Sierra describes Hans Vogel as “an anti-fascist fairytale/historical fantasy”; it’s a story about a German WW2 ace pilot called Hans Vogel after he is killed in the Battle of Britain, who now needs to reckon with the evils he perpetuated in life. What really makes this comic compelling to me is that Hans is a generally normal person with instincts towards helping people, who nevertheless seems to have let his cowardice/passivity and fear of confrontation lead him to become a literal Nazi war hero; the interchapter flashbacks to Hans growing up in Weimar Germany in particular are doing a really interesting job of showing how he ended up in this position (Ottoplatz has been my favourite so far).
As for Brynhildr, her contempt for and total disinterest in Hans is delightfuland I hope we see her in the comic again soon.
AHHH I PROPERLY SCREAMED ABOUT THIS ON TWITTER BUT I’M GONNA HOLLER AGAIN HERE!!
Thank you thank you thank you so much for drawing the best character in this entire comic! This looks so good, ahh you got her baleful glare perfectly!! And as for seeing her again, well. I’ve got some GREAT news….. ;)
¼ of my final fairytale illustrations! I’ve worked really hard on them over the past 4 weeks putting 24+hrs into the project and I’m super happy with the result!
#fairytale #illustration #myart #myccad #ccadillustration #penandink #traditionalart #traditionalmedia #fantasy #folktale #sigurd #brynhildr (at Columbus College of Art & Design - CCAD) https://www.instagram.com/p/B4KgHqIjwOA/?igshid=xdfmo1sm7toe