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Wednesday, July 03, 2013
PR: Awesome Con Kickstarter campaign update
Tuesday, July 02, 2013
Tracking Truitt at USA Today
Brian Truitt, USA TODAY July 1, 2013
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2013/07/01/neil-gaiman-the-sandman-overture-comic-book-series/2480171/
'Miami Vice,' 'Knight Rider' return as digital comics: Three other retro shows from the 1980s and '90s are also getting the treatment this year.
Brian Truitt, USA TODAY uly 2, 2013
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2013/07/02/miami-vice-knight-rider-1980s-retro-tv-comic-books/2481811/
Author Jeff Lindsay takes a stab at 'Dexter' comic book: Just as the Showtime series is ending, the vigilante serial killer comes alive in comic-book form.
Brian Truitt, USA TODAY July 2, 2013
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2013/07/02/dexter-comic-book-series/2483309/
Game On! Comics July 4th sale

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Comic Riffs on Entertainment Weekly's Top 10 graphic novel list
Monday, July 01, 2013
International Ink extra: Gettysburg: The Graphic History
The story is so big and complex that it doesn't fit well into 96 pages. Vansant does a competent job of explaining the preparations before the battle, the three days of the battle and the aftermath, including the full text of Lincoln's Gettysburg Address which dedicated the Union cemetery. He's obviously used reference photographs, and his artwork makes the famous people recognizable, if a bit stiff. He approaches the story chronologically, and one can get an idea of how the battle unfolded, but the book remains rather dry. Given his young adult audience, Vansant draws a minimum of bloodshed. When he writes, "Down below, General Hood's left arm was shattered by a shell burst," he draws Hood and his horse blinded and pushed to one side by the explosion and only colors them with a golden wash. I do not think most readers would actually want any more graphic detail than that, but Vansant's decision does sap some of the essence out of the story. His need to jump from one small segment of the battle to the next, unavoidable as it may be, has the same effect.
The story appears to be factually correct, although some items such as drawing Confederate General Lewis Armistead advancing with his hat speared on his sword aren't explained. Perhaps he thought sharpshooters would aim for his hat? A final round of proof-reading would have avoided mistakes such as "Choked with emotion because he did not want to make this attack, Longstreet nearly nodded." (p. 81) Presumably 'merely' is meant, not 'nearly' since a near nod is not much of a military command.
In conclusion, this book is most likely to appeal to a boy who already has an interest in the Civil War or military history, and is a perfectly reasonable starting place for someone looking at the vast amount of Gettysburg literature.
Still coming next - Tommysaurus Rex.
Nick Galifianakis joins Go Comics
PR: Swann Foundation Announces Awards for 2013-2014
Library of Congress
101 Independence Ave. SE
Washington DC 20540
July 1, 2013
Public contact: Martha Kennedy (202) 707-9115, mkenn@loc.gov
Swann Foundation Announces Awards for 2013‑2014
The Caroline and Erwin Swann Foundation for Caricature and Cartoon, administered by the Library of Congress, has awarded fellowships to five applicants for the academic year 2013-2014. Recipients attend the University of North Carolina and Brandeis, Fordham and George Mason universities.
Alexandra Boni, a doctoral candidate in history at George Mason University, was awarded a Swann Fellowship to support research for her dissertation, “Editorializing the Cold War: Cartoons and Commentary on Nuclear Fear and Anxiety, 1945-1989.” Boni aims to provide a comprehensive analysis of cartoons relating to Cold War anxiety by three nationally syndicated cartoonists—Herbert Block (Herblock), Paul Conrad and Frank Miller—in the context of their cartoons’ embedded contents and related articles and letters to the editor in the main newspapers that published their work (Herblock’s in the Washington Post, Conrad’s in the Denver Post and Los Angeles Times and Miller’s in the Des Moines Register).
Erin Corrales Diaz, a doctoral candidate in art history at the University of North Carolina, was awarded a fellowship to support research for her dissertation, “Remembering the Veteran: Disability, Trauma, and the American Civil War, 1861-1915.” She will investigate ways in which American illustrators, cartoonists, artists and photographers used the figure of the disabled veteran to explore the trauma and violence of the American Civil War. She will focus on the work of Thomas Nast, Joseph E. Baker and other artists whose work in the pictorial press shows how the figure of the veteran permeated many forms of American popular culture.
