- The Critics
The Critics are the main characters of a long-running
cartoon of the same name in the Britishcomic "Viz". It was created and is illustrated byJohn Fardell .They are Natasha and Crispin Critic, two high brow art critics from
London . They work for The Sunday Chronicle, though they have done freelance work with theBBC andChannel 4 , writing elitist and sometimes sycophantic articles on contemporary art. However they're very damning of pop culture and popular art as "tat".Their sharklike profiles could be an allusion to the predatory nature of journalism and arts criticism, as some sharks (like
tabloid hacks) are predatory themselves. Despite this, they are very snobbish, and though they practically drool over gritty and cutting-edge art that is in touch with theworking classes , they loathe the working classes themselves. In fact, they have little knowledge of what is outside London, once describing the North ofEngland as "That place we fly over on the way to theEdinburgh Festival ."The artists they admire are all fictional, but are clearly inspired by real-life artists such as
Damien Hirst andTracy Emin . A frequent plot device involves Natasha and Crispin mistaking some everyday object - like afire extinguisher , puddle ofvomit or even some public toilets - as a piece of modern art. In other episodes, they don't grasp the concept of art at all - once, they viewed an artist create artwork with conventional methods like drawing and painting, and marvel that it is something they have never seen before.The pair have died frequently, usually thanks to their habit of reviewing the works of a reformed-violent-criminal-turned-artist, giving tactless negative reviews and then coming to a brutal end at the hands of the artist in question. They are invariably automatically resurrected in time for the next episode, although once they did actually make it to
heaven , where they proceeded to deride the pearly gates to heaven as being unfashionably minimalist.Saint Peter could not bear to have them in heaven, but the Critics were not evil enough to warrantHell either, and so he had themreincarnated as the lowest form of animal,fleas . After finishing that life-cycle, Natasha and Crispin were reincarnated as the life form just slightly more advanced than fleas - art critics!They once received a booby-prize at the Critics Awards for bringing the reputation of critics into disprepute for writing a review that was not only positive but actually made sense.
The strip itself is, like the rest of Fardell's work, a satire on the fashionably solipsist, pseudo-liberal middle classes and their attitudes. He depicts Natasha and Crispin as shallow, sycophantic, elitist, snobbish and hypocritical people who live in a cliquish social circle that borders on incestuous. In one episode, Fardell shows them having sex and then analysing it as if a theatrical performance. He then uses this as a subtle commentary on the
incest uous nature of these cliques as they both resemble each other to the point of looking like siblings.External links
* [http://www.viz.co.uk/ The Viz Website]
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