Showing posts with label Patricia Breccia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Patricia Breccia. Show all posts

Monday, November 15, 2021

A direct speech from my friend and extraordinary Argentine artist Patricia Breccia


- Hey Man...

- You in love again? 

- Is it true?

- Know that ladies love you...

- Artists know your soul...

- Maybe also your heart...

- Always new and never old...

- Joyful's start...

- Not only a writer you're...

- Always near...

- Never far...

- Sweet and dear...

- Know who you're...

- Your art's passion...

- Always fashion...

- Like a cat being stray...

- Do know your own way...

- Argentina never cries...

- It's the world that sighs...

- But again...

- People're lame...

- Inside a clerical's game...

- New book...

- Spikey's look...

- Not like Mickey Rourke...

- Carlos Gardel's singing...

- About the upbringing...

- Carlos Nine's drawing in heaven...

- Not counting till 7...

- Remember that Muñoz...

- Isn't José's boss...

- Like my father and I...

- Our soul and spirit never lie...

- Bit like the Latin...

- Without satin...

- No Conquistadors' land...

- Endless loop without an end...

- Astor did told me inside a melody...

- That our choice's not our enemy...

- Our inner shadows do dwell...

- Women love a simple spell...

- Like you do...

- Always somebody that's new...

- It's the bloody internet...

- Being eaten by a bat...

- There's my new book...

- Fish and hook...

- Have a copy for you...

- I'll sketch something new...

- True...

- Can't understand...

- Why Portugal doesn't have a band...

- Summer's gone.,.

- Fall's alone...

- Outside any storm...

- Sun does burn...

- India's path again? 

- Mind's a spot game...

- At Buenos Aires fatmen talk...

- Maybe about white chalk...

- It's the climatic change...

- Not at river Ganges...

- It's an M & M?

- Filter it with your pen...

- Whatever you do...

- Just remain true to you...

- Marry the best one...

- During any time's zone...

- Inside the library...

- Fell thy speech inside me...

- Will not forget...

- That Voltaire was a brat...

- Know also that Descartes wore an hat...

- Walking in the streets...

- Not thinking in any kind of sweets...

- Memories of my time as an Argentine...

- Delightful mine...

- Moon does shine...

- Towards my within I go...

- No art show...

- Island inside an island being...

- An episodic's sight seeing...

- Hate Star Wars...

- With their saga's cross...

- Obi Wan Kenobi's father...

- 3 CPO can't move further...

- Feel myself inside a comedy...

- When I think on their scenery...

- George Lucas did told...

- THX 1138 is present time's gold..

- Not knowing a thing... 

- Do know that the fat lady does sing... 

Monday, September 13, 2021

A sweet speech from my friend and extraordinary Argentine artist Patricia Breccia

 

- Man, we go back...

- No cigarettes' pack...

- Yesterday champagne was at bay...

- Just a marvellous day...

- Kirschner did scream..

- Not like a queen...

- Felt something new...

- Wanted to illustrate something to you...

- For true...

- It's your personal style...

- Never forget...

- Meanwhile...

- It was about a bat...

- Caught a smile...

- Did remember you wearing a t-shirt with an artwork from me...

- Portuguese tiles being your energy...

- It was a woman and a cat...

- Not having a map...

- Design was prime...

- Books that you created...

- Outside any rhyme

- Never tainted...

- Inside our mind...

- Always kind...

- Women do admire you...

- You're always something new...

- Deep imagery's scene...

- Artists by your side...

- Not inside any given dream...

- But with pride...

- Thought on something that you always tell me:

"Patri, your pages are a vast sea" 

"Way more than an identity"

"Juxtapose's entry" 

- Felt happy...

- Snappy...

- Totally true...

- Felt the world turning new...

- Napkins were in the table...

- Being able...

- Stroked them gently...

- With a brush that I found near a tree...

- Did I told you that Las Pampas looked even prettier yesterday? 

- It's true...

- Whatever people say...

- No stick's glue...

- Breathed oxygen pure...

- Listening to The Cure...

- Treachery was a speech...

- Melt the breeze...

- Outside any game...

- Need caffeine...

- Bastards tried to destroy my birth country...

- Over a bounty...

- You know me...

- Not a flowerish honey bee...

- To you I make an exception...

