Thursday, October 24, 2013

Brad Meltzer's book talk - guest blog post by Bruce Guthrie

I went to Brad Meltzer's talk at the Martin Luther King Jr Memorial Library last night.  He's definitely a crowd pleaser!  He was promoting his new book "History Decoded" based on the History Channel show.  Wonderful speaker who even brought junk food for the signing line.  Scott Rolle from the show was also there.

Q&A focused mostly on Kennedy's assassination and I was relieved to hear him dismissing the conspiracy theorists so quickly.  He said we don't want to accept that a lone crazy could have killed a popular US president.  Makes you wonder about why we don't have that problem with John Hinkley.  Is it just because both Reagan and Hinkley survived?  When the story's cut short, I guess there's more room to make up conspiracy stuff to fill in gaps.

Several questions dealt with his comic book work.  He said he was very excited to be working on the Batman 75th anniversary retelling of the Batman origin story due out in January.  As http://bigstory.ap.org/article/batman-turns-75-dc-plans-weekly-title-events says,

The Bob Kane and Bill Finger-created character's origin will get a "modern-day retelling" in the 104-page issue by Brad Meltzer and Bryan Hitch, along with new stories and art from Snyder, Frank Miller, Sean Murphy, Peter J. Tomasi and Guillem March, Paul Dini and Dustin Nguyen, Gregg Hurwitz and Neal Adams.

The issue, out Jan. 8, will also lay the framework for new creative team Francis Manapul and Brian Buccellato, who take over the book in the spring.

"We want to bring him closer to his roots and be more of a street-level type of hero," Manapul said about their plans. "His super heroics will still be present, but the investigative part of Batman will be at the forefront."

He also showed some pages from his upcoming "I Am Amelia Earheart" kids graphic book and he showed covers for "I Am Abraham Lincoln" and "I Am Rosa Parks".  Apparently there will be at least six book in the "I Am..." treatment.

The signing event was fun as he appeared to recognize a bunch of his fans.  He's great at establishing personal connections with his fans through social media and in person.  He's got a lot of fan loyalty.  I talked with three people about many times they had seen him before and two of them said five or more times.

There were about 250 people in the audience.  The signing lasted over 90 minutes.  Pictures are up on http://www.bguthriephotos.com/graphlib.nsf/keys/2013_10_23B_Meltzer

--
Bruce Guthrie
Photo obsessive
http://www.bguthriephotos.com
__._,_.___

Seth Goldman and Talkin' About Toons photos

101_6565 Seth Goldman on Mission in a BottleSeth Goldman on his graphic biography of Honest Tea, "Mission in a Bottle" at One More Page Bookstore in Arlington. More photographs are here.

And two pictures of the Talkin' About Toons panel:


101_6568 Talkin Bout Toons Wuerker Rechin Conley Baumann

Talkin' Bout Toons panel with Matt Wuerker, Kevin Rechin, Steve Conley and Marty Baumann. NOVA Community College.

101_6569 Talkin Bout Toons Wuerker Rechin Conley Baumann

Oct. 26: Loya workshop at Winchester bookstore


Cartoonist/artist Steve Loya will be hosting his wonderful “Splotch Monster”-making workshop Oct. 26 from 12:30-2:30 p.m. at the Winchester Book Gallery in Winchester, Va. He’ll show you how to turn a random watercolor painting into a unique monster, then you make your own for Halloween!

Art courtesy of Steve Loya

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Nov. 2: Cartoonists Draw Blood


Donate blood on Nov. 2 at CARTOONISTS DRAW BLOOD with the American Red Cross in D.C. and get a complementary sketch by a D.C. cartoonist, including Steve Artley, Carolyn Belefski, Bill Brown, Michael Cavna, Eric Gordon, Art Hondros, Mal Jones, Teresa Roberts Logan, Steve Loya, Jay Payne, Michael Ricigliano, Joe Sutliff, Jake Warrenfeltz and JTW. To participate, email: info@curls-studio.com

Oct. 24, 26: Warrenfeltz at Artisphere


Cartoonist Jacob Warrenfeltz is this week's resident artist at the D.C. Conspiracy's Comics Making Workshop at the Artisphere in Rosslyn, Va. He will be at the Works In Progress Gallery Oct. 24 from about 6:30-9:30 p.m. and on Oct. 26 from 1-4 p.m. Jake is a regular contributor to the Magic Bullet comics newspaper and is currently working on his self-published comic Villains Galore.


