Tuesday, January 15, 2008

2008: All a-Blur...

The cover to Blur, Volume 2; cover painting/collage by yours truly, cover design by Jon-Mikel Gates (copyright 2008 SR Bissette)

I've been writing non-stop for two full weeks! It's been a productive stretch, but with the break between Center for Cartoon Studies semesters almost over, I'm feeling pretty woozy.

Currently on the keyboards: CCS syllabus revisions; ongoing work (transcription, fact and trivia checks) on The Neil Gaiman Companion; a massive essay Rick Veitch commissioned from me for the upcoming King Hell definitive edition of Brat Pack, an article which has been as research-heavy as the book on Neil (I'll excerpt some of that piece here, down the road); and -- at last -- Blur volumes 2, 3 and 4.

Jon-Mikel Gates just sent me his cover designs for Blur volumes 2 and 3, and I love 'em. With Jon-Mikel's considerable help, the old digital files for those three volumes are now on my laptop, and we'll be getting volume 2 to Jean-Marc Lofficier at Black Coat Press early in February, with volumes 3 & 4 to follow pretty quickly. It's foot-noting, formatting and proof-reading left to do, with a bit of cross-checking of my VMag collection to ensure correct references to some of the original publication dates of the "Video Views" columns reprinted in the Blur series. When all is said and done, it'll offer over 1000 pages of my writings on movies, video and DVD -- I hope some of you indulge the purchase of the complete collection. Announcements and release and ordering info to follow, here, when the time arrives!

I'm also drawing again, and will have some announcements about that soon.

But first, I have to finish my revised syllabus for this semester's CCS classes... a busy January, to say the least!

Note: For your peace of mind, a Middle East trip update:
  • While Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said this absolutely stupid shit earlier today (especially given the context of her and her President's and Administration's actions of the past 6 years!),
  • her beloved President also said even stupider shit today that tried to pretend this isn't happening. No, no, the U.S. economy is fine. We're fine. America's largest bank had the largest quarterly deficit in its 196-year history and the U.S. dollar is at an all-time low and per-barrel prices of oil have just about doubled since this time last year, but we're fine.


  • Have a titanic Tuesday...

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    Saturday, November 03, 2007

    This, That, Paddywhack, Give That Cat a Bone

    Just wrapped up my part of a roundhouse discussion with Tim Lucas, Kim Newman and Shane Dallmann about Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino's Grindhouse for an upcoming issue of Video Watchdog, and more work on the Christopher Golden/Hank Wagner book on my amigo Neil Gaiman, which I'll be sharing some co-author credit on. Thanks to Chris's busy schedule, I'll be the one joining Hank in a couple of weeks for a weekend visit/interview session with Neil, too, which I'm greatly looking forward to. Haven't seen Neil face-to-face for quite a stretch, though we've stayed in touch over the years.

    That said, the Center for Cartoon Studies is keeping me busy, too, and oh, the folks I've met and get to work with, primary among them the incredible CCSers themselves -- man, I love seeing/reading their comics! Anyhoot, a lively week is ahead: CCS hosts Lynda Barry this week, who's coming in and giving a full two-day intensive workshop for the students. Whew! I'll be dining with Lynda and alumni Colleen Frakes Monday night, which should be big fun. Marge and I are having breakfast with Colleen and her partner and fellow alumni Jon-Mikel Gates this AM, just socializing; life is good.

    Fellow CCSer (and among the school's funding co-founders) Peter Money is making his own waves with his new tome, Che, and as a publisher with exiled Arab poet Sinan Antoon's The Baghdad Blues.
  • Peter's latest poetry/publishing venture landed a piece in Time Magazine -- kudos to Sinan and to Peter!

  • As for last Saturday's White River Junction Halloween Parade, in which CCS figured mightily, Main Street Museum's David Fairbanks Ford just shared these links with us all hereabouts, sporting photos from the parade shot and posted by Matt Bucy and Dennis Grady,
  • here and
  • here. Enjoy!


  • And, for your Saturday AM amusement, CCS freshman Jeff Mumm shared this link with us all, and you might dig it, too: a venue for reworked Garfield strips, sans Garfield's dialogue.

  • As Jeff put it, "There's a fun strip called "Arbuckle" in which cartoonists send in comics based on Garfield strips, removing the dialogue by Garfield (to see the world through Jon's eyes, considering that it's canon that he doesn't understand what Garfield says) and rendering it in whatever style they deem appropriate. I did one a couple years ago and thought it might be fun if people wanted to do a strip for it or even just to read through it a bit, because it's a pretty funny concept. Because really, who doesn't like making fun of Garfield?"

    Check it out; click backwards from the lead page strip using the little arrows beneath it, and read the source Garfield strip for each via the link. Consider it a morning laxative, folks, if nothing else...

    Have a great Saturday, one and all...

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    Tuesday, October 02, 2007

    October Offerings at the Center for Cartoon Studies:
    Dead Man's Hand & Doonesbury Delights

    As noted in the last two posts, I wrapped up my own six-page contribution to the upcoming CCS-spawned anthology Dead Man's Hand, brainchild of CCS seniors and the portmanteau's editorial team of Christopher Warren, Denis St. John, Matthew Young, Morgan Pielli and alumni Jon-Mikel Gates.

    Chris (who did the production on my son Daniel's and my own "An Alphabet of Zombies" for the Accent UK Zombies anthology) scanned, cleaned up and prepped my story for publication last night, so I'll be posting a page or two of the story here starting tomorrow.

    In the meantime,
  • here's the link to the Dead Man's Hand site -- updates and much, much more art to follow, as the team gets the book together for its SPX debut!

  • Here's the SPX link for more info on the convention itself --
  • -- and note that CCS once again has a table at SPX. SPX will be held in Bethesda, MD on October 12th and 13th; CCS will be at table W22, near the door and registration table. I won't be there (my convention days are over), but that's where you'll find Dead Man's Hand and many, many other great CCS student/artist/faculty creations!
    _________

    Garry Trudeau Visits CCS in October...


  • Garry Trudeau is coming to CCS later this month -- and here's the promised link with the particulars!

  • "Garry Trudeau, creator of the Pulitzer Prize winning political cartoon Doonesbury, is making a rare public appearance on behalf of The Center for Cartoon Studies in White River Junction Vermont