{"id":25800,"date":"2022-02-07T23:23:23","date_gmt":"2022-02-07T22:23:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/?p=25800"},"modified":"2022-02-12T11:49:42","modified_gmt":"2022-02-12T10:49:42","slug":"komikaze-at-the-intersection-of-styles-nations-and-generations","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/komikaze-at-the-intersection-of-styles-nations-and-generations","title":{"rendered":"Komikaze \u2013 at the Intersection of Styles, Nations and Generations"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Since 2002, for two decades precisely, the Komikaze network has actively and consistently promoted the spread of comic strip art. Based in Zagreb, Komikaze virtually visits comic strip authors in the region and peeks over their shoulders to see their latest work. Once a year, that work materializes in the comic strip magazine of the same name. But the activity of this network is daily and omnipresent, dedicated and documented and, perhaps most importantly, available to everyone at every moment. This is primarily thanks to the editor-in-chief and one of the webzine\u2019s founders, <strong>Ivana<\/strong> <strong>Armanini<\/strong>, as well as the numerous comic artists who express their thoughts and ideas issue after issue. Ivana and two comic authors from Croatia and Serbia, <strong>Damir Stojni\u0107<\/strong> and <strong>Radovan Popovi\u0107, <\/strong>talked to P-portal about the comic strip scene in the region and the activities of Komikaze.<\/p>\n<p><strong>You have tremendous insight into generations of comic strip authors from the last two decades thanks to the Komikaze webzine. The themes and the tools are up to the authors, but are there still connections between different works and styles?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>IVANA: I started Komikaze with the Cvek brothers as a web project because there was no room for publishing comic strips. This accumulated material now offers an insight into two decades of comic strip generations, permanently accessible to all and free at <u>komikaze.hr<\/u>. The idea is to always keep the door open, letting in the winds of different styles, nations and generations. The consistency lies in the provocative freshness of authorial voices, sometimes melodious, sometimes shrill, but always their own, wherein their value lies. As curator <strong>Bojan Kri\u0161tofi\u0107<\/strong> says: \u201cKomikaze comic strips primarily celebrate individuality, originality and unpredictability, even when that is against their interest.\u201d The idea that is always present is that every author creates their own rules and that there is no definition of authorial comics. The main function of this type of comic strip is exploration, experiment, provocation and social critique, making it a constant challenge for all involved. That is the main theme, while the rest are \u201ccurrent deviations\u201d.<\/p>\n<h2><strong>The faith and magic of creative work<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p><strong>Is it true that the pandemic has been the dominant theme since 2020?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>IVANA: The coronavirus is one of those rare \u201csuper-themes\u201d that arrogantly force themselves on us and is the focus of the \u201ccovix_C19\u201d webzine, created in June 2020. After that, we had the \u201cStreet girls\u201d topic as part of the \u201cFemicomix\u201d program, which certainly influenced the content of the issue, but the choice of subject was still free. The pragmatic Komikaze idea is to filter out yearly a select issue from the hysterical, dense rhythm of comic strip activities and web issues, raising the visibility of that selection and expanding the comic strip archive. So it has been done every four months (give or take a day) for two decades. The <em>Komikaze<\/em> album is created from the material collected over the whole year \u2013 the webzine, fanzine, exhibitions and magazine exchanges at comic festivals.<\/p>\n<p>In the new, 20<sup>th<\/sup> issue of <em>Komikaze<\/em>, we watch and read insights into the faith and magic of creative work; we scan repetitive patterns of life, the position of the weak and the marginalized and their fight for liberation, apocalyptic projections and reflections on the coronavirus reality.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Your webzine\u2019s contribution to increasing the visibility of regional comics is immeasurable. Does this type of art today mostly rely on the efforts and dedication of individuals like you?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>IVANA: Thank you very much! We have used the web since the beginning for pragmatic reasons because our boat is leaking on all sides. I mean here the practical side of creative survival. As an author, you need to work continuously, but you also need communication, internet posts, exhibitions \u2013 in short, an audience. All the while, that is probably a nuisance to you because you would rather draw. The first level of organization towards the audience is a webzine and\/or fanzine. It costs at least 1000 euro to have your webpage made, and only one bookstore in Zagreb takes fanzines. The next level is an exhibition and a professional magazine. A gallery or a bookstore will take 40-50% of your profits, all the while knowing little or nothing about the material they sell. Half of the registered mail gets lost in the mail in Croatia, and you pay the price of two printed magazines for small packages from abroad. Your CV, based on short-term authorial work, is unusable in the business sense because institutions don\u2019t see it as employment, and if you haven\u2019t earned enough, you won\u2019t get the coronavirus financial support, and so on. In short, <strong>the situation for artists and small publishers looks like a huge and bottomless black hole. <\/strong>However, the project has had the support of the Ministry of Culture and the City of Zagreb since the beginning, as a media outlet of innovative practice, and the album has had the support of the city for the last four years. The support for the Komikaze association is modest and often varies, but it is constant and has enabled this two-decade survival through authorial cooperation and partnerships.