Friday, May 10, 2013

NoVA's Bro Russell on editorial cartoonists and censorship

Editorial cartoonists resist censorship
By Rehman Tungekar and David Reed
Mid-Missouri Public Radio's KBIA's Global Journalist (May 9 2013)
http://kbia.org/post/editorial-cartoonists-resist-censorship

Panelists:

Mark Fiore, president-elect of Association of American Editorial Cartoonists

Dr. Robert "Bro" Russell, executive director of Cartoonists Rights Network International


Bob Staake in the NY Times


 Bob Staake is always in the Washington Post on the weekends, with a small drawing for the Style Invitational contest. Here's a larger piece in another newspaper: 

The Open Book

A young reader goes on an adventure [wordless comic].
New York Times book Review

Carla Speed McNeil Wins Two Stumptown Awards

As noted herein...

 

DARK HORSE WINS FOUR STUMPTOWN AWARDS!

 

MAY 10, MILWAUKIE, OR—The Stumptown Comic Arts Awards were presented on April 27 at the tenth annual Stumptown Comics Fest, in Dark Horse Comics' backyard of Portland, Oregon.

 

As reported via Twitter by comics' own Jen Vaughn, Dark Horse walked away with four wins, a very impressive showing.

 

The nominees, chosen by a blue-ribbon panel of judges, journalists, and retailers, reflect the wide range of independent material being published in comic and graphic novel form today.

 

DARK HORSE STUMPTOWN 2013 AWARD WINNERS

 

Best Artist

Juanjo Guarnido (Blacksad: A Silent Hell)

 

Best Publication Design

Blacksad: A Silent Hell, designed by Cary Grazzini

 

Best Cartoonist

Carla Speed McNeil (Finder: Talisman)

 

Best Letterer

Carla Speed McNeil (Finder: Talisman)

 

About Stumptown Comics Fest

The Stumptown Comics Fest was started almost on a whim in 2004 by a small group of Portland-area cartoonists lamenting the lack of local convention-style outlets. While there were certainly other comic book shows in town, there weren't any that gave much attention to the artists themselves. The dream was to design a festival with the creators as its focus, rather than dealers and work-for-hire publishers.

 

About Dark Horse Comics

Since 1986, Dark Horse Comics has proven to be a solid example of how integrity and innovation can help broaden a unique storytelling medium and establish a small, homegrown company as an industry giant. The company is known for the progressive and creator-friendly atmosphere it provides for writers and artists.  In addition to publishing comics from top talent like Frank Miller, Mike Mignola, Neil Gaiman, Gerard Way, Will Eisner, and best-selling prose author Janet Evanovich, Dark Horse has developed such successful characters as the Mask, Timecop, and the Occultist. Additionally, its highly successful line of comics and products based on popular properties includes Star Wars, Avatar: The Last Airbender, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Aliens, Conan the BarbarianMass Effect, Serenity, and Domo. Today, Dark Horse Comics is the largest independent comic-book publisher in the United States and is recognized as both an innovator in the cause of creator rights and the comics industry's leading publisher of licensed material.

Ann Telnaes interviewed in new IJOCA issue

The new, paper-only issue of the International Journal of Comic Art (15:1) is out and features an interview of political cartoonist Ann Telnaes done during the 2011 Small Press Expo, as well as reviews of exhibits on Roy Lichtenstein at the National Gallery of Art and Patrick Oliphant at the Phillips Collection.

More with Lincoln Peirce and Big Nate

(all images by Bruce Douglas for Adventure Theatre)
Yesterday, the Washington City Paper ran my interview with Lincoln Peirce about the current adaptation of his Big Nate comic strip to a musical at Adventure Theatre in Glen Echo Park. The show runs through June 2, 2013.

Peirce also took questions from the children in the audience after the show.

Q. Are you going to make any new books?

LP: I'm working on it, I'm working on it. There are two kinds of books. There's the chapter books and then there are the compilation books which are collections of the comic strip. The compilation books they just assemble from the strips I work on every day. The chapter books come out once a year. The most recent one came out in February so that means the next one's coming out next February. I wish I could write it as fast as you could read it.

Q: What is your favorite book and why?

