Thursday, June 07, 2018

June 9: Isola creators at Third Eye Comics

 
at THIRD EYE ANNAPOLIS
Click here for the event info on FACEBOOK
Hello Third Eye Faithful!

When we first took a glance at ISOLA - we knew right away that this book was going to be truly special, and Third Eye Faithful, after sitting down with issue #1 - we can tell you we were absolutely right.
This lush, gorgeously illustrated sci-fi fantasy epic takes us back to our youth when we spent way too much time playing FINAL FANTASY VII, and eagerly sought out every Miyazaki film we could find.
Seriously though, imagine the world-building and epic storytelling of SEVEN TO ETERNITY and mix that with a STUDIO GHIBLI aesthetic, and that sums up ISOLA very well.
And, because we're so pumped on the book, we've put together a very special signing to bring ISOLA creators BRENDEN FLETCHER (BATGIRL OF BURNSIDE, MOTOR CRUSH, GOTHAM ACADEMY) and KARL KERSCHL (GOTHAM ACADEMY) to Third Eye!

PR: Ready for Steadman? Opening Reception and Gallery Talk 6/16


AMERICAN UNIVERSITY MUSEUM 
AT THE KATZEN ARTS CENTER 


SUMMER OPENING RECEPTION
JUNE 16, 6-9PM
free and open to all

GALLERY TALK WITH RALPH STEADMAN
JUNE 16, 5PM, JOIN THE WAITLIST HERE

Join us for a lively session about the diverse and wide-ranging span of works in Ralph Steadman: A Retrospective. Ralph Steadman will be joined by Anita O'Brien from the Cartoon Museum in London, who curated the exhibition. Space is very limited! We will release seats as they become available. We also plan to have an overflow space with a live stream of the talk. Members of the waitlist will receive details.
 
Originally curated by Anita O'Brien at the Cartoon Museum, London, the Ralph Steadman Retrospective offers phenomenal insights into the genius of one of the world's most acclaimed artists. This exhibition takes the viewer on a journey through Steadman's prolific career of more than sixty years, from the sketches he created as a student in the 1950s to present day pictures.
 
The retrospective showcases Steadman's legendary collaborations with maverick Gonzo journalist, Hunter S. Thompson; his illustrated literary classics such as Alice in WonderlandTreasure Island; and the inventive books he authored such as I Leonardo and The Big I Am. There are also illustrations from his children's books, which include No Room to Swing a Cat and That's My Dad, plus artworks from his travels with Oddbins Wine Merchants and his iconic packaging for Flying Dog Brewery.
Copyright © 2018 American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center, All rights reserved.




Wednesday, June 06, 2018

Fluggenock's Latest'n'Greatest: "Where's Melania?"

From Mike Fluggenock, DC's anarchist cartoonist.


"Where's Melania?"
http://sinkers.org/stage/?p=2526

So... Flint, Michigan still doesn't have clean water, at least half of 
Puerto Rico still doesn't have electricity months after the hurricane, 
the Israeli army is shooting first responders at the protests in Gaza, 
we're still funding Saudi atrocities in Yemen, and what are the US 
media yelling about...?

I can't even, man.

Tuesday, June 05, 2018

June 6: Comics Auction in Falls Church

Collectors Series: Comic Books & Comic Art - June 6, 2018
Quinn's Auction Galleries
360 S. Washington St.
Falls Church, VA 22046
Date(s) 6/6/2018
June 6, 2018 @ 6:00PM Quinn's Auction Galleries and Waverly Rare Books are proud to offer a Collectors Series Auction of Comic Books & Comic Art. Amassed from several long-standing collections, this sale ranges from the Golden Age of Comics to Modern and present-day issues. A significant number have been graded by the CGC, an independent comic evaulation service trusted by collectors worldwide. Highlights of the sale include: original storyboard art by Sal and John Buscema, The Amazing Spider-Man #14 (Marvel, 1964), and Thor #165 (Marvel, 1969).