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Besides offering a publishing platform, Komikaze enables authors to meet each other. Is that a conscious goal for you or a natural, spontaneous byproduct of the webzine? Are there enough opportunities for comic strip authors to meet each other in Croatia and the rest of the region?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>IVANA: Before the pandemic, there were a few places where comic authors could meet, but now most of the events have moved to the web. The development happened on social media and the internet in general. The cohesive power of culture is great, and the Komikaze network has been growing since 2002 through some 300 events, workshops, exhibitions and comic festivals and over 100 web and paper editions. Komikaze is an online place for the promotion and distribution of authorial comics, which materialize once a year in the underground comic strip magazine of the same name. The webpage has 60,000 visits a year, which is an OK result for our low-key scene. Two albums on average are viewed every day on the webpage, and the audience is from all the continents. Quality artists from the global and local alternative scene, more and less known, continuously contribute to the issues, webzines and print albums in original ways, and they contact us on their own, or we call them directly. Komikaze brings together works from the Croatian language area, establishing itself as a unique and significant local phenomenon, but international artists have also participated since the beginning.<\/p>\n<p><strong>You celebrated your 20<sup>th<\/sup> anniversary in January. Looking back on those two decades, what has the journey been like?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>IVANA: It has been very colorful and dynamic, at times cloudy with brief showers. I\u2019d do it all again, but I don\u2019t like looking back. I am more concentrated on the moment we are in now. Colleagues from \u201c<a href=\"https:\/\/www.instagram.com\/imaginarni.muzej\/\">Imaginarni muzej<\/a>\u201d reminded me of Malreaux\u2019s concept: \u201c\u2018Mus\u00e9e Imaginaire\u2019 is a collection of works which we admire, which inspire us \u2013 in short, which have the power to keep us alive.\u201d This alive and constantly growing beast with over 6000 pages and illustrations is still kicking; what is more, it\u2019s ready for the top comics festival, Angoul\u00eame.<\/p>\n<p><strong>You will be guests in France on that occasion, since you received an important recognition \u2013 the 2020 Alternative Comics Award. How important are awards of this kind in the comics scene, and how important are they to the Komikaze crew?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>IVANA: This award is important because it is more than 40 years old and is awarded by the top authorities in the comics world gathered in the jury of the most prestigious European comics festival. Other important international awards are two American ones (Eisner and Ignatz Awards), which are also on our agenda. Awards are important as a kind of tattoo that reminds you that you are recognized and validated when the rainy days come. This award is also concrete and included 1000 euro from the French Alternative Publishers\u2019 Union in 2020, participation in the 2021 jury and a paid appearance at the festival in 2022. We have received the jury\u2019s explanation of the award, which we unfortunately couldn\u2019t receive in person because the results came too late: \u201cEditing comic publications is more like a marathon than a sprint. The editor\u2019s work is exploration and experimentation. <em>Komikaze<\/em> is one of the best examples, whose editor, Ivana Armanini, chooses the content of every issue with consistency and a sharp artistic radar. Every year, the <em>Komikaze <\/em>album offers a careful selection of the works of somewhat known and completely unknown names from the global alternative scene of comic strip originals. <em>Komikaze <\/em>is a long-standing and regular participant of the Angoul\u00eame alternative award (since 2004), and in 2020, the jury awarded the consistency and the focus on authors and discoveries of entire generations from Eastern Europe, a scene much more prolific than anyone could imagine.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>If the epidemiological situations allows, we are going on the road in mid-March 2022.<\/p>\n<h2><strong>Recognizing without knowing each other<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p><strong>You have been working with Komikaze for two decades. How did it start, and why did you choose to stay active on this platform to this day?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>RADOVAN: It wasn\u2019t a conscious decision, intention or plan, but we simply gravitated towards each other without knowing about each other. We were thrilled when we found out that there is a collective like that in the neighboring country. We recognized each other even though we had never met; the works of Croatian authors gathered in Komikaze amazed us, and the cooperation started. At the time, we were working very actively on our Kosmoplovci mission, and we established a strong bond with Komikaze, a friendship, sisterhood and unity. We traveled together to festivals, dragged our gangs across Europe, the Balkans and the web, met at community actions, published joint issues and, most importantly, included more likeminded actions, groups, subgroups, initiatives, teams and gangs into our network.