Showing posts with label marc pearson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marc pearson. Show all posts
Sunday, March 30, 2014
Sunday Gems: Pearson + Parrish + Pitt & Painted Cereal Advertising
I like the colour work Katie Parrish has been posting at katieparrishtime.tumblr.com.
Three original Stanley Pitt Flash Gordon illustrations at the Bristol Board. (H/T Comics Reporter)
12 page Marc Pearson comic based on 12 year-old Mei Teimeyer’s DOLF character sheet printed last year in the providence comics consortium's Classic Characters 1.
Tuesday, February 11, 2014
2014 Sticky Zine Fair
Blurry out-of-focus poorly lit photos of some comic people at the 2014 Sticky Zine Fair.
David Blumenstein and Anthony Woodward
People
More People
Andrew Fulton
Ive Sorocuk and Alex E Clark
Jase Harper
David Blumenstein
Myles Loughran
Frank Candiloro
Phil Bentley
Marc Pearson
Michael Fikaris
Simon Hanselmann
Michael Hawkins
Grant Gronewald
Chris O'Brien and Joanna Anderson
Sam Wallman
David C Mahler
Sunday, February 2, 2014
Sunday, January 12, 2014
Sunday Gem: Advice Comics
Need advice? Consult some of Melbourne's top advice columnists via the wonderful medium of comics.
Sally
is due to start high school next year, her mum’s boyfriend often refers
to her as an ‘old soul’ as she feels deeply and completely for all
things. If asked, she identifies as a ‘professional empathe’ which her
grandma feels is very mature. Her two all time favourite things are dogs
and the colour blue.
Mulbert was abandoned mere seconds after his birth. His parents had been expecting a girl, not a moose, and this would not be the last time he would disappoint a group of strangers. To quote his doctor, Mulbert’s life has been “medically regrettable”. He spent his first few years of orphanhood squatting sleeplessly inside a Time Crisis II arcade machine, his tiny hooves perpetually up in bewildered surrender. For a while he tried masquerading as a hypertrichotic Vietnam veteran named ‘Gubers’, but his pension never came through. His roommate recently got him a job at Cosmo’s Deli, which was cool of him, but still Mulbert wakes up most days acheing, sore from modest dreams, wondering how to get from point A to point B if you never learned to spell.
Mr. Ray is one of the most influential and important names in contemporary Australian poetry. His long-awaited new book Aghh, I Don’t Know If I Can Do This Again Vol. 2 is out this Christmas through Mouthwhisp & Whimperman. Ray Lives in Melbourne, Australia with his dog.
Because of what he is, Boyfriend
brings a perspective external to general human experience. But don’t
think he can’t empathize with you or he doesn’t care. The events of your
life mean more to him than anything.
Monday, December 2, 2013
Paper Trail
Boy's Own adventure by Tony Thorne in Demons.
WIP: Jase Harper's Awk Wood.
Preview of Roger Langridge's L'il Ernie.
Preview for new comic from Katie Parrish.
A lengthy post on T.C. Denne’s soft drink and ice cream business by Darian Zam.
Recreation of a mid-1960s hand screen-printed poster for the Peter Pan Dazzle, by Bob Godfrey.
Phil also recently announced the end of his Australian comics publication Word Balloons.
"With the release of A Life in Comics it seems an appropriate time to draw a line under the publication of Word Balloons. It was not my intention from the outset to conclude its run here, but anyone who has been following the magazine’s trajectory will have seen that its frequency has slowed over the years. This is just the natural consequence of producing an work as labour of love. Eventually enthusiasm will run out. I had thought that perhaps at the end of producing the book I would feel energised and be enthusiastic about getting back into WB, but the opposite has been true, so I very much feel it is time to move on"
Back issues of Word Balloons can be purchased from Second Shore.
Emmet O'Cuana reviews Home Brew Vampire Bullets #0.
Eleri Mai Harris made a beautiful comic for the 2013 Caravan of Comics TCAF excursion.
Gallery of New Zealand reprint comics at The Library of American Comics Blog.
The Dominion Post profiles Murray Webb.
Simon Hanselmann's 2013 CAB report.
Daniel Best announces a Keith Chatto ebook biography.
Neale Blanden diagrams the Melbourne Comics Community.
Jem Yoshioka writes about the recent Women's Cartoon colloquium in Wellington.
Sarah Laing's commentary on the Women's Cartoon colloquium.
David Mahler writes about Marc Pearson.
Have you ordered your SAVAGE BITCH?
Stephen A. Russell profiles Art Spiegelman for The Age prior to his recent Australian visit.
Paper Trail masthead courtesy of Toby Morris.
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