June 3: Jim Butcher at Tysons Corner Barnes & Noble

Brief Cases


Jim Butcher
Author Event (Fiction)
Saturday June 09, 2018 4:00 PM
https://stores.barnesandnoble.com/event/9780061935544-0?sourceId=L000027454&st=EML&2sid=180605_TD_STR_AUTHOR_EVENT_JB_2&sid=STR&hConversionEventId=AQEAAZQF2gAmdjQwMDAwMDE2My1kMDc3LTllNWMtYzEyNi03NWY0YmJjNzg2YzjaACQ3OTlkYTE3NS0yZWZhLTQ4MWItMDAwMC0wMjFlZjNhMGJjY2LaACQ2ZTVhZTUyOS03Y2U0LTRmNGEtOTRmMS1mMWEwMDgxMTMxZGPEhYsmy-JMTFl03yxATaVi6Q6SkKZwUj-CqscQigXa_Q

Join us in welcoming bestselling author Jim Butcher for the release of Brief Cases, short stories from his series the Dresden Files. Beginning at 3pm we will distribute wristbands for the signing portion of the event with proof of purchase. This event will be a Q&A followed by a signing. The author will personalize books. Photos with the author will be decided on the day of the event.

Tysons Corner Mall

Tysons Corner Center
7851 L. Tysons Corner Center
McLean, VA 22102
703-506-2937

Monday, June 04, 2018

Comic Riffs on Mad's Nick Meglin

Signed Bill Watterson book to be auctioned for Team Cul de Sac

From Chris Sparks:

Bill Watterson contributes a signed with a doodle in a hardcover of the Complete Calvin and Hobbes to Team Cul de Sac for our Heroescon Drink and Draw auction. A sketch from Bill is beyond very rare. We appreciate his continued support in helping us to raise money for the Michael J Fox Foundation for research in honor of our friend Richard Thompson. (Remember, you can donate at any time). Please visit our booth at Heroescon and come out to our drink and draw at the Westin ballroom on Friday night,the 15th of June. We will probably do remote bidding for those unable to attend in person

 #heroescon #tea
34367930_1923734714367530_6313383083651366912_o.jpg
(64K)
mculdesac

Sunday, June 03, 2018

David Apatoff remembers Mad's Nick Meglin

NICK MEGLIN (1935-2018)

by David Apatoff

Illustration Art blog June 2, 2018

http://illustrationart.blogspot.com/2018/06/nick-meglin-1935-2018.html

Arnold Blumberg, Geppi's Entertainment Museum's first curator, remembers the museum


by Mike Rhode

Geppi's Entertainment Museum (GEM) in Baltimore closed for good earlier today. It was one of my favorite museums with an overwhelming amount of fantastic material on comics and cartoons and I'm sorry to see it go. The only positive thing is that Steve Geppi is donating a lot of the Museum (3,300 items I'm told) to the Library of Congress in the coming weeks.

I've reached out to a few people to get their thoughts on the Museum. Dr. Arnold Blumberg was the first curator of the museum, and was very generous with his time over the years. As he has been this weekend, when he answered a few questions about the museum and his role in it.

I was proud to be Curator and part of the team that developed a one-of-a-kind display of 230 years of pop culture history, shedding light on the many ways we defined ourselves through the decades as a nation and as people. I think it's wonderful that so many media artifacts will now be available for public view. The collection will surely provide opportunities for future historians to examine the ways entertainment shaped and reflected the American experience

When were you curator?

I was Curator beginning in the summer of 2005, hand-picked by John Snyder, and worked on building the museum with the rest of the team for that next year until our opening on Sept. 2006. John was President of Geppi's Entertainment Museum when we started, and had already been running Diamond International Galleries before that and also Gemstone Publishing, which is where I was working as Editor when he tapped me to move over to the museum. I left in October 2010.

What did the work entail?

I was charged with being the intellectual custodian of the history behind all those amazing artifacts, coordinating educational and other programming in conjunction with other staff members, conducting tours and doing community and media outreach - lots of morning TV interviews! - writing most of the material on the walls and in various publications associated with the museum, and helping to care for and manage the collection alongside Registrar Andrew Hershberger. There were lots of other things in an average day, but that's the basic overview.

What was your favorite item or exhibit?

