Working from Home
Here is a comic I made for the newest issue of Broken Pencil Magazine (#60, summer 2013).
Note: I ignored most of my own advice to get this thing done.
Here is a comic I made for the newest issue of Broken Pencil Magazine (#60, summer 2013).
Note: I ignored most of my own advice to get this thing done.
The next issue of Last Mountain is finally here!
Featuring three new stories, this minicomic has domesticated garden gnomes, teenage boys searching for faeries, and a bus full of people-watchers.
Last Mountain is debuting at the 2013 Chicago Alternative Comics Expo. I’ll be at table 52, so be sure to come say hi.
For those of you unable to travel, I’ll have copies available here when I get back. But really, you should go to Chicago. It’s nice there.
I’ll be at TCAF this weekend for the first time, so come say hi if you’re in Toronto. I’m tabling with Joseph Lambert, Sean Ford, and Alex Kim at table 160.
Here’s the stuff I’ll have for sale:
Brokenface – A new 12-page mini about that guy with no face who shows up in my strips sometimes. He has no face, and wants one.
Irene #2 – Anthology featuring work by Andy Warner, Bailey Sharp, Beth Hetland, dw, Jonah McFadzean, Marc Bell, Omar Khouri, Sean K, Sophie Yanow, and me.
Irene is edited by Andy Warner, dw, and myself. It’s a rainbow of color, a dream of beauty, a wild bust of lafter ‘an regular hot stuff.
Last Mountain #0 – Collection of three of my short stories. The next issue will debut at CAKE in June.
Ghost Rabbit – A comic about a ghost rabbit, a rabbit, and a little girl.
I think that’s it. See you there?
Recently, my work was included in issue 58 of Stripburger, a Slovenian comics anthology. I’ve been hoping to get into Stripburger for some time, so I was thrilled that the editors wanted to run “The Best Donald“, a story I originally did for the Lies Grown-Ups Told Me anthology.
They also asked me to write a little essay for the issue. Ostensibly, this was to explain the word game featured in my comic, but the editors encouraged me to write about my larger relationship with cartooning. They even translated the piece into Slovenian!
You can read the English version of the essay below. And don’t forget to pick up a copy of Stripburger online or at fine comic shops near you– there is tons of great stuff in this magazine!
Amazingly, I had some spare time this week, so I thought I’d put together a little Christmas card. I often draw my wife and I as little kids for cards because relatives think it’s adorable, but this is the first time we’ve visited the Peanuts universe.
Whatever you call your things this time of year, I hope you have a happy one.
If you’re in Montreal this weekend, you should come down to Expozine and buy a ton of amazing small press work! Here are the details:
EXPOZINE 2012
NOVEMBER 17 & 18
12pm – 6pm, 5035 St-Dominique
(Église Saint-Enfant Jésus, between St-Joseph & Laurier, near Laurier Métro)
Free admission.
I’ll be there with some cartoonist pals, selling comics and probably eating a samosa or ten.
Also, come to Librairie Drawn & Quarterly tonight for the Expozine Launch event: a panel discussion and screening of scenes from Cartoon College, a documentary about The Center for Cartoon Studies:
EXPOZINE LAUNCH EVENT: CARTOON COLLEGE!
Friday November 16 at the Drawn & Quarterly Bookstore
211 Bernard W., 7 – 10p.m., free admission.
Join us for a screening of select scenes from the brand new documentary, Cartoon College! Each fall The Center for Cartoon Studies in nearby Vermont invites 20 aspiring cartoonists and graphic novelists for a no-holds-barred education in comics.
Several will be on hand to discuss their experiences: Jon Chad Dakota McFadzean Sophie Goldstein Julie Delporte Jai Granofsky
Finally, here are the comics I’ll have at my table for you to buy…
My good pal dw will be at the Brooklyn Comics and Graphics Festival this weekend, selling copies of Irene, as well as his new book Abzernad, which is being put out the wonderful Hic and Hoc!
dw and I used to talk extensively about work, ritual, and cartooning during grad school. He’s also a fellow daily drawer, with an overwhelming and dizzying aesthetic. Be sure to drop by the Hic and Hoc table (U34) and say hi to him.
