A native of Tartu, Estonia, wants to expand the Estonian diet with foreign dishes. She has by now published her first cookbook „Teistmoodi kokaraamat” (A Different Kind of Cookbook) and is currently working on another.

since

nov 4 '09
2 contributions

Maiken Urmet

Martin Lazarev

since

oct 19 '09
3 contributions

Martin Lazarev

Tristan Priimägi

since

sep 14 '09
1 contribution

Tristan Priimägi

Michael Gallagher

an Estonian/American lawyer who came to Tartu in 1994 and has been living and working in Tartu since then.

since

sep 9 '09
2 contributions

Michael Gallagher

Marika Agu

on the way she'd pick up anything, from poker skills to photography

since

sep 9 '09
2 contributions

Marika Agu

Hanno Soans

Hanno Soans, born in 1974 is a freelance art critic based in Tallinn, Estonia.

since

aug 31 '09
1 contribution

Hanno Soans

Aleksander Kelpman

My name is Sander. I'm a suburb kid from Tallinn - Estonia, I'm 18 years old and find pleasure in arts.

since

aug 14 '09
1 contribution

Aleksander Kelpman

Jack

Hi I'm Jack. I like to make things, tables chairs, book cases. I'm going to be showing you how to make things too.

since

aug 13 '09
2 contributions

Jack

Maria Juur

is a writer based in Tallinn, Estonia. Her background is in art history but prefers Mutant Discos to museums and sees herself in the space between art and music culture.

since

jun 29 '09
1 contribution

Maria Juur

Gavin Watson

Today he works in fashion, photo realism and portrait photography and his work is on show at galleries all over the globe.

since

jun 17 '09
1 contribution

Gavin Watson

Michael Walsh

a graphic designer from Ireland, living in Tartu, Estonia since 1992. An underlying element in his work is a search for a reinterpretation of design classics in a contemporary way which respects aesthetic heritage and craft.

since

jun 17 '09
3 contributions

Michael Walsh

Olga Temnikova

a graduate of the Estonian Academy of Arts. Now working as a freelance graphic painter/designer/illustrator and gallerist in Tallinn.

since

jun 14 '09
2 contributions

Olga Temnikova

Harry Lurcher

Heard once that life is too serious to be taken seriously. Poet, promoter, director of creativity, frustrated artist and aspiring human being.

since

jun 14 '09
13 contributions

Harry Lurcher

Prologue

The famous choral of Martin Luther states “A Mighty fortress is our God” but in the world of comic books is it so? The fantasies of the picture pages do of course deal with the problems of our cultural space that are rooted in the Christian tradition - temptation, sin, repentance, redemption - but a comic book city is no shelter for a lone wanderer, it is a new threat. While in the medieval sanctums in England from the 4th to 17th century there was a Law of Shelter, pursuant to which a sanctum built on holy land provided shelter to wanderers from robbers and to robbers shelter from the law, then in the world of comic books the cities offer shelter to neither the good or evil. In a city everyone has to stand up for themselves. The city is a callous inevitability, where the emergency light never goes off and the prevailing instinct of a more vigilant mind is - to get away from here, far away.

In a classical comic book story line the role of a city is that of a grey cardinal (to lay it on with the religious parallels). Usually the fight between good and evil takes the centre stage in the story. People are reduced to an anonymous mass, a herd of sheep, which would be unable to achieve anything without the help of the hero. In comic books people often lack their own will, they act on instincts without any capacity to shape their destiny. Ordinary people surface the grey mass only if they are ‘love interests’ or ‘donors’. A ‘love interest’ is the fair lady of the super hero, a ‘donor’ as characterized by Vladimir Propp in the myth-archetypes description is a character who intervenes on the hero's path, giving him necessary advice during times of difficulty or a magical object that enables the story to reach the envisaged ending. In the hierarchy of characters the city is ever-present, standing tall and threatening above the story lines. The role of the city is to emphasise and sharpen the intense atmosphere, to create a mysterious ambience. The comic book city is not a place with regulated crossroads and window-shopping, but a maze of shadowy alleyways that are occupied by characters from the edges of imagination.

