Tuesday, March 26, 2024

WaPo reviews Princess Peach videogame

The new Princess Peach game is high femme, low tech and good fun [in print as New Nintendo Switch game is, well, just peachy]

Baltimore Comic-Con announces Ringo judges

Ringo Awards '24 judges announced

Gill, Greenberger, Igle, Maggs and Wu will oversee your nominations

PR: Important Information for the 2024 Ignatz Awards Submissions


Hello Creators and Publishers!!


We learned a lot last year with the new submission process and judging teams, so we are tweaking things a bit this year to make the process smoother all the way around.


Below is the information you need about the changes we made to submit your works for this year's Ignatz Awards.


We will start accepting submissions to the 2024 Ignatz Awards on Monday April 1.


You can take your time with the submissions, as the submission window does not end until Friday May 31.


Please read all of the below and any questions, do not hesitate to send them to ignatzawards@smallpressexpo.com.


Thanks,

Warren and Francesca

2024 Ignatz Awards Schedule


  • April 1 - Ignatz Submissions Open
  • May 31 - Ignatz Submissions Close
  • Mid-August - Ignatz nominees announced and ballots available
  • September 14 @ 9:30PM - Ignatz Awards Ceremony


Ignatz Logo by Deb JJ Lee.

IGNATZ SUBMISSION PAGE


You can get to the submissions page one of two ways:


  • On the SPX landing page, click on the Submit Works to the 2024 Ignatz Awards icon.
  • Go directly to the Ignatz submission landing page here.


NOTE: The submission forms will not be active until Monday April 1.

THE SUBMISSION PROCESS


1. Everyone will submit their works to one and only of the following mutually exclusive categories:


  • Outstanding Minicomic
  • Outstanding Graphic Novel
  • Outstanding Anthology
  • Outstanding Collection
  • Outstanding Comic
  • Outstanding Online Comic


You can read the definitions of these categories on the About The Ignatz Awards page on our web site.


2. For any of the above categories, you have the option of uploading up to three 1MB photos of your printed works. With the advent of digital submissions, the judges can get a better feel for your work in terms of production values by showing them a few photographs.


3. All works submitted to the above categories can also be submitted to the remaining categories of Outstanding Story, Outstanding Series, Outstanding Artist and Promising New Talent.


4. You will be asked for two new pieces of information for the above categories: the dimensions of your book/comic and the number of pages.

UPLOADING PDF FILES

We ask that everybody take a look at compressing large PDF files. Here is the information from Adobe . We request you do so if indeed the Adobe compression does not impact the reading experience of your work. If you can do this, it will decrease the amount of time you will spend during the the upload process.


We also recommend splitting large (over 100MB PDF's) into two, as shown here on the Adobe site.


Based on the experience of running virtual Ignatz Awards over the past two years, we are making this move to digital submissions permanent, as well as making a few important changes to the entire process:


Here is other important PDF information:

  • Please send us PDFs only of no more than two 200meg files in size per submission
  • PDF file naming convention for Mini-comics, Comics, Series, Story, Artist, Promising New Talent, Collections and Graphic Novels is: CreatorLastName.CreatorFirstName.Comic_Title.IssueNumber (If needed).Publisher.PubMonthPubYear.pdf If there is no Issue Number, then do not put one in the file nameIf it is self published, put Self as the Publisher
  • PDF file naming convention for Anthologies is: EditorLastName.EditorFirstName.Comic_Title.Publisher.PubMonthPubYear.pdf

COPIES FOR THE SPX COLLECTION AT THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS


In addition to the digital submission, you will be required to send us one physical copy so we can display the Ignatz noms at the show, as well as preserve your works for future generations in the SPX Collection at the Library of Congress:


  • Please mail the submission to Small Press Expo P.O. Box 5704 Bethesda, Maryland 20824
  • Physical copies are due at the PO box by August 5.


Copyright © 2023 Small Press Expo, All rights reserved. 

You are getting this email because we know you might want a table to SPX 2022!! 