- With perfection...

- There's an empty glass...

- No human mass...

- Just like a gate's pass...

- Muñoz told me about your conversation...

- It began inside a pagan nation...

- Not in France...

- With you writing a romance...

- But how you a book collection by him shaped during a break...

- Some Argentine do understand...

- When an heart's a band...

- Never forgot...

- It was hot...

- Pale blue dot...

- There were sharks attacks...

- Wolfpacks...

- Mankind want profit...

- Near a comfy seat...

- Intelligence ain't knowledge...

- Then again...

- Instinct is the edge...

- No shame...

- America doesn't bend knee...

- We're latin like thee...

- Sometimes day color...

- Inside an hour...

- Others only draw black and white...

- During the night...

- All my kitties and cats say "hello" to thee...

- Doesn't matter if you're in land or at a huge vast sea...


Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Something sweet told to me by my friend and fascinating Argentine artist Patricia Breccia

 


- Man, the world is a mess...

- Let's play chess...

- Sometimes I don't know what to tell you...

- This is true...

- As being inside an act of magic...

- Never tragic...

- There's a word...

- Staring at a bird...

- Cats in your eyes...

- No lies...

- 7 Lives...

- Just like a powerful song...

- Battered in a huge gong...

- Somewhere at Hong Kong...

- People come and go...

- Inner flow...

- No mystery...

- Our arms belong to the sea...

- Remember that you once told me this:

"A ginger girl's like a cascade's fall" 

- Didn't think too much about it at the time...

- Never was lost in one of your rhymes...

- Like the moon...

- Bathing the sun...

- Too soon...

- For fun...

- Know that you admire my father's artistry...

- While being always free...

- Also remember that you also told me this:

"A friend is with us even when we're  picking a bus"

- Our genuine style...

- For more than a shortwhile...

- Walking a huge street...

- Never thinking deep...

- Suddenly you tell me this:

"Life's more than chemistry when we're source of energy" 

- Give it a deep thought...

- It was something that I've sought...

- Near you in your infancy...

- Know that you actually mirrored the Baltic Sea...

- Like a soldier with a pen...

- Being a simple man...

- Language's ain't an issue in our empathy...

- We're linked through telepathy...

- Know well that you love my art...

- Can feel it inside my heart...

- Some women understand you...

- Others don't...

- Because you're always true...

- They always forget about your magical wand...

- There's an old Astor Piazzola melody...

- In you and me...

- Borges forgot to told...

- That this world is real world...

- Stone age was millennia ago...

- Like a river that flows...

- I'm Argentine...

- Never lost inside a dream...

- You're Portuguese...

- Born in the land of wine and cheese.

- Sometimes it does rain...

- Love's a cure for pain...

- Dancing with you...

- Never feeling blue...

- A French book...

- Definitely a stylish look...

- Years pass by...

- No sigh...

- Into every step of my soul...

- Know that we're friends a go...

- Not inside a freakish show...

- From Russia, France, passing India to Argentina's land...

- World without end...

- Cortazar told about a clock...

- Time as an electroshock...

-  Instantly to me you said:

"Patri, the sky's never red" 

- Stared at your hair...

- No white in there..

- Only our young soul...

- Worthing more than gold...


Saturday, August 14, 2021

Something sweet told to me by my friend and astonishing Argentine artist Patricia Breccia

 

- Man...

- Not the bat...

- Talk with the cat...

- Being you...

- Always something new...

- Buenos Aires streets...

- With several sweets...

- I stare at my watch...

(Not being a Swatch)....

- Think on time...

- Like a precious goldmine...

- You drive women mad...

- Because you're good...

- Sometimes they're bad...





- It depends on your own mood...

- Artistically speaking...

- Harbouring your mind...

- Boat's never sinking...

- Heart's also kind...

- There's your style...

- For more than a shortwhile...

- In Buenos Aires we don't think...

- Always forget how to merge water with ink...

- But it's all over the world...

- I know that dearly I you hold...

- It's how we both telepathy make...

- Nothing at stake...

- Battleships are empty...

- Chinese are plenty...

- It's the global pandemy...

- Money's always for free...

- You know me...

- Sometimes I stare at you by the sea...

- While you walk without a simple talk..

- To cats we both communicate...

- Never being late...