LP: I can tell you that my favorite book when I was your age or a little older was a mountain-climbing story called Banner in the Sky by James Ramsey Ullman. It's the story of a boy who tries to climb a mountain on which his father was killed. I read it many times. I probably read it twice or three times a year from when I was ten until when I was sixteen or seventeen. That's probably my favorite book ever from when I was a kid. Sometimes kids ask what's my favorite book of the Big Nate books and I always say I like them all for different reasons, but I'm especially fond of the second chapter book, Big Nate Strikes Again. It's got all the Ben Franklin comics in it because I love Ben Franklin. The fourth one is call Big Nate Goes for Broke and it's a winter story. I wanted to write a story about winter because I wanted to be able to draw winter scenes. I'm particularly fond of those two.


Jenny, Gina and Artur
LP: "Why do I make Big Nate hate Artur?" Well, here's the thing. It's a fine distinction. Nate doesn't hate Artur. Nate is jealous of Artur. Nate understands that Artur is a nice guy and that's what bothers Nate. When I brought Artur into the comic strip, I brought him in because I wanted to give Nate sort of a friendly rival. At the time I was writing a lot of comics about chess. Nate's a chess whiz. So I brought in Artur who's the champion of the entire country of Belarus so he can be better than Nate at chess. And then I thought wouldn't it be funny if Artur is just a little bit better than Nate at everything? I personally think we all have an Artur in our lives. We all have somebody that we want for our friends and yet they are always just a little bit out. So Nate does not hate Artur. He hates Gina.

Q: Have you ever written anything else besides Big Nate?


LP: Probably not that you've ever seen. Nothing's that really been published. I tried to write some cartoons for Cartoon Network, but they never quite made it. Down the line, I certainly plan to write some other things after I'm done writing Big Nate, but I can't tell you what those are now.

LP: "How long have I been writing my books?" Not all that long. Most of the kids here hadn't heard about Big Nate until a few years ago because that's when I started writing the chapter books. The first one came out in the spring of 2010 so that's only three years ago. But Big Nate's been around as a comic strip for years and years before that -- it started in 1991. So Big Nate has been around for twenty-two years and he's still eleven years old.

Q: Have you ever thought about making a movie about Big Nate?

LP: Well, I can tell you why there has not yet been a Big Nate movie, and that's because the offers we've received have been to make a live-action movie with real-life performers playing the kids. I've always said Nate's a cartoon character. One of the things that's so great about this show is how much it uses the art from the comic strip and the books. For me, it would be difficult for me to accept seeing a real-life ten or eleven year old wearing a Big Nate wig and trying to act like a cartoon character. If we can find a way to make a Big Nate movie or a tv show that's a cartoon? Then we'll make it happen.

LP: "Why did I come up with the name Nate?" Because that's my brother's nickname. I'll tell you the story. My brother's name is not actually Nate. It's Jonathan. When we were kids, I realized if I took the first two letters off his name, J-O, I was left with Nathan. So I came up to him one day and said, "I'm going to start calling you Nathan." He said, "No, you are not." Then I said, "Well how about I call you Nate?" and he said, "OK." I called him Big Nate because he's my big brother and he's a big person. It's one of those family names that almost nobody calls him except me. It's sort of like a secret name, and I've always loved the name. When I started the comic strip it was a way of me fulfilling a dream of doing a comic strip, but also having the name Nate attached to it is just a reminder for me of my brother and how much I love my brother.

Q: Are you going to ever have Nate grow up?

LP: No, no, he's never going to grow up. There are two kinds of comic strips out there -- there are the ones where people stay the same age all the time and there a few -- For Better or For Worse is one or Gasoline Alley is another -- where the characters age. Here's why I don't want Nate to grow up. I would have to teach myself how to draw him differently each year that passes. I'm too lazy for that. I'm just going to keep him eleven years old.

Enslave the Mollusk
Q: Where did you get the name Enslave the Mollusk?

LP: I'm often asked do you get ideas from real life, and usually the answer is no. It's not that often that I get ideas from real life, but when our son, who is now nineteen years old, was in sixth grade some friends asked him to join a band they called Enslave the Mollusk. Their illustrious career lasted for one rehearsal. Then it was over, and now they're just a legend.

Q: How do you get your ideas for Big Nate?

LP: A lot of times, if you're a writer or cartoonist, you're submitting ideas and your editor will tell you to write about what you know best. So I'm the sort of person -- I don't have a really good memory for recent events, but I remember in vivid detail almost everything that happened to me when I was in sixth grade. I remember the first day of sixth grade better than I remember yesterday. So I thought when I was trying to get this comic strip going, I thought I'd write about a sixth grade boy because that's who I was and what I remember best.

Q: Why does Nate like Jenny?