All is Made by Man

If we take a look at the portrayal of real cities in comic books, then in most cases it is the more grotesque part of any city depicted. The most popular cities for the comic books to build a firework of poetic liberties on the familiar grounds seem to be London and New York. Due to such comic books as ‘From Hell’, ‘Constantine’, ‘Sandman’, ‘Albion’ or ‘The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen’ London has become the contemporary foreshadowing of apocalypse, a place where everyone lives together alone. The Japanese comic books depict Tokyo as a doomed mega city that is in a constant fight over each square inch of its land with the elements, sea and tsunamis. Faced with forces of nature Tokyo citizens seek help from technological advances, setting up a classical semiotic opposition of nature and culture. Due to irresponsible actions the nature has become man's enemy rather than companion. As the ecosystems collapse, people seek help from technological advances, but in the Japanese stories the robots, cyberspace and artificial intelligence often prove to be smarter forces than man and seem to have a plan of their own how to shape the future of the world.

The architecture of the comic book cities is usually reminiscent of an Orson Welles style futuristic and cold place with distorted perspectives, where pursuant to the context and tone of the comic book a touch of Gothic, Art Deco or Art Nouveau elements are added. The effect created is the co-existence of two worlds - the minimalism of glass towers and grotesque details from old architecture such as rainwater pipes with gargoyles and ornamented cornices. Based on a real world, the comic book city is a handiwork of a talented architect's evil twin, still a man, but quite a different one.

Size Matters (Where Nothing Else Remains)

The bases for a classical comic book city could be the three mega cities in ‘Judge Dredd’ - Mega City One, Mega City Two and Mega City Three. After a nuclear catastrophe the entire America has turned into a desert with just three large centres remaining, immense city-states, where street crime and corruption flourish and everyday life is in complete anarchy. The largest is Mega-City One, which covers the entire East coast of the USA and is home to 800 million people. It is the huge mass of people squeezed onto such a small area that turns Mega-City One into Gomorrah. People live in high apartment blocks, under constant attack from crimes of every description. Mutants that have been created by the poisonous wasteland areas surrounding the city also live illegally inside the city in different forms. Mega-City One is divided into districts, each of which is the size of a 21st century mega-city (London, New York or Tokyo). The districts are often at war with one another. Next is Mega-City Two, which is on the West Coast and Mega-City Three, which collocates Texas and the Southern States and later assumes the name Texas City. These three Mega-Cities are the absolute height of classic urbanization paranoia. Everything that one could hate about cities is concentrated into these places. In these comic books cities have become a separate organism, in which fights are fought constantly depicting all shades of hoodlum individuality. The city is a dangerous inevitability that has to be accepted since there simply is nothing better.

Two Sides of a Silver Dollar

The most famous city of the comic book world is Gotham City, the stomping ground of Bruce Wayne, who in his spare time flies around in a batsuit and is otherwise known as the Batman. Gotham City is modelled on New York; many places on the city map coincide, e.g. Manhattan. Gotham City is often depicted as an exaggerated distorted mirror of New York. The main problem of Gotham City is corruption, which has reached all institutions, the police being the most prone to bribery. In the Batman comic books the focus of the stories is where the bad guys tilt the governing power towards their interests illegally by manipulating the people. Characters include the Joker, Penguin and Harvey Dent AKA Two Face. To some extent Metropolis, the hometown to the Superman stories is linked with Gotham City. Sometimes the two have been depicted on two coasts of the same bay, sometimes even as neighbouring cities. The two can be compared with a sentence said with some humour that Metropolis is New York by day and Gotham City is New York by night. However, Metropolis is actually based on Chicago.

