It’s time for the annual Free Comic Book Day on Saturday, May 7th. There are two locations in Mid-Missouri who are participating:
Rock Bottom Comics, 1013 E Walnut St, Columbia, MO
Hastings, 2233 Missouri Blvd, Jefferson City, MO
According to the Free Comic Book Day website, Rock Bottom Comics will be hosting Brad Desnoyer to sign books for fans. He’s the writer of Detective Annual 12 and Batman 80-page Giant 2010.
We recently caught up with local comic artist Jamie Hibdon. This last year he interned for Fanatagraphics, has been featured on the repanleled blog, and has traveled to the Center for Cartoon Studies for portfolio day. He is always working on various comic and illustration projects that you can see on his blog MC.Goodwin’sDoneFor, or on his Flicker page.
What are you working on now comics-wise?
Currently, I’m working on Lingua Franca, a series of strips centered around an extra-terrestrial named Uchu and his adventures on and off planet Earth. I usually confine myself to 4 or 6 panels with these strips, so I can create something a bit irreverent that is very focused on timing. This strip will be ongoing until I get bored or run out of ideas, and is ideal material to be distributed through mini-comics or zines. At the moment, it’s just a matter of accumulating material and finding a good format. Aside from that, there’s a Batman/Zorro story that’s been waiting for its finishing touches for some time, and three upcoming collaborative projects including a one-shot involving some pretty well known characters which I will be inking and co-writing with my cohort at Go For Red Lion, another series based in Columbia written by a good friend with art by me, and lastly a sort of wildcard project with Mary at 2 Smelly Kids That Like Each Other. After I get some headway on these projects, I’m going to venture briefly away from fantasy to work on a short story about deer hunting I just finished scripting. I’m also researching pretty heavily right now for a space story which I hope to submit to the Xeric foundation.
In addition to those projects, I recently submitted a Madman cover to Robert Goodin’s covered blog, and try to submit consistently to Smoke Signal, and plan to Hive and Electric Ant when I get some free time. Whether or not I get rejected, I like the pressure a deadline presents, because I’m a notorious procrastinator.
Last Thursday, Jeni DeFeo took Jefferson City Public School’s teacher of the year award for 2011. She is an advocate of using comics in the classroom, and spoke this last weekend at the Boston Comic Con. In March, she gave a chance to her students at Thomas Jefferson Middle School to talk to comic artist Jeremy Dale via Skype, and KRCG news covered the story:
Chiara, a 7-year-old girl from Columbia, recently won a contest and was drawn into a nationally syndicated Oh Brother! comic strip. The contest solicited parents to send in a funny story about how their kid is a character, with the top prize being an appearance in the comic strip. Oh Brother! was started in June of last year by cartoonists Bob Weber Jr. (Slylock Fox) and Jay Stephens (The Secret Saturdays, Tutenstein, Oddville).
The Columbia Tribune has an in depth profile of webcomic artist Mick Beyers. Beyers celebrated the one year anniversary of his Buster Drake comic this last week, and has relaunched it as a larger weekly comic (Previously he updated the site with smaller strips three times a week.). In addition to the new schedule, his site has a new look and he’s also added Michelle Rivas as colorist for the comic.
Writer Josh Eiserike would like to up the ante for local cartoonist Zac Crockett to finish drawing their series Anyone but Virginia, so Eiserike has started a Kickstarter campaign. The idea is to pay Zac for his time on illustrating Anyone but Virgina #5 (the final issue), and keep him away from other commissioned projects until he finishes the series. If you pledge your support for the series, there’s lots of goodies available for various pledge levels.
Batman is based off of a painting of Mars by Diego Velázquez. The original hangs in the Museo del Prado in Madrid, Spain. The artist (Velázquez) reveals a sense of humor in the painting as the infamous war god is portrayed here not as a strong warrior (as his armor is stripped from him on the floor) but as a weaker more human-like version. Here Mars is not a fighter, but a lover as this is a scene portrayed from Greek mythology where the warrior god has been caught in romance with the love goddess Venus. Rumors state that this painting was also a portrait of King Phillip IV, who was known himself to be the flirtatious type with the ladies. One of the strongest themes in Velásquez’s painting that con-temporized his works was that of banal humanity. The artist was representing the average person as mythological god. In essence Velázquez takes a god from above and brings him down, making him human as he stripped his armor to the floor. Batman attempts to meet Velázquez in the middle, rising from below (A pile of comic books on the floor) to become human.
The “Peanuts” characters we all came to know and love on the comic strip page come to the stage, now in their teens and facing situations far more troublesome than kicking a pesky football. Deemed an “unauthorized parody,” the characters bear different names but also vestiges of very familiar personas. In Royal’s paradigm-bending world, Linus is now on drugs, Pigpen is an abrasive homophobe, Lucy is a pyromaniac, Charlie Brown is finally popular but with a few secrets, and Snoopy is no longer with us, having succumbed to rabies.
The play, written by Bert V. Royal (Easy A) and directed by Bryan Vandevender, will be held at the Corner Playhouse at MU.
Mort Walker has produced his award-winning comic strip, Beetle Bailey, for over fifty years and is one of the nation’s best-known comic artists. Walker grew up in Kansas City and attended the University of Missouri where he invented the character that later became Beetle. This exhibit features several Beetle Bailey cartoons as well as Walker’s popular strip Hi and Lois.
The exhibit started in December and runs through Spring 2011.
Cartoonist Gary Lister is taking the month of November to do the 30 characters in 30 days challenge. Lister explains the challenge:
The goal is to create 30 new characters for each day in November! The roots of this challenge begin at 30characters.com. Over 150 other artists and writers have signed up for this year’s challenge! By the end of November, the site will see the creation of thousands of new characters – everything from fantasy to superheroes/villains to slice-0f-life to characters for a dramatic novel! Please visit 3ocharacters.com and check it all out. It’s too late to participate for this year but according to site admin Tyler James, this is the event’s 2nd year and we have 4 times the participants as last year! Mark it on your calendar for 2011 and come join us then!
This month Mick Beyers has been adding some color to his Buster Drake online comic. It’s quite a shift away from his strips he was creating when we profiled him last summer. The strips he’s been coloring so far have been ones that he finished during the 24 hour comic day event back in October.
After speaking at this year’s Toonfest, cartoonist and musician Guy Gilchrist is coming back to Marceline Mo. on November 27th. According to the Linn County Leader, he’s giving presentations at 4pm and 7pm at the Uptown Theatre, with book signings after each talk. Gilchrist is best known as the artist behind the current Nancy comic strip.
Local creator Scott Ziolko has been busy posting some comics to his flickr site. Go check out the first Owen Steelheart chapter he’s posted. You can also keep up with Ziolko’s tumblr blog to see more of his work.