Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Oct 12 - Roadtrip! Ed Stein opens political cartoon exhibit at William & Mary

Google maps, which appears to be much smarter than Mapquest at this point, says it's 154 miles from DC. Actually, I can't recommend attending this with both ICAF and SPX underway in DC, even though I like Stein's comic strip a lot, but the exhibit runs through January.

Cartoonist Ed Stein to open Swem exhibit with lecture
News · Press Releases · Ed Stein to open Swem exhibit
Author: Suzanne Seurattan, Source: Press Releases
Date: Oct 09, 2006

(Williamsburg, Va.)—Internationally-syndicated editorial cartoonist, Ed Stein, will speak at the College of William and Mary's Earl Gregg Swem Library on Thursday, Oct. 12 at 4 p.m. Stein currently draws for the Rocky Mountain News but his cartoons have also appeared in The Washington Post, The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, Newsweek and other publications. He will share his experiences as an editorial cartoonist, as well as the place of a political cartoonist in the modern world. Some of Stein‚s cartoons are currently on display in the library‚s Botetourt Gallery as part of an American Political Cartoonists exhibit which will run until Jan. 2007. A reception will immediately follow the lecture. The event is free and open to the public.

The American Political Cartoonists exhibit features the works of significant American cartoonists from the last 150 years including: Thomas Nast, Bill Mauldin, Dr. Seuss, Herbert Block (Herblock), Pat Oliphant, Garry Trudeau, Signe Wilkinson, Stein and Hugh Haynie. The exhibit can be seen in the Botetourt Gallery on the ground floor of Swem Library. Exhibit hours coincide with those of the library.

A special section of the exhibit (on the 1st floor) focuses on the works of Haynie, a 1950 graduate of the College, and cartoonist for the Louisville Courier Journal for forty years. To view more about Hugh Haynie's work, visit http://swem.wm.edu/exhibits/political-cartoons/.

The American Political Cartoonists exhibit, website, and corresponding events are were made possible by through the support of the Roy R. Charles Center, Swem Library and the hard work of junior, Jocelyn Krieger. For more information on the lecture or exhibit, please contact Rebecca Beasley, rlbeas@wm.edu, 757.221.3123.

Oct 13-14 SPX Programming schedule

Tom Spurgeon at the Comics Reporter noted that SPX's programming schedule is up.

Some good stuff on both days. Note Jules Feiffer's appearance is only on Friday; I've seen him speak several times and he's always entertaining. Note also that Saturday's events are parallel and an hour long each, so you're always missing something good. I think this is Douglas Wolk's first ICAF, and fairly positive that it's Tony Millionaire's as well. Watching Nadel, Groth and Brunetti duke out the idea of a canon should be entertaining - hopefully a transcript of that will run in The Comics Journal or moderator Kartopolis' Indy Magazine. Yoe's session should be fun, McCloud's interesting and Brownstein's political cartoons one disturbing. It all looks good.

Friday:

2:00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kids Comics with Brian Ralph!
Brian Ralph, creator of Reggie-12, the graphic novels Cave-In and Climbing Out, and comic strips for Nickelodeon Magazine, will talk about his comics for kids and how he makes them.


TBA
3:00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jules Feiffer Q+A
Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Jules Feiffer inaugurated the contemporary weekly cartoon format in the Village Voice with groundbreaking cartoons about psychology, social mores, relationships, and politics. Feiffer is also a screenwriter and playwright, and has in recent years authored a number of award-winning children's books. He most recently drew illustrations for The Long Chalkboard, a collection of stories by his wife, the comedian and writer Jenny Allen. Tim Kreider will ask Feiffer questions about his work and the state of the world today.


Auditorium
8:00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tony Millionaire Q+A
Tony Millionaire's weekly Maakies strip is traditionalist and subversive, horrific and comic, beautiful and profane. Millionaire has also written and drawn the Sock Monkey series of comic books and several children's books. Gary Groth interviews the man whose exquisitely drawn strip about drunken animals, sea battles, and much more is arguably the most delightful comic strip on newsprint today.


SATURDAY
11:30
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Graphic Novels: First Authors
What challenges face a cartoonist making a long-form work for the first time? Writer Douglas Wolk talks about problems, solutions, and methodologies with Austin English, Megan Kelso and Matthias Lehmann, all of whom have recently finished their first graphic novels.

12:00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Masters, Canons and Anti-Canons
In light of the "Masters of American Comics" show and several new books that seek to expand or challenge our notions of comics' greatest works, Ivan Brunetti, Gary Groth and Dan Nadel will address the concept of a canon as it relates to comics, discuss its necessity and consider its possible function. Moderated by Bill Kartalopoulos


12:30
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Center for Cartoon Studies: Presentation and Workshop
Robyn Chapman joins us from the Center for Cartoon Studies, a recently-founded two-year educational institution for budding cartoonists in White River Junction, Vermont. Robyn will talk about this unique school and will lead a hands-on cartooning workshop. No matter how little experience you have, you will leave this panel having drawn a comics page!

1:00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Craig Yoe: Arf Lover
Twisted archivist of the ridiculous and the sublime Craig Yoe presents for your pleasure and scandalization selections from the collection of comics, gags, and graffix which form the source for his eccentric series of "Arf" anthology books. Outrageous obscurities and eyeball-kicks are practically guaranteed! (Offer not valid where offer may apply.)


1:30
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ways of Drawing
What do different styles of cartooning mean to cartoonists? What are cartoonists trying to get across with their brushstrokes? Why draw with thick or soft lines? Is drawing style a conscious choice or does it evolve naturally? Is it pleasureable to draw? Or is it a struggle? Ben Catmull, John Hankiewicz, Megan Kelso, Onsmith and Frank Santoro discuss these questions and more with moderator Austin English

2:00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Scott McCloud Q+A
Scott McCloud has become a leading spokesman and thinker in American comics through his treatises-in-comics form, Understanding Comics and Reinventing Comics. Now he follows up his analyses with a new approach to practical application in Making Comics. McCloud will discuss his ideas with moderator Bill Kartalopoulos and answer questions from the audience.


2:30
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Political Cartooning in 2006
One year ago Danish newspaper cartoons sparked deadly global riots. Earlier this year the Joint Chiefs of Staff protested a political cartoon about troop injuries in Iraq. Last month a graphic novel adaptation of the 9/11 Commission Report became a New York Times bestseller. Charles Brownstein talks to Tim Kreider, Ted Rall, Mikhaela Reid, Jen Sorensen and Rick Veitch about the interesting times these cartoonists live within and how their work responds.

3:00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ivan Brunetti Q+A
Ivan Brunetti has drawn raging screeds against the void, gag cartoons from hell's lower circles, sensitive biographies of dead artists, and observant slices-of-life. His cartooning style has transformed over the years from harsh and anguished to geometric and delicate. He is also an educator, editor, historian, curator, and spiritual seeker. Jesse Fuchs leads a discussion with the artist who calls his comic book "Schizo."


3:30
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
How to Draw Thinking
Some say that because comics is a visual medium, it's better suited for action and spectacle than for rumination or the internal life of the mind. Comics by Gabrielle Bell, Kevin Huizenga, and Anders Nilsen consistently prove this notion wrong. With moderator Isaac Cates, they will discuss the pleasures and problems of making pictures that think.

4:00
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brian Chippendale Q+A
Brian Chippendale co-founded the seminal Fort Thunder artists' space in Providence, Rhode Island in 1995. His first book, Ninja, has just been published. He is also the author of numerous mini-comics, including the Maggots series, and has appeared in anthologies including Paper Rodeo, Non, and Coober Skeeber. Chippendale also plays drums and sings as one-half of the band Lightning Bolt. Dan Nadel asks the questions

Oct 11 2pm - Herblock webcast from Library of Congress

Sara Duke reports that she will be lecturing for an online webcast:

Cartoons and Political Opinion

Join the Library of Congress in the OPAL (Online Programming for All Libraries) online classroom as it explores the resonant work of political cartoonist Herblock, through the Library of Congress's new exhibition: Enduring Outrage: Editorial Cartoons by Herblock. Sara Duke, Curator of Popular and Applied Graphic Art, will delve into the treasure trove of material from the Prints and Photographs Division and show cartoons related to perennial topics such as the environment, ethics, privacy, the Middle East, and more.

When: Wednesday, October 11, 2 p.m. (E.D.T.), 1:00 p.m. CST

To attend, go to
http://67.19.231.218/v4/login.asp?r=67955673&p=0


Type your name and click Enter to go into the online room. A small software applet will download to your computer as you enter the room. All that is needed is an Internet connection, sound card, and speakers. A headset with microphone will enable you to speak to the group.

Note: Use of Internet Explorer is recommended. Log on 5 minutes early to allow for the web conference software to be downloaded automatically to your computer.

For more information about upcoming programs, see Online Programming for All Libraries (OPAL) at http://www.opal-online.org/progschrono.htm.

To learn more about the Library of Congress, see http://www.loc.gov/, especially:

Prints & Photographs Division: http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/

Online Exhibition: Enduring Outrage: Editorial Cartoons by Herblock - http://www.loc.gov/exhibits/treasures/herblock-intro.html

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Nov 18 - Academic panels - “Comics, Graphic Novels, and the Bible”

A. David Lewis reports that he will be speaking at the following session next month. More details if I get them, but it sounds interesting. Besides the obvious issue of the propriety of the Danish Islam cartoons, there has been a lot of growth in Christian and Jewish comics in the US. (BTW, I think that's Andre, not Andrea).