<\/p>\n<p><strong>How much does Komikaze contribute to increasing the visibility of comic strip authors in the region and establishing connections between them?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>RADOVAN: Komikaze is the most important, consistent and quality place, time and space for authorial, alternative, underground comics, not just in the region, but across Europe and other places in the world it has so far reached. Comics of established authors, legends of the underground, masters of experimenting, disjointed classics, dirty underground, alternative approach, original, autochthonous and autonomous comics all find their place both on the webpage, where something always happens and which I regularly visit, and in the print edition, which has, over the years, gained experience, weight, balance and quality to become what it is today. That has been recognized by the international comics community and crowned with the award for the best alternative publication at the festival in Angoul\u00eame. People without a knowledge of comics, which means without general knowledge, don\u2019t understand the importance of that and the honor this recognition is.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Is cooperation between Serbian and Croatian authors commonplace? Are there other active meeting places for them?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>RADOVAN: Our cooperation with Komikaze, as well as with other worldwide, floating pirate ships, stranded randomly on the soil of any city of the region, the Balkans, a former, future or immaterial Utopia, limitless region or borders that, like Gypsies, we don\u2019t acknowledge, is getting stronger, the production better and print runs bigger; we\u2019re getting younger and crazier the older we are; we meet and never part at festivals, occupied factories, secret passages, street fests and speakeasy galleries. Anyone who wants can find us, on the web or by accident, although I don\u2019t believe in accidents.<\/p>\n<p><strong>You are, among other things, the founder of the Studiostrip platform and also organize comic strip events and fanzines. Does this type of art today mostly rely on the efforts and dedication of individuals like you or Ivana?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>RADOVAN: There is this idea that everything starts with the individual. That is true, but every socially conscious individual not limited by their ego and the traditional idea of man, artist and individual is aware that by associating and pooling strength and resources (and I don\u2019t mean only material resources \u2013 on the contrary), by joining or starting a group, association or editorial staff, <strong>our strength and energy not only add up but multiply<\/strong>. This unity and brother-sisterhood founded on solidarity and humanistic principles we share can be our only advantage, strength and potential energy for days to come, much more than a business or corporate contract. As someone who has been in the subculture since the 1980s, who has later founded the Kosmoplovci group, Studiostrip platform and Novo Doba festival, who is now preoccupied with their own authorial work but still follows the work of collectives such as Matrijar\u0161ija, as an editor, publisher and author, I stand firmly behind all I have said.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I hear the new album is still not out, but I believe you have been able to see some of it in electronic form. What do you think of the new sample of the regional comics scene?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>RADOVAN: I am full of optimism and awash with impressions. The years of experience have not hardened me, but have rather deepened my sense of the beautiful and ugly, strong and stronger, new forms and platforms and ways of organizing and self-organizing. There are many talented authors, female and male \u2013 I use that order deliberately. The idea of the comic strip has undergone a big revolution, perhaps more than other forms of expression. There is something unique, subtle and otherworldly in comics, especially today, and Komikaze is the best example of that. I feel very proud to be a part of the past and present of such a cultural excess, movement and event.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Looking back on your work so far, what changes do you see in your artistic expression, especially in the newer work?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>RADOVAN: Experience is very important and does not necessarily mean years, but rather a work ethic, which my collaborators and I never lacked. I rely less and less on others, on movements, schools, styles and trends. I realize and feel more and more that you have to listen to yourself first, no matter how hard that might be, and that you have to walk your own path, together with someone else, if possible. If not, it doesn\u2019t matter \u2013 the journey is what matters.<\/p>\n<h2><strong>Creativity and resistance<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p><strong>Your first comic, <em>Report: Subpolis<\/em>, was published by Komikaze, and you are still active on that platform. What is your relationship with it?