Allison Lange, a doctoral candidate in history at Brandeis University received a fellowship to support research on her dissertation, “Pictures of Change: Transformative Images of Gender and Politics in the Woman Suffrage Movement, 1776-1920.” This project explores the use of publicly circulating imagery in the movement. Lange first will examine late-18th century conventions for representing gender. She then will examine how suffragists used newspaper cartoons and illustrations, photographs and other imagery to promote their movement, which ended with women winning the vote in 1920.
Johnathan Pettinato, a doctoral candidate in history at Fordham University, received a fellowship to support research for his dissertation, “Burke and Britons: Edmund Burke and the Irish Other in 18th-Century Cartoons.” In tracing the rise of chauvinism and xenophobia in late-18th-century Britain, Pettinato focuses on the era’s scurrilous cartoons that caricatured Burke as an ‘other,’ an un-British threat to Britain and its empire, by often drawing upon stereotypes of the Irish and Jesuit priests. The study will particularly benefit from consulting the Library’s outstanding collection of British satirical prints.
Louis Dean Valencia, also a doctoral candidate in history at Fordham University, received a fellowship to support research for his dissertation, “Making a Scene: Movida, Comic Books, Punk Rock, Anti-authoritarian Youth Culture, and Creating Democratic Spaces in Franco’s Spain, 1955-1984.” He explores how young Spaniards living under Francisco Franco’s dictatorship subverted the régime in their everyday lives by reading American comics, despite government attempts to interdict such activity. Valencia suggests that exposure to such comics that conveyed democratic, pluralistic and proto-feminist ideals contributed to Spanish youths’ rejection of fascist ideology as evidenced in comics they produced in the mid-1970s that critiqued the régime.
During the coming academic year, the five recipients will conduct research at the Library of Congress, largely in the General Collections and in the Prints and Photographs, Serial and Government Publications, and Rare Book and Special Collections divisions.
New York advertising executive Erwin Swann (1906‑1973) established the Swann Foundation for Caricature and Cartoon in 1967. An avid collector, Swann assembled a large group of original drawings by more than 500 artists, spanning two centuries, which his estate bequeathed to the Library of Congress in the 1970s. Swann=s original purpose was to build a collection of original drawings by significant creators of humorous and satiric art and to encourage the study of original cartoon and caricature drawings as works of art. The foundation=s support of research and academic publication is carried out in part through a program of fellowships.
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PR13-127
7/1/13
ISSN: 0731-3527
Sunday, June 30, 2013
John Kinhart's videos on comics
Kim Deitch : The Search For Smilin' Ed
Jul 15, 2010
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfqCgf8867c&feature=youtu.be
Finally collected in one volume, Kim Deitch's sprawling whiligig of a yarn "The Search for Smilin' Ed" chronicles his investigation into the secrets behind the life and career of a very strange children's show host and his malevolent (in fact, possibly demonic) sidekick. Directed, edited and shot by John Kinhart
BB&B Special Feature: The Archive of Jay Lynch
bbbmovie Nov 7, 2012
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z_SAkUqsr-g&feature=youtu.be
Kelly Froh
Jan 5, 2012
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xn4Nsa1qd0A&feature=youtu.be
Short documentary about cartoonist Kelly Froh. Kelly has released mini-comics and zines with such titles as The Cheapest S.O.B.'s, Puke Stories, Beating Up Little Brother, Unlucky, Two Days Away From Staring at Birds From a Park Bench and the autobiographical series Slither.
Saturday, June 29, 2013
Aug 21-Nov 3: DC Conspiracy at Arlington's Artisphere
COMICS MAKING STUDIO WITH MEMBERS OF THE D.C. CONSPIRACY
Meet and Greet: Sat Sep 21, 6-8pmON VIEW WED AUG 21 – SUN NOV 3
FREE
Works in Progress Gallery
Members of the D.C. Conspiracy (DCC), a comics-creating collaborative, will be working on actual page submissions for the Spring 2014 edition of Magic Bullet, a free, semi-annual comics newspaper. The artists will have onsite working hours so you can watch them draw and see the magic unfold. There will be "blank" comic pages available so you can make a comic and leave it behind as part of the exhibition.