Program for 2006 National Academy of American Religion/Society of Biblical Literature

SBL Forum Special Session, Nov. 18, 1pm – DC Convention Center
“Comics, Graphic Novels, and the Bible”
Dan W. Clanton, Jr., Presider

Papers

G. Andrew Tooze, Winston-Salem, NC, “Do Superheroes Read Scripture? The Bible and Comic Books” (30 minutes)

Terry Clark, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs, “Biblical Graphic Novels: Adaptation, Interpretation, and Pedagogy” (30 minutes)

Andrea Molinari, Creighton University, “Climbing the Dragon’s Ladder: Perpetua, Felicitas, Graphic Novels and the Possibility of Modern Hagiography” (30 minutes)

Panel Discussion (60 minutes)

Greg Garrett, Professor of English, Baylor University
A. David Lewis, author of The Lone and Level Sands
Steve Ross, author of Marked
JT Waldman, author of Megillat Esther

Article - DC resident reviews NYC's Masters of American Comics

You can find it here:

Wecker, Menachem. 2006.
What’s New With Jewish-American Superheroes?
Jewish Press (October 4).

and here's the details for 1/2 the exhibit at least:

Masters of American Comics
September 15, 2006-January 28, 2007
The Jewish Museum
1109 Fifth Avenue – at 92nd Street, New York
212-423-3200, http://www.thejewishmuseum.org

I don't know Mr. Wecker, but his bio on the JP site says, "Menachem Wecker is a painter and assistant editor of B’nai B’rith Magazine in Washington, D.C. He welcomes comments at mwecker@gmail.com." The number of people interested in comics in Washington continues to surprise me.

Oct 8 - Animation Festival - National Geographic REPOST

This slid off the main heading's list so I'll repost it in case anyone's looking for something to do today.

As part of their All Roads Film Festival, Nat'l Geo has a morning showing of animated shorts at their 16th and M Sts, NW location. There is a charge to see these.

Sunday, October 8
11 a.m. ANIMATION PROGRAM
Traditional tales from around the world come alive in animated form.
*How the Elephant Lost his Wings
Tara Douglas
4 min/India/2006
World Premiere

A story from the Muria Gond culture about conflict between the first elephant and man.
*Pot of Gold
Nitin Donde
5 min/India/2006
World Premiere

A tale from the Warli tribe of Maharashtra tells what happens when a husband and wife find a pot of gold.
*Best of the Best
Leslie MacKenzie
5 min /India/2006
World Premiere

A vain mouse gets what she deserves in this story from the Gondi tribe.
First Fire
Nathan Young
10 min/USA/2004
Cherokee with English Subtitles
DC Premiere

Stop-motion claymation depicts the origin of fire from the Cherokee Nation.
Un Poquito De... (A Little Bit Of...)
Dominique Jonard
11 min/Mexico/2003
Spanish with English subtitles
US Premiere

Schoolchildren wrote and illustrated this story showing the fun lives of people living near Mexico's Popocatepetl volcano in Mexico.
Raven and the First People
Caleb Hystad, Simon James
23 min/Canada/2006

In the first of two new episodes from the award-winning series about Pacific North Coast tribes, Raven Tales, Eagle and Raven are at odds over how to take care of the world entrusted to them.
Raven and the Seawolf
Caleb Hystad, Simon James
23 min/Canada/2006
US Premiere

The first man is dismayed to find he has no skill as a fisherman and that his skills as an artisan are unappreciated, so he calls out a mythical sea monster to help him.

Oct 14 5 pm - Terri Witek poetry reading UPDATED with CORRECTED TIME

Terri Witek will be reading at Chapters, a literary bookstore. Terri's a friend of mine, and her poetry is frequently about graphic images. Her current book, Carnal World, is on her responses to paintings.

Chapters has a description up now:

Time: Saturday, October 14, 2006 5:00 PM
Title of Event: Steve Scafidi & Terri Witek
"This is a return trip for Steve Scafidi, whose second collection, For Love of Common Words exuberantly embodies that title, in being both meditative and defiant about our common losses. Terri Witek, whom we know and admire from the West Chester Poetry Conference, reads from Carnal World, her smart, funny, and keenly observant poems on paintings."

Terri's in town with her husband, Joseph 'Rusty' Witek, who's attending ICAF and is the author of Comic Books as History: the Narrative Art of Jack Jackson, Art Spiegelman, and Harvey Pekar.

Saturday, October 07, 2006

Oct 7 - Get Your War On article in Post and other tidbits UPDATED

Pressley, Nelson. 2006.
Internet Comic Strip 'Get Your War On' Goes 3-D on Stage.

Washington Post (October 7): C1.

The article's about the staging of a clip art comic strip, rather than a review of the performance.

Also in the Style section is another of Richard Thompson's caricature finger puppets. Don Rumsfield will be joining the previous ones on my book shelves -- and pushing them around apparently!


The City Paper
also has a bit on Get Your War On. They've also got an illustration by Josh Neufeld on an article about rats. Josh hopefully should be attending ICAF this year as he's been a regular for years.

Over in the Washington Times, Zadzooks! reviews games and toys based on comics. Oddly enough, he's been doing this column for at least a decade and I've never run into him.

Szadkowski, Joseph. 2006.
Hong Kong Phooey bats at villains in 3-D action.

WASHINGTON TIMES (October 7).

Finally, the Express had the Spider-Man Collectible Series 8 comic book, reprinting part of Amazing Spider-Man #4 - remember steal a copy from your neighbor's lawn!

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Oct 11 - Presidential Doodles booksigning

David Greenberg - Presidential Doodles: Two Centuries of Scribbles, Scratches, Squiggles & Scrawls from the Oval Office
Wednesday, October 11, 2006 at 07:00 PM at Olsson's The Lansburgh/Penn Quarter, 418 7th St., NW, (202) 638-7610

What were the leaders of the free world really doing during all those meetings? As the creators of Cabinet magazine reveal here for the first time, they were doodling! Includes a powerpoint presentation.

National Public Radio had a story on this book a few days ago -
Siegel, Robert. 2006.
'Presidential Doodles:' Oval Office Artists.
National Public Radio's All Things Considered (September 21) .
online at http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6118892

Oct 12-14 - Cartoonists with Attitude appearances

Tom Spurgeon's fine blog, The Comics Reporter, pointed to Cartoonists with Attitude's website today. CWA is a group of young, mostly editorial, cartoonists centered around the frequently controversial. Mikhaela Reid and Jen "Slowpoke" Sorenson have been regulars at SPX for years now, and I recommend their works. On Oct 12, the group will be at Politics and Prose at 7 pm. On the 13th and 14th, they'll be at the Small Press Expo in Upper Bethesda, or Lower Rockville, near the White Flint Mall.

Oct 5 - Get Your War On article in Express

Berger, Arion. 2006.
What is it good for? A prickly Web strip comes to life as 'Get Your War On,' the play.
[Washington Post] Express (October 5): E11

- that's the paper in the yellow box. It's an interview with Kirk Lynn who adapted the strip to the stage. The article's not online so you'll have to get it today if you want it.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Oct 7 - Comic book signing

Joel Pollack, owner of Big Planet Comics, told me today that he'd have two comic book creators at his store this Saturday during the Taste of Bethesda festivities. John "Buzzboy" Gallagher and Shannon "Marvel Adventures Avengers" Gallant will be appearing. Gallagher most likely from 1-4 and Gallant from 11-2.

Oct 15 - Comic Book convention

Labelling themselves "Washington, DC's only ComiCon" on their flyer, Capital Associates' convention is in Tyson's Corner at the Dunn Loring Volunteer Fire Department at 2148 Gallows Road from 10-3 on 10/15 with an admission of $3.00.

Article - Herblock exhibit

The new Library of Congress Information Bulletin for July-August has a profile, or apparently a re-written press release with a lot of pictures in it. Unfortunately, the LoC's website is way behind on loading these, so you'll have to see if you can scrounge a copy from an acquaintance who works in a library.

Here's the citation for those keeping track:
'Enduring Outrage': Editorial Cartoons by Herblock on display.
Library of Congress Information Bulletin (July-August 2006): 177-181

Toles in Buffalo

The school newspaper had the story of Toles' speech last weekend -
Kim, Jungmin. 2006.
Pulitzer Prizewinner Toles discusses censorship in society.
University of Buffalo Spectrum (October 5).
online at http://spectrum.buffalo.edu/article.php?id=28540.

Tuesday, October 03, 2006

Article - Big Planet Comics in PW Comics Week


Publisher's Weekly electronic comics newsletter covered Big Planet Comics this week - the store I've been shopping at since The Dark Knight Returns dragged me back into comic books. See '20 Years of Retailing at Big Planet Comics,'
by Chris Arrant, PW Comics Week, October 3, 2006

Gaiman booksigning report, of sorts

I'm sure a lot of other blogs covered this, and better, but here's my notes from the P&P signing.

Gaiman attracted a crowd of about 450-500 people to the site in the church. This was the first signing that P&P had there, and it's a good venue, although it was a bit strange to see Gaiman in a pulpit. He noted that these are all the stories he's written since the last collection, except for a story called "Orange" I think. He talked about putting poetry in the book, which his fans are divided about, but included it because the book would be the same length whether or not it was included. So he read his included poem, The Day The Saucers Came to a good bit of laughter.

He then read the first story in his book, A Study in Emerald after determining that he'd read another one at a con in Baltimore recently. After that, he took questions.

Asked what is Alan Moore like, Gaiman gave an amusing description of meeting him with Moore while Moore was wearing a bright red suit. He also gave an amusing account of Moore deciding to short-circuit his midlife crisis by worshipping an imaginary snake.

Asked how he can let characters go, Gaiman noted that 10 years of Sandman was long enough and it was a relief for all parties to let go some times.

Asked how long American Gods took to write, he explained 2 years, but the book had been gestating for longer.

Anansi was the central figure of the sequel because 8 years earlier he'd been working with Lenny Henry on his audiobooks. Henry noted that there were no black characters in horror movies because they all get killed offstage. Lenny's a bespectacled comics nerd offstage, but wanted a role written for him, so Anansi Boys is all written with Caribbean black characters unless otherwise noted. Originally it was to be a novella, along with Stardust and Neverwhere stories, but editor Jenny Brown insisted it would be a book.

Asked about his personal relationship with God, as it were, he said, "I think religions are the coolest things on earth and I hope people keep making them up until the end of time." He followed this by stating, "I think they're really cool and odd and I wish people wouldn't kill each other over them."

After questions, he gave his film FAQ.

John Hodgeman is the father in Coraline which is being done as stop-motion and will be ready in 2008. The misic is by They Might Be Giants. Also Ian McShane will be the upstairs neighbor.

The 1st movie out, March 2007, will be Stardust. Filmed in Highland Studios in England.

On November 22, 2007, Beowulf, starring John Malkovich, Anthony Hopkins, Crispin Glover predictably as Grendel, and Angelie Jolie as Grendel's mother. He began the script with a friend in 1998. The friend planned to direct it until Zimeckis offered them, not one, which wasn't enough, but two wheelbarrows of money. It's being done like Polar Express but better.