- It's how we move our own words...

- More than colloquial swords...

- Know that you love my father's artistical goal...

- Eisner's hall of fame...

- More than coal..

- He never loved a game...

- I remember that you told me this:

"Patri, don't forget who you're.", "Always be more than a simple star" 

- Thought a bit on this...

- Inside a storm bliss...

- Tall and thin you stood...

- Eating all kinds of food...

- Man good...

- Science did came...

- Who's to blame? 

- Always have your own inner flame...

- Never forgetting a simple talk...

- Dancing with me, we both walk...

- Melody movement start...

- Knowing that you speak with your heart...

- Using your soul and brain...

- No shame...

- With Yankees you do dwell...

- Loving your belle...

- It's how you're...

- Always near and never far...

- State amend...

- Time quality does bend...

- Whispering to a tree...

- Becoming ours for free...

- It's the oxygen that we breathe...

- Surely sweet...

- Or how we "see" the biosphere...

- More than simple atmosphere...

- Double dare...

- No fear...

- A huge grizzly bear...

- Towards cats talk again...

- Never in vain...

- More than Gods inside a train...

- We never know...

- Maybe it's a theater show...

- All the evil that mankind do...

- Being true...

- Through centuries...

- In world entities..

- They tell us to cry...

- About a lie...

- No shout...

- Going out..

- Cats do know..

- That all's a freakshow...


Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Interview Patricia Breccia about her father Alberto Breccia and her works - English



Mort reads Valentina by ED


Manuel Santo: Your father was born before WWI in 1919 in Uruguay and later went with his family to Buenos Aires In Argentina.

Patrícia Breccia: You're right. My father was born in Uruguay, in Pocitos and came to Argentina when he was a small boy. He loved Uruguay, he never wanted to become an Argentine citizen. About Uruguay's influence in his work, I don't know if he had it, because his childhood and his friends and life, have them in Buenos Aires and in his childhood  in a small town called Mataderos. It was a small town filled with beautiful people and cutlers, that he visited a few months before his death.

2
I remember being a child and reading something about Ernie Pike character drawn by your father in 1959, "Mort Cinder" in 1964, "Che" in 1968, as well as "The Eternaut" In 1969 and In the following year "Evita", all of them with Hector Oesterheld script in magazines that I've read that came from Spain.
 Could you tell us a bit about the companionship of these two genius, his origins and if Argentina politics has influenced these masterpieces that were drawn phenomally by him? 


I think that he drew only some parts of Ernie Pike. He and Oesterheld began their work together with "Sherlock Time" that was published in "Hora Cero" in 1958.
 The first time that they met was in 1955, in a party given in Hugo Pratt's house, when he lived in Argentina. After came the meetings at our town in Haedo, at the time that they were making "Mort Cinder" in a famous restaurant in the hystorical street named Corrientes. The restaurant's name was "El palacio de las papas fritas". 
 They really admired each other... But they weren't close friends, They didn't have that cumplicity among two friends...
In Hector's scripts, always existed a social background and in his latest stories, the political theme was obvious. My father's drawing skills were phenomenal. I agree with you.

3
In the 70's, I've read your father's genius with literary adaptations of American Writer H.P. Lovecraft in 1974 and some Edgar Allan Por stories in 1974, some of them had script by Argentine Writer Carlos Trillo.
Can you tell us a bit of the techniques that your father used to create these masterpieces? 


When he drew Lovecraft with Norberto Buscaglia (that was his brother in law because of being married with my sister Cristina), my father used watercolor, monocopy, collage and ink china. There were some pages that he used only pencil.
If I remember correctly, some of his Poe's literary adaptations are in color, he used acrylic painting on them. When he used his literary adaptation of "Tell tale heart", he used only black and white and changed a bit the scenario of his story, because he thought that was necessary to tell the tale in his own way. He left only of the original story, the victim, the aggressor and the police (that are three identical men), to whom he cut their eyes, because as he told, the Law has no face.

4
In 1981 your father did several literary adaptations by Italian Writer Papini, Belgian Writer Jean Ray, American Writer Robert Louis Stevenson, Japanese Writer Lafcadio hearn and In the same year made his literary adaptation of short tales by German writers Grimm Bros in color.
Was your father a supernatural lover and used color to cause chills to the readers? 


