Tommi Musturi is one of the masterminds behind Finnish comics. He is a co-founder of the KUTI collective and the publisher HUUDA HUUDA. On top of that he is a comic artist himself. We are more than happy to welcome Tommi at the Millionaires Club! He is going to show his amazing artwork in an exhibition at the TMC.
Also check out Tommis books that have been published in Germany:
"Unterwegs mit Samuel" 2010 (Reprodukt)
"Comic Atlas Finnland" 2014 (Reprodukt)
„Das Handbuch der Hoffnung" 2015 (Avant-Verlag) NEW @ the TMC!!!
Obviously you are a man of many talents! You are a comic artist,
publisher, editor and translator in one person which means you must be
working 24/7. How do you handle all these things?
And where are your priorities?
Well, it's pretty much endless struggle against time and frustration
as I mostly of course would like to just draw my own material.
However, I've done this for so long time already that I've developed
some kind of multitasking capacities. When it comes to publishing and
editing, I do very fast decision and base everything on intuition. On
the other hand I do not make much of compromises which often means
book productions can be real time-eaters - doing all the letterings by
hand, going through multiple book designs and so on. I don't make
money with publishing so my rewards are in actual good books that I
put out. I want to make timeless publications that are produced well.
In general my workday consists always of many different tasks and also
ways of doing. I usually wake around 7am and start working at eight by
answering emails and taking care of the questions and tasks that
appear. That takes usually two hours after which I do spend couple of
more on working digitally some of the layouts, images and such. That
was the boring part of the day and around midday I usually go to some
cafe to sketch or work on ideas. Around 2pm I get to my studio I share
with four others and start on the actual drawing or painting. We
decided our studio is an 'internet-free-zone' which I've found perfect
for my work. There's nothing that can interrupt and I already know I
step into that when I close the studio door. When it comes to actual
work, I usually have 2-3 book projects going on at the same time, few
illustrations as well and then some plans and free skethching I do
every day. I like to keep it that way so I can jump from a project to
another in case I get stucked or get frustrated. I also use very
different ways of drawing and somedays it's much better to use wilder
and more expressive technique instead of something very focused and
detailed. It's good to listen to yourself and then release the energy
in right direction. Anyway, I get back home usually around 7pm. Indeed
it's very difficult to priorize my work. I kind of feel that all the
publishing and editing I do is really important for the development of
the Finnish comic scene. On the other hand my head is bursting with
ideas and I currently have book ideas already for the next ten years.
I feel there's yet lots to discover when it comes to comics. For some
reason my projects seem to always be so epic they take several years
to get finished. This is also a good thing, I've noticed, as they get
processed a lot before I actually put the final stage on paper. So the
real content kind of gets chewed out.
Your work offers a great variety of styles and topics. It goes from
wild psychedelic pictures to clear, almost silent lines with a good
amount of horror, tragedy and humor. What's your process of drawing
like?
There are several processes. My comics are the most troublesome of
everything I've ever done. I assume there's bit of perfectionist
inside me and when you combine this with all the dozens of elements
that comic narration has it leads to a pile of things to take care of.
Like the mute comics that I've done around character 'Samuel' - they
look very simple indeed, mathematic even… but still they actually take
more time than any other thing I do. The work with Samuel is mostly
thinking - how to do this - how to express that - what is important
and so on. Next to this kind of painful work I've always got
sketchbook that's just a place for jamming on paper, not really
sketching actually. In there I try new things, new equipment, new
techniques. It's simply a place nothing can go wrong, a place without
'undo' or eraser. As I use many different styles in the actual work I
do, most of them got developed inside my sketchbooks. So, I'd call
them laboratories. It's important to play and what's most nice is that
a 'treasure' I find in some other style can be also used with the
other styles. My aim is still to work on a comic that actually
combines all this into one coherent wholesome. While the equipment
(which includes also materials) define your work, so do also the sizes
you use and the places you draw in. I work mostly in our studio, but
also in cafes and restaurants, home, my parents' place (which still
has the desk I used to start drawing) and so on. It's important to
understand how you work, which ways are the best ways to do this and
that. I for example NEVER sketch something that requires thinking in
the morning - that'd be very painful and slow and most likely would
give me bad mood and ruin rest of the day. Instead I can easily ink
sketches ready in the morning - I've done that so much it's kind of
'off-mood' for my brains and the sketch usually already contains 95%
of the thinking-job. I think this kind of way of working keeps me also
active, aware and focused all through the day. Getting bored can be
always seen in the result when it comes to creative work. Basic stuff.