Our mailing address is: 

Small Press Expo

P.O. Box 5704

Bethesda, Maryland 20824


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Small Press Expo | P.O. Box 5704, Bethesda, MD 20824

New ComicsDC page on the 'timeless' material I've written

 The Timeless Stuff: IJOCA, ComicsDC, and Washington City Paper etc. writings list is a list of material that I've written for various places, most of which can be read online. These are usually interviews, or history pieces, and not the daily quick hits. It's only my work on this blog, in spite of having a few contributors, because I pulled it from my CV.

PR: Help us Launch Issue #3 of 1/6: The Graphic Novel!

Readers of the blog know I'm a big fan of this series.

Help our New Comic Book to Help Save Democracy!


Thanks to you, Issues #1 and #2 of 1/6: The Graphic Novel are making news, wowing critics, and sparking real-world activism for democracy and equality.  Now, we need your help to get Issue #3 into the world!  Please back our Kickstarter Campaign.  (You can click below or go to http://kck.st/3vfd39B)

Support Issue #3 Here!

The new blockbuster volume in the series depicts the fall of the U.S. Capitol, the rise of authoritarianism, and the birth of a hopeful resistance.  Along the way we'll take on book bans, militias, and a fight for the soul of America.


As with Issues #1 and #2, we'll be sending copies of #3 to libraries, universities, elected officials, and nonprofits, as well as to Election Deniers, Book Banners, and other opponents of democracy ('cause, you know, they need to see what they tried to do).

 

There are some cool rewards for backing this project and, of course, you might just help to save democracy.

 

Thanks and #RememberOneSix!

Support Issue #3 Here!

Comics Research Bibliography citations update, 3/25/2024

Accusations Over DC Comics Artists Using Artificial Intelligence Mount

Lots of people are against the use of AI in comic book creation. Here are three recent examples from DC Comics highlighted on social media.

by Rich Johnston

 23 Mar 2024 
https://bleedingcool.com/comics/accusations-over-dc-comics-artists-using-artificial-intelligence-mount-ai/

 

DENIS KITCHEN ART COLLECTION GOES ON THE BLOCK At Heritage

 Milton Griepp on March 25, 2024 

https://icv2.com/articles/news/view/56555/denis-kitchen-art-collection-goes-block

 

China Box Office: 'Kung Fu Panda 4' Opens to $25.9M During Quiet Weekend

'Dune: Part 2' climbed to $44.6 million, surpassing the China total of the first film in the franchise.

Patrick Brzeski

March 25, 2024

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/china-box-office-kung-fu-panda-4-opening-weekend-1235859397/

 

SAG-AFTRA Performers Ratify TV Animation Contracts

Katie Kilkenny

The new deal includes several gains secured in the union's 2023 TV/theatrical contracts following its 118-day strike, such as guardrails on AI and wage increases.

March 22, 2024

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/business-news/sag-aftra-tv-animation-contracts-ratified-1235858863/

 

Manga industry faces hard questions as Eiichiro Oda takes break

As Eiichiro Oda goes on a break after the death of Akira Toriyama, should this signal better self care for manga artists?

D. Morris

03/25/2024

https://www.comicsbeat.com/manga-industry-faces-hard-questions-as-eiichiro-oda-takes-break/

 

"It's a Silent Fire": Decaying Digital Movie and TV Show Files Are a Hollywood Crisis

Industry pros sweat the possibility that many digital files will eventually become unusable — an archival tragedy reminiscent of the celluloid era.

By Gary Baum, Carolyn Giardina

March 15, 2024 

This story first appeared in the March 14 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/digital/digital-preservation-film-tv-shows-archives-1235851957/

 

MoCCA 2024: On FLY CHILD with artist Caitlin Du

A spotlight on MoCCA artist and SVA comics graduate in the making Caitlin Du about her latest work: Fly Child.

Christian Angeles

03/25/2024

https://www.comicsbeat.com/mocca-2024-on-fly-child-with-artist-caitlin-du/

 

Multiple women accuse cartoonist Ed Piskor of grooming and misconduct

Multiple women have accused cartoonist Ed Piskor of misconduct and grooming.