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>DAMIR: <em>Report: Subpolis<\/em> is not my first comic, but the first comic I ever published. It was created by combining some earlier drawings and aquarelles that I included in my text about the Underground City, which I\u2019m developing as a project in Labin with the art collective Labin Art Express. Labin was the site of the largest coal mine in this part of Europe. It has been decommissioned since the mid-1980s, and we are trying to convert it into a futuristic city-state with art as the basic principle. I created my first comic in 1990 and called it <em>End<\/em>. I was 18, and it was made in the same style I have been developing to this day. Ivana has it on her computer, so it might see the light of day someday. When it comes to my relationship with Komikaze, I can say that I feel completely at home with all my demons there. I think Ivana has created an invaluable space for expressing creative freedoms, a playground for experiments and unconventional approaches of all kinds. The Angoul\u00eame award and twenty years of work of increasing quality are a testament to that.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Through Komikaze, you also met Radovan Popovi\u0107 from Belgrade, who then helped in publishing your first long-form album <em>Medusalem<\/em>. I would say that its sensibility is also close to Radovan\u2019s expression. How much have you two influenced each other, advised each other or collaborated?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>DAMIR: Radovan and I had never met before our work was in the 18<sup>th<\/sup>, award-winning <em>Komikaze<\/em>. I had never seen his work until then, nor he mine. I have mentioned that I have been working in this idiom since 1990. I later made three other comics from the \u201cBoreal cycle\u201d, as I call it: <em>Asma<\/em> (1995), <em>Boreal<\/em> (1998) and <em>Wendigo<\/em> (2001). The last two were published in that now legendary 18<sup>th<\/sup> issue. Radovan then sent to my inbox a long and beautiful letter with a collaboration proposal. I, of course, said yes, and this correspondence resulted in the publishing of my <em>Medusalem<\/em> and the exhibition of my work at the Zadnje doba festival organized by Matrijar\u0161ija. Since that letter, we haven\u2019t communicated at all, except for putting hearts on each other\u2019s work on our Facebook profiles. I love his work, as well as the work of some other people from Studiostrip. I recently snagged two of their issues in a second-hand bookshop in Rijeka: <em>Raskal<\/em> and <em>The Secret of the Spider\u2019s Blood<\/em> by Aleksandar Opa\u010di\u0107. I wondered how these pieces of genius eluded me for so long.<\/p>\n<p><strong>You mentioned that you have experienced a new youth in a creative sense thanks to comics. Is that energy still there?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>DAMIR: Of course. That energy gives the only true meaning to my work in comics, but also art in general. Recently I participated in the event \u201c24-hour comic strip drawing\u201d and created ten pages of the comic <em>EraZor<\/em> in that time. I threw myself into it without any preparation or scenario. It was an experiment for me, something like automatic writing. I liked the result so much that I decided to develop the scenario further and complete the plot, so I\u2019m working on it now, as well as on another long-form comic I started in 2019, called <em>The Hyperborean<\/em>. Its first episode was published in issue #53 of the <em>Komikaze<\/em> webzine, and ten pages of <em>EraZor <\/em>can be seen at <a href=\"http:\/\/24satnocrtanjestripa.com\/\">24satnocrtanjestripa.com<\/a>. I have somewhat turned towards the more classical form of comics, at least when it comes to narration. I\u2019m now interested in more linear comic narration, and I enjoy it so much that it has become plain rude. I neglect daily obligations, friends and my girlfriend. It has come to that.<\/p>\n<p><strong>You have passed a kind of milestone in the latest issue of <em>Komikaze<\/em>. What exactly is it, and where did this surge of articulate inspiration come from?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>DAMIR: The milestone you ask me about concerns the fact, which shocked even me, that I have drawn nearly 200 pages of comics in the last two years. This surge is probably the result of my years-long inability to paint anything. I had a difficult, depressive phase, and the mere thought of entering a studio repulsed me. Drawing comics requires less space than painting, so I started at the kitchen table, which soon became a scene of terrible chaos full of trash. In making comics, I often use the technique of imprinting different textures from various objects, such as different cloths, sponges, fabrics, pieces of wood, leaves, stones, rotten fruits and vegetables, so you can imagine the mini garbage dump that formed there. This technique was first used, as far as I know, by the surrealist painter <strong>Max Ernst<\/strong>, and he called it decalcomania. Only recently I found out that it was much used by the genius Argentinean comic artist <strong>Alberto Breccia<\/strong>, especially in the masterpiece <em>Perramus<\/em>, which I wouldn\u2019t even know about had it not been recently published by Fibra. In short, creating comics has helped thaw my personal creative \u201cice age\u201d, and I think that working with Komikaze and Ivana has played a big part in that. For an artist, finding a platform or scene which matches his sensibility means a lot. The underground comics scene thrills me with its unbounded, perfectly unmarred enthusiasm, which I find less and less in the contemporary official art scene.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The new <em>Komikaze <\/em>album is a kind of cross section of the regional comics scene. How do you see it, and have you noticed any changes in the last two years?