Corrections, especially those of names, are welcomed.

Alison Bechdel booksigning followup UPDATED

Politics and Prose put an interview with Bechdel on their website.

Also they sell recordings of the event and noted in their newsletter that Bechdel is available. I've ordered mine.

Bechdel wrote about the booksigning in her blog as did Jenny Miller on her blog.

Article - editorial cartoons in Health & Medicine museum exhibit




Captions: Reception for the exhibit; Wayne Stayskal, Tampa Tribune, June 24, 1997; and Mike Keefe, Denver Post, 1997

Here's an article on the editorial cartoon exhibit on smoking on display at the museum through early spring. The museum's 5 miles north of the White House on 16th St. I work in this museum, but didn't have anything to do with this exhibit so I can say without self-promotion that it's good and worth seeing.

Bell, John R. 2006.
Museum Exhibit Shows Shift in Thinking About Tobacco.
Family Practice News 36 (18; September 15): 4.
http://www.familypracticenews.com/article/PIIS0300707306738191/fulltext.

Monday, October 02, 2006

Oct 2 Booksigning - Alison Bechdel REMINDER

Just a reminder - and note the time is an hour later than usual. I probably won't make it to this, but if anyone goes, feel free to comment here. Again, this is one of the best graphic novels of 2006.

Politics and Prose
Monday, October 2, 8 p.m.
ALISON BECHDEL
FUN HOME (Houghton Mifflin, $19.95)

In this illustrated memoir, Bechdel tells the story of her relationship with her father—an artistic, obsessive, and tragically repressed man. Bechdel has won acclaim for her hilarious, high-minded comic portraits of lesbian life, and this rich, beautiful work is a remarkable demonstration of her power as a storyteller.

Sunday, October 01, 2006

Oct 8 - Animation Festival - National Geographic

As part of their All Roads Film Festival, Nat'l Geo has a morning showing of animated shorts at their 16th and M Sts, NW location. There is a charge to see these.

Sunday, October 8
11 a.m. ANIMATION PROGRAM
Traditional tales from around the world come alive in animated form.
*How the Elephant Lost his Wings
Tara Douglas
4 min/India/2006
World Premiere

A story from the Muria Gond culture about conflict between the first elephant and man.
*Pot of Gold
Nitin Donde
5 min/India/2006
World Premiere

A tale from the Warli tribe of Maharashtra tells what happens when a husband and wife find a pot of gold.
*Best of the Best
Leslie MacKenzie
5 min /India/2006
World Premiere

A vain mouse gets what she deserves in this story from the Gondi tribe.
First Fire
Nathan Young
10 min/USA/2004
Cherokee with English Subtitles
DC Premiere

Stop-motion claymation depicts the origin of fire from the Cherokee Nation.
Un Poquito De... (A Little Bit Of...)
Dominique Jonard
11 min/Mexico/2003
Spanish with English subtitles
US Premiere

Schoolchildren wrote and illustrated this story showing the fun lives of people living near Mexico's Popocatepetl volcano in Mexico.
Raven and the First People
Caleb Hystad, Simon James
23 min/Canada/2006

In the first of two new episodes from the award-winning series about Pacific North Coast tribes, Raven Tales, Eagle and Raven are at odds over how to take care of the world entrusted to them.
Raven and the Seawolf
Caleb Hystad, Simon James
23 min/Canada/2006
US Premiere

The first man is dismayed to find he has no skill as a fisherman and that his skills as an artisan are unappreciated, so he calls out a mythical sea monster to help him.

Oct 1 Book review in Post - Gaiman

Joyce, Graham. 2006.
Beyond Imagination: Dazzling tales from a master of the fantastic [Gaiman].
Washington Post Book World (October 1): 7
online at http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/28/AR2006092801423.html.

also, there's a review of Brad (Green Arrow, Identity Crisis, JLA) Meltzer's new thriller The Book of Fate and, in Style or Arts, a mention of his appearance at the National Book Festival.

Speaking of the NBF, the Library of Congress usually puts up links to videos of the festival. When they do, I'll post the link.

Saturday, September 30, 2006

Oct 19 Auction: Cartoons and Cocktails

Richard Thompson tipped me to this year's Cartoons and Cocktails auction. A silent auction of editorial cartoons starts at 6 pm followed by a live auction at 7 pm. The event is at the National Press Club and benefits student journalists and the Cartoonists Rights Network. Tickets are $50. Richard says he donated a piece this year, so this is apparently a rare opportunity to own one of his works. Also if you work the crowd, you might actually meet him. I attended a few years back and bought some nice Cuban pieces, oddly enough. Garrincha, a Cuban cartoonist was attending and had brought the work of some of his colleagues for sale.

Here's a list of who they've got already:

Spend an evening with these talented and award-winning editorial cartoonists

Don't miss "Art in Action": Real-time cartooning on current themes to be auctioned at the end of the evening! The following artists have been confirmed for C&C 2006:

Mike Luckovich
Joel Pett
Tom Toles

Last year, these artists created two original pieces of art throughout the night:

Nick Anderson
Steve Artley
Chip Beck
Nate Beeler
Justin Bilicki
Chip Bok
Drew Chapman
Bob Erskine
Bob Gorrell
Clay Jones
Lee Klousia
Barrie Maguire
Kathy Steve
Sage Stossel
Ann Telnaes
Tom Toles
Steve Wetzel

Sept 30 - Comics in today's papers

The Washington Examiner, one of the new free papers, has a Spider-Man Collectible Series #7 comic book (reprinting a continuation of Amazing Spider-Man #3) in it. This is interesting because it has a new cover (since they split the original comic book into at least 3 new ones). The cover is by Raney who is competent, but no Steve Ditko. Unfortunately, I don't believe they stock these in the yellow boxes, so you have to find a neighborhood where they're delivered and steal one from a lawn. Like I do.

Also, this isn't exactly DC news, but Politics and Prose distributes the Rain Taxi Review of Books for free. They have the new Fall 2006 issue now, which has reviews of Robert Kirkman's Invincible, Sfar's Vampire Loves, Eisner's Contract with God Trilogy and Renee French's The Ticking.

Oct 1 Booksigning - KAL in Baltimore


KAL
aka Kevin Kallaugher, the current Economist and former Baltimore Sun political cartoonist, will be appearing at the Baltimore Book Festival at 3 pm. His work infrequently makes it into the Post, but he's one of the great cartoonists of our day. I can't recommend the exhibit at the Strathmore, posted on earlier, highly enough.

And while I realize it's Baltimore, hey, it's closer than you think. And the Feds lump us together for pay scale purposes.

Friday, September 29, 2006

Interview online - Richard Thompson

Since I mentioned this in a comment earlier today, I'll put it up for those who missed it. This is a few days old, but hopefully not much has changed in his life. I think the Post if finally regularly putting up Richard's Poor Alamanac online. BTW, Politics and Prose is sold out of the book, so buy it online. Click on the link to read the whole interview.

Richard Thompson [chat].
WashingtonPost.com (September 11, 2006): http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/discussion/2006/09/08/DI2006090800043.html

Every Sunday, Richard Thompson's local comic strip "Cul de Sac,"
starring Alice, Petey and the rest of the Otterloop family, appears
in The Washington Post Magazine . Every Saturday, his "Richard's
Poor Almanac" cartoon is a fixture in the newspaper's Style section.

He was online Monday, Sept. 11, fielding questions and comments
about "Cul de Sac, Richard's Poor Almanac and the art and craft of
cartooning.

Booksigning - October 31: Marjane Satrapi

Politics & Prose Bookstore
October 31, 7 pm
Her new book is Chicken with Plums.

Given that it's Halloween, I won't be there unfortunately. She's an entertaining speaker.

Festival - October 1: Crafty Bastards in Adams Morgan

The Washington City Paper's artist festival Crafty Bastards, running in Adams Morgan on 18th St, NW from 10-5 on Sunday has some cartoonists coming including DC's Savage Love cartoonist, the excellent Rob Ullman. I buy original art from Rob every year at SPX. Ben Claassen who does a strip in the CP each week as well as a lot of their advertising illos will also be there.

Comic art articles in today's papers UPDATED

I'm not sure if I'll keep this up, but there was quite a bit on comics in today's papers. A quick rundown revealed the following articles, which are online unless otherwise noted.

Washington Post:

Two animation reviews in the lame new Weekend section format -

Hornaday, Ann. 2006.
'Season': Grin and Bear It.
Washington Post (September 29): Weekend 37

Hornaday, Ann. 2006.
Skin-Deep 'Renaissance' [French animation].
Washington Post (September 29): Weekend 37

Washington Times:

Minor bit about Trudeau at Pentagon -

Gertz, Bill and Rowan Scarborough. 2006.
Inside the Ring: Doonesbury.
Washington Times (September 29)

Two movie reviews -

Toto, Christian. 2006.
'Renaissance' puts looks first [French animation].
Washington Times (September 29)

Mayo, Jenny. 2006.
Right 'Season' ['Open Season' animation].
Washington Times (September 29)

In the paper, but not online:

Emerson, Bo / Atlanta Journal-Constitution / Cox News Service. 2006.
Humor lives as art form at New Yorker: Trademark cartoons tweak society's pretentious nose.
Washington Times (September 29): D2

and also bundled in Friday's paper:

Keel, Beverly. 2006.
Happy birthday, Dick Tracy: America's most durable cartoon crime fighter marks a milestone.
American Profile (October 1): 12-17

Washington Examiner:

Johnston, Nancy.
Pair of 'toons walk the plank [Scooby-Doo, Tom and Jerry].
Washington Examiner (September 29): 26

Truitt, Brian. 2006.
When the fur hits the fan: Animals rule the day in animated 'Open Season'.
Washington Examiner (September 29)

Washington Blade:

Moylan, Brian. 2006.
Don't get your freak on: Comedy Central's badly executed and somewhat offensive ‘Freak Show'is one lame cartoon.
Washington Blade (September 29).
online at http://www.washingtonblade.com/2006/9-29/arts/television/television.cfm .

and I haven't read the City Paper yet. So what do you think? Anyone like to see this continue? I'm tracking these stories for my Comics Research Bibliography, but it does take extra effort to pull them out this way.

