Jonathan 12: Celui qui mène les fleuves à la mer
Hij die de rivieren naar de zee leidt/Der die Flüsse zum Meer geleitet
Last page: 1997; album 1997 

Cover of the special edition, large
format.
Jonathan... eleven years later
After 'Greyshore Island' Cosey seemed to
have stopped with the Jonathan series. Only eleven years later, a new album was published.
A new Jonathan album after eleven years
of silence. What were Cosey's reasons to start again? 'I have always told I would continue
Jonathan as soon as it pleased me again. And this time, I was in the mood for it.'
'After the first nine albums, I felt I
was running in cricles in my little Tibetan universe.'
But then, in 1994, 1995 and 1998, Cosey
travels again to Tibet and parts of China. The first trip as a 'tourist guide', the two
last ones in company with a friend photographer, Jean-Pierre Grandjean. 'Well, after those
journeys, I was recharged for making a new Jonathan.'
'This album in first instance was a
project for 'Aire Libre'. And then, the character of Jonathan imposed itself.'
Politics
In the first albums of Jonathan, Cosey
writes about the political situation: the Chinese bombardment, the resistance by the
Khambas. In later albums, politics play a less role. In this twelfth album, politics are
more present than ever, not in the least because one of the main characters is a Chinese
colonel, Lan.
Cosey: 'I don't like messages, I don't
like political engagement in a comic or in a novel, because I - this is maybe a bit
ambitious to say - but I think that a good book, a good movie, a good comic should
position itself above the political message. But in the case of this album, it is true
that after many journeys to Tibet and having taken home so many documents that do not
comply with this mythological Tibet of which we have dreamt and that has existed, I felt
almost obliged...'
'But anyhow, to draw scenes of torture
(there are thousands of torture scenes to draw in Tibet at this moment, in the whole
planet, the list in infinite), is not my cup of tea, I prefer to suggest it.'
Cosey about Tibet's political position:
'Tibet is the 'water castle' of Asia. All the great rivers have their sources there, which
is of great value for the future. And furthermore, on the strategic position: there are
fields of uranium, etc...'
'Tibet and China have been neighbors
chronically at war, since always. The Chinese have invaded Tibet, and they have been
hunted down by the Tibetans, who in their turn have invaded China and have gone as far as
Beijing. Before being Buddhists, the Tibetans were a rather savage people. The Nepalese
too have invaded Tibet.'
'But sure, Tibet has never been a
province or a Chinese minority, it has always been an own entity. It has always been an
independent country, occupied or not.'
'It was impossible not to testify about
this.'
Documentation
Cosey: 'This twelfth album is definitely
much more rigorously documented then its predecessors. I begin to know these regions. The
story is also enriched by my observations on the spot and situations I have experienced
myself. And I think you can feel that in my drawings.'
'The Chinese colonel who sings in the
Chinese army choirs [colonel Lan] really exists: I have met her in a Karaoke bar. She was
one of the privileged of the regime, she was married to the chief of a grand hotel and she
spoke English! And... she was beautiful...'
A complex read
Reading 'Celui qui mène les fleuves à
la mer' requires an effort of the reader, it is not a very simple story. Cosey: 'There are
more difficulties. The flash backs, the fact that there are so many characters with Asian
names.'
'However, this album is less experimental
then 'Zeke raconte des histoires' or 'Saigon - Hanoi', so the effort that is required is
less justified, one could have prevented it.'
Special products

Ex libris & silk-screen print of
Lan.

Silk-screen print of Jonathan and the
Potala Palace.
|