Tuesday, August 06, 2019

ICAF 1999 program booklet now online...


The International Comic Arts Festival was founded in DC by Guy Spielman of Georgetown University and Tristan Fonlladosa of the French Embassy in 1995, building on top of an earlier Georgetown University Manga Symposium. It's changed names several times and now is a traveling show. I met a lot of interesting people and made a lot of good friends when it was regularly held in the area. The schedule information contained in this booklet is already online, along with others, at http://www.internationalcomicartsforum.org/past-icaf-programs.html but I like to present the object, as it were, even if the actualy object is now in a recycling bin.

I'll upload more of them as I recover my comic art vertical files from a basement flood earlier in July when Arlington, and my house, underwent flash floods throughout the county.

The files themselves, or in the case of material that got wet, reasonable facsimiles, will eventually reside at the OSU Billy Ireland Cartoon Library, hopefully.

Editorial Cartoon by Steve Artley

My cartoon, "POTUS for the RESTOFUS" on Trump broadening voter appeal.
(click on image for larger view)


Saturday, August 03, 2019

August Events at Fantom Comics

Fantom Comics invites anyone staying in town for the month of August to stop by one of our upcoming events.

Thursday, August 01, 2019

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

The Post's obituary for Minnie Mouse's voice

Russi Taylor, voice of Disney's Minnie Mouse and 'Simpsons' staple, dies at 75 [in print as Emmy-nominated actress voiced Minnie Mouse for 3 decades]

David Levine and Chuck Jones at National Portrait Gallery

by Bruce Guthrie

 

Yesterday, I checked for updated pieces at the National Portrait Gallery. The David Levine of Lee Iacocca is no longer on display.  But upstairs in the 20th Century American exhibit are four of his original pieces -- Steve Jobs, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Jimmy Connors and Jerry Seinfeld. 

And if you go up to the Bravo floor, they still have that wonderful Chuck Jones and his characters sculpture by Paul Moore.  The piece is not all that easy to photograph because it's bronze in a reflective plastic-y box but I gave it a shot (so to speak).














--
Bruce Guthrie
Photo obsessive
http://www.bguthriephotos.com
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Kevin Smith at Arlington Cinema and Drafthouse in November is sold out

Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Flugennock's Latest'n'Greatest: "When You Can't 'Buy In'."


From DC's anarchist cartoonist Mike Flugennock:


"When You Can't 'Buy In'"
http://sinkers.org/stage/?p=2773

It isn't just that Kamala Harris has the gall to straight-up rip off 
the name "Medicare For All" for her hack-ass healthcare proposal, nor 
is it just the convoluted, typically technocratic Rube Goldberg nature 
of her grand plan, nor the fact that it builds on the "success" of 
Obamacare – a healthcare policy written by the Heritage Foundation. 
It's the fact that Kamalacare involves the health insurance industry – 
the heart of the very problem we're trying to eliminate.

And don't get me started on all her talk about "buying in" – basically 
no different from Obamacare, where people who are already struggling 
are forced to have "some skin in the game", in the words of our 
beloved ex-President.

Oh, and it's going to be phased in over ten years. Ten years. Fat lot 
of good that's going to do for all the people having to crowdfund 
their surgeries and are being gouged for their insulin right now.

-----

Kamala Harris, "My Plan For Medicare For All", medium.com 07.29.19
https://medium.com/@KamalaHarris/my-plan-for-medicare-for-all-7730370dd421

"Kamala Harris' new health plan: 'Medicare for All' — with private 
insurers", Politico 07.29.19
https://www.politico.com/story/2019/07/29/kamala-harris-medicare-for-all-1438631

The Post reviews J. Michael “Joe” Straczynski's new biography


As an abused child, he took refuge in superheroes. Then he made a career out of them. [in print as Surviving a dad as toxic as kryptonite].
By Chris Klimek
Washington Post July 30 2019, p. C4

The Post on live-action Dora

'Dora' fan Isabela Moner didn't leap at first to play the explorer as a teen

Word Balloon podcasts by John Suintres of interest

This has nothing to do with ComicsDC, except I did a book about Harvey Pekar - that you can still buy ...