FRIDAY EVENING UPDATE -

Washington City Paper:

As Marc Singer noted in the comments, surprisingly enough the City Paper got its hands on a copy of Lost Girls -

Eiserike, Josh. 2006.
Speed Reads: Lost Girls By Alan Moore and Melinda Gebbie,
Top Shelf Productions, 264 pp., $75.
Washington City Paper (September 29).
online at http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/arts/2006/speed0929.html?navCenterBot

and also reviewed 'Open Season' -

Bayard, Louis. 2006.
Short subjects: Open Season [animation].
Washington City Paper (September 29).
online at http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/film/2006/shorts0929.html?navCenterBot

Thursday, September 28, 2006

News report - Trudeau in DC earlier this week

Doonesbury's Gary Trudeau was in DC this week. He was at Walter Reed Army Medical Center's Fisher House, where recovering soldiers stay, on the morning of September 25th. Later that day, he went to the Pentagon and the American Forces Press Service had a report:

Wood, Sara. 2006.
Doonesbury Cartoonist Writes Second Book for Troops.
American Forces Press Service (September 26).
online at http://www.infozine.com/news/stories/op/storiesView/sid/17999/

(By Sgt. Sara Wood, USA)

The award-winning creator of the Doonesbury cartoon strip visited the Pentagon today to meet with wounded servicemembers and sign copies of his second book in a series chronicling the recovery of a wounded Operation Iraqi Freedom veteran.

Washington, D.C. - American Forces Press Service - infoZine - Garry Trudeau wrote the book, "The War Within: One More Step at a Time," as a follow-up to his book, "The Long Road Home: One Step at a Time," which tells the story of comic strip character "B.D.," a National Guardsman who lost his leg during the battle of Fallujah in Iraq and suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder. The second book follows B.D.'s return to civilian and family life after leaving the hospital and his process of dealing with his post-traumatic stress disorder.

Trudeau said he's putting together these books, which are really a compilation of his comic strips, as a way to bring the war home to Americans, many of whom may not know any servicemembers or understand the sacrifices they're making.

"America in general has not been asked to sacrifice much for this particular war," Trudeau said. "Their world has nothing to do with the military world. I think it's important, if you're given a platform that I've been given, to try to bring those two worlds together and say, 'Look, these guys are making some pretty heavy sacrifices and contributions in our name, and we should know a little bit more about them.'"

Trudeau was encouraged to publish the books by the Fisher House Foundation, to which he is donating all the proceeds from these books. The foundation operates 34 Fisher Houses in the U.S. and Germany on the grounds of military and veterans hospitals. The
houses give family members a place to live and be close to loved ones while they are hospitalized for an injury, illness or disease.

Trudeau has met many servicemembers over the years and has recently spent a lot of time talking with military doctors, therapists, and veterans counselors to make his depiction of the recovery process as accurate as possible, he said. His regular comic strips are very satirical and political, he said, so working on this project has forced him to use a different mindset.

"It's been quite an experience for me to work on this sort of naturalistic level and to try to understand," he said. "There's not much hyperbole in this; this pretty closely tracks what a soldier would actually go through. I try not to exaggerate, and it's important our countrymen understand some of the sacrifices that returning warriors are going through."

Trudeau's account of B.D.'s recovery is very accurate, according to the servicemembers who have read it and know firsthand what the experiences are like. Army Spc. Maxwell D. Ramsey, a left-leg amputee recovering at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, said Trudeau did a good job using real-life events wounded troops face and identifying the issues they deal with. He noted a section in the
first book in which B.D. gets frustrated with the constant expressions of gratitude from strangers, saying that is something he can relate to in his own life.

"I'm one that was using humor to deflect and deflate the situation before I even got to Walter Reed to some degree, so seeing it manifested in a comic like this is, for me, appropriate and relieving in a way," he said. "I hope that others will take some
measure from that. Anybody that's not feeling sorry for themselves will find the humor in this and giggle about it."

Using humor to tackle such a sensitive subject was a challenge, Trudeau said, but humor is often an indispensable coping mechanism for people going through challenges like wounded troops go through. "Humor can sometimes be that thin membrane between you and madness that you need to create some perspective on your situation and move forward," he said.

Trudeau said he received a lot of positive feedback about the first book, and that helped shape this book. He said he doesn't know yet how far B.D.'s story will go, but he hopes to see him recover enough to eventually be a peer counselor for newly returning wounded veterans.

Army Spc. David Lease, another wounded servicemember Trudeau met with today, said the books are important because they bring to light the experiences of wounded troops and letting them know people care.

"This is letting us know that they support us," Lease said. "They might not support the fact that we're over there, but they support us."

As part of his attempt to inform Americans about the sacrifices servicemembers are making, Trudeau is launching a military blog on his Web site: www.doonesbury.com, he said. The blog, which launches Oct. 8, will be called "The sandbox" and will feature entries from servicemembers in Iraq and Afghanistan.

"It's important that people understand," he said. "I think the wars are just too remote for people's minds. They see two, three minutes on the evening news, maybe, if they don't look away. And people just get on with their lives. I understand that; there's just so much stress that you want in your life. But at the same time, there's a lot of people over there fighting in our name, so I think we need to pay attention to what they're doing."

Interview online - Tom Toles

Tom Spurgeon's invaluable Comics Reporter blog pointed out this story:

Kelly, Geoff. 2006.
The Uncensored Tom Toles.
Buffalo Artvoice 5(39; September ?).
online at http://artvoice.com/issues/v5n39/uncensored_tom_toles.

Toles talks a bit about cartooning in DC, concluding, "The density of information and interest is so high here—you can find out a lot, but the context of everything is sometimes quite confusing."

Wednesday, September 27, 2006

Report on Book signing - September 27: Jeff Danziger


The event was sparsely attended with less than 10 of us in the audience, which is a shame as Danziger was an interesting speaker. He showed about 25 of his cartoons, and explained the rationale behind them. One cartoon, of Bush and Cheney floating down the river on the corpse of a soldier, was notable because he decided not to submit it for publication. He began his talk by saying that he felt especially qualified to comment on the current war because as far as he knows, he's the only Vietnam war veteran political cartoonist. He continued by stating forcefully that the conduct of this war, and the government's behavior reminds him strongly of that war.

Questions from the audience revealed that he draws with a lead pencil, a Bic pen for blacks and a charcoal pencil and then photocopies the image and then scans it. Influences are Oliphant, Walt Kelly of Pogo, and the British cartoonists David Low and especially Carl Giles (a favorite of mine as well). His new book Blood, Debt and Fears: Cartoons of the First Half of the Last Half of the Bush Administration is most likely available in a signed copy from Olsson's, because they wheeled out a cart of them as he was finishing signing for people on line.

Theater - Oct 5-14: Get Your War On

At the Woolly Mammoth, live from Texas. The Houston Chronicle ran a generally favorable article - see

EVANS, EVERETT. 2006.
Get Your War On is a political zinger.
Houston Chronicle (September 23).
online at http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ent/4207867.html .

For details on the local production, Woolly Mammoth's website says:

created by RUDE MECHS of Austin TX

directed by SHAWN SIDES
adapted by Kirk Lynn et al from the internet comic strip by DAVID REES

October 5 - 14, 2006.
"Oh, yeah! Operation: Enduring Freedom is IN THE HOUSE!"

MEET DAVID REES: on Fri, Oct 6 & Sat, Oct 7, David will be in the lobby to sign his books (7:15-8pm), as well as participate in aftershow discussions with members of the Rude Mechs (running time of show is 70 minutes).

"A BRILLIANT & SARDONIC BLITZ"– Austin American-Statesman

"TIGHTLY-WOUND, HIGH PRECISION... POLITICAL COMIC STRIP HILARITY"– Austinist.com

From Artistic Director, Howard Shalwitz: "Rude Mechs are a sensational ensemble performance group that has been on my radar since their Off-Broadway production of Lipstick Traces a couple seasons back. They develop and produce very original theatre pieces that they refer to as 'mentally nervy and physically ecstatic shows.' The stage production of GET YOUR WAR ON combines their fresh theatrical energy with David Rees' wry, biting political comic strip. With important elections approaching in November, the timing seemed perfect to bring this show to Washington audiences."

ABOUT THE SHOW: Rude Mechanicals (a.k.a. Rude Mechs) of Austin, TX barrel into DC with their down and dirty theatrical adaptation of the savage internet comic strip by David Rees (called "sardonic, hilarious, and impossible to pigeonhole" by Rolling Stone). Rude Mechs' GET YOUR WAR ON breathes life into Rees' ranting clip-art office workers but retains the DIY aesthetic of this certifiable internet phenomenon. With five actors, some mics and an overhead projector, GET YOUR WAR ON represents pissed-off, stunned and outraged Americans as they react to 9/11, the Bush administration and this totally awesome War on Terror.

Running Time: 70 minutes (no intermission)


WOOLLY MAMMOTH THEATRE COMPANY
641 D St NW, Washington, DC 20004
Admin: 202-289-2443 Box Office: 202-393-3939

Booksigning - Oct 2: Alison Bechdel's Fun Home

This is an excellent book. I highly recommend it. Mike

Politics and Prose
Monday, October 2, 8 p.m.
ALISON BECHDEL
FUN HOME (Houghton Mifflin, $19.95)

In this illustrated memoir, Bechdel tells the story of her relationship with her father—an artistic, obsessive, and tragically repressed man. Bechdel has won acclaim for her hilarious, high-minded comic portraits of lesbian life, and this rich, beautiful work is a remarkable demonstration of her power as a storyteller.

Tuesday, September 26, 2006

Convention - Oct 13-14: Von Allan, Small Press Expo Exhibitor Press Release

Von Allan emailed this press release a few minutes ago, along with some kind words about the idea of this blog. I hadn't thought about putting individual's press releases up until he sent me one, so thanks!