Artists' onsite residency hours:
Thursdays 6:30-9:30pm + Saturdays 1-4pm (+ Wednesday September 18)
Residency Dates:
Thu Aug 22 & Sat Aug 24: Matt Rawson
Thu Aug 29 & Sat Aug 31: Matt Dembicki
Thu Sep 5 & Sat Sep 7: Rafer Roberts
Thu Sep 12 & Sat Sep 14: Steve Loya
Wed Sep 18 & Sat Sep 21: Evan Keeling*
Thu Sep 26-Sat Sep 28: Eric Gordon
Thu Oct 3-Sat Oct 5: Jamie Noguchi
Thu Oct 10-Sat Oct 12: Christiann MacAuley
Thu Oct 17- Sat Oct 19: Art Hondros
Thu Oct 24- Sat Oct 26: Jacob Warrenfeltz
Thu Oct 31- Sat Nov 2: Andrew Cohen
*Please note that Evan Keeling will be on-site on Wed Sep 18 instead of Thu Sep 19.
Friday, June 28, 2013
Cartoonists Rights Network profiled in Salt Lake paper
By robert russell
Salt Lake Tribune Jun 28 2013
http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/opinion/56505901-82/cartoonists-akram-political-rights.html.csp
The title refers to Akram Raslan of Syria.
Recent stories by Brian Truitt
Brian Truitt, USA TODAY June 27, 2013
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2013/06/27/superior-spider-man-month-marvel-comics/2446727/
Two-Face a lethal lawyer in 'Dark Knight' digital series: The disfigured supervillain wants to right a wrong from his past in digital comic story.
Brian Truitt, USA TODAY June 26, 2013
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2013/06/26/batman-legends-of-the-dark-knight-digital-comic/2459299/
Meet Marvel's new animated 'Agents of S.M.A.S.H.': The Disney XD series premieres in August with an array of musclebound superheroes.
Brian Truitt, USA TODAY June 26, 2013
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2013/06/26/hulk-and-the-agents-of-smash/2459317/
July 6: Mark Burrier's new t-shirt design
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June 29: Nathan Edmondson Signing "The Dream Merchant" at Big Planet Comics DC
June 29 3:00pm until 5:00pm
After the store closes at 6, Nathan has invited everyone to come hang out with him at Solly's down the street at 1942 11th St NW!
We will raffle off 2 free t-shirts to people at the signing, and the first 5 people at Solly's will get a free drink!
...
The Dream Merchant: Haunted by recurring dreams, a boy named Winslow is hunted by mysterious beings and protected by an old traveler. Soon Winslow will realize that what is in his dreams is what the rest of the world has been made to forget–and what strange entities will stop at nothing to erase from his mind.
Nathan's website: http://www.nathan-e.com/
Big Planet Comics of Washington, DC
1520 U St NW
Washington, DC 20009
202-342-1961
dc@bigplanetcomics.com
June 29: Annapolis Comic-Con
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July 14: Glen Weldon on Superman at Politics and Prose
Glen Weldon - Superman: The Unauthorized Biography
As Superman turns 75, what better time to look back over his life? Weldon, NPR blogger, critic, and comics expert, considers not only the Man of Steel's adventures and achievements, but also his place in the culture as the first, and still most popular, superhero.
- Street:
- 5015 Connecticut Ave NW
- City:
- Washington ,
- Province:
- District Of Columbia
- Postal Code:
- 20008
- Country:
- United States
Thursday, June 27, 2013
Comics artists of the New Yorker Kickstarter Documentary profiled on Comic Riffs
By Michael Cavna
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/comic-riffs/post/kickstarter-of-the-week-training-a-lens-on-the-new-yorker-magazines-cartoonists/2013/06/27/70af02fc-ddf6-11e2-b197-f248b21f94c4_blog.html#pagebreak
The fundraising goes on for a few more hours.
Harvey Pekar: Conversations book on sale
Big Planet Comics to distribute Box Brown's Retrofit Comics
ComicsDC will be following up on this, but it appears that this is being developed by Jared Smith,
formerly the force behind Mars Import, the excellent Euro-comics source of the late 90s.
The byline to this should go to Matt Dembicki who caught it, but didn't want to type it out on
his smartphone.
