Between the 1960s and 1970s and then in different ways in the following decades as well, abetted by the formation of underground cultural movements and a new idea of propaganda, numerous white struggle comics developed. Subversive, critical, satirical, uncomfortable and inconvenient, they dealt with issues that could not be disseminated by the mainstream media such as TV or radio, reaching directly to the strata of society or the centers where these cultures gathered and where they developed their ideas.
It is these comics that inspired the work of illustrator Junwoo Park, who takes up some of the subjects but especially the grain and that DIY style that very much reflects the handmade soul of these comics, which were circulated as leaflets or in small independent print publications.
The rough grain of comic books is brought back into digital form by Junwoo Park, who chooses partly recognizable but often imaginary subjects as the protagonists of his illustrations, in other cases patterns of contrasting colors and shapes. There is often chaos, which translates visually with the black lines scribbled the colors mixed, while the citation to the world of comics is represented by the cartoons, not rounded baloons but random, angular shapes.
Junwoo Park’s punk and urban style can be followed on the artist’s official Instagram profile, which collects fantastical and imaginary landscapes along with vignettes that resemble slides taken on the subway, among writers and sidewalk bums.