Von Allan to appear at the 11th annual Small Press Expo

Ottawa, Ontario, Canada (September 26, 2006) – Comics and graphic novels have truly come of age over the past ten years and the diversity and magic of the medium have gone a long way towards capturing the imaginations of those who read them. The Small Press Expo (SPX) has played a huge role in that development and 2006 marks its eleventh anniversary. Von Allan, a Canadian graphic novelist, will be an exhibitor at this year’s SPX and will be displaying early pages from his forthcoming graphic novel “the road to god knows…”

“Comics and graphic novels have so much to offer and the Small Press Expo has become the place to see the best and brightest,” says Allan. “SPX showcases this very diversity all under one roof and I’m pleased as punch to be a participant. It’s kinda scary, too; the Expo has served as the launching pad for some of the strongest voices comics has to offer. The second SPX, for instance, saw Daniel Clowes’ “Ghost World” and Chris Ware’s “Acme Novelty Library” each win the inaugural Ignatz Awards in their respective categories and both books have gone on to wonderful things since then. Amazing stuff and it’s a little intimidating to rub shoulders with that. It’s very clear that without the Expo comics would be a very different place; a little colder and that much darker. It’s truly special to be a part of it and I’m thrilled that I’ll be able to showcase early pages from my graphic novel.”

“The road to god knows...” is the story of Marie, a teenage girl, coming to grips with her Mom’s schizophrenia. As a result, she’s struggling to grow up fast; wrestling with poverty, loneliness, and her Mom’s illness every step of the way. Betty, Marie’s Mom, can’t help; she’s living with an illness that’s slowly getting worse and increasingly frightening. With her Mom absorbed in her own problems, Marie is essentially alone while she learns to deal with the chaos in her young life.

“The road to god knows…” is expected to be printed in 2007.

About Von Allan: Von Allan was born red-headed and freckled in Arnprior, Ontario, just in time for Star Wars: A New Hope. The single child of two loving but troubled parents, Von split most of his childhood between their two homes and, consequently, spent a lot of time in the worlds of comics and wrestling. He managed Perfect Books, an independent bookstore in Ottawa, for many years while working on story ideas in his spare time; eventually, he decided to make the leap to a creative life, and “the road to god knows…” was the result. Additional information about the graphic novel can be found at http://www.vonallan.com/.

About the Small Press Expo (SPX): SPX serves as the preeminent showcase for the exhibition of independent comic books and the discovery of new creative talent. SPX will bring together over 300 artists and publishers to meet their readers, booksellers, distributors, and each other. SPX 2006 marks the tenth annual presentation of The Ignatz Awards for outstanding achievement in comics and cartooning. The Ignatz, named after George Herriman's brick-wielding mouse, recognizes outstanding work that challenges popular notions of what comics can achieve, both as an artform and as a means of personal expression. The Ignatz is a festival prize, the first such of the United States comic book industry. Winners will be determined by ballot during SPX and presented at the gala Ignatz Awards ceremony. As with every year all profits from SPX will go to support the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, protecting the First Amendment rights of comic book readers and professionals. For more information, please visit http://www.spxpo.com/.

Contact:

Von Allan
P.O. Box 20520, 390 Rideau Street,
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. K1N 1A3
Email: von@vonallan.com
Phone: 613-236-9957

Small Press Expo 2006
October 13th and 14th 2006
Marriott Bethesda North Hotel & Conference Center, 5701 Marinelli Road,
North Bethesda, Maryland, United States. 20852
Hotel Phone: 301-822-9200
SPX Exhibitor Co-ordinator: Karon Flage
Email: spxcomics@gmail.com

###

--
Eric "Von Allan" Julien
P.O. Box 20520, 390 Rideau Street, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. K1N 1A3
Phone: (613) 236-9957
Email: von@vonallan.com
Web: http://www.vonallan.com/
Blog: vonandmoggy.livejournal.com

Booksigning - Sept 29 - Neil Gaiman MOVED

Politics and Prose reports:
NEIL GAIMAN EVENT VENUE MOVED - SAME TIME
*NEW VENUE*
Wesley United Methodist Church
5312 Connecticut Avenue, NW (two blocks north of the bookstore on Connecticut Ave.)
Doors open at 5:30 p.m.
This event is FREE
Friday, September 29, 7 p.m.
NEIL GAIMAN FRAGILE THINGS (William Morrow, $26.95) Gaiman's third collection of "short fictions and wonders" (after Smoke and Mirrors and Adventures in the Dream Trade) includes an alternate-world Sherlock Holmes, a new last book of the Bible, verses from "a vampire's Tarot," and love stories that stretch the definitions of "love" and "story" in previously unimaginable ways.
• Read our 10 Questions with Neil Gaiman here.

Monday, September 25, 2006

Festival - Oct 12-14: ICAF Schedule

The Eleventh AnnualInternational Comic Arts Festival (ICAF)
Festival International de la Bande Dessinée
-->OCTOBER 12-14, 2006
Washington, D.C.
The Library of Congress, James Madison Building
With thanks to our many sponsors.
Read more about ICAF's mission here.
All events will be held in the Mumford Room, Library of Congress Madison Building, unless otherwise noted

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12

9:00-9:15: ICAF Welcome and Introduction

9:15-10:45: Panel #1: Cultural exchanges in French comics
Chair: Guy Spielmann, ICAF Executive Committee
Karen Leader, “Les caricaturistes peints par eux-mêmes”
Jennifer Worth, “Framing and Unveiling: Marjane Satrapi’s Performance of Persepolis“
Bart Beaty, “Appropriating la nouvelle bande dessinée: The Question of Cultural Change”

10:45-11:00: Break

11:00-12:30: Panel #2: Manga and Japanese society
Chair: Ana Merino, ICAF Executive Committee
Ryan Holmberg, “Japan, a country with guns: Armament and Manga in the 1960s”
Steven Clark, “Boxing Manga and the Fictionality Vector “
Kukhee Choo, “Manga: Japanese Governement Marketing Strategy”

12:30-2:00: Lunch

2:00-3:00: Georgia Higley, “Researching Comic Books in the Library of Congress”

3:00-3:45: Display of drawings and manuscript materials by Jules Feiffer in the Prints & Photographs Reading Room
Courtesy of the Swann Foundation for Caricature and Cartoon
Curated by Sara Duke & Martha Kennedy, The Swann Foundation

3:45-4:00: Break

4:00-5:00: Tour of “Enduring Outrage: Editoral Cartoons by Herb Block” in the American Treasures Gallery, Library of Congress Jefferson Building
Tour conducted by Martha Kennedy and Sara Duke

5:00-7:00: Dinner

7:00-8:30: An Evening with Jules Feiffer
The legendary cartoonist and author discusses his career


FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13

9:00-10:30: Panel #3: Collaborative authorship
Chair: Charles Hatfield, ICAF Executive Committee
Adam Rosenblatt, “The Making and Remaking of El Eternauta”
Michael Wenthe, “The Rules of the Game“
Isaac Cates, “The Many Hands of Alan Moore“

10:30-11:00: Break

11:00-12:30: Panel #4: Comics and memory
Chair: Ana Merino, ICAF Executive Committee
Natsu Onoda, “Comics, College, and Collective Memory”
Pedro Perez-Del-Solar, “Spanish War Stories:Constructing Spanish Civil War from the Underground“
Michael Chaney, “Re-Membering, Re-mediating Slavery”

12:30-2: Lunch

2:00-3:00: Lent Scholarship Lecture: Barbara Postema (Michigan State University)

3:00-3:30: Break

3:30-5:00: Panel #5: The frontiers of the comics form
Chair: Craig Fischer, ICAF Executive Committee
Robert Peterson, “The Acoustics of Manga: Narrative Erotics and Visual Presence of Sound”
John Jennings, Damian Duffy, and Rose Marchack, “Virtual Unreality and the Shape of Time: Virtual comics, postmodern self-referentiality, and the fourth dimension”

5:00-7:30: Dinner

7:30-9:30: Smile Through the Tears: Bearing witness to the Rwandan genocide through comic arts
A special event at the George Washington University’s Gelman Library featuring Rupert Bazambanza, Ellen Yamshon, and moderator Steven Livingston

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14

10:30-12:00: Panel #6: Early comics
Chair: Marc Singer, ICAF Executive Committee
Gerry Beegan, “’Leaving Out’: Imaging the Cockney in the Caricatures of Phil May”
David Olsen, “’Monkeying with the ink bottle’: The Signifying Potential of George Herriman’s Krazy Kat”
Jared Gardner, “Gutter Stories: Comics, Film, and Modernity, 1897-1917”

12:00-1:30: Lunch

1:30-3:00: Comics production roundtable
Stuart Moore and Jamal Igle (Firestorm) discuss the steps of assembling a comic book for a major US publisher

3:00-3:15: Break

3:15-4:45: Comics and politics
Phil Jiminez (The Invisibles, Infinite Crisis, Otherworld) and Denny O’Neil (Batman, Green Lantern/Green Arrow) discuss the challenges of addressing political issues in superhero comics

Festival - Oct 12-14: ICAF Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Date: 26 September 2006
Contact: Marc Singer
msinger@howard.edu
202-238-2379 (office)
615-428-2861 (cell)

COMICS COME TO THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Jules Feiffer, DC Comics Artists Headline Conference

EVENT: Eleventh Annual International Comic Arts Festival (ICAF)WHEN: Thursday, October 12 – Saturday, October 14, 2006
WHERE: Mumford Room, Madison Building, Library of Congress
COST: Free and open to the publicBACKGROUND: The International Comic Arts Festival, an annual conference devoted to the study of comics, returns to the Library of Congress this October for a three-day forum of panels, keynote speeches, artist talks, and exhibitions showcasing work by comic artists and scholars alike.

SPECIAL GUESTS: ICAF is proud to present legendary cartoonist and author Jules Feiffer (Tantrum, The Great Comic Book Heroes), who will speak from 7:00 to 8:30 p.m. on Thursday, October 12. Original drawings and manuscript materials by Feiffer will be on display in the Prints & Photographs Reading room from 3:00 to 3:45 p.m. Thursday.

On Saturday afternoon, ICAF presents a behind-the-scenes look at superhero comics. Acclaimed artist Phil Jiminez (Infinite Crisis, The Invisibles) and writer and editor Denny O’Neil (Batman, Green Lantern) will discuss the challenges of addressing political issues in comics. Writer Stuart Moore and artist Jamal Igle (Firestorm) will appear in a panel revealing the step-by-step process of producing and publishing a comic book. Both panels will occur on the afternoon of Saturday, October 14.