Comic Books Harvey Pekar's Legacy with Dean Haspiel and Josh Neufeld

July 10, 2019


Cartoonists Dean and Josh just started a new podcast Scene By Scene where they breakdown the Harvey Pekar film American Splendor . We also talk about their current projects and where they see the comic market going.

...but this talks about Rafer Roberts' new comic book

Comic Books A New Mike Norton Moment

Word Balloon July 22, 2019

Mike is back to talk about bring his web comic Battle Pug to Image Comics as a monthly in September. Plus Grumble with Rafer Roberts, his thoughts on the creator owned Market and why he stopped his political comic strip Lil D

Local Raven writer Kami Garcia interviewed at San Diego Comic-Con

INTERVIEW: TEEN TITANS: RAVEN creators Kami Garcia & Gabriel Picolo

The Beat catches up with the Teen Titans: Raven creative team

PR: Small Press Expo 2019 International Special Guests



For Immediate Release

Contact: Eden Miller

 
Small Press Expo Announces International Special Guests for 2019.
 
Bethesda, Maryland - July 30, 2019
 
Media Release - Small Press Expo is proud to announce the first group International Special Guests for SPX 2019. The festival takes place on Saturday and Sunday, September 14-15, at the Bethesda North Marriott Hotel & Conference Center and will have over 650 creators, 280 exhibitor tables, over 20 programming slots and additional hands-on workshops to introduce attendees to the amazing world of independent and small press comics. Additional Special Guests will be announced soon.
 
SPX 2019 is honored to have the following creators as International Special Guests to this year's show:
Aimée de Jongh
Aimée de Jongh (1988) is a comic author, animator and illustrator from the Netherlands. After drawing a Dutch daily newspaper comic called "Snippers" for nearly five years, Aimée decided to change the direction of her career entirely. Now focusing on graphic novels and graphic journalism, Aimée has reached an international audience for her work. Her debut graphic novel "The Return of the Honey Buzzard" won the Prix Saint-Michel and was adapted to a feature film. In her recent comic works, Aimée does not shy away from social and political subjects. During a visit to the refugee camps in Greece, she made the comic "Europe's Waiting Room" to draw the attention to the poor living conditions of the refugees. Her new graphic novel "Blossoms in Autumn" is a taboo-breaking book about love and sex after 60, written by the acclaimed Belgian comic author Zidrou. The book reached third printing in France in only three months time, and won the Silver Japan International Manga Award 2019. Her upcoming graphic novel is "TAXI!": an autobiography about taxi rides all over the world.
Kenny Rubenis
Kenny Rubenis (1984) is one of the Netherlands best known cartoonists. His popular comic strip "Dating for Geeks" is published daily in the country's largest newspaper "Metro", and is read by close to a million people every day. To date, 9 collections of the strip have been published and the 10th book in the series is coming out later this year. 

"Dating for Geeks" details the lives of 7 nerdy characters. There's Jasper, who's searching for true love (and mint condition comic books) with the help of dating-consultant Yvon, there's geeky couple Renee and Edward who have just moved in together and now have twice as many collectables, there's hopeless romantic Claire, not so much looking for a Prince Charming on a white horse, but more for a Doctor in a bright blue box and there's Jeff, your typical gamer who isn't really looking for a girlfriend, but more for someone to play "two player games" with, if you know what I mean. And finally the author himself is one of his own characters. A little bit dumber, more insecure and less charismatic than in real life. 