Bottom of the Basin

One comic book, where the city is undisputedly the main character is Frank Miller's series of dark stories, ‘Sin City’. The city is actually called Basin City and does not draw its inspiration from any specific city, but is a mix of the Southern and Central States and the East and West Coast. Here the winters are heavy with snow and the summers unbearably hot. There are palm trees in Sin City, but the city is surrounded by tar craters, dinosaur bones, deserts and mountains. Real life Americana subtly becomes a dreamlike fiction. The nickname ‘Sin City’ is of course due to the high level of depravity and corruption of its citizens and Frank Miller has not been modest with the morbid details in describing the dark deeds that take place here. Sin City is ruled by the Roark dynasty, who have turned the whole town into their private church. A church, that demands a regular and ruthless human sacrifice to the altar of greed, power and moral decay.

One of the quinetessential depictions of a “comic book city” originates actually from the world of movies. Alex Provas's film “Dark City” (2000) nails the murky atmosphere with extraordinary precision, turning a modern urban landscape into a creepy location, where nothing can be trusted. To drive a point home, he has houses changing place and walls shifting every night, so that the citizens cannot trust even the things that seem solid. In Dark City, you can literally trust nothing. The moving walls of the city at night and the disseminating faceless vampires form a good portrayal of the general atmosphere of paranoiac uncertainty in which the people of the comic book cities have to dwell.

Epilogue

Martin Luther might have argued, that the people do not need the institution of church to talk to god. That there is no necessity for a governing body, that keeps the mortals on a distance from the divine and vice versa.

It seems that the comics world needs that institution, and the role of the church is claimed by the city, that acts as a source of of redemption and downfall at the same time. The city a acts as an intermediary between the masses and their heroes, advocating their communication, but being constantly driven by a guilt of failure, shaking under its own terrible weight of depravity. The city is desperately craving for forgiveness, but deep inside hates the only one, who can give it to him - the hero - and plots its destruction.

A good comic book hero, on the other hand, is a dual character, a saviour and an antichrist rolled in one, its sole purpose usually, to think about it, not saving the people, but saving the city from complete annihilation. It seems that in the world of uber-men, “good” and “evil” are just four-letter words, that belong in a children's textbook in their naive simplicity. A hero is up against the villain, who wants to rule the world, the people, who are blinded often by media, superstition, or just plain stupidity, and the city, who cannot stand a moral guardian. All that belongs to him, when he is alone, are his thoughts in the darkness.

 

“A mighty fortress is our God, a bulwark never failing. Our helper He, amid the flood of mortal ills prevailing”   Martin Luther

A Mighty Fortress Is Our God A Mighty Fortress Is Our God A Mighty Fortress Is Our God A Mighty Fortress Is Our God A Mighty Fortress Is Our God A Mighty Fortress Is Our God A Mighty Fortress Is Our God A Mighty Fortress Is Our God A Mighty Fortress Is Our God A Mighty Fortress Is Our God

Tristan Priimägi

since

sep 14 '09
1 contribution

Tristan Priimägi

Tristan Priimägi studied Semiotics in the Tartu University. He graduated with a BA in 2001, specializing in film semiotics. Since then has been working for different advertising agencies and been a driving force in several cultural projects like the graphic design webzine "Beta" and the "Plink Plonk" music festival. In addition to that, he has been a regular contributor to all the bigger press publications, newspapers and magazines, writing about film, music and pop culture in general, helped with translation and promotion work for Estonian films and film events and been a member of the Tallinn Black Nights Film Festival selection committee for several years. Plans for 2010 include organizing DocPoint Tallinn - an Estonian branch of the renowned Helsinki documentary festival DocPoint.

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published • September 14th '09

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Submit your comment

jan 19 '10 19:44

toom

Nice article!

jan 10 '10 20:18

Nikko

City as Church, love it. Thanks

dec 25 '09 17:04

Martin`s friend

cool

Divedivedive, a platform for survivors of the 20th century cultural landslide.

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