My favorite room was the museum within a museum - the comic book room, showcasing the history of that medium from periodicals and artwork stretching back centuries to the formal comics timeline of the 1930s to the present. One of my personal favorites was the Oscar Goldman action figure from the Six Million Dollar Man Kenner toy line in the 1970s room, mainly because it was one of the few things from that line that I never got myself.

Did you expect an outcome like this? It's a pretty munificent gift.

It's been years since I've been involved in the museum or in contact with anyone associated with it, so I have no particular insight into the reasons behind the museum's closure and the donation of the collection, but it's nice to know that all those items that give people so much joy and allow them to travel back into their own pasts will now be made available to view for free and at a facility that will respect their historical importance and preserve them for future generations.

After leaving the Museum, you put together your own publishing house?

Yup, since 2012 we've put out a number of titles from ATB Publishing, and we just put out our first book on comics and superheroes, Storytelling Engines, this past May!

We'll be checking in with Arnold in the coming weeks to find out more about how he went from being a museum curator, to a college professor, to a book author and publisher...

National Lampoon Presents


by RM Rhodes

In early 2018, Netflix released A Futile and Stupid Gesture, a movie about Doug Kenney and the founding of National Lampoon. I mostly watched it because I knew that Matty Simmons, publisher of National Lampoon magazine, was the first publisher of Heavy Metal magazine. Matty Simmons had a fairly sizable role in the movie, but Heavy Metal was never mentioned.

However, I come to the realization that the majority of the comedy I absorbed during my formative years came out of National Lampoon or National Lampoon-related properties. The movies – Animal House and Caddyshack – really set the tone for my sense of humor. And everything else came from Saturday Night Live; many of the Not Ready for Primetime Players had done work with National Lampoon spinoffs and most the writers came directly from National Lampoon’s talent pool.

Intrigued by this, I searched around for copies of some of the standalone works that National Lampoon had published over the years. One of the items that caught my eye was a hardcover book published in 1977 called French Comics (the Kind that Men Like). I found a used paperback copy in no time flat and was amazed by what showed up.


The lurid “implied rape is funny” cover looks like something straight out of Sex to Sexty, but the contents do not even remotely live up to the marketing. In fact, they skew in a completely different direction.

Looking through the copyright credits in the back of the book, it looks very much like members of the National Lampoon editorial team walked up to a newsstand in Paris and bought the current issue of every alternative comics anthology they could find: Pilote, Fluid Glacial, L’Echo des Savanes, and several others. The only magazine they didn’t seem to pull from was Metal Hurlant. (Of which, more later.) At the time, the anthology was still the dominant publishing format in Francophone comics (and it really hasn’t ever gone away).

The copy that I have is light on production values. The yellowing paper is one-step-above-newsprint and there is neither a table of contents or page numbers. The stories are just shoved together in no discernable order and the contrast in art styles is more than occasionally jarring.

The stories themselves are a very mixed bag. There are some amazing artists (Moebius, Fred, Gotlib, Brechter, Sole) but the missing table of contents makes it tricky to match artist with story. There’s a lot of sex, or sexual situations, but not in the way that a horny teenager would be looking for. Instead, there is a grab bag of genres and cartooning styles. There is a story about a fly getting high and horny, psychedelic adventures with tits, talking heads conversing about sex, even a raunchy parody of the long-running serial Blueberry (which American audiences were unlikely to get). But little overall cohesion.

The names on the editorial team are probably the most interesting thing about the book. The three translators are Sophie Balcoff, Valerie Marchant, and Sean Kelly. Sean Kelly is American and his wife, Valerie Marchant, is French; they were also the first editors of Heavy Metal. One of the other credits in the book is Jean-Pierre Dionnet, who was one of the editors of Metal Hurlant. This is probably not a coincidence.

Given the timing (the first issue of Heavy Metal had a cover date of April 1977), National Lampoon’s French comics anthology feels very much like an unacknowledged proof-of-concept version of what became Heavy Metal. After all, National Lampoon was the company that published Heavy Metal until they were split apart in 1992. Using National Lampoon staffers on a pilot project doesn’t seem like much of a stretch – National Lampoon did a lot of media spinoffs of every stripe, so this edition falls into the category of “other stuff they did.”



