The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

From superheroe­s to civil rights

Comic book artist’s work spans genres.

- By Bo Emerson bemerson@ajc.com

SIX FEET TALL in her red platforms and brilliant sunflower-yellow dress, Afua Richardson sails into My Parents’ Basement with an arm full of comic books and her portfolio over her shoulder.

The restaurant/tavern/ comic book store in Avondale Estates is appropriat­ely dolled-up for Richardson’s arrival, with a poster featuring one of the artist’s paintings of a glamorous femme fatale, and a display of her prints and greeting cards for sale.

Tim Ensor, co-owner of the establishm­ent, is ready with the news that Richardson, 38, has just won an Eisner Award the previous Saturday at the San Diego Comic Con, for her work as illustrato­r of “Black Panther: World of Wakanda.” But this isn’t the coolest thing happening right now in the World of Afua.

The big news is cradled in her right arm. The Stone Mountain resident is carrying a stack of samplers from “Run: Book One.” These are advance copies of a few pages from the latest graphic novel by U.S. Rep. John Lewis. Richardson is the proud illustrato­r of the new book, and she’s signed a stack of the samples for Ensor.

People familiar with the 2013 graphic novel “March” and its two sequels already know that Lewis’ illustrate­d history of his role in the civil rights movement became a sensation. Despite critics who thought a “comic book” was too pulpy for an elder statesman’s story, it triumphed on the New York Times best-seller list. The third installati­on went on to win the National Book Award, a first for a graphic novel.

“Run: Book One” begins where “March” left off, two days after the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965, when Lewis encounters one of the biggest Klan parades in decades, in Americus, Ga. It traces the collapse of the Student Nonviolent Coordinati­ng Committee, and Lewis’ launch into public office.

Co-written by Lewis and his policy adviser and digital director Andrew Aydin, the “March” trilogy was illustrate­d in a brooding black and white by North Little Rock native Nate Powell. Powell will draw the first 10 pages of “Run,” but then will hand over the inkwell to Richardson. The first volume is expected next year.

It’s a big job (she still has 55 pages to produce by October), and Aydin predicts it will have a profound impact on Richardson’s career. “Your life is going to change. You’re going to have a totally different experience from here on out,” he said, predicting that her renown will go far beyond her Black Panther fame.

Can she handle it? “She’s been training her whole life for this,” said husband Camron Wiltshire.

Like Powell, who started out as a drummer, her early training was actually in music. She grew up on 153rd Street in Harlem, and began playing the flute at age 9, performing in Carnegie Hall with a citywide orchestra at age 11. “I was a quiet kid,” she said, untying her elbow-length dreads and ordering a snack of tater tots. “I sang, but that was the only time you heard me. I joined the band; I was a band nerd.”

She began working in high school to help support the family, and continued scuffling afterward, as telemarket­er, secretary, caterer, model, jingle singer and vocalist in a menagerie of ensembles, including a Rose Royce cover band. She even appeared on the Jimmy Fallon show as a backup singer.

A sketcher since she was little, the young woman also saw that her future might be in art rather than music. She took online art classes and taught herself how to use Adobe Illustrato­r whenever she had access to an office computer.

Richardson first drew for Marvel in 2006, shortly before she moved to Atlanta from New York and gained some

attention with her work on “Genius,” a 2014 Top Cow comic about a military prodigy who happens to be a 17-yearold black girl from South Central, L.A.

Around that time, she also shared a panel with Aydin at a black comic arts festival in Los Angeles.

“I liked her style. I particular­ly liked her ability to do likenesses,” said Aydin, speaking from Lewis’ Washington, D.C., office. “More than anything, I liked the way she gave time to young people.”

Aydin noticed that whenever a kid approached Richardson’s table at a convention, she would step around the table, crouch down until she was at eye level, and give all the attention in the world to the youngster.

“I don’t think she’s ever attempted anything of this length before.”

Powell, who hands her his blessing along with the torch, said Richardson is wellequipp­ed for the responsibi­lity. “She’s better than me at isolating and minimizing the pictorial content in a panel into a more stark, single, graphic image,” he said from his home in Bloomingto­n, Ind. “I’m more panel heavy.”

She’s learned about racist violence from her grandmothe­r in Alabama, who was arrested and jailed for registerin­g to vote, and from her father, who was attacked for walking to school.

“Her father has experience­d a lot of the racism depicted in the book,” said Wiltshire, a muralist and a mixed martial arts competitor. “He’s a very sweet and gentle, considerat­e man, he’s very well-educated, he’s selfmade, and I think it’s wonderful that she can pay tribute to his spirit and his resilience.”

Her style is fluid, painterly. She is influenced by anime and is a delicate colorist. Restrictin­g herself to the black and white of “Run” has been a learning experience. “It’s a good challenge to study value,” she said.

Richardson started the project using brush and ink, but switched to digital art to be able to move faster, and also to incorporat­e the revisions that flowed in from Washington.

Even her digital art is painterly. She scans individual brushstrok­es into Adobe Illustrato­r, so that she works from a lexicon of her own gestures. “I turn my computer into a digital brush.”

Unlike some comics fans, she’s nothing but happy about the thunderous success of comics-based movies, especially the slew of Marvel superheroe­s (including Black Panther) who have become boxoffice gold. The exposure has given comics new life.

“Once the rights to X-Men were released, the floodgates opened,” she said. “It provided more of a financial base, opening up comics to a new audience.”

She’s had dinner with Aydin and John Lewis in New York, but her access to the congressma­n has been limited, and she’s worked — as did Powell — from visual reference materials, photograph­s and newsreels of the 1960s.

Lewis, she said, “is a very gentle and quiet man until he gets on stage. Then he’s filled with so much fire. He reserves his energy for the right moment.”

Afua Richardson’s moment is now. She will talk about her new project at Dragon Con over Labor Day weekend, Aug. 30-Sept. 3. Go to Dragoncon.org for more informatio­n.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Comic book artist Afua Richardson, the illustrato­r on John Lewis’ new graphic novel “Run,” shows off her puckish version of the Powerpuff Girls. (She turns the superheroe­s into girls of color and calls them Cocoa Puff Girls.)
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Comic book artist Afua Richardson, the illustrato­r on John Lewis’ new graphic novel “Run,” shows off her puckish version of the Powerpuff Girls. (She turns the superheroe­s into girls of color and calls them Cocoa Puff Girls.)
 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Comic book artist Afua Richardson strikes a superhero pose surrounded by the inventory at My Parents’ Basement, a restaurant/comic book store in Avondale Estates.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Comic book artist Afua Richardson strikes a superhero pose surrounded by the inventory at My Parents’ Basement, a restaurant/comic book store in Avondale Estates.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ABRAMS COMIC ARTS ?? The new graphic memoir “Run” by Rep. John Lewis is illustrate­d by Stone Mountain artist Afua Richardson. The book begins in 1965, just after the Voting Rights Act was passed, and demonstrat­es that the fight for civil rights isn’t over. The first volume is due next year, but Richardson recently received some samples of advance pages from the publisher.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ABRAMS COMIC ARTS The new graphic memoir “Run” by Rep. John Lewis is illustrate­d by Stone Mountain artist Afua Richardson. The book begins in 1965, just after the Voting Rights Act was passed, and demonstrat­es that the fight for civil rights isn’t over. The first volume is due next year, but Richardson recently received some samples of advance pages from the publisher.

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