Jenny
LP: Nate kind of likes the idea of Jenny more than he likes Jenny. Over the course of time... Jenny's been around in the comic strip since the very beginning, so for all of these twenty-two years, he's liked her. But if any of the other characters asks Nate why he likes her, he never really has a great answer. It's not that they have a lot in common. It's not that she treats him real well. It's just that she's an ideal. She's a dream. That's why I loved it when Jenny came skating out [in the play] with the wings and everything. That's exactly the way he thinks of her. A lot of times, especially when you're a young person, you think you're feeling something really intensely, but what you're feeling is something different. In Nate's case, he doesn't quite know what he's feeling. He thinks it's love.

Q: Would you ever make Jenny dump Artur?

LP: I don't know. You know, Artur has not been in the comic strip since the beginning and before Artur came around, Jenny had a few other boyfriends. So I suppose it's possible that she could still have yet more boyfriends, which would mean that she and Artur could break up. When I do the comic strip.. the comic strip that appeared in the paper today, I actually did about three weeks ago. So I'm right now doing comic strips for July, and into August, so as of August, they're still together.
Mrs. Godfrey, Nate and Gina

Amanda Russell: For the playwright and the writer of the music, how many drafts did you do?

Christopher Youstra & Jason Loewith: We had drafts, but it was more evolutionary. There were probably four or five really big drafts. We had a workshop in December and we spent a week and made a lot of little changes. We made sure the characters were in the voices that were in Lincoln's head and then once we got here, there's was a lot of cut and change. The music changed far less.

Christopher Youstra & Jason Loewith: Lincoln, you've been living with these two-dimensional people here in your head -- which of these actors sounds the most to you like what you've got in your head?

LP: Gina.


Thursday, May 09, 2013

Ben Hatke art for Kids Read Comics

Ben Hatke art for Kids Read Comics can be downloaded here.

Another profile of local student cartoonist Christopher Huh

14-Year-Old Author Tells Story of Holocaust in Graphic Novel
Eighth-Grader Christopher Huh Debuts 'Keeping My Hope'
By Laura Moser
Jewish Daily Forward May 09, 2013, issue of May 17, 2013.
http://forward.com/articles/176210/-year-old-author-tells-story-of-holocaust-in-gra/

Lincoln 'Big Nate' Peirce interview online at City Paper

Meet a Visiting Cartoonist: A Chat with Lincoln Peirce
by Mike Rhode
Washington City Paper's Arts Desk blog May 9, 2013

Tune-in tomorrow at ComicsDC for the children's Q&A session that didn't make it into this story.

Posters at the National Library of Medicine

'Could you poison your child?': images from a century of medical propaganda;  Health, history, and design collide at the National Library of Medicine.
 By Amar Toor
The Verge April 12, 2013
The first image, about a sailor blinded at Pearl Harbor, is by the noted cartoonist Alex Raymond.

May 11: ANS Comic Con features Frank Cho

LEGENDARY COMICS CREATOR TO HEADLINE

THE SECOND ANNUAL ANS SCI-FI & COMIC CON

On May 11, 2013, the ANS Sci-Fi & Comic Con returns to Archbishop Neale School in La Plata, Maryland for their Second Annual benefit event!

Headlining a stellar variety of vendors and artists is legendary comic creator, writer and artist
FRANK CHO!

The ANS Sci-Fi & Comic Con is proud to host the amazing Frank Cho! As the creator of the groundbreaking newspaper strip Liberty Meadows, Cho is well known for his incredible artistry and story writing talent. Cho is currently the writer and artist behind Marvel Comics' hot, brand new title – "Savage Wolverine" – that debuted in January 2013.

The ANS Sci-Fi & Comic Con is an ALL AGES fan and collector event benefiting Archbishop Neale School in La Plata, Maryland. This year's event promises to be one of the most exciting and memorable events ever with an amazing array of vendors selling vintage and modern comics, collectible cards, sci-fi and pop culture toys and much more.

In addition to Cho, area artists working in a wide range of mediums will be represented including sculptors, pyro-artists, independent and online comic artists, writers and publishers.

The Second Annual ANS Sci-Fi & Comic Con is a fun-filled full day event for the whole family. Art contests and prizes will keep kids entertained as well as plenty of playground space for them to have fun! A charity Silent Auction with loads of collectibles and autographed items will keep parents and collectors on the edges of their seats! There will also be panels, presentations and a unique film festival showing rare and unique films for sci-fi and comic fans!

The Second Annual ANS Sci-Fi & Comic Con is Saturday, May 11, 2013, from 10-3pm.