Beat Staff

03/25/2024 https://www.comicsbeat.com/multiple-women-accuse-cartoonist-ed-piskor-of-grooming-and-misconduct/

 

Interview: TONY FLEECS is having a moment

The creator shared what is coming up and his take on the state of comics today

Deanna Destito

03/25/2024

https://www.comicsbeat.com/interview-tony-fleecs-is-having-a-moment/

 

Interview: 'The Many Deaths of Barnaby James' [writers Neil Gibson and Brian Nathanson ]

Interview by Troy-Jeffrey Allen

Mar 19, 2024

https://previewsworld.com/Article/271263-Interview-The-Many-Deaths-of-Barnaby-James

 

A Chat with Nick Davis, a DC-adjacent cartoonist

by Mike Rhode

ComicsDC blog March 25, 2024

https://comicsdc.blogspot.com/2024/03/a-chat-with-nick-davis-dc-adjacent.html


Tintin au-delà des idées reçues

22 contre-vérités sur Hergé et son œuvre

https://lesimpressionsnouvelles.com/catalogue/tintin-au-dela-des-idees-recues/

Patrice Guérin

Les Impressions Nouvelles 2024

 

IDEAS DON'T BLEED episode eighty | Kieron Gillen, part two

March 25 2024

https://ashcanpress.substack.com/p/look

 

WIA Ireland Marks 10th Anniversary with Animation Dingle Announcements

By Mercedes Milligan

March 23, 2024

https://www.animationmagazine.net/2024/03/wia-ireland-marks-10th-anniversary-with-animation-dingle-announcements/

 

BOOM! SPLAT! Comics and Violence

Edited by Jim Coby & Joanna Davis-McElligatt

University Press of Mississippi, 2024

https://www.upress.state.ms.us/Books/B/BOOM!-SPLAT

 

Introduction: Here is Violence Galore

 

Jim Coby and Joanna Davis-McElligatt

 

Section I. Bang! Histories of Violence

1. Hawk, Dove, Ditko, and Kant: Self-Defense for Superheroes

Sam Cowling

 

2. Black and White Death: Graphics of Violence from the Great War

Christina M. Knopf

 

3. A Tale of Two Cuban Cartoonists

Diana Álvarez Amell

 

4. Archiving the Past, Drawing the Present, and Preserving Displaced Histories of Violence in Nonfictional Graphic Novels

Natalja Chestopalova

 

Section II. Zzap! Forms of Violence

5. Calvin and Hobbes: A Case Study of the Cartoon Fight Cloud

Jacob Murel

 

6. White Black Men and Black White Men: Reading Race as Violence in Mat Johnson and Warren Pleece's Incognegro: A Graphic Mystery

Joanna Davis-McElligatt

 

7. Violence Trying Patience: Daniel Clowes, Gender, Semiotics, and the Duo-Parallel-Critical Alternative to McCloud's World-Image Typology in Comics

Steven S. Vrooman

 

Section III. Aarrgh! Interpersonal and Collective Violence

8. Gender-Bending Aggression: A Comparative Study of Superheroine Aggression in Hulk (2016), Captain Marvel (2017), and The New Wolverine (2017)

Kiera M. Gaswint

 

9. Male Authority against Female Bodies: Gender, Sexuality, and Violence in Comics

Elisabetta Di Minico

 

10. "It's Football, Sir. It's Worth the Blood": Football and "The Violence That Finds Us" in Aaron and Latour's Southern Bastards

Jim Coby

 

11. Complex Comics, Complex Trauma: Registration of Traumatized Childhood in the "Autographics" of Phoebe Gloeckner

Partha Bhattacharjee and Priyanka Tripathi

 

Section IV. Thunk! Political and Social Violence

12. #BlackLivesMatter and Cartooning Racial Violence

Vincent Haddad

 

13. Radical Empathy in March

Leah Milne

 

14. "Peace Be with You": The Sheriff of Babylon and Violence in the "War on Terror"

Lawrence Abrams and Kaleb Knoblauch

 

15. Violence for the Cause: Social Justice and the Need for Representations of Violence

Rita Costello

 

Eli Noyes, Pioneer in Clay and Sand Stop Animation, Dies at 81

An Oscar nominee for 'Clay or the Origin of Species,' he later helped shape the look and spirit of Nickelodeon and MTV.