ICAF will also feature eighteen academic presentations by comic art scholars from around the world.

SPECIAL EVENT: Rwandan comics artist Rupert Bazambanza (Sourire malgré tout) and American lawyer and conflict mediation expert Ellen Yamshon will speak about comics and the Rwandan genocide at the George Washington University’s Gelman Library at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, October 13.

SPONSORS: ICAF is pleased to work in collaboration with the Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division and the Caroline and Erwin Swann Foundation for Caricature and Cartoon, and with the support of Foreign Affairs Canada / avec l’appui d’Affaires Étrangèrs Canada. Other sponsors include the Gelman Library, the Washington Post, Andrews McMeel Universal, Jean Schulz, Cartoon Books, and Jay & Silent Bob’s Secret Stash.

INFORMATION: For more information, including schedules and sponsors, please visit our official website, http://go.to/icaf, or contact Marc Singer.

Exhibit - Nov 2: Cartoon America update

http://www.loc.gov/today/pr/2006/06-165.html
Press contact:
Donna Urschel (202) 707-1639

September 12, 2006

Library of Congress Exhibition "Cartoon America" Opens Nov. 2

Exhibition Features America’s Best Cartoons from the Art Wood Collection

“Cartoon America: Highlights from the Art Wood Collection of Cartoon and Caricature” will open at the Library of Congress on Thursday, Nov. 2, in the Great Hall of the Thomas Jefferson Building, 10 First St. S.E., Washington, D.C. On view through Jan. 27, 2007, the exhibition is free and open to the public from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday-Saturday.

The exhibition will feature 100 masterworks of such celebrated artists as political cartoonists Thomas Nast, Rube Goldberg, Bill Mauldin and Patrick Oliphant; comic strip creators Winsor McCay, George Herriman, Chic Young, Milt Caniff, Charles Schulz and Lynn Johnston; humorous gag cartoonists Peter Arno and William Steig; caricaturists Al Hirschfeld and David Levine; animation drawings and cels from Walt Disney Productions and Hanna-Barbera; and illustrations by Edwin A. Abbey, John Held and Michael Hague.

Drawings selected for the exhibition reflect the primary collecting interests of J. Arthur Wood Jr., a connoisseur of popular graphic art. Wood’s collection of more than 36,000 original cartoon drawings * the Art Wood Collection of Cartoon and Caricature * is now housed in the Library’s Prints and Photographs Division. The collection came to the Library in 2003 through a gift-purchase agreement made possible in part by a generous contribution from H. Fred Krimendahl II, a member of the Library’s Madison Council, and the generosity of Wood himself.

The collection, spanning three centuries, is distinctive and unparalleled because of the depth of holdings in political cartoons and comic strips and the specific landmark pieces in all major genres. It stands out as a jewel among the Library’s special collections, illuminating the history of American cartoon art forms and greatly enhancing the Library’s extensive holdings of cartoon art.

According to exhibition co-curators Sara W. Duke and Martha H. Kennedy, the exhibition presents stellar examples from Wood’s collection that reflect the vitality of an innovative, indigenous art form. The exhibition features the major genres of cartoon art: political cartoons, illustration, comic strips, gag and single-panel cartoons, illustration, and animation drawings and cels. An overview of highlights includes:

  • Political cartoons by leading practitioners of the “ungentlemanly art,” who comment pointedly on corruption, war and public figures from the 19th century’s Gilded Age to recent times. Their visual editorials reflect diverse viewpoints conveyed in a wide variety of artistic approaches, including the classic cross-hatching techniques of Harper’s Weekly cartoonist Thomas Nast and Washington Star cartoonist Clifford Berryman, the broad crayon strokes of Rube Goldberg and Bill Mauldin, and the painterly styles of contemporary cartoonists Paul Conrad and Patrick Oliphant.
  • Rare early comics in large, multi-panel formats include portrayals of the Yellow Kid and Buster Brown, two early famous comic strip characters created by Richard Outcault. Family strips such as “Bringing Up Father” by George McManus, “Gasoline Alley” by Frank King and “For Better or for Worse” by Lynn Johnston chronicle the humorous ups and downs of family life. Selections include adventure strips “Secret Agent X-9” by Alex Raymond and “Terry and the Pirates” by Milt Caniff; artfully innovative strips “Krazy Kat” by George Herriman and “Dream of the Rarebit Fiend” by Winsor McCay; and timeless classics “Popeye” by Elzie Segar and “Peanuts” by Charles Schulz. All transport viewers to other, self-contained, captivating worlds.
  • Gag cartoons by Peter Arno, Barbara Shermund, George Price and others lampoon behavioral quirks and foibles that madden and amuse readers of The New Yorker and other popular magazines.
  • Caricatures of Stokely Carmichael, by David Levine, and of performers Jimmy Durante and Paul Whiteman, in a 1935 staging of “Jumbo” by Al Hirschfeld, offer incisive insights and display witty and magical use of the pen.
  • Treasures of animation art include a Walt Disney Productions cel of Mickey Mouse from “Fantasia”; a delightful drawing of Dumbo the elephant bathing himself; a storyboard drawing for “Bambi” by Tyrus Wong; a presentation drawing of all of the Seven Dwarfs; and a beautiful animation cel of Snow White for Disney’s groundbreaking first full-length animated feature “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs” (1937).
  • America’s Golden Age of Illustration (1880s to 1920s) is represented by drawings created by Edwin Austin Abbey, James Montgomery Flagg, Dean Cornwell and their pioneering women counterparts, Nell Brinkley, Rose O’Neill and Katherine Pyle.

Wood, an award-winning cartoonist himself, began collecting original drawings at the age of 12. During a period of 60 years, he contacted and befriended numerous older masters of cartoon art forms, as well as leading contemporary creators in the field, and obtained selections of their work, primarily by gift and some by purchase. During his professional life, Wood worked diligently to establish a museum or gallery to preserve and showcase his collection. He achieved his goal in 1995 with the opening of the National Gallery of Caricature and Cartoon Art in downtown Washington, D.C., but the gallery closed in 1997, due to a lack of sustained funding. Undeterred, Wood turned to the Library of Congress, where he had worked early in his career, to preserve and present his collection.

A companion book titled “Cartoon America: Comic Art in the Library of Congress” will be published by Harry N. Abrams, in association with the Library of Congress. The book is edited by Harry Katz, former head curator of the Library’s Prints and Photographs Division. Images of many cartoon drawings in the exhibition will be included among the 275 full-color illustrations in the book, which also surveys the Library’s other holdings of related art.

The exhibition and an accompanying brochure are funded through the generous support of the Caroline and Erwin Swann Memorial Foundation for Caricature and Cartoon. The Swann Foundation showcases the collections of the Library of Congress in rotating exhibitions and promotes the continuing Swann Foundation program in the study of cartoon, caricature and illustration, while also offering a provocative and informative selection of works by masters from the past and present.

For more information about the exhibition and related programming, contact exhibition co-curators Sara W. Duke, at (202) 707-3630, or Martha H. Kennedy, at (202) 707-9115, or email swann@loc.gov, or visit the Swann home page at http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/swann/swannhome.html.

# # #

PR 06-165
09/12/06
ISSN 0731-3527

Sunday, September 24, 2006

Book signing - Sept 30: Brad Meltzer

Brad's a really nice guy and will gladly sign and talk about his comics work.

Library of Congress National Book Festival
http://www.loc.gov/bookfest/index.html

Brad Meltzer
Mysteries & Thrillers Pavilion
10-10:30 am

Book Signing
11-12 noon

Each of Brad Meltzer's five novels has been a New York Times best-seller. He earned credit from Columbia Law School for writing hisfirst book, which became The Tenth Justice (1997), an instant best-seller. His new novel is a thriller, The Book of Fate (Warner Books, 2006). His books have a total of almost 6 million copies in print and have been translated into more than a dozen languages. He is also one of the co-creators of the TV show "Jack and Bobby" and is the No. 1 best-selling author of the critically acclaimed comic book Identity Crisis. He lives in Florida.

Exhibit, thru Sept 30: Drawing Back - worldwide political cartoons

Provisions Library on Dupont Circle
http://microsites.provisionslibrary.org/cartoons_site/index.html
Provisions presents a two-part cartoon exhibition that features complimentary critiques of American policy viewed through foreign editorial cartoons and local resistance poster art.

Why Do They Hate US?
Views from the international media. A survey exhibition drawn from the work of more than 35 editorial cartoonists from around the world.

Political Posters by Mike Flugennock
Views from the street. Political Resistance cartoon posters by DC's own maverick artist.

Drawing Back also features a full series of accompanying public programs including a cartoon film series of rare historical andbiographical films on cartoonists and alternative comics; a panel of editorial newspaper cartoonists and a one-day workshop and masterclass with renowned cartoonist Kevin Kallaugher (KAL).

Exhibit - thru Nov 7: Mightier than the Sword: The Satirical Pen of Kal

[a smaller version of the Walters show in Baltimore, this will be excellent - well worth seeing]

from the Baltimore Sun:

Mightier than the Sword: The Satirical Pen of Kal
Strathmore Hall
10701 Rockville Pike
North Bethesda, MD
You may not know who Kevin Kallaugher is, but you probably known him by his alias, KAL. A longtime editorial cartoonist for the BaltimoreSun, KAL threw punches at the government the best way he knew how: with his pen.

Through Nov. 7
Mondays: 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Tuesdays: 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Wednesdays: 10 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Thursdays: 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Fridays: 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Saturdays: 10 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Price: Free.
Information: 301-581-5200

Convention - Oct 13-14: Small Press Expo

http://www.spxpo.com/

LATEST GUEST ANNOUNCEMENTS:

Megan Kelso — The Ignatz award recipient of both Best Artist andBest Minicomic has collected some her work of the past five years in "Squirrel Mother".
Matthias Lehmann — The French cartoonist is attending his first everUS show. His new graphic novel "HWY. 115" will debut at the show.
Scott Morse — The Eisner and Ignatz nominated creator of "Soulwind", "Volcanic Revolver" and "Magic Pickle."
Ted Rall — A renowned editorial cartoonist, Ted will be featuring his new book "The Silk Road to Ruin" at the show.
Scott McCloud — SPX is proud to be a stop on the McCloud family's "Making Comics" 50 States Tour.
Denis Kitchen — Cartoonist, writer, editor, publisher and Small Press Pioneer.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SHOW and PUBLISHER GUESTS FOR SPX 2006

ANNOUNCED:Update: Mr Feiffer will only be able to attend the show on Friday afternoon. SPX is honored to have the legendary Jules Feiffer as aguest at this year's Expo. Mr. Feiffer, one of the great political cartoonists of his generation, is also well known for hisaccomplishments as a playwright and a children's book author. Mr.Feiffer will be attending the SPX for the very first time.

