Sunday, October 24, 2010
Washington tv cartoonist weather girl dies
[online: Tippy Stringer Huntley Conrad, charming D.C. weather beauty, dies at 80, October 23].
By Emma Brown
Washington Post Staff Writer October 24, 2010
p. C7
"She was often joined on-air by a cartoon character she created named Senator Fairweather, whose doe-eyed likeness was photographed with Tippy for Life magazine in 1955."
Saturday, October 23, 2010
Oct 24: DC Counter Culture Festival
This Sunday, October 24th
12 noon -- 8pm
RFD's
810 7th St NW
Washington DC 20001
OT PR: Comica Festival 2010
NEWS FROM |
Comic books at the USA Science and Engineering Festival
Catching up with some photos
OSU's Wexner's book store had my Pekar book for sale! I couldn't believe it. More pictures from the OSU Festival of Comic Art are here.
Matt Groening and Tom Gammill.
Jeff Stahler construction cartoons at the Columbus Museum of Art.
Jen Sorenson and Richard Thompson admiring Crumb's line.
Pictures of Ted Rall at Busboys and Poets are here.
Friday, October 22, 2010
Mark Zaid's legal comics exhibit coverage continues
By Jill Schachner Chanen
Posted Nov 1, 2010
http://www.abajournal.com/magazine/article/comic-con/
"The Book in Art & Science," deadline November 30, 2010. SHARP meeting, Washington DC 14 July through Sunday, 17 July 2011
A reminder that the deadline for individual and panel proposals for the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading & Publishing (SHARP) 2011 conference, CFP "The Book in Art & Science," is November 30, 2010. The links to the electronic proposal submission forms can be found at http://www.sharpweb.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=360&Itemid=62&phpMyAdmin=1326493665cf5bcaf15cc4e30ad5ea2c&lang=en
SHARP's nineteenth annual conference will be held in Washington, DC, Thursday, 14 July through Sunday, 17 July 2011. The sponsors of the conference are the Smithsonian Institution Libraries, the Library of Congress, the Folger Shakespeare Library and Institute, and the Corcoran College of Art + Design. The National Library of Medicine will be the site for welcome ceremonies and the conference's opening keynote address by Dr. Jon Topham, Senior Lecturer in History of Science & Director of the Centre for History and Philosophy of Science, University of Leeds.
Evoking Washington's status as an artistic and scientific center, "The Book in Art & Science" is a theme open to multiple interpretations. Besides prompting considerations of the book as a force in either art or science or the two fields working in tandem, it also encourages examinations of the scientific text; the book as a work of art; the art and science of manuscript, print, or digital textual production; the role of censorship and politics in the creation, production, distribution, or reception of particular scientific or artistic texts; the relationship between the verbal and the visual in works of art or science; art and science titles from the standpoint of publishing history or the histories of specific publishers; and much more.
Such topics raise a host of possible questions:
What tensions exist between the book in art and the book in science? What collaborations emerge? How do these tensions or collaborations differ according to time or place? What roles have materialforms-manuscript, print or digital embodiments or books, periodicals, journals, editions-played in the histories of artistic and scientific works? How does the lens of art or science inform histories of reading and readers? What does this lens reveal about histories of authorship?
How have commercial factors or economics influenced the production or distribution of scientific or artistic works? What roles have states or institutions played in the history of the book in art and science?
The conference hopes to welcome many longstanding SHARP members but also aims to attract new members. The conference's address of art and science in its title invites those working on the history of science, technology, knowledge production, or the scientific book, to join us.
The full CFP is available now at www.sharpweb.org
Eleanor F. Shevlin, Ph.D.
Dept. of English
548 Main Hall
West Chester University
610-436-2463
eshevlin@wcupa.edu
Society for the History of Authorship, Reading & Publishing (SHARP)
Membership Secretary<mailto:eshev@loc.gov>
members@sharpweb.org<mailto:members@sharpweb.org>
Home/Mailing Address
2006 Columbia Road, NW
Apt. 42
Washington, DC 20009
Phone: 202-462-3105
History of the Book in the West, Vol. 3, 1700-1800
http://www.ashgate.com/isbn/9780754627685
Comic Riffs talks to Pastis on Pearls before screens
By Michael Cavna
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog (October 22, 2010):
http://voices.washingtonpost.com/comic-riffs/2010/10/pearls_before_swine_animations.html
Note that Ringtales also did an interview with Richard Thompson, according to this.