Mike Barnes

March 25, 2024

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/eli-noyes-dead-pioneering-stop-motion-animator-1235859948/

 

X-Men: From the Ashes Wants to Make Cyclops the Leading Man He Was Always Meant to Be

Exclusive: X-Men writers Gail Simone and Jed MacKay and editor Tom Brevoort talk about the future of Marvel's Merry Mutants in the From the Ashes relaunch.

By Joe George, Sam Stone | March 25, 2024

https://www.denofgeek.com/comics/x-men-from-the-ashes-cyclops-new-mission/

 

"It's A Cliché, But I Write What I Know": An Interview with Gareth A. Hopkins, Abstract Cartoonist

Hagai Palevsky | March 25, 2024

https://www.tcj.com/its-a-cliche-but-i-write-what-i-know-an-interview-with-gareth-a-hopkins-abstract-cartoonist/

 

A Game Designer's Lifelong Pursuit of Action Nirvana

Hideaki Itsuno helped shape the fighting genre in the 1990s with Street Fighter. Now he's applying similar ideas to the open-world adventure Dragon's Dogma 2.

By Lewis Gordon

A version of this article appears in print on March 25, 2024, Section C, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Still Shaping The Genre Of Fighting.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/21/arts/dragons-dogma-2-hideaki-itsuno-capcom.html

 

'X-Men' Is Back, but a Key Member Is Missing

By Calum Marsh

March 25, 2024,

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/25/arts/television/x-men-97-beau-demayo.html

 

Laurent de Brunhoff, Artist Who Made Babar Famous, Dies at 98 [Nelvana]

By Penelope Green

A version of this article appears in print on March 25, 2024, Section A, Page 20 of the New York edition with the headline: Laurent de Brunhoff, Artist Who Made Babar Famous, Dies at 98.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/22/books/laurent-de-brunhoff-dead.html

 

The Art of Babar

For more than seven decades, Laurent de Brunhoff painted the adventures of the world's most beloved elephant.

— Penelope Green

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/23/arts/laurent-de-brunhoff-babar-books.html

 

Finding Happiness Through Many Mediums

At this Lower East Side cafe, patrons order up charcoals instead of cappuccinos and find the joy of getting their hands dirty.

By Nancy Coleman

Illustrations by Vidhya Nagarajan

A version of this article appears in print on March 24, 2024, Section AR, Page 2 of the New York edition.

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/23/arts/design/nyc-art-cafe.html

 

Dean Haspiel's What If? With The Red Hook X Dean Haspiel

by Rich Johnston 24 Mar 2024

https://bleedingcool.com/comics/dean-haspiel-what-if-with-the-red-hood-x-dean-haspiel/

 

Life Studied 8: Illustrators VS artists?

 

Mike Hawthorne

February 15 2024

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dCuydeIKNC8

 

Meet the Team - Holly Craven [archivist]

Ralph Steadman Art Collection March 25 2024

https://mailchi.mp/f1f4edccf924/meet-the-team-holly-craven

 

 

Monday, March 25, 2024

Ralph Steadman exhibit coming to American University in fall

" a brand new exhibition, And Another Thing opening in September 2024 at the American University Museum at the Katzen Art Center in Washington DC. The exhibition will go on to tour venues across the USA until 2028."

from

Meet the Team - Holly Craven [archivist]
Ralph Steadman Art Collection March 25 2024
https://mailchi.mp/f1f4edccf924/meet-the-team-holly-craven

Troy-Jeffrey Allen interviews 'The Many Deaths of Barnaby James' writers Neil Gibson and Brian Nathanson

Interview: 'The Many Deaths of Barnaby James' [writers Neil Gibson and Brian Nathanson ]

Interview by Troy-Jeffrey Allen

A Chat with Nick Davis, a DC-adjacent cartoonist

Awesome Con photo by Rhode
by Mike Rhode

I was walking around Awesome Con with another local comics fan who wanted to check out the children's section. Since I know that some of the best cartoonists are making comics for children, and local cartoonists John Gallagher, Kata Kane, and Carolyn Belefski set up there, I was glad to follow along. With a British accent, Nick Davis introduced himself as DC-adjacent which was enough to get him a ComicsDC interview offer right there (we also do visiting cartoonists, so heck, anyone can appear here). Nick sent a very thoughtful set of answers to our standard questions.