But if you read the editorial from the first issue of Heavy Metal, it’s not mentioned at all. The first editorial read as follows:

At 4AM on the nineteenth of December, 1974, under the mad marksman’s eye of the archer in the sky, on the feast of Bishop Nicasius, who prophesied the arrival of the barbarians who beheaded him, observed by whoknows how many orbiting whatnots, a linkless foursome previously identified as Druillet, Dionnet, Moebius, and Farkas were transformed into the Associated Humanoids. Shortly thereafter, a magazine entitled Metal Hurlant materialized on newsstands. Metal Hurlant means “screaming metal” – whatever that means. It was, and still is, issued by the Associated Humanoids. The magazine appears to be the work of an alien intelligence, and it indeed it is.

It is French.

French is a difficult language to understand because of the large number of English words in it. Thus, when the French say “science fiction,” they are not, as you might think, referring to HG Wells or “Star Trek” or even Jules Verne. “Science fiction” is a term which can sufficiently define Big Macs, South America, Methodism, or a weird neighbor. Vogue Magazine, anything Belgian, and pop-top cans are certainly science fiction. The Humanoid “Moebius,” writing in Metal Hurlant, describes how, while listening to a Johnny Cash album, he realized that science fiction is a cathedral. Are beginning, dear reader, to sufficiently misunderstand?

And lo, it came to pass that Metal Hurlant found its way even unto the New York offices of the National Lampoon, where the editors sit around hoping to see something they can’t see through. After a series of transatlantic phone calls resulting in the permanent hospitalization of the FBI operative assigned to tapping our line, it was agreed that America should be exposed to the contents of Metal Hurlant for its own good. A series of high-level conferences concluded that Heavy Metal was the least comprehensible title for the magazine, and it was thus adopted. Certain American artists famous for their obscurity were relieved of their manuscripts, and now, as you can see, Heavy Metal #1 has been published.

And the rest is science fiction.

One wonders if the sub-par production values on the National Lampoon book prompted its erasure from the official narrative or if the official narrative just didn’t have room for the complication of this weird side project. Either way, as a mostly unknown precursor artifact to what would eventually become Heavy Metal, it’s fascinating. It also happens to be a cross-section of what some off-beat American humor writers in New York City thought that American audiences would find interesting in contemporary French alternative anthologies. Imagine if some French curators walked through SPX and bought any number of random stories for translation and reprint – the effect would be similarly eclectic.

I would not recommend the book to anyone but completists of Heavy Metal, National Lampoon, and/or people who like French comics translated into English. If you really want to flip though it, let me know and I’ll let you take a look at it. But – trust me on this – it’s more interesting in the context of a collection of Heavy Metal.

__________________________________________________________

Why is this here? It's a long story. Mike Rhode first introduced himself to me when I first started vending at SPX. Over the years, we've talk to each other at Comic conventions around the DC area and never quite get around to sitting down for lunch. 

When I moved to Arlington two years ago, I didn't realize that Mike lived within a mile of my building. Nor did I realize that he lived next door to my girlfriend's friend from college. We also discovered, by accident that we work two buildings away from each other, because we work in adjacent organizations. The world is a very small place, sometimes. 

It really feels that way when I run into Mike at the local farmer's market. Naturally, that's when I pitch him article ideas. I'm reading the entire run of Heavy Metal in public (in blog format) because I happen to own the entire run of Heavy Metal. This means that I'm engaged in an ongoing study of the magazine. In addition, I have a diverse and idiosyncratic reading list that tends towards the weird corners of comics history. Sometimes one circumstance or another results in long articles that I don't really have anyplace to put. Mike has been gracious enough to let me publish them here.

In summary: this is an article about comics from someone in the DC area. 

Saturday, June 02, 2018

Long-time comics pro doesn't like Judge Parker writing

Ted White who's edited Heavy Metal and written comic books doesn't like the newish Judge Parker's writer:

'Judge Parker' has become incomprehensible [in print as Sally forth from 'Judge Parker']


Friday, June 01, 2018

City Paper reviews movie based on Gaiman short story

How to Talk to Girls at Parties Is a Stellar Space-Punk Love Story [in print as Punk-Drunk Love]

John Cameron Mitchell's new film might have the polished look and feel of a poseur film, but make no mistake, it's punk as fuck.