Oh, and while you’re here, check out this extensive interview with dw, Andy Warner, Rachel Dukes and me on Bleeding cool.
Go! Go to the festival!
This weekend, I drew my thousandth Daily comic.
Well, that’s not totally true. I’ve mentioned before that I tried doing a daily strip back in 2007, but I only kept it up for a couple of months.
And when I was in high school, I would do a haiku with a drawing before bed every night (usually they were about dreams I had, or how no one understands).
Regardless, as the number of Dailies crawled closer to the one thousand mark, I’ve been reflecting on the exercise– not only how it has affected my comics, but how it’s impacted my approach to work. This seems like as appropriate a time as any to write down some of those thoughts.
I’ve always romanticized the idea of doing something every day. Somewhere in my parents’ house I know there’s a box filled with diaries containing fewer than three entries in each one. (Note to my parents, if you’re reading this: stay out of any boxes you find containing diaries).
The thing is: I’ve always been lousy at keeping up these self-imposed exercises. I can do something if someone tells me to, but when I try to enforce my own deadlines and goals it used to be much more of a struggle. When I go back and read those strips from 2007, the primary theme seems to be one of frustration. There’s a lot of false-starts and self-chastising for forgetting to do strips, or for simply not being good enough. Like many young artists, my ambitions were much higher than my skill level.
When I started drawing daily strips again in 2010, it was more of an act of desperation. I was working a full-time office job to save money for school, and that left very little time to make comics. I was terrified that my development would come to a halt. With my only goal being to put pen to paper once a day, rather than to get published by D&Q immediately, the exercise seemed a little more manageable.
Almost three years later, The Dailies have become increasingly rewarding. It used to feel like an obligation, but it’s become something I get excited about almost every day. Almost.
Anyway, I’d like to share some of my thoughts on the act of keeping a daily strip, so here we go:
Ostensibly, I started this exercise for myself, hoping to become a better cartoonist. But I wouldn’t post them every week if I didn’t want people to see them. I can’t fully describe how much it means to me that people take the time to read my strips. Whether you read them every week, or have just read a strip or two here and there, I truly appreciate it.
See you next week.
It’s been a busy summer, friends. Since leaving Vermont in May, I haven’t been in one place for more than a few weeks at a time. But now I’m back in Montreal, and ready for comics-related action. And the first order of business, now that I’m no longer a transient vagabond, is to pack my bags and hit the road for the Small Press Expo!
I’ll be tabling once again with my good pals Beth Hetland, Pat Barrett, and Josh Kramer. Here’s a selection of my wares:
This new anthology is edited by Andy Warner, dw, and myself. It features work by the three of us, as well as Jon Fine, Rachel Dukes, and Nate Wootters. There’s laughter, tears, and other strange curiosities. Here’s a sample from my new story, Skeletons:
I’ve also put together new editions of some of my past minicomics:
Features three short stories I did over the last year. You’ll see everything from disconcertingly invisible enemies, to high school anxiety, to cowboys.
This comic debuted at MoCCA 2012, and the second edition features a new cover with 120% more bird close-ups.
The story is about a small town, a fracturing family, and a flock of birds whose unusual behaviour permeates and intersects with the lives of the townspeople.
This comic has been making the rounds since it came out. It made The Comics Journal’s list of The Top 30 Minicomics of 2011, and was nominated for the Gene Day Award for Self-Publishers at this year’s Joe Shuster Awards (which will be happening this very weekend in Montreal while I’m at SPX!).
It’s a story about memory, death, childhood, and cartoon rabbits.
So be sure to check out all the great stuff we have at table E3!
And that’s just one quarter of one table! Now imagine a gigantic room filled with tables, and amazing comics made by wonderful people. It’s going to be a great weekend, friends. Can’t wait to see you there…