Sunday,
Dec. 14, 2003.
Just wanted to thank Ben here.
Please excuse the right border,
it is currently being
very fussy with me.

Gods,
this drawing took a long long time. I just wanted to draw some modern
Corean superheroes. There's a lot of little concepts in this one.
This drawing is a little different than
any others I've done. Firstly, it's a group portrait of some of my
favorite online friends. Secondly, they are posing as character types
I've had in mind for several years.


Next
is the irrepressible, unpredictable, and gorgeous, MIRA.
Character name: MYRRH MAR (as in heart "murmur").
I
wasn't sure how to draw Mira at first. When I asked her for
suggestions, she wanted big guns. All puns aside, while I am a huge fan
of shooting games, I try not to put guns in my drawings anymore for a
number of personal reasons. Plus, they are illegal in Corea anyhow. So
Mira decided on swords. Now, a girl with a sword is not exactly a new
concept. But a femininja with fifteen blades on her could be
interesting.
Corean swords (awesome link by the
way) are different from their Japanese and Chinese counterparts.
In fact, Corean swords were often made to be mirror images of their
owners in some way, of all shapes and sizes, often made by the martial
artists themselves, with no standard pattern.
So
why does Mira have so many swords? Are they for her many moods? Or
collected from her foolish foes? The answer is the same - we probably
don't want to find out, but they look mad
cool, yo. And there are fifteen blades on her counting the ones
tucked in her sleeve and the small one stuck in her cleavage (that was
Mira's idea I swear).
Mira's
left pant leg spells out "Dae han min guk" (an earlier 1919 version of
Corea's modern name "Hanguk") while her left sleeve has the original non-Corean spelling of "Corea"
(added a third article to that page recently). The tied ribbon,
sleeves, and V-collar are from the hanbok design, with some typical
Corean patterns near the ends.
Mira's
foot rests on a motorcycle made in a Taekwon V motif. Taekwon V was a
very popular, and now nostalgic, robot cartoon back in 1970s Corea. (It
was either a Taekwon V motorcycle or a fire hydrant in the form of a
temple demon guardian.)
The poster to the left says "Blue Genes -
Designer DNA" for the highly fashion conscious Corean youth of today
and tomorrow.

Last
but not least, is the understated, modest, and disarmingly amusing SOO.
Character name: OTTO ZOMO DOM (as in "Autosomal dominant" mutation.
Give me a break on the names, I thought them up 9 years ago in medical
school.)
Soo's
personality brought a very different
aspect to the 2-dimensional character I had in mind. He's a Corean
Superman, yet remains reserved, and gentle, and he keeps his glasses
on (and his size screws up any sense of perspective in my drawing). No
flashy outfit or emblem. The clothes decorations are from Corean
paintings from the
15th-16th centuries.
The
poster behind Soo, is a parody of the K-pop princesses known as
Fin.K.L., except in the poster they are a K-pop/assassin group known as
Fin.K.I.L.L. and not quite as innocent in this brave new Corean world.
The
little boy in the lower right corner of the drawing is my 19-month old
little champion, SUN SU. He's wearing his (and our) favorite pajamas,
the ones with the skeleton bones on them. Sun Su actually had a hand in
this drawing as well. If you look at that grey scribble over the Blue
Genes poster (upper left, top of page), that's his handiwork with a
(thankfully) yellow marker.
One of these days, my little one will be
the Corean superhero. As will his yet unborn sister.
.