What type of comic work or cartooning do you do?

I write and self-publish fantasy adventure stories, featuring the Night Guardians, cuddly toys and kids who protect you from the monsters under the bed, and their master the Boogeyman. The stories are fantasy adventures, much in the same vein as the Amulet, or Wings of Fire and I consider them to be all ages adventures, written to appeal to kids and adults alike.

And if you are a fan of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, especially their first appearance, I publish a series of books called Let’s Hunt Montas! Which is more cartoony violent, a lot like Rick and Morty, set in the same fantasy world as the Night Guardians.

How do you do it? Traditional pen and ink, computer or a combination?

Veronica Smith, the artist I work with on the Night Guardian adventures, works the layouts in pencil and then the final art in Manga Studio. The Let's Hunt Monstas! comic, that I exclusively write and draw, is drawn completely in Procreate.

There is a movement that digital art isn’t real art in the comic book community, but you don’t get to draw on these tablet programs without putting in the hours using traditional pen and ink methods. The skills transfer. You can’t cheat your way to good storytelling art, you have to put the hours in.

When (within a decade is fine) and where were you born?

I’m generation X, the largely forgotten generation, the one that has to get things done, because we were left to it. I was born in the early 70’s in a small English market town called Melton Mowbray.

Why are you comics-adjacent to Washington now?  What  area do you live in?

I work in DC for a health care non-profit that overseers medical accreditation, when I am not in DC (which is a lot). I live in PA, right in the middle of Amish country.

What is your training and/or education in cartooning?

None.

I am trained graphic designer, so I have art courses that are attached to that, you know form, life drawing, color theory, but I received no formal training in comic book storytelling. While schools like that do exist, you can only learn from reading comics and doing it yourself.

Who are your influences?

The biggest is the King himself, Jack Kirby, I used to dislike it, then I started telling comic book stories and the sheer storytelling power of his work, the mastery of his panel storytelling is the pinnacle. 

I grew up in the UK reading the Beano, 2000AD, Warlord, Battle, so I have a very heavy black and white influence. The book that really blew my mind was the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, it was unlike anything I ever saw before, and those turtle boys captured lightning in a bottle. 

So, I guess you can add Eastman and Laird to my influences too.


If you could, what in your career would you do-over or change? Or rather, how are you hoping your career will develop?

You learn more from your mistakes, than you do from your successes. I try not to look back at things I do, as that isn’t the direction I am going in. Learn what works, apply it to future work and keep moving forward.

My career in cartooning? I would love it to develop to the point where I don’t have to work a day job and can live making comics. It’s an independent dream, few of us actually achieve it. Personally I would love to have the success the turtle boys had, but that was very much a time and place thing.

At the moment my goal is to keep telling good stories and having readers come back wanting more. So far, I’ve been mostly successful in that area.

What work are you best-known for?

The Night Guardians - Awakenings graphic novel was a work of a couple of years to get done and told one of my longest stories about four cuddly toys who have to journey into the realm of the Boogeyman to save their child. It hit all the themes I wanted it to, about courage, friendship and hope, and told a fun fantasy adventure in the dark fantasy voice (with a touch of whimsy) that I wanted it too. 

It was also my first real dive into the world of comic book storytelling and I am immensely proud how it came out.

What would you like to do or work on in the future?

