Silent comics (orpantomime comics) arecomics which are delivered inmime. They make use of little or nodialogue,speech balloons orcaptions written underneath the images. Instead, the stories or gags are told entirely through pictures.
Silent comics have the advantage of being easily understandable to people - like children - who are slow readers. The genre is also universally popular sincetranslation is not required, lacking the usuallanguage barriers.Sergio Aragonés, a famous artist in the field, once said in a 1991 interview withComics Journal: "What happens is like a supersimplification. Something you can say with words, you have to eliminate all the words until it can be told in a little story without words. You just think a little longer. But it becomes rewarding in the end because everybody can understand your cartoons no matter what your nationality. And that, to me, has been always a big thing—to do cartoons that everybody can understand, every age, every nationality. It is different. It's like in the theater. You have regular theater, and you have pantomime, likeMarcel Marceau orAlejandro Jodorowsky. And I apply that to cartooning and it works."[1] Silent comics tend to be popular in thegag-a-day comics genre, where they typically consist of just three or four images per episode. But somegraphic novels with longernarratives also make use of pantomime (seeWordless novels). This allows for a more visual experience, where the actual meaning of the events is left to the readers' own interpretation. Some famous silent-comics artists areSergio Aragonés,[1]Guy Bara,[2]Chaval,[3]Henning Dahl Mikkelsen,[4]Adolf Oberländer,[5]Wil Raymakers,[6]Otto Soglow,[7]Gluyas Williams[8] andJim Woodring.[9]