Art Hondros interview online at City Paper
Gibson Girls exhibit review in today's Express
International Journal of Comic Art 1:1 reprint available now

You can now buy a reprint of the sold-out Spring 1999 first issue of IJoCA at Lulu.com. Lulu will print and ship the issue to you directly.
Table of contents:
1. Editor's Note: Finally, an International Journal for Comic Art
2. Comics Criticism in the United States; A Brief Historical Survey
3. A Framework for Studying Comic Art
4. Comic Art in Scholarly Writing: A Citation Guide
5. The Marumaru Chinbun and the Origins of the Japanese Political Cartoon
6. Proving "Silas" an Artist: Winsor McCay's Formal Experiments in Comics and Animation
7. William Hogarth: Printing Techniques and Comics
8. Breaking Taboos: Sexuality in the Work of Will Eisner and the Early Wordless Novels
9. Comics in the Development of Africa
10. Featuring Stories by the World's Greatest Authors: Classics Illustrated and the "Middlebrow Problem" in the Postwar Era
11. Recovering Sensuality in Comic Theory
12. The Horrors of Cartooning in Slim's Algeria
13. Mr. Punch, Dangerous Savior Children's Comics in Brazil: From Chiquinho to Monica, A Difficult Journey
14. Brazilian Adult Comics: The Age of Market Postmodern Spatiality and the Narrative Structure of Comics
PR: Small Press Expo Announces Jeff Smith and Raina Telgemeier at SPX 2013
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The Post on Annie; Weldon on Modan; CBR on March; and Fantagraphic's early U of MD years
By Hank Stuever,
Washington Post June 24 2013
and note Annie: It's the Hard-Knock Life, From Script to Stage (one hour) airs Friday at 9 p.m. on WETA.
Weldon, Glen. 2013.
Women Find More Than They Bargained For In 'The Property' [Rutu Modan].
NPR.org (June 25)
Congressman John Lewis Recalls the Civil Rights Movement in "March".
Alex Dueben,
Comic Book Resources June 18th, 2013, updated: June 21st, 2013
Panel on the Origin of Fantagraphics: Excerpt
Comics Journal (June 24 2013): http://vimeo.com/69051716
Kim Thompson, Gary Groth and Mike Catron discuss the earliest days of Fantagraphics and The Comics Journal at the 2001 Comic-Con International: San Diego.
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
Art Hondros' Song of Sandy Hook part 1
When asked why he's done a comic book about gun control, Art says, "During the holidays last winter, I tried to keep my focus on comics projects I had currently in the works, but my mind kept going back to what it must've been like in the halls and classrooms at Sandy Hook Elementary School on that wretched day. Finally I realized I couldn't work on anything else but what follows here. Call it a process of dealing with the collective grief of that news. But I also felt that, as an illustrative storyteller, I could attempt something, just one more thing besides voting to keep someone in or out of office, or donating money to a cause one might think useful. No matter how feeble it may turn out, "Song of Sandy Hook" is that attempt."
An interview with Art should be up later this week at the City Paper. He's also agreed to let ComicsDC run his strip as a webcomic, although you can buy a hard copy at the DC Conspiracy store, and the money will be donated to the Newtown-Sandy Hook Community Foundation.
Here's the cover and page 1 of Song of Sandy Hook
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
International Ink extra: The She-Hulk Diaries
I'm not currently keeping up with Marvel's ever-expanding Avengers line, so I'm not sure how the book fits into continuity. In Acosta's story, Jennifer Walters and her alter-ego She-Hulk (annoyingly aka Shulky) have a Jekyll and Hyde relationship with one personality displacing the other rather than the comic book's original version of She-Hulk as a more confident, less uptight and fun-loving version of Jennifer. John Byrne even had She-Hulk practicing law (which is referenced in this novel, but not in a believable fashion). Like Byrne, Acosta has a light humorous hand with the character, and refreshingly doesn't take superheroism too seriously.
As with Hyde, She-Hulk is a released Id and has been tossed out of Avengers Mansion for being too destructive and disruptive. Jennifer, narrating the story via her diary, is living in a borrowed apartment and looking for a new life - a new job, a new apartment and a new boyfriend. Her secret identity as She-Hulk is making all of these objectives difficult.