Do you listen to music while drawing? if yes, what kind of?
Yes I do, I always did. I try follow the news and current political
programmes via radio but have to shut it when they start to play some
music. I work half home and half in our studio couple of km away. Back
home I've got my records which I still prefer in lieu of Spotify, Ipod
or such. Back at the studio we're dependent on tapes and CDs, which is
also kind of good as back home I usually play just vinyls. Anyway, I
listen to almost anything these days - just try to find out the best
things from each genre. When I was a kid every boy here listened to
metal. That's how we also ended up doing fanzines. The first one
(called 'Sickness') we released when 15yo with my friend. While we
started with thrash, death and black metal the last fifth issue
already had some punk and experimental stuff (Finnish band 'Circle'
for example) interviewed. After I went to all this crazy shit one can
find, through which I found noisy free jazz and psychedelic & folky
stuff. Some of the artists I've listened to for a long time are
Michael Hurley, John Fahey, Magma, Michael Yonkers Band, The Seeds,
Jonathan Richman, Os Mutantes, Tangerine Dream, Robbie Basho, Jandek,
The Fall, Jackson C. Frank, Slayer, Sonny Sharrock, Guided by Voices,
Death, Yo La Tengo, Sun City Girls, Chester Burnett… just to name a
few. My all time favourite Finnish band is Radiopuhelimet though
lately I've listened a lot to Sur-rur.
You are living and working in Tampere. Can you give us a little
insight into the comic scene there? And what's the benefit for you
living in a smaller city?
Well, Tampere is a small town yet big in Finnish scale. The center is
really packed so one can go by feet to any place. It's also much
cheaper to live here than in Helsinki where I'd pay double for a flat
we have now. I did live here during 90s several few-month-long periods
so I had some friends living in when we moved back here five years
ago. Also, ten years in Helsinki was enough for me. Even though I got
used to stand the city I never really found it much my home. Like
every capital it's a place filled with a lot of nonsense you get
surrounded with - all the scenes and small circles that you have to go
through to be something and in the end you've lost the most essential
of yourself. A lot of creative talents move to Helsinki and turn into
something boring and disappear. When my fiancee Tiina got a place to
do another degree here in Tampere it was not really a hard decision to
move. I haven't really missed Helsinki a single moment since I moved
here. However, I'm not sure if this is the place I will stay. It's not
very important for me really. The pace here is much slower compared to
Helsinki. People have more time. The town is filled with cafes and
there's actually more live music than in Helsinki. The punk scene is
active and actually the only pure punk club in Finland exists here
with gigs at least five nights a week. The history of Tampere is very
leftish as well, which gives a sort of flavour these days still.
However, I'm not really a fan of the politics of the city goverment
these days, especially how they treat culture. It does not effect my
work much as what I do is mostly international projects but it of
course effects on the mood you have - the artists start to feel that
their work is not appreciated. However, Tampere has always had a
strong underground in many different scenes and this kind of actions
from above only strengthen it. In general I'd say this is town that
most likely produces something 'new' compared to Helsinki. I'm not
complaining. When it comes to local comic scene I'd say there are lots
of artists that work on high level but the scene is not as connected
as the one in Helsinki. Mostly because Helsinki has their Comics
Center that works as a meeting point for it all. Tampere has a
festival that's kind of commercial and not that interesting to me.
There are few small publishers here, Suuri Kurpitsa (The Great
Pumpkin) being the most important - they started already early 80s and
have inspired many artists, myself as well.
With what kind of comics or children books did you grow up with in Finland?
I had lots of books and comics when I was a kid. It was mostly the
usual stuff everyone read and I read everything I got in my hands. The
first comic my parents ordered me was the Finnish version of Woody
Woodpecker when I was 5 yo. I didn't really like it that much and read
Donald instead that my friend had. You know, Finland is THE land of
Donald Duck in the world and we also had our 'Fan Club' which included
all the boys from the small village I grew up in. We had a wooden
cottage as our club house and it still exists - there are even some
drawings on the walls though squirrels have eaten bits of them.