My father was addicted to the supernatural, but I don't think that he used color to cause chills. I think that he used it, because the story demanded it or because he simply wanted to put color in them... For him, each story and a blank page was a challenge for him to solve.

5
Your father worked a lot with Argentine Writer Carlos Trillo in the 70's and 80's in short stories and in a lovely story named "Buscavidas".
Can you tell us a bit about this particular story? 


In "Buscavidas", my father drew little short tales about real life based in how we saw it, sometimes being silly, others being fantastic. It was the miserable life of small towns in Buenos Aires, the suburban area of his childhood.
 Obviously, the stories were a bit grotesque, so the artwork couldn't be realistic, so he changed his technique and style, being it more expressionist and grotesque, using conventional elements to express himself better.


6
Perramus masterpiece with script by Juan Sasturain made in 1983 was a bit different from all his other previous works in graphic terms.
 Do you think that this masterpiece also has Influences of a political state, since Argentina at the time was passing from a dictatorship to a democracy? 

In "Perramus", he also used monocopy, collage and watercolor. It's a story made with grey tones.
 It exists a clear political issue in Juan Sasturain's script, but my father didn't cared about politics or politicians. For him politicians, being them from the right, left or center party were all liarsvand thieves and under all the government politics, the poor were still poor, kids were dying of hungry and mysery was everywhere.
He was a sensitive man with injustice, because of that, he didn't loved politicians and he was right. 


7
Your father made several literary adaptations from several writers like Argentine Ernesto Sabato's "report on the blind", Moral tales in 1991 based on Robert Louis Stevenson named "the other part of Dr. Jekyll" and "the good, the death and tango" with Richard Boucheron and in 1993 your father published literary adaptations of several well known writers of Latin America such as Argentine José Luís Borges, Uruguayan Juan Carlos Onetti, Mexican Juan Rolfo, Cuban Alejo Carpentier, Colombian Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Brazilian writer João Guimarães Rosa.
Was your father a fan of Classic Latin America literature masterpieces? 


My father loved reading and he was a man with a huge cultural knowledge. (In my home at Haedo, we had more than 4.000 books that covered his Studio walls from the floor to the ceiling in each house that he had, obviously he was a fan of Latin American literature.


8
Your father was friends of artists such as Argentine José Muñoz and Italian Hugo Pratt (and made some works with both of them) and created an art school in Argentina.
Can you tell us a bit about this school? 


Yes. The school was named "IDA" (instituto de directores de Arte). He founded it with other Argentine partners such as Soule, Pereyra, Borisoff, Spagnuolo, a little while after my mother's passing. We taught his comic books passion and Illustration.
 It was a beautiful institute.. Many people from cultural scene visited it, because it had  also an excellent movie theater. (That belonged to Rodríguez Jurado), it also had theatrical performances and other cultural activities.
 2 or 3 times, Argentine Writer José Luís Borges gave there lectures with other Argentine writers such as Manuel Mujica Lainez, Ernesto Sábato among others.
 In it, we could see tango concerts, presentation of books and writers, painters, exhibitions.. So, the artistic and cultural level was real high. It was wonderful.

9
I know that you're also a graphic artist and I love your work. Do you think that your artwork came with your father's genes or were you and your brother Enrique influenced because you were gazing your father's work? 

I think that the love and the skills for art in our family is a genetic thing, because my grandfather also drew and my uncle Humberto also (he was my father's elder brother), but they weren't professionals.
 But of course, while growing up as a family where we saw our father drawing all the time, made our love for this art form become bigger.


10
Can you tells us a bit of how was your father as a family man and a human being? 


My father was a quiet man, sensible and with a great sense of humour, an intelligent one.. (We were laughing with him all the time). He was real gentle, kind and protected us (but didn't intruded in our life). He became widow when he was young and had to take care of three little kids, I was real small then, Enrique and my sister were teenagers. It wasn't easy for him dealing with all this, lots of sadness in our home, but he made it fade away and put us in the right track as he could, while doing it the best way. He was a wonderful person and very wise.