For more information, please visit anscomiccon.com Contact event organizer Tom Boone at info@anscomiccon.com And for more information about the school, visit archbishopnealeschool.org







Tuesday, May 07, 2013

Iron Man, Marvel's original anti-Communist, bows to ChiComs

'Iron Man 3' is latest Hollywood movie to court Chinese censors
By William Wan,
Washington Post May 7 2013
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/asia_pacific/iron-man-takes-heroic-efforts-to-satisfy-chinas-state-censors/2013/05/06/62d11e08-b62e-11e2-92f3-f291801936b8_story.html

District Comics panel audio online now

Ripped from the site of Carolyn and Joe's podcast - click through to get the audio:

DISTRICT COMICS PANEL at AWESOME CON

awesomecon2013_districtcomics

EPISODE 225

LIVE from the historic first ever Awesome Con from the Washington DC Convention Center, The Carolyn and Joe Show bring to you another exclusive, on this weeks show listen to the whole entire DISTRICT COMICS panel LIVE from Awesome Con.

Here's quick write up
-Chronicling the unconventional history of our nation's capital, District Comics has won numerous awards and has received critical acclaim across the U.S. Join the writers and artist who came together to honor our favorite city during this Q and A panel moderated by ComicsDC's Mike Rhode.

Panelists include contributors Troy-Jeffrey Allen, Rafer Roberts, Andrew Cohen, Jacob Warrenfeltz, and Carolyn Belefski.

Yellow Peril, Book 2, at Kickstarter

Jamie Noguchi writes in:
I've launched a kickstarter to fund my second book, http://kck.st/YzvEH1.  
Sincerely,
Jamie Noguchi
Yellow Peril

I'm about to go sign up for this now, and hope to interview Jamie about it soon.

'Big Nate' playwright on the new musical

Bringing Big Nate From the Page to the Stage
Jason Loewith
Playwright, 'Big Nate'; Artistic Director, Olney Theater
Huffington Post 05/03/2013

Monday, May 06, 2013

Pictures of cartoonists made my life so wonderful...

I've been keeping busy going to events and I've generated a bunch of photographs of them. Click through the links under each picture for more shots.

101_5532 Starro the Conqueror
Here's more shots of Awesome Con. Starro the Conqueror!

101_5571
Dan Perkins, aka Tom Tomorrow, receiving the Herblock Award for his strip, This Modern World, at the Library of Congress. See the strip here.

101_5603
Way too many shots of Charles Vess at Politics and Prose bookstore.

101_5685
Free Comic Book Day at Big Planet Comics in Bethesda and Vienna, as well as Victory Comics. That's Art Hondros, the cover artist for Magic Bullet #6.

101_5715
Political cartoonist Kevin "KAL" Kallaugher's book launch for Daggers Drawn, his Kickstarter-funded retrospective, held at Boordy Vineyard near Baltimore. Buy the book here.

101_5730
Glen Echo Park in Maryland with cartoonist Lincoln "Big Nate" Peirce. Get tickets to the Big Nate musical here. (I'm working on writing up an interview with Peirce, but I saw the show on opening day, and can recommend it).

'Big Nate' musical reviewed by Gazette


Beloved comic character "Big Nate" comes to life on stage
Adventure Theatre MTC presents world premiere of 'Big Nate, The Musical'
by Cara Hedgepeth
May 6 2013
http://www.gazette.net/article/20130506/ENTERTAINMENT/130509319/1148/beloved-comic-character-x201c-big-nate-x201d-comes-to-life-on&template=gazette

That darn Danziger, redux

Letter to the Editor: On gun control, agree to disagree?
Stephen K. Stearns, Charlottesville
David M. Carr, Washington
Washington Post May 4 2013
http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/on-gun-control-agree-to-disagree/2013/05/03/5e907a86-b05d-11e2-9fb1-62de9581c946_story.html


Herblock and Krypto

Herblock Loved the Little Guy and Hated Nixon's Guts
By Bill Morris
 May 3, 2013
http://www.themillions.com/2013/05/herblock-loved-the-little-guy-and-hated-nixons-guts.html

"I Gotta Cut Krypto"
The author of Superman: The Unauthorized Biography argues with his editor about the Dog of Steel.
By Glen Weldon
May 3, 2013,
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/books/2013/05/superman_s_dog_a_history.single.html

Monkey See on Iron Man

Armor And Anxiety: Tony Stark Is The New Captain America  
by Linda Holmes
May 06, 2013