SPX is also honored to welcome another first time guest, Tony Millionaire. Creator of "Sock Monkey" and "Maakies", he is currently developing a "Drinky Crow" cartoon for Adult Swim. He will bepromoting his new book, "Billy Hazelnuts" which has generated manyrave industry reviews. Debuting at SPX will be "PremillennialMaakies", a hardcover "Maakies" collection.

In addition, SPX will be graced by the talents of the following additional guests:
Gabrielle Bell — Author of the Ignatz Award winning "Lucky"and "When I Am Old and Other Stories", will have a hardback editionof "Lucky" released at this years SPX.
Kevin Huizenga — Recipient of last years Ignatz Award for Outstanding Comic for "Or Else", Kevin will be again be in attendance at the SPX to promote the latest issue of this well received series.
Anders Nilsen — His new book, "Monologues For The Coming Plague", comes on top of his ongoing comic book series "Big Questions"and "Dogs & Water" along with his contributions to the MOME anthology.

DIRECTION:
SPX 2006 has a new home in 2006 at the Marriott Bethesda North Hotel& Conference Center.

ADMISSION:
One day memberships: $8.00
Weekend memberships: $15.00
Collected at the door the day of the show - ADMISSION TICKETS TO THEPUBLIC ARE AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR ONLY AND ARE NOT SOLD IN ADVANCE

SHOW HOURS:
Friday: 2:00 pm - 8:00 pmS
aturday: 10:00 am - 7:00 pm

Festival - Oct 12-14: International Comic Arts Festival (ICAF)

Eleventh Annual International Comic Arts Festival (ICAF)
OCTOBER 12-14, 2006 Washington, D.C.
The Library of Congress, James Madison Building

watch http://www.go.to/icaf for details to emerge

Exhibit - thru October 31: Simplicissimus and the Empire

[this is a very good exhibit, and I believe they're original pages, not repros]

Contact:Norma Broadwater202-289-1200, ext. 106
nbroadwater@washington.goethe.org

September 6 – October 31, 2006
Simplicissimus and the Empire 1896-1914

Satire is undoubtedly as old as humankind itself, and has always provoked both laughter and outrage. Recognizing the success of theSimplicissimus and the Weimar Republic exhibition in the fall of2003, the Goethe-Institut Washington displays reproductions of original Simplicissimus caricatures dating from 1896 to 1914. Simplicissimus, also commonly known as "Der Simpl," was among the earliest and most significant of the late nineteenth-century satirical periodicals that nurtured and embodied the developing spirit of Expressionism in Germany. The magazine was satirically strongest during those early days, caricaturing Wilhelmine politics,publicservants, the military, and other political groups, but nevertheless leaving room for an animated portrayal ofdaily life. Originally conceived in 1896 as an art and literature revue for themasses, it soon changed its course to feature caricature and satire, projecting a shockingly aggressive, inherently revolutionary vision. Its attitude and ideology consisted of antagonism towards the bourgeoisie, rejection of urban life with its culture andmaterialism, and espousal of man's unity with nature. It highlighted new design currents and a new form of social and political satire. Simplicissimus developed a model still in use by modern caricaturists and illustrators. Although some of the texts' allusions may challenge today's public due to our lack of knowledge about the day-to-day political context in which they were created, the drawings speak for themselves.

Opening lecture Wednesday, September 6, at 6:30 pm by Marion Deshmukh, Professor of Art History at George Mason University, followed by a reception. RSVP to 202-289-1200 ext. 160.

Panel discussion Satire: History and Modern Perceptions on Thursday,September 14, at 6:30 pm: Satire and cartoons have a long legacy of provoking laughter and outrage. What are some highlights of that history, and what role docartoons and humor play throughout the world today? Are there any boundaries, or is everything allowed? Panelists include: PeterJelavich, professor of history, Johns Hopkins University KevinKallaugher (KAL), The Economist, www.Kaltoons.com Ann Telnaes, editorial cartoonist and Pulitzer Prize winner
RSVP to 202-289-1200 ext. 161

Gallery hours: Monday to Thursday 9 to5; Friday 9 to 3. Featured during "Third Thursday," Downtown's monthly gallery crawl, on September 21 and October 19 from 6 – 8 pm, and on Saturday, September 16, from noon to 5 pm as part of the14thannual Arts on Foot festival. Presented in conjunction with the film series Satire in Film. More information can be found at www.goethe.de/washington.

About the Goethe-Institut: Mutual understanding among nations bypromoting international cultural dialogue: this is the ambitiousmission of the Goethe-Institut. On behalf of the Federal Republic ofGermany, cultural institutes around the world provide cultural programs, language courses, support to educators, and up-to-date information on Germany in the context of Europe. Founded in 1990, Goethe-Institut Washington, DC is a center for German culture and language, and for the coordination of media projects for all of North America. From its location in the newly-revitalized Downtown, the Goethe-Institut Washington reaches out to both individuals and organizations in the community, bridging the past, present, and future with a variety of high-quality events.

ADDRESS:812 Seventh St. NW
Washington, DC 20001
Metro: Gallery Place/Chinatown202-289-1200
www.goethe.de/washington
###

Exhibit - though Feb 2007: "CARTOONISTS TAKE UP SMOKING"

[Extended through February, I believe]

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 20, 2006
Contact: Courtney MacGregor, 202-782-2671, courtney.macgregor@afip.osd.mil
Steven Solomon, 202-782-2672, steven.solomon@afip.osd.mil

"CARTOONISTS TAKE UP SMOKING"

WASHINGTON - A free gallery talk at the National Museum of Health andMedicine about the recently opened "Cartoonists Take Up Smoking," an exhibition of original newspaper editorial cartoons on a single theme, is being presented by Alan Blum, M.D., one of the nation's foremost authorities on the history of the tobacco industry and the battle over smoking.

Scheduled for 1 p.m. on Sunday, April 30, Blum, a professor of family medicine at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Ala., will retrace the 40-year battle over the use and promotion of cigarettes since the publication of the landmark Surgeon General's report on smoking and health in 1964. Blum will also discuss complacency on the part of organized medicine, politicians, and the mass media in ending the tobacco pandemic.

The exhibit is curated from material at the University of Alabama Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society, which Blum founded anddirects. It holds one of the largest sociocultural archives on tobacco, including more than 300 original editorial cartoon artworks on smoking-related themes.

The exhibit features 55 original cartoons by more than 50 nationally known American editorial cartoonists and is supplemented by smoking-related items, from the original newspaper headlines that inspired the cartoons to advertisements promoting the health benefits of lighting up. Also displayed are several artifacts, as well as two preserved lungs -- one showing the ill effects of smoking and the other a healthy lung -- from the museum's anatomical collection.

Blum, a graduate of Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta,was awarded the Surgeon General's Medallion in 1988 by Dr. C. Everett Koop. He has been invited to speak on tobacco-related issues by medical and public health organizations in all 50 states and at numerous international conferences. As the former editor of theMedical Journal of Australia and the N.Y. State Journal of Medicine, he also published the first-ever theme issues on smoking by any medical journal in the world, in 1983 and 1985 respectively.

"The wide-ranging controversies surrounding tobacco are captured in the cartoons, from the misguided quest for a safe cigarette to the targeting of tobacco advertising to women and minority groups," Blumsaid. "Cartoons on smoking have had an impact at both the local andnational levels. Editorial cartoons practically laughed Joe Camel out of town and helped pass countless clean indoor air laws."

In their artist's statement, several of the cartoonists relate that their family members have suffered from smoking-related illnesses. For example, David Fitzsimmons of The Arizona Star, said "My mother andfather died within a month of each other because of their inability to overcome their addiction to cigarettes. I understand, firsthand, the impact of tobacco on the lives of people."

For half a century, the cartoonist most unapologetically opposed to smoking and the tobacco industry was The Washington Post's Herblock (Herb Block), several of whose cartoons are reproduced in the show.

Not all cartoonists have depicted tobacco as an evil weed. Indeed, several could be described as anti-anti-smoking, in part based ontheir belief in the freedom to choose. Clay Bennett of the Christian Science Monitor wonders if there also should be laws against nagging and finger-wagging. The New York Post's Sean Delonas foresees theadvent of a smoke police force roaming sidewalks and parks.

The exhibition debuted at the Ann Tower Gallery in Lexington, Ky. in conjunction with the annual convention of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists. It also was displayed in Seattle, Tuscaloosa, and Birmingham, Ala. Its display in Washington, D.C. is the conclusion of its traveling schedule.

"We are happy to be hosting 'Cartoonists Take Up Smoking,' said Adrianne Noe, Ph.D., the museum's director. "The assembled cartoonists' work rivals any scalpel we have on display for their sharpness. They span the humorous to the deadly serious and will allow visitors to relive a public medical and political debate about a health issue that continues to grasp us all. It's particularly fitting to host this wonderful collection at the nation's medical museum,where it will be seen amid other exhibits that inspire learning about medicine and health, including the real lungs of a person who smoked."

The exhibit, which was produced with the cooperation of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists, will be on display at the museum during the week of the World Conference on Tobacco or Health, July 10-15, at the Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C.

Lori Jacobi, M.A., archivist at the University of Alabama Center for the Study of Tobacco and Society, provided additional support with thedesign, organization, and coordination of the exhibition. Eric Solberg, M.S., of Houston, Texas, past director of Doctors Ought to Care, served as Blum's principal adviser since the exhibition'sinception a decade ago.