11
How was it for you to grew up in Argentina with a comic book icon such as your father? 


Well, I was aware, since I was a child what was comic books as a genre and especially in Argentina, that my father was one of the best ever, (if not the best).
 In the beginning for me was something natural having a father that was a well known artist, like for other friends of mine having a father that was famous as a doctor, with time, I realized that being Breccia's daughter could be something wonderful and difficult at the same time, because my father was admired by lots of people, respected and loved, being also despised by other medíocre people that exists in any social environment.


12
Do you think that your father's bibliography is well edited and published or someone could do new books with your father's masterpieces, being him the genius that he was? 


Well, I think that my father's books deserve to be published and in deluxe editions.
There are some beautiful ones and well edited, but my desire and my brother and sister have the same desire, is to see his books like he wanted him to see them.

Entrevista Patrícia Breccia sobre su padre Alberto Breccia y sus trabajos - Spanish

El maestro Alberto Breccia


Patricia Breccia cuando era niña

01 

Tu padre ha nacido después de la primera guerra mundial en 1919 y en un país pequeño llamado Uruguai y despues ha ido com su familia para Buenos Aires em Argentina.
El hablaba mucho de sus origens y de como ellas han influenciado su trabajo? 



Asi es, Mi padre nacio en Uruguay, en Pocitos, y vino a  la Argentina siendo muy pequeño. El amaba al Uruguay, de hecho, nunca quiso nacionalizarse Argentino.
Sobre la influencia en su trabajo, no sé si la ha tenido, porque sus verdadera crianza, y sus vivencias,las tuvo luego aquí, y en su barrio de la infancia, Mataderos. Barrio de guapos y cuchilleros, que visitó hasta pocos meses antes de su muerte.

02 

Recuerdo de quando era niño ter leido algo del personaje Ernie Pike dibujado por tu padre en 1959, Mort Cinder en 1964, Che en 1968, asi como El Eternauta en 1969 y Evita en año seguinte, todos con guión de Hector Oesterheld en revistas que leia oriundas de España.
Podrias nos decir la cumplicidad que estos gênios tenian y se sus origines y la política Argentina les ha influenciando tambien en estas obras maestras.
En estas obras los dibujos de tu padre eran magistrales.








Creo que dibujó muy pocas de Ernie Pike
El verdadero comienzo con Oesterheld vino con "Sherlock Time", que lo dibujó, para "Hora Cero" en 1958.


La primer vez que ellos se conocieron,  fue en el año 55, en una fiesta que dió el tano Pratt en su casa. 
Luego vinieron las reuniones en mi casa de Haedo, o , en la época en que estaban pergeñando "Mort Cinder" en un conocido restaurante, de la histórica calle Corrientes,  que se llamaba "El palacio de las papas fritas". 
Ambos se admiraban mucho, por supuesto...pero no llegaron a ser muy  amigos, quiero decir,no existía ésa complicidad extrema que puede haber entre dos amigos...
En los guiones de Héctor siempre existió un trasfondo social..claro. 
Y en sus últimas historias, el tinte político ya era evidente.
En cuanto al dibujo de mi padre, sí, estamos de acuerdo, eran magistrales.
 
03

En los años 90, quando ya era un poco mayor, he visto la genialidade de tu padre con adaptaciones literárias de Lovecraft en 1974, de Edgar Allan Poe en 1974, algunas con guión de Carlos Trillo.
Puedes nos decir un poco la técnica que tu padre ha utilizado para crear estas obras maestras? 



Cuando dibujó el Lovecraft, con adaptaciones de Norberto Buscaglia, (en ése momento, su yerno, ya que era el marido de mi hermana Cristina) mi padre utilizó aguadas, monocopia, collage, y tinta china. 
También hay páginas donde dejo solamente el lápiz, nada mas.
Si mal no recuerdo, algunas adaptaciones de Poe, son a color. 
Ahí utilizaba acrílico.
En cambio cuando realizó su adaptación de "El corazón delator" , Utilizó solo blanco y negro puro,  jugó con la repetición de los cuadritos, y eliminó todo lo innecesario de la historia, lo que el consideraba que molestaba para la narración. 
Dejó solamente los personajes.
La victima, el victimario, y la policía,(que son tres tipos iguales) a los que les sacó hasta los ojos. Porque, según decía,  la Ley no tiene cara.