Anyway, I later traded those three volumes of Woody magazines (that is
'Nakke' in Finnish btw) in a second hand store to a couple of other
comics. I had thought they were worth something. Anyway, I think there
are few important comic publications that I got hold of before turning
twelve and going to upper comprehensive school where I started to dive
into the world UG and artsy stuff. The first one was Jacovitti's
'Cocco Bill' that was released here as few albums during 70s. I was
really amused by it's details and wild twists in the story. On the
other hand my aunt accidentally bought me the 1st Finnish issue of
Judge Dredd magazine that came out '84. I was never really a big fan
of American superhero stuff though I of course had my share of it BUT
Judge Dredd was something different. It was damn violent and much more
'dirty' in many ways. I lated also recognized that the dystopias Dredd
offers were often very accurate and many of them have become at least
partly true these days. I later regretted I drew a 'KISS' logo on the
back of that first JD magazine. Yet to mention one more comic is
actually from DDR. I got pretty early age all the Finnish albums of
Hannes Hegen's 'The Digedags'. This was because my parents were
members to some 'Soviet Union Club' that had as well a book mailorder
for small selection of translations into Finnish. It was mostly books
about Soviet Union and communism but they had some children books as
well, The Digedags being the only comic-like release among. Anyway,
though these days I'd say The Digedags is in many ways crappy comic,
back then I liked it's detailed drawing and long adventurous stories.
When it comes to books, real literature, I started read more around 9
yo - first from our school's small library (that actually had a lot of
the same books my father had read when he went to same school 25 years
before) and later from our regional library that already had a pretty
nice selection of stuff. What I first read as a kid was detective
stories (I finished the whole shelf of the library) and adventures
like 'The Hardy Boys'. When I had consumed that part of the library I
went through (back then short) selection of fantasy books and then
started with science fiction. I don't recall much of the material I
read, it was mainly for entertainment as living in a forest village
with just couple of friends around got sometimes lonely. Anyway, I
liked Isaac Asimov, Stanislaw Lem, Arthur C. Clarke and Tove Jansson…
and I still do like all these writers a lot.
And what where your biggest artistic influences when you decided to
become a comic artist?
Well, I started really work with comics relatively late, around 22yo,
when I went to art school in the Northern part of Finland. There were
some people who had already made comics even fanzines and we started
together the anthologies Glömp and Pole. Of course I had been drawing
a lot before that but it was just mostly illustrations and free
drawings sent to some mail art fanzines. Anyway, I ended up being the
editor for Glömp that kind of worked as a playground for me and later
Kutikuti bunch for twelve years. I had read before that a lot of
stuff, main source being a very good comic store Kukunor that existed
back those days in Tampere. They also had a good mailorder with
monthly catalogue that I used to order from. So, all the Fantagraphics
and D&Q stuff was already in front of me when I was 18yo but Kukunor
also provided some more artsy stuff from France and Belgium such as
books from L'Association, Freon and Amok. Basicly the whole my 'born
on 70s' generation got their influence to start with comics from that
store. I really liked Dan Clowes and Chales Burns, before them I
digged Joakim Pirinen and Didier Comes that I found from Library.
Still I don't feel that any of these really effected on my comics that
much. It was merely the fact that they showed that I could deal with
ordinary things and do simply 'anything' with comics. Also the freedom
by doing also the publishing myself was kind of rewarding. From the
new stuff Olivier Schrauwen and Ruppert & Mulot have proved that
there's new things and ways in comics that haven't yet been revealed.
Of course besides comics I've followed fine arts, music and
literature. Later especially literature became really important
inspiration, writers like Sandemose, Musil and Céline to name a few.
The real content to my work still comes from just daily life notes I
do, things abstract to me, things I do not understand or things that
annoy me. As I've been publishing so much for so long already there's
so much stuff going through my hands all the time that I somehow feel
I need to empty my head before I start with my own work. That's the
appeal in the game as well - to do something from nothing, to think
and challenge myself with it.
How do you like to spend your free time away from comics?
When Tiina & I have spare time we usually escape to countryside. Our
both parents live on the country so it's quite easy to spend a week or
two there. I like the nature and how countrylife expands your time and
space. It simply keeps you more focused. Doing ordinary things somehow
also puts the difficulties with your work in right measures. The panic
settles down. We try to eat organic food so we also spend time
collecting berries and mushrooms. I do fish the fish we eat and
usually go on the lake once a week. We even have a small rowing boat
close by our flat in Tampere. Besides that my spare time usually goes
with friends, seeing some bands and playing some basketball - a thing
we started last summer among friends. No one of us had really played
since school but it's been fun.