The exhibit installation was designed by museum exhibits manager, Steve Hill, with assistance from anatomical collection curator Lenore Barbian, Ph.D., exhibits specialist, Bill Discher, registrar Michelle Fontenot, collections manager Elizabeth Lockett, public affairs specialist Courtney MacGregor, and public affairs officer Steven Solomon. The Herblock Foundation gave a special unrestricted gift to the Centerfor the Study of Tobacco and Society, which is helping to cover various expenses and to produce a facsimile exhibition for display in other cities.The exhibit is running through September 2006. It will be on display at the museum, which is open every day except Dec. 25 from 10 a.m. to5:30 p.m. The museum is located at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, 6900 Georgia Ave. and Elder Street, NW, Washington, D.C. For more information call (202) 782 2200 or visit www.nmhm.washingtondc.museum. Admission and parking are free.###

Book signing - September 27: Jeff Danziger

Jeff Danziger - Blood, Debt and Fears: Cartoons of the First Half of the Last Half of the Bush Administration
Wednesday, September 27, 2006 at 07:00 PM at Olsson's The Lansburgh/Penn Quarter, 418 7th St., NW, (202) 638-7610

Jeff Danziger, using slide illustrations, presents his book of cartoons of George W. Bush's second term in office, an entertaining excursion through the national and international political and popular-culture landscape. Danziger is an independent political cartoonist whose work appears in hundreds of newspapers around the world through the New York Times Syndicate. Danziger is also a decorated Vietnam veteran, and his experience gives him a unique viewpoint on the current conflict

Book signings - Sept 29: Gaiman; Oct 13: Feiffer; Oct 14: McCloud

Friday, September 29, 7 p.m.
NEIL GAIMAN FRAGILE THINGS (William Morrow, $26.95)
Gaiman's third collection of "short fictions and wonders" (after Smokeand Mirrors and Adventures in the Dream Trade) includes an alternate-world Sherlock Holmes, a new last book of the Bible, verses from "a vampire's Tarot," and love stories that stretch the definitions of "love" and "story" in previously unimaginable ways.

Friday, October 13, 7 p.m.
JENNY ALLEN and JULES FEIFFER THE LONG CHALKBOARD (Pantheon, $16.95)
Feiffer's distinctive drawings, made famous by his PulitzerPrize-winning editorial cartoons as well as his children's illustrations, enhance the subtle humor of Allen's three stories about aging baby boomers still not sure they've grown up.

Saturday, October 14, 8 p.m.
SCOTT MCCLOUD MAKING COMICS (HarperCollins, $22.95)
America's leading comics theorist (and creator of the cult classicZot!) shares—in cartoon form—secrets of the art of storytelling that other cartooning how-to books don't cover. McCloud's earlier critical works made waves in the comics world; this one is sure to do the same.

Booksigning - October 12-13: Ted Rall

Ted Rall reports on his website:

Thursday 10/12, Time TBD - Politics and Prose, 5015 Connecticut Avenue NW, Washington, DC - this will be a joint appearance as part of Cartoonists with Attitude.

Friday 10/13 & Saturday 10/14, 10 am - 5 pm - Small Press Expo,Marriott Bethesda North Hotel & Conference Center, 5701 Marinelli Road, North Bethesda, Maryland - I will be signing books at the NBM Publishing table.

Exhibit - thru September 25: Anime club at DC Library

The Washington Post on Sunday, September 17, 2006; Page D08 reported:

Fans of Japanese anime, a style of animation, will want to catch theDC Anime Club's art show at Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library. Anime sketches, handmade T-shirts, props and more are on display through Sept. 25.The library is at 901 G St. NW. It is open from 9:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 9:30 to 5:30 Friday and Saturday, and 1 to 5p.m. on Sunday. For information, call 202-727-1111.

LECTURE - October 17: “PHYSICS OF SUPERHEROES” TALK

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
101 Independence Avenue SE
Washington DC 20540
Phone: (202) 707-2905
fax: (202) 707-9199
Email: pao@loc.gov

September 20, 2006
Press contact: Donna Urschel (202) 707-1639, durschel@loc.gov

Public contact: Science, Technology and Business Division (202) 707-5664

JAMES KAKALIOS TO DISCUSS "PHYSICS OF SUPERHEROES" AT LIBRARY OFCONGRESS OCT. 17

James Kakalios, a professor in the School of Physics and Astronomy atthe University of Minnesota, will discuss his book "The Physics of Superheroes" at 11:30 a.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 17, in the West DiningRoom on the sixth floor of the James Madison Building, 101Independence Ave. S.E., Washington, D.C.

The event, which is free and open to the public, is co-sponsored by the Library's Science, Technology and Business Division and the Serial and Government Publications Division. A book sale and signing will follow the presentation.

Also at the event, a selection of comic books cited in Kakalios' bookand others from the Library's "Golden Age" and "Silver Age" comic book collections will be on display.

Kakalios teaches a popular freshman seminar "Everything I Needed toKnow about Physics I Learned from Reading Comic Books." In "ThePhysics of Superheroes" (Gotham Books, 2005), Kakalios explores everything from energy to thermodynamics, to quantum mechanics, to solid state physics; and Kakalios relates the physics in comic booksto such real-world applications as automobile airbags, microwave ovens and transistors.

# # #PR06-1729/20/06
ISSN: 0731-3527

America's Best Cartoons, 1870-1989, to be Subject of Library of

http://www.loc.gov/today/pr/2006/06-115.html
May 12 , 2006
Press contact: Donna Urschel (202) 707-1639
----------
MEDIA ADVISORY
America's Best Cartoons, 1870-1989, to be Subject of Library ofCongress Exhibition in November"

Cartoon America: Highlights from the J. Arthur Wood Jr. CollectionOf Cartoon and Caricature" on View
Starting Nov. 2
WHAT: The exhibition "Cartoon America" features 70 of the best American cartoons from the 1870s through the 1980s selected from the J. Arthur Wood Jr. Collection of Cartoon and Caricature, includingworks by Thomas Nast, Rube Goldberg, Bill Mauldin, Paul Conrad, Pat Oliphant, Peter Arno, William Steig, Michael Hague, John Held, ChicYoung, Milt Caniff, Charles Schulz, Lynn Johnston, Walt DisneyProductions, Hanna-Barbera, David Levine and Al Hirschfeld.

This exhibition is a selection of highlights from a magnificent acquisition of more than 36,000 original cartoon drawings now housed in the Prints and Photographs Division. The J. Arthur Wood Jr. Collection of Cartoon and Caricature has come to the Library ofCongress through a gift-purchase agreement made possible in part by a generous contribution from H. Fred Krimendahl II, a member of theLibrary's Madison Council; funds provided by American taxpayers; and the generosity of Arthur Wood himself.

WHEN: Nov. 2, 2006, to Jan. 27, 2007
WHERE: The Library's Thomas Jefferson Building, 10 First Street S.E.,Washington, D.C.

# # #PR 06-11505/16/06
ISSN 0731-3527

Editiorial Cartoons By Herblock are Subject of Library Exhibition

http://www.loc.gov/today/pr/2006/06-132.html
June 20, 2006
Press contact: Audrey Fischer (202) 707-0022

Editiorial Cartoons By Herblock are Subject of Library Exhibition
Opening July 17

"Enduring Outrage: Editorial Cartoons by Herblock" will open on Monday, July 17, in the Southwest Gallery of the Thomas Jefferson Building, 10 First Street S.E., Washington, D.C. The exhibition, which will remain on view through Jan. 20, 2007, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday -Saturday, will feature approximately 40 original cartoon drawings by the Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist Herbert Block, better known as Herblock.The Herblock exhibition will be a featured display in the reopened "American Treasures of the Library of Congress" exhibition, which will be closed June 18 through July 16.

The Herblock exhibition's main section, "Get Out the Vote,"chronicles elections from 1946 to 1998 and comments on Democratic andRepublican presidential administrations during the same time period. Other sections of the display highlight six major themes of enduring importance to Herblock that continue to resonate in American society today: environment, ethics, extremism, the Middle East, privacy/security and war.

When he died in October 2001, Block left the bulk of his estate to create the Herb Block Foundation to carry on his life's work of championing the cause of social justice. In 2003 the foundation donated the Herbert L. Block archives of editorial cartoons to the Library of Congress, where they are available to both scholars and the general public.

In addition to 14,000 original drawings and more than 2,000 preparatory sketches, the collection includes voluminous files of records, correspondence, clippings and photographs. The donation also provides for display of portions of the collection. This exhibition will mark the debut in a Library of Congress exhibition of Herblock's rough sketches for finished drawings. An online version of the upcoming exhibition will join several previous Library exhibitions ofHerblock's work at www.loc.gov/exhibits.

Herblock was one of the most influential political commentators and editorial cartoonists in American history. His work reflects a dailynewspaper career that spanned much of the 20th century. From April 1929 to August 2001, Herblock chronicled the major social and political events of the nation and the world, summarizing issues others had taken thousands of words to explain in a single 4-by-6-inch drawing. Herblock spent the last 55 years of his career as the editorial cartoonist for The Washington Post.

# # #PR 06-13206/20/06
ISSN 0731-3527

ComicsDC's reason to exist

I've created a this blog and a new Yahoo group to keep track of all of the comics activities in DC since there's so many happening now. ComicsDC is for: Events relating to cartoons and comics including comic books, comic strips, political cartoons, animation and carticature in Washington, DC and its environs.

You can email http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ComicsDC/post?postID=qxB4e-K8MDOJQjbWt6l-MphxZEMz3i4pM6g4vC1uKQ2wg9RRoaLYuYHCfdqpWuTU9G5hRs2owl9syu6xGLDhqlbPDEPojBosFgTMkQ or go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ComicsDC/ to sign up for the group if you prefer emails to reading a blog.

Press releases including store events are welcomed.

A quick list of current happenings which will be soon populating the group in more detail are:

Exhibits:
Kal at Swathmore in MD
Simplicissimus German cartoons at Goethe Institute in DC
Herblock cartoons at Library of Congress in DC
American Comics opening soon at Library of Congress in DC
Smoking political cartoons at National Museum of Health & Medicine in DC

Signings:
Neil Gaiman at Politics and Prose in DC
Jeff Danziger at Olssons in DC

Lectures: Science and comic books at LoC

Festivals and Conventions:
International Comic Arts Festival at LoC in DC
Small Press Expo in upper Bethesda / lower Rockville