04 

En 1981 tu padre ha hecho muchas adaptaciones literárias de Papini, Jean Ray, Robert Louis Stevenson, Lafcadio hearn y en esto mismo año ha hecho su version de los cuentas de los hermanos Grimm, me acuerdo de todas estas histórias en color.
 Le gustaba a tu padre el sobrenatural y por eso ha metido color en estas historietas para ellas crear calafrios en el público con la estética particular de tu padre? 



Bueno, a el le gustaban mucho las narraciones fantásticas, y sombrías, claro. pero no creo que haya utilizado el color para provocar escalofríos, para nada. Creo mas bien que lo utilizó porque consideró que la historia así lo exigía.O porque tenía ganas de meterles color, simplemente... 
Para él, cada historia,y la página en blanco, era un desafío que debía resolver.

05

Tu padre ha trabajado mucho con Carlos Trillo en los 70 y 80 en histórias cortas y numa história para mi encantadora llamada "Buscavidas".
Poderia nos dicer lo que miraba tu padre en la vida, te pergunto esto por esta história me ha marcado mucho.

En el "Buscavidas" mi padre trató de dibujar, en ésas pequeñas historias cotidianas,y muchas veces disparatadas y fantásticas, la vida, a veces miserable, que transcurría en ésos barrios de cielos bajos..
los suburbios de su infancia.
Obviamente, al ser las historias un tanto grotescas, el dibujo no podía ser realista, así  que tuvo que  modificar su técnica, y transformar también su dibujo, en algo mas expresionista y grotesco, utilizando elementos no convencionales para expresarse mejor.

06

La obra maestra Perramus con guión de Juan Sasturain hecha en 1983 era um poco distinta de las otras anteriores en termos gráficos (una completa barbaridad).
Piensas que esta obra tambien tien influências del estado político dado que Argentina ha pasado de una ditadura para uma democracia.
Le gustaba a tu padre los temas políticos tambien? 


En "Perramus" utilizó también la monocopia, el collage,  y las aguadas...
Es una historieta hecha a base de grises. Sí, existe un claro tinte político en el guión de Sasturain, por supuesto, pero si me preguntas si a mi padre le interesaba la política, te digo que no. No en el sentido estricto de la palabra...para él, los políticos , tanto de derecha,de centro, o de izquierda, eran igual de delincuentes y mentirosos, y bajo todas las políticas de gobierno, los pobres seguían siendo pobres, los chicos seguían muriéndose de hambre, y la miseria no menguaba. 
Era un hombre sensible, que lo conmovían las injusticias, por eso mismo, descreía de los políticos...y tenía razón.

07
Tu padre ha hecho algunas obras en 1991 como Informe sobre ciegos (1991), baseada em uma obra de Ernesto Sabato.
Historias con moraleja (1991): "El otro yo del Dr. Jekyll", "El guapo, la muerte y el tango"
Vários acrílicos que foram utilizados para o filme El viaje, dirigido por Pino Solanas (1991).
El Dorado, el delirio de Lope de Aguirre (1992), guion de Carlos Albiac.
Martín Fierro, de José Hernández, Doedytores (2004). Ilustrações feitas em 1991.
Y en 1993 han sido publicadas tambien versiones literárias como  de escritores mui famosos de América Latina como el Argentino José Luís Borges, el uruguayo Juan Carlos Onetti, el mexicano Juan Rolfo, el Cubano Alejo Carpentier, el colombiano Gabriel Garcia Marquez y el Brasileño João Guimarães Rosa.
Era tu padre un aficionado tambien de los clássicos de literatura de America Latina? 




Mi padre era un gran lector,y un tipo de una enorme cultura (en mi casa de Haedo había mas de 4.000  libros tapizando las paredes del estudio, hasta el techo, y en cada habitación, que no eran pocas... 
me preguntabas si era un aficionado de los clásicos de la  Literatura Latinoamericana...? 
por supuesto que sí. 
Te lo respondo con lo que te  escribí mas arriba.

08 
Tu padre era amigo de artistas como Hugo Pratt, José Muñoz (y ha hecho algunos trabajos con estos dos) y muchos otros y el ha creado una escuela de arte en Argentina.
Nos puedes hablar de esta misma escola? 