"Tamara Drewe" movie review in Post
By Michael O'Sullivan
Washington Post October 22, 2010
Cartoons continue to show up in weird court cases
By William McQuillen - Oct 20, 2010
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-10-20/-south-park-threats-result-in-terrorism-guilty-plea-for-virginia-man.html
Meet a Local Comic Book Writer: A Chat with Joe Carabeo
Meet a Local Comic Book Writer: A Chat with Joe Carabeo
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Nate Beeler Youtube interview that we may never have linked to
CagleCartoons | June 20, 2010
Daryl Cagle, the political cartoonist for msnbc.com and owner of the Cagle Cartoons syndicate, speaks with Nate Beeler, the editorial cartoonist for the Washington Examiner, at the 2010 AAEC Convention in Portland, Oregon.
Our Man Thompson on Our OSU Trip
PR: Lynd Ward graphic novel prize established
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE October 8, 2010
Penn State announces new graphic novel award in honor of Lynd Ward
University Park, PA—Penn State University Libraries and the Pennsylvania Center for the Book are pleased to announce the creation of the Lynd Ward Prize for Graphic Novel of the Year.
The Lynd Ward Graphic Novel Prize honors Ward's seminal influence in the development of the graphic novel and celebrates the gift of an extensive collection of Ward's wood engravings, original book illustrations and other graphic art donated to Penn State University Libraries by his daughters, Robin Ward Savage and Nanda Weedon Ward. Between 1929 and 1937 Ward published his six ground-breaking wordless novels—"Gods' Man," "Madman's Drum," "Wild Pilgrimage," "Prelude to a Million Years," "Song without Words" and "Vertigo"—which are being re-issued this month by
The Library of America in a two-volume boxed set entitled "Lynd Ward: Six Novels in Woodcuts," the first time the nonprofit publisher has included a graphic novelist in its award-winning series.Sponsored by Penn State University Libraries and administered by the Pennsylvania Center for the Book, an affiliate of the Center for the Book at the Library of Congress, the Lynd Ward Graphic Novel Prize will be presented annually to the best graphic novel, fiction or non-fiction, published in the previous calendar year in the United States by a living American citizen or resident. The announcement of the award will take place each spring and the prize of $2500, the two volume set of Ward's six novels published by
The Library of America, and a suitable commemorative will be presented each fall to the winner at a ceremony to be held at Penn State.The selection jury for the award will have representatives from various Penn State academic departments who use the graphic novel in their teaching or research, as well as representatives with graphic novel expertise from among Penn State's alumni. The inaugural selection jury for 2011 includes John Meier, an assistant librarian in the Physical and Mathematical Sciences Library; Jarod Rosello, a cartoonist, writer and doctoral student in curriculum and instruction in the College of Education; Jean Sanders, an associate professor of art in the School of Visual Arts; Scott T. Smith, an assistant professor of English and comparative literature in the College of the Liberal Arts; and Jerry Zolten, an associate professor of communication arts and sciences and American studies at Penn State Altoona.
For more information about the selection criteria and how to submit books for consideration for the Lynd Ward Graphic Novel Prize, contact Steven Herb at 814-863-2141 or visit the Pennsylvania Center for the Book website http://www.pabook.libraries.psu.edu/activities/ward/index.html
Dustin Harbin draws me in a comic strip
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
Zadzooks on Spider-Man videogame and comic book movies
Re-piecing reality in 4 Spidey universes
By Joseph Szadkowski
Washington Times October 13, 2010
Zadzooks: Jonah Hex, Superman/Batman: Apocalypse and 30 Days of Night
By Joseph Szadkowski
Washington Times, October 20, 2010
Oct 28: Cartoons & Cocktails
Comic Riffs' Cyanide and Happiness webcomic interview
By Michael Cavna
Washington Post Comic Riffs blog October 20, 2010