  June 1, 2018. p. 20
online at https://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/arts/film-tv/blog/21007429/how-to-talk-to-girls-at-parties-reviewed

The Post reviews movie based on Gaiman short story

Punks, aliens and loud guitars: This sci-fi love story sounds weird, but it works [in print as Sometimes, chicks are from another planet].


Washington Post June 1 2018, p. Weekend 24
online at https://www.washingtonpost.com/goingoutguide/movies/punks-aliens-and-loud-guitars-this-sci-fi-love-story-sounds-weird-but-it-works/2018/05/25/29b8120c-5ed0-11e8-9ee3-49d6d4814c4c_story.html

Quick Review: Abridged Classics by John Atkinson

Canadian cartoonist John Atkinson's new book, Abridged Classics: Brief Summaries of Books You Were Supposed To Read But Probably Didn't (New York: Harper, 2018, $20) appeals to people that love books and comics. It requires a certain level of familiarity with the 'canon' of western literature though, because as the press release notes, "Whether providing a thumbnail sketch of the notoriously long read In Search of Lost Time ("Smell of cake reminds guy of stuff. Four thousand pages of stuff."), translating The Odyssey into an elevator pitch ("War veteran takes forever to get home, then kills everyone."), or boiling down a beloved classic like Peter Pan to its weird basics ("Some kids and a crocodile pester an amputee."), Abridged Classics finds the comedy in taking the shortest route through the literary canon."  If Proust or Homer don't already ring a bell for you, the cartoon that goes along with the punchline probably won't help you out.

The press release goes on to note: This humorous collection abbreviates over a hundred works of literature from some of the world's most-revered authors, including William Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, Emily Brontë, Leo Tolstoy, Jane Austen, Margaret Atwood, James Joyce, Plato, Ernest Hemingway, Dan Brown, Ayn Rand, and Herman Melville. This book will probably appeal to people that read the New Yorker for the cartoons, or enjoy Tom Gauld's reading-themed cartoons. Personally, I enjoyed it and recommended it to my wife.


Not From Brazil's Vanessa Bettencourt on the move

Not From Brazil's Vanessa Bettencourt is literally on the move as she and her husband leave Alexandria for the midwest as she mentions in her latest webcomic.

We wish them well.

Thursday, May 31, 2018

Baltimore Sun on Geppi's Museum closure and transfer to Library of Congress

Geppi's Entertainment Museum to close as comic and art collection heads to Library of Congress

Chris Kaltenbach
Chris Kaltenbach
Baltimore Sun May 30 2018
http://www.baltimoresun.com/entertainment/bs-fe-geppis-20180529-story.html

Jeffrey Thompson illustrations in a new fantasy novel

I was reading The City of Lost Fortunes by Bryan Camp, a fantasy novel about magicians and luck gods in New Orleans this week, and thinking something looked familiar about the interior illustrations.



It turns out that they're done by Jeffrey Thompson, of Baltimore. For many years, Jeff was the Wednesday staff at Big Planet Comics Bethesda and I've followed his illustration career for years. It was a good feeling to see these illustrations in a brand new book. I didn't photograph them all, but the Tarot Card concept is integral to the plot.

I enjoyed the book quite a bit, and I've seen it compared online to American Gods which seems reasonable. I'd recommend it.

Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Nell Minow profiles the National Cartoonist Society's annual meeting

JK Snyder III on his art for 8 Million Ways to Die

Go Behind the Scenes of IDW's Eight Million Ways to Die Adaptation (Preview)

John K. Snyder III

New comic on Nepal from International Monetary Fund

Nepal: Into and Out of the Grey

A story about Nepal's journey to address money laundering – how it navigated the various obstacles it faced over the years to meet international standards on anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism.

Script by Joe Procopio and Amit Khetarpaul
Art by Steve Conley and Rick Veitch of Eureka Comics