Alberto Breccia con José Muñoz 


Alberto Breccia en el instituto de directores de Arte


Así es. La Escuela se llamaba "IDA" (instituto de directores de Arte) la fundó con otros socios.(Soule, Pereyra, Borisoff, Spagnuolo) poco tiempo después de la muerte de mi madre. 
El enseñaba Historieta e ilustración.
Bueno, era un instituto hermoso... 
lo visitaba mucha gente de la cultura, también, ya que además, contaba con una cinemateca muy importante, (la de Rodríguez Jurado)  también había teatro, y otro montón de actividades culturales. Dos o tres veces, fué J.L. Borges a dar conferencias, Manuel Mujica Lainez, Sábato,etc. 
Había conciertos de tango, peñas de escritores, pintores, exposiciones, presentaciones de libros... 
Así que imaginate el nivel artístico y cultural del que estamos hablando, no? Una maravilla.


09
Se que tu, tambien eres artista gráfica y me encanta tu obra, piensas que la arte puede venir de una forma genética o ha sido solo por mirares las obras de tu padre que te has influenciado asi como tu hermana Cristina y tu hermano Enrique

Cristina, Patricia y Enrique Breccia 


Trabajo artistico de Patricia Breccia en homenaje al personaje Valentina de Guido Crepax que ha sido enseñado en exposiciones en Portugal, Finlandia y Estados Unidos da América con mas de 100 artistas internacionales (que también hicieron homenajes a Valentina) con mi curadoria y que ha sido tambien publicado en la editora norte americana Fantagraphics (tambien com otros artistas mundiales) en libros limitados de homenaje a Crepax organizados por mi devido a la publicacion a nível mondial de la coleccion completa de Crepax (también organizada y editada por mi) 


Página de Patricia Breccia 

Página de Cristina Breccia

Pagina de Enrique Breccia

Yo creo que el gusto y la facilidad por el dibujo, en nuestra familia, es algo genético. 
Porque mi abuelo tambien dibujaba, y mi tío Humberto (el hermano mayor de mi padre) hasta llegó a publicar alguna que otra historieta, y tengo entendido que había otros familiares (algunos tíos de mi padre) que también dibujaban, pero no de manera profesional. 
Pero por supuesto que crecer en una familia donde veíamos a un padre que dibujaba todo el día, agudizó el amor por esta profesión, desde ya.  
Entonces, la publicación, luego, vino de forma natural.

10
Poderias nos decir como era tu padre como jefe de una família y como persona? 


Mi padre fue un hombre cálido, sencillo, con un enorme sentido del humor, de un humor tan inteligente...(cómo nos reíamos con él !!! ) muy tierno y protector (pero nada invasivo) Imaginate que quedo´viudo siendo todavía  joven, y tuvo que hacerse cargo de la crianza de tres hijos chicos, al menos yo era muy chica todavía. 
Enrique y mi hermana, dos adolescentes. 
No fue nada fácil esa etapa, había mucha tristeza en mi casa, y él supo salir adelante , y sacarnos adelante, cómo pudo, pero lo hizo de la mejor manera. Fue una persona maravillosa, muy sabia.


11
Cómo ha sido para ti cresceres en Argentina con un ícono de los tebeos como tu padre? 

Patricia Breccia en niña

Bueno, siempre supe, desde que tomé conciencia de lo que representaba la historieta como género, y sobre todo en la Argentina, que mi padre era uno de los mejores, (sino el mejor) Al principio era tan natural para mi tener un padre dibujante, como era tener un padre doctor, para alguna de mis amigas...
pero, con el tiempo, me di cuenta que ser la hija de Breccia podía ser algo maravilloso, y difícil al mismo tiempo... porque mi padre era extremadamente admirado, respetado y querido,(por un lado), pero denostado muchas veces, por parte de la mediocridad que existe en cualquier ambiente.

12 
piensas que la obra de tu padre esta bien editada y publicada o piensas que se poderian hacer nuevos libros dedicados al genio que ha sido tu padre? 

Bueno, yo pienso que la obra de mi padre merece más publicaciones, y en ediciones de lujo. Hay publicaciones lindísimas, y maravillosamente editadas, pero mi deseo, y el de mis hermanos, es ver su obra, como a él le gustaría verla.

Sequential love story/arts project - Part 132 - International artists

With  Janina - 01 With Janina and an artwork by American artist Bill Ward With Irina and a cover of John Willie 's Bizarre magazine ...