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>DAMIR: The underground comics scene <em>Komikaze<\/em> works in is very lively, fresh, enthusiastic, interesting and, of course, fun. I see that in the yearly almanac-anthology of <em>Komikaze<\/em>, which has only gotten better with the years. Enthusiasm is especially important. You can feel that these authors create completely unencumbered by any goal other than simply to express and tell stories that matter to them, or even just express a simple nothing, as a pure, unconditioned, purpose-free impulse. And that is close to poetry, as is stated in the <em>Komikaze<\/em> manifest. In today\u2019s world, where art is pushed more and more into the one-dimensional relation of product-profit, this approach has great relevance, and in it I see the deeper purpose of platforms such as <em>Komikaze<\/em>. They maintain a zone of resistance to a world of increasingly fascistic consumerism. They are guerrilla enclaves in a wider archipelago of \u201ctemporary autonomous zones\u201d, as <strong>Hakim Bey<\/strong> defined them long ago. They can also be compared to the rhizomic principle of acting within \u201csoft-structured\u201d communities of \u201cnew nomads\u201d, which <strong>Guattari<\/strong> and <strong>Deleuze<\/strong> wrote about in <em>Capitalism and Schizophrenia<\/em>. The need for such \u201cplateaus\u201d is becoming more and more evident because, deep down, we are all exhausted by the alienation and apathy served to us by the official structure of art presentation, as well as the alienating practice of its \u201ccreative\u201d industrialization, which, of course, includes computer-made, commercial comics polished to death.<\/p>\n<p><strong>You also work at the Academy of Applied Arts in Rijeka. What do you feel is important to pass on to and awake in young people?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>DAMIR: Creativity and resistance! I encourage them to find their own authenticity, their own artistic expression as a reflection of their inner strivings, unencumbered by anything someone else might have to say. <strong>Mikhail Bakunin<\/strong> rightly said that humans are motivated by two basic impulses: the need for creativity and the instinct for resistance. Today\u2019s society heartily tries to destroy these two important components in people. More and more, art is being used as a tool for achieving political goals. It would serve us all better if politics served the goals of art. I feel it is my mission to restore these two things, as an artist, a professor or simply as a human being.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: right;\"><em>Translation from Croatian: Jelena \u0160impraga<\/em><\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-22298\" src=\"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/08\/Footer-ENGi-1.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"605\" height=\"299\" srcset=\"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/08\/Footer-ENGi-1.jpg 605w, https:\/\/p-portal.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/08\/Footer-ENGi-1-300x148.jpg 300w, https:\/\/p-portal.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/08\/Footer-ENGi-1-570x282.jpg 570w, https:\/\/p-portal.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/08\/Footer-ENGi-1-369x182.jpg 369w, https:\/\/p-portal.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/08\/Footer-ENGi-1-229x113.jpg 229w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 605px) 100vw, 605px\" \/><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Komikaze has been promoting authorial comics and bringing together regional comic strip authors for two decades. It has received numerous awards, including the one at Angoul\u00eame, the largest European comics festival<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":54,"featured_media":25740,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_seopress_robots_primary_cat":"224","_seopress_titles_title":"","_seopress_titles_desc":"","_seopress_robots_index":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[4,330],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-25800","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-iz-zajednice","category-upoznajmo-se-en","infinite-scroll-item","generate-columns","tablet-grid-50","mobile-grid-100","grid-parent","grid-33"],"featured_image_src":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/ivana2.jpg","featured_image_src_square":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/wp-content\/uploads\/2022\/02\/ivana2.jpg","author_info":{"display_name":"Marija Stojadinovi\u0107","author_link":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/author\/marija-stojadinovic"},"rbea_author_info":{"display_name":"Marija Stojadinovi\u0107","author_link":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/author\/marija-stojadinovic"},"rbea_excerpt_info":"Komikaze has been promoting authorial comics and bringing together regional comic strip authors for two decades. It has received numerous awards, including the one at Angoul\u00eame, the largest European comics festival","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/25800","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/54"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=25800"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/25800\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":25801,"href":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/25800\/revisions\/25801"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/25740"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=25800"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=25800"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/p-portal.net\/en\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=25800"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}