I'm tabling here with friends, come check out the inaugural year of the Grand Comics Fest at Bird River Studios in Williamsburg. Should be lots of fun.
In other news, I just finished the first of two one-hour interview transcripts--27 pages! It's awesome. But I can't see straight at the moment.
Thursday, March 28, 2013
Drawings from Hattiesburg
I spent last week in Hattiesburg, Mississippi with my friend Nathan Galster. I had the opportunity to finally grasp why Hattiesburg means so much to him, and meet a lot of the friends he's made there. He very generously sat down with me for two hours, answering my questions for the next installment of his story. It's going to be really lovely, I can't wait!
Here's a map Nathan drew for me of Downtown Hattiesburg, where he spends a lot of time.
I did a few small sketchbook pages while I visited Nathan and his friends around town.
Nathan took a picture of me enjoying BBQ at Rose's BBQ:
Here's a map Nathan drew for me of Downtown Hattiesburg, where he spends a lot of time.
(Map by Nathan Galster) |
I did a few small sketchbook pages while I visited Nathan and his friends around town.
Mason, Katherine, glassware. |
Azaleas in the kitchen, bearded menfolk at T-Bones. |
Nathan in the kitchen, and part of his camera. |
Students and writers at T-Bones. |
Luke Winslow King Trio. |
Nathan, Mason, and Russell at The Thirsty Hippo. |
Free jazz. |
Nathan took a picture of me enjoying BBQ at Rose's BBQ:
(Photo courtesy Nathan Galster.) |
A War, Before and After - Home Fires
I highly recommend making a beeline for the New York Times' Home Fires blog, where several talented veteran writers I'm honored to know have posted some great personal accounts from the Iraq War, in observance of the ten year anniversary of the invasion. Read on here.
So excited for and proud of the writers featured in this piece--way to go Josiah, Maurice, Jake, Mariette, Roy, Matt G., Matt M, Phil, and all the rest!
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Interview on The Beat
Dre Grigoropol interviewed me for The Comics Beat, check it out here. I talk about the Joe Bonham Project, comics I like, and awesome veterans I've met. Thanks Dre!
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
The Cartoonist in Comics @ Housing Works Cafe
There's a fabulous panel discussion happening tonight at Housing Works Cafe on Crosby Street at 7pm. Get the details on the speakers here.
Monday, March 4, 2013
Ingrid Rios' Untitled Comic Project
I had the opportunity to read the first five pages of Ingrid Rios' memoir about her life-threatening eating disorder. Her drawing is incredible, she's come so far artistically in the years I've known her, and the story is powerful. It is emotionally honest, raw, and well-done. You must read this.
Page 2 of Ingrid Rios' comic, via her Tumblr. |
Sketches from the Studio: The Decisions
Nichole talking, page 1 study |
So sweet! Nichole in the Army National Guard |
Smoke plume from the base in Iraq |
Page 1 thumbnails |
Page 2 thumbnails |
Page 3 thumbnails (my favorite pages) |
Page 4 thumbnails |
I drew some character studies and thumbnails for a short, four page story I'm working on about my friend Nichole, who served in the Army National Guard in Iraq. It'll be part of a zine I'm making of shorter (4 page) veteran stories for the Brooklyn Zine Fest in April.
To Build A Home
Hang Dai v2.0, March 2013. Photo: Dean Haspiel |
I moved to a new studio space in Gowanus with some cool cartoony folks on Friday. Hang Dai version 2.0 desks left to right: Christa Cassano, Dean Haspiel, Fred Harper, Seth Kushner, myself, Greg Benton. Not pictured: microwave. The building is really beautiful and already feels like home. I did a lot of drawing over the weekend and rode my bike there on Saturday. The sky is open in that part of Brooklyn, there's weird overpasses, train trestles covered in black gauze, and little brick apartments with tiny porches.There's also 99 cent chicken in a parking lot nearby (which sounds as magical as it actually is, no sarcasm). The trains go by above our heads and sound the way an airplane sounds when you're inside it and it's taking off, but even softer. It's interestingly soothing.
To Build a Home - Cinematic Orchestra with Patrick Watson
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