I am working on two separate books at the moment, with my artist I am working on Dream Warriors, the tale of two children and their teddy bear spirit guide, who find themselves becoming the defender of dreams. And my Let’s Hunt Montas! Book, that allows me to play fast and loose with my Night Guardians world and inject some Tom & Jerry style humor into things. I guess LHM is very much my safety valve and allows me to release more of my 2000AD ID.

What do you do when you're in a rut or have writer's block?

There is no secret to writing, except to write.

Accept whatever your first write is a pile of poop, once you do that, let the words flow until whatever story inside you is out. Then go back and turn it into something that actually makes sense. Remember it is your world, you control everything, and do not have to kowtow to realism. Let yourself go wild.

The biggest issue I have found with folk who want to write is they are scared of what they want to write, that it is silly, that is nonsense. Tell your story, embrace the absurd.

What's the story about the FCBD issue pictured here?

Every year the comic book store that hosts me for Free Comic Book Day, gets a complimentary FCBD book from me that is exclusive to their story. The book, in this case Adventures Ahead, is a compilation of extracts from the opening pages of Let's Hunt Monstas! Dream Warriors and TeamD, It's a fun little comic book that gives the reader an idea about my stories and gives the comic book store, an extra air of exclusivity.

The book will also eventually be available as a digital download via my Comix Well Spring online box store at https://cwsbookstore.com/store/nick/

What do you think will be the future of your field?

That is tough, comics as an industry is largely stagnant, not shrinking, not really growing. You would think after all the superhero movies we would have a new readership. But the simple fact is can you find a comic book that easily?

Manga for example is everywhere, American style comic books are relegated to niche stories, that are mostly uninviting, and the books within tell stories for adults, into the wonder of superheroes and worlds beyond our own that we read as kids.

I fear that my generation is the last one that grew up reading all types of comic books, we simply had no choice because we read what we could get. Now, you can choose what you want to read, and the funny kind of freedom directs you into niches, or silos, and you inherit a fear of trying something new.

Comics are not doomed, they will survive. I think the Manga style is going to dominate in another ten years or so. I hope my stories can keep up and continue to grow.

I like to think the future is bright, but it's hard work if folk don’t recognize your work and the kids they are with want Deadpool.

What local cons do you attend? The Small Press Expo, Awesome Con, or others? Any comments about attending them? I know you were at Awesome Con - how was the show for you?

I just finished Awesome Con, which turned out good for me. I was a little worried at first, but folk came, brought my books and it was worth my time going too.

I would like to attend the Small Press Expo, which is dependent on their lottery system and my next big show is Four State Comic Con in Hagerstown, MD. You can view all my ‘tour’ dates on my website.

What comic books or strips or webcomics do you read regularly or recommend? Do you have a local store?

My local store is Comic World, it's a great comic book store, before that I used to pick up books at Collectors Corner, sadly they are no longer local to me. As for reading, I read all kinds of books. As you can imagine I am a huge turtles fan, and the Last Ronin stuff is a return to form. 

What's your favorite thing about DC?

DC is an interesting city, I love how walkable it is and you can always find something interesting to do, and it is surprisingly free.

Least favorite?

Traffic, really easy to get into the city, really hard to get out of it.

What monument or museum do you like to go to?

There are some amazing, breathtaking monuments in this town. I enjoy the American Art museum and the National Air and Space Museum, because I am a huge plane nerd.

How about a favorite local restaurant?

Gosh… There are so many good restaurants here.  One of my favorites is Sol Mexican, it's very much a hole-in-the- wall place on H street, but has the best Mexican food ever.

Do you have a website or blog?

Certainly do, you can find all my work and learn more about me at altworldstudios.com

How has the COVID-19 outbreak affected you, personally and professionally?

The lockdown hit just as I finished the Night Guardians Awakenings book, I lost an entire year to market and sell the book and I’ve only just started recovering from that. You would think being locked in place would be a boon to a cartoonist, it really wasn’t because I couldn’t tour my work and lost a lot of momentum.

Thank you for this opportunity, cartooning is hard work, it's fun, get good folk around you, to play with and work with and it becomes more than just cranking out a page. Especially when folk start reading your work, everything takes up a life of its own.