Showing posts with label let me be frank. Show all posts
Showing posts with label let me be frank. Show all posts
Sunday, May 18, 2014
Sunday, March 16, 2014
LMBF #5 and Claire Melody Preview
Forthcoming from Pikitia Press in April, Sarah Laing's Let Me Be Frank #5 and Bob McMahon's Claire Melody.
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Friday, May 10, 2013
Pikitia Press News
I'm proud to announce the Pikitia Press Blog has been invited by the National Library of New Zealand to be added to the National Digital Heritage Archive which
collects copies of New Zealand websites, plus sites relating to
New Zealand, for the preservation of their historical and research
value.
Toby Morris' Dreamboat Dreamboat.
Toby Morris is an illustrator, designer, art director and comic artist recently returned to New Zealand after 9 years of living and working in Melbourne and Amsterdam. He made his start by drawing and self publishing comics from the age of 13 and currently works as an advertising art director by day and an illustrator at night.Toby's style has roots in the clear line school of comics, but in more recent years has evolved into a looser and simpler but still very graphic look.
Sarah Laing's Let Me Be Frank #1 and #2
James Davidson's Moa Volume One.(Collecting the first three issues of Moa and extras.)
James Davidson, creator of Moa, a comic series set in a distant New Zealand where history and myth collide. An Art teacher by day, James has a passion for sequential art and plans to convert the children of New Zealand to the comic form. With his plucky heroes Possum von Tempsky and Kiwi Pukupuku, James hopes young people will be brought into the world of comics he so enjoyed as a child.
Another mini comic joint from the gutter by M.Emery.
These titles will all be available from the Pikitia Press Store next week.
We'll also have a limited selection of Steve Ditko's contemporary work from Robin Snyder and titles from Milk Shadow Books including Tim Molloy's It Shines It Shakes And Laughs and Mr Unpronounceable Adventures.
Click to enlarge the Chromacon floorplan below. Pikitia Press will be located at H2 and H3. James Davidson and Sarah Laing will be attending the Press tables most of the day, catch them and Toby Morris at Adrian Kinnaird's Best Of New Zealand Comics panel on Level 4 at 9:30am.
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Sarah Laing Interview
Auckland cartoonist Sarah Laing was recently awarded a six-month University of Auckland residency from the Micheal King Writers Centre to work on a graphic novel about Katherine Mansfield that is part-biography, part-memoir and part-fiction. Laing's comics have frequently appeared in Metro magazine and she is also a novelist, graphic designer and mother of three. A prolific output of auto-bio comics have featured on Laing's blog Let Me Be Frank in recent years. I asked her a few questions via email about her upcoming residency.
Are you the first author to receive a Michael King Writers Centre residency to work on a cartooning project?
When did you first experience Katherine Mansfield's writing?
Somebody read me 'The Dolls' House' when I was in primary school and it all came alive for me - she's such a visual writer; I can still picture everything she described. I remember my grandmother telling us that Mansfield's family, the Beauchamps, lived down the road from her family when she was a child in Karori. My first writing prize was for a poem I wrote in 7th form, called 'At the (York) Bay', after Mansfield's story. I spent lots of summer holidays in Eastbourne as that's where my grandmother and great aunts lived. Later I lived in a little lane off Tinakori Road in Wellington, where Mansfield was born. My first book published by Random House was a collection of short stories, and I felt like I was following in a tradition established by her. She really is still the most amazing short story writer, the way that she sets up a scene and then disrupts it entirely. Her writing still feels very contemporary.
Will your
project be purely comics or a combination of prose and cartooning?
This project will be a cartooning
one - a book-length graphic novel. Language does play a big part in my
comics though, and I will be working hard on that. There is so much of
the visual world to explore - Mansfield was stylish - she had that great
bob - and she lived in the 1920s and 1930s, and she hung out with all
the modernists and the Bloomsbury set (Virginia Woolf, D H Lawrence) She
pushed a whole lot of social boundaries, redefined literature, had
lesbian affairs, was the only writer that Virginia Woolf was jealous of.
She moved to France and Germany to try and cure her TB, but she died
young, at the age of 34. Recently I read Kiki of Montparnasse and I think graphic novels are such a great way of bringing historical figures to life.
I
will be given a studio to work in at the top of Mt Victoria in
Devonport. It was built in the late 19th century, so I'm hoping it will
get me into the right era. Also I will have an office at the university
and access to the library, where I hope to read lots about Mansfield. I
think I might have to give lectures at the English department too, so
I'll be hustling comics and graphic novels.
Do you have a projected scope for the size of this project and when you'll complete it?
I'm hoping it will take me no longer than a couple of years. But then I'm still finishing an illustrated novel (to be published in July 2013) that I started almost 4 years ago! I want to explore Mansfield's life, and also I want to couple that with memoir, exploring how my own fascination with her. I imagine that this will be a reasonably big book - 300 pages maybe, and I want to do it all in inks and watercolour. I've recently been reading Brecht Evans and I love his style and his way of story telling. I'm also a fan of Joann Sfar and Vanessa Davis, who also use watercolours a lot.
I'm hoping it will take me no longer than a couple of years. But then I'm still finishing an illustrated novel (to be published in July 2013) that I started almost 4 years ago! I want to explore Mansfield's life, and also I want to couple that with memoir, exploring how my own fascination with her. I imagine that this will be a reasonably big book - 300 pages maybe, and I want to do it all in inks and watercolour. I've recently been reading Brecht Evans and I love his style and his way of story telling. I'm also a fan of Joann Sfar and Vanessa Davis, who also use watercolours a lot.
How was the experience of your short term residency at the Michael King Writers Centre in 2008?
You've indicated on your blog that you've had an interest in doing a longer comics work for a while, did applying for the residency help consolidate commencing this project or was it already underway?
I
thought this would be a good kind of project for a University
writer-in-residence - I'd have access to all the English department
expertise and a library full of books! I also had a lot of other ideas
jostling around - mostly memoir ideas. I still have a whole host of
short stories I want to draw in comic form - I'm hoping to get a few of
those started before the residency begins.
All images copyright Sarah Laing 2012
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