In coincidences that could only happen in a comic book, or a romance novel, Jennifer gets a job at a law firm that is suing over failing artificial organ transplants, and her former lover Ellis Tesla is the son of the firm;s owner, engaged to its hot-shot lead attorney AND being sued by the firm in the organ case. Tesla is a former musician whose most famous song "Flesh-Eating Bacteria Girl" is about Jennifer, although she continually denies it. Acosta keeps a lot of balls in the air as Jennifer works all of these things out, as well as random attacks by a minor league supervillains, while trying to keep a lid on She-Hulk.
The story is full of lines such as "In order to get Ellis out of my head, which is already crowded by Shulky sprawling all over the place, I decided to participate in something outside my comfort zone" (which is a Game of Thrones party at a bar). After a few minutes of reading, one gets used to them and begins looking forward to the next escapade. This novel won't be for everyone, but if you're a fan of strong female superhero characters, give it a try.
Next up: Tommysaurus Rex by Doug Tennapel
Matt Wuerker interview from March
Podcast: Cartoon Character
Virtual Memories – season 3 episode 6 –
Mar 18, '13
http://chimeraobscura.com/vm/podcast-cartoon-character
http://traffic.libsyn.com/virtualmemories/Season_3_Episode_6_-_Cartoon_Character.mp3
Dembicki at ALA this weekend
I'll also be a one-man panel to talk about District Comics and what's coming down the pike for the project!
Other comics-related events at ALA: Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.) will be one of the featured speakers, promoting the first book of his three-volume graphic novel March (Top Shelf Productions).
There's also a slew of events centered around comics all weekend, with panels featuring Gail Simone, Paul Pope and Jeffrey Brown, among others.
New local webcomic: 'Zodiac Starforce'
Cavna on Herblock documentary film
filmmakers: Send in the satirists
By Michael Cavna
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog June 24 2013
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/comic-riffs/post/saluting-herblock-an-open-note-to-the-black-and-the-white-filmmakers-send-in-the-satirists/2013/06/24/4d398536-dd33-11e2-85de-c03ca84cb4ef_blog.html?wprss=rss_comic-riffs
Monday, June 24, 2013
June 29: Herblock documentary to be screened at AAEC convention
Nobleman talked to Jerry Robinson
by Marc Tyler Nobleman
Noblemania blog June 17-19 2013
http://noblemania.blogspot.com/2013/06/jerry-robinson-previously-unpublished.html
http://noblemania.blogspot.com/2013/06/jerry-robinson-previously-unpublished_18.html
http://noblemania.blogspot.com/2013/06/jerry-robinson-previously-unpublished_19.html
Michael O'Connell talks to Josh Kramer too
By Michael O'Connell
It's All Journalism Podcast: June 22, 2013
http://itsalljournalism.com/josh-kramer-takes-journalistic-approach-to-creating-comics/
http://media.blubrry.com/itsalljournalism/p/content.blubrry.com/itsalljournalism/IAJ-2013-06-22-055.mp3
http://itsalljournalism.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/Josh-Kramer-transcript.pdf
Truitt's latest articles
Brian Truitt, USA TODAY June 24, 2013
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2013/06/24/greg-pak-batman-superman-action-comics/2451219/
Lois Lane plays important role in 75 years of Superman: For many fans, the Daily Planet reporter is just as important as the Man (of Steel) in her life.
Brian Truitt, USA TODAY June 22, 2013
http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/2013/06/21/lois-lane-superman-75th-anniversary/2444395/
Comic Riffs on the end of Gaiman's booksignings and Time.com's cartoons
By Michael Cavna
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog June 24 2013
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/comic-riffs/post/timecom-e-mail-cartoons-of-the-week-feature-discontinued/2013/06/24/9fa5e230-dceb-11e2-9218-bc2ac7cd44e2_blog.html#pagebreak
NEIL GAIMAN's FAREWELL SIGNING TOUR: In D.C., it's 'The Emotion at the End of the Line'
By Michael Cavna
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog June 23 2013
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/comic-riffs/post/neil-gaimans-farewell-signing-tour-in-dc-its-the-emotion-at-the-end-of-the-line/2013/06/23/50aef8ce-dc5f-11e2-85de-c03ca84cb4ef_blog.html#pagebreak