2 more positive articles on Rep. Lewis' 'March'

 

 

March: Book One

REVIEWED BY Robert Kirby Oct 23, 2013

http://www.tcj.com/reviews/march-book-one/

 

BEST BOOKS OF 2013: How artist Nate Powell helps tell John Lewis's compelling civil-rights story, 'March'

By Michael Cavna

Washington Post Comic Riffs Blog October 21 2013

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/comic-riffs/post/best-books-of-2013-how-artist-nate-powell-helps-tell-john-lewiss-compelling-civil-rights-story-march/2013/10/21/f761c6aa-2b0c-11e3-b139-029811dbb57f_blog.html#pagebreak

Fredericksburg gets Clay Jones back

Clay Jones to return to Freelance-Star

  by
October 23, 2013
http://dailycartoonist.com/index.php/2013/10/23/clay-jones-to-return-to-freelance-star/

Corrected - the town is Fredericksburg (which I got wrong) and the paper is the Free Lance-Star (which Alan got wrong).

Rebecca Sugar interview

SW #23.4 – NYCC '13 Interview With Rebecca Sugar & Ian Jones-Quartey

According to Joel Pollack, Rebecca was a customer at Big Planet Comics Bethesda, but he never mentions these things until someone's moved....

Ryan Holmberg interviews Indian cartoonist Ghosh

Inverted Calm: An Interview with Vishwajyoti Ghosh

BY Ryan Holmberg Oct 23, 2013
http://www.tcj.com/inverted-calm-an-interview-with-vishwajyoti-ghosh/

Oct 24: Comics Journalism class

Comics Journalism

date Thursday, 24 October 2013 time 6:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.

👤 Josh Kramer 🏢 Washington Post

http://knowledgecommonsdc.org/classes/comics-journalism/

 Registration is open

event preview image

Are you a news junkie with a taste for graphic novels? Or maybe you're a comics fan who also geeks out over The New Yorker and "This American Life." At the intersection of art and nonfiction, comics journalism radically combines real stories about real people with imaginative, drawn storytelling. 

We'll tear through a brief lecture and conversation about contemporary comics journalism and then go straight into a workshop in which you'll learn the building blocks of a comics story and how to apply journalism tools and ethics. Some reporting experience is useful, but not necessary. If you choose, you may bring a short piece of journalism — ideally a simple narrative — and we'll thumbnail some of it into the beginnings of a comic. 

Location

Washington Post
1150 15th St. NW 
WashingtonDC 20071 
Neighborhood: McPherson Square 
Between L and M streets NW

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Walking Dead wire story in today's Express

TV's 'The Walking Dead' inspires Atlanta's newest convention, a
podcast and a one-man show

By Jeff Martin/ Associated Press,

October 20 2013

http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/tvs-the-walking-dead-inspires-atlantas-newest-convention-a-podcast-and-a-one-man-show/2013/10/20/3d229c58-39b0-11e3-b0e7-716179a2c2c7_story.html

Lou Scheimer's obituary in The Post

Art show by Britt Conley

Britt's a friend of mine, and a friend of cartoonists in general.
                                                                                
Conceptual Structuralism: Considerations with Graphite
November 9 - December 1, 2013

Free Reception:  Saturday, November, 9, 2013.  6 - 9pm
Workhouse Arts Center, Building W-6 Gallery
9601 Ox Road, Lorton, Virginia  22079
Gallery hours: Wed – Sat 11am – 6pm and Sun 12 – 5pm


To me, art is a means of communication that goes far beyond subject matter alone. Although direct reference can be used to motivate the mind or evoke a reaction, visuals can be configured to move a person and trigger aesthetic responses on much broader and hopefully, deeper, levels. These abstract drawings are from a nearly daily drawing journey from which I have been exploring conceptual structuralism.

I find graphite to be both an incredibly versatile and neutral medium which allows for expressive explorations into the potential of line as well as subtle "breathable spaces."   For these graphite works line is a character supporting a conversation among spatial areas.  Each of the images constitutes an evolving journal of ideas, considerations and concepts, which have in turn, helped shape the blueprints of my larger works.



Theoverture: Britt Conley, The Overture, 2012, Graphite, 8" x 11" 


Whatnot: Britt Conley, What Not, 2011, Graphite, 6 1/2" x 7 1/2"



Related information:

Artist name Website:  www.brittconley.com

Artist name Facebook: www.facebook.com/brittconley


For more information, contact:                                                                                  
Britt Conley, Studio Artist at the Workhouse Arts Center                              britt@brittconley.com
703 981-5442
                          

Dec. 16: Kennedy Scholarship deadline


Applications for the 2014 Jay Kennedy Memorial Scholarship are due Dec. 16. Applicants must be college juniors or seniors and do not have to be art majors to be eligible for the scholarship. The winner is selected by the National Cartoonists Society Foundation. (As an aside, the scholarship winners since 2010 have been female cartoonists.)