The first proper translated Dating for Geeks comics will debut at SPX this year.
José Quintanar
José Quintanar is an artist working on narrative drawings, comics, and books. He has released several full-length graphic novels and artists' books including Conociendo a Jari, Grundfunken, Fartlek and Culto Charles. His drawings have been published in The New York Times, Nieves, Vice, Esquire, kuÅ¡! Komikss, Fulgencio Pimentel, Editions Misma, Fosfatina and many more. His work has been exhibited in galleries in New York, Paris, London, Rotterdam, Madrid, Porto, and Berlín. José is also a professor at Willem de Kooning Art Academy of Rotterdam, The Netherlands, and a Ph.D. Student at Universidad Politecnica Madrid, where he researches narrative structures and artists' books. Recently, his short stories have appeared in several issues of Now: The New Anthology, from Fantagraphics. 

Yann Kebbi
Yann Kebbi was born in Paris in 1987, and studied at the École des Arts Décoratifs. His paintings and illustrations have appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Guardian, and The Washington Post and elsewhere. Most recently, he collaborated with writer Viken Berberian on the graphic novel The Structure is Rotten, Comrade. He lives and works in Paris.
Typex
Typex is a Dutch illustrator and graphic novelist. A graduate of the Amsterdam College for the Arts, his work has appeared in many national newspapers and magazines. He has illustrated numerous children's books and has published some of his own. Typex is the author of the acclaimed graphic biographies Andy: The Life and Times of Andy Warhol and Rembrandt, both published by SelfMadeHero. He lives in Amsterdam.
Jérôme Tubiana
French writer and researcher Jérôme Tubiana first met the former Guantánamo Bay detainee Mohammed El-Gharani in N'Djamena in 2011, two years after his release from the notorious camp. They met every afternoon for two weeks, after which Tubiana turned their conversations into a diary piece for the London Review of Books. Now, in collaboration with Mohammed El-Gharani, he has written a graphic novel: Guantánamo Kid. Illustrated by French cartoonist Alexandre Franc and endorsed by Amnesty International, this landmark work of graphic non-fiction tells the astonishing true story of one of the camp's youngest detainees, who was held and abused for seven years without charge or trial.
Small Press Expo (SPX) is the preeminent showcase for the exhibition of independent comics, graphic novels, and alternative political cartoons. SPX is a registered 501(c)3 nonprofit that brings together more than 650 artists and publishers to meet their readers, booksellers, and distributors each year. Graphic novels, mini comics, and alternative comics will all be on display and for sale by their authors and illustrators. The expo includes a series of panel discussions and interviews with this year's guests.

The Ignatz Award is a festival prize held every year at SPX recognizing outstanding achievement in comics and cartooning, with the winners chosen by attendees at the show.

As in previous years, profits from the SPX will go to support the SPX Graphic Novel Gift Program, which funds graphic novel purchases for public and academic libraries. For more information on the Small Press Expo, please visit http://www.smallpressexpo.com.
Small Press Expo
P.O. Box 5704
Bethesda, Maryland
20824
STAY CONNECTED


Cavna on the voice of Minnie Mouse

She was the voice of Minnie Mouse. He was the voice of Mickey Mouse. That's how their romance began.

Washington Post July 30 2019

Monday, July 29, 2019

Catching up with the Post: graphic memoirs, Rowland Emett, Aladdin, the Lion King, and NC Wyeth

Four of the best graphic memoirs of the year — so far

[in print as A sampling of the most engaging illustrated memoirs published this year]


Air and Space Museum used to feature flying machines of the strangest sort [in print as This beautifully useless, imaginative flying machine was no figment].

Columnist
Washington Post July 28 2019

What do Broadway's 'Aladdin,' 'Mean Girls' and 'Book of Mormon' have in common? Director Casey Nicholaw. [in print as A directorial genie behind four curtains].

Washington Post July 26 2019, p. Weekend 18-19.

'Lion King' has been clouded by intellectual property controversy for 25 years. Here's the story behind it.

[in print as Circle of life or rip-off? Remake renews dispute].

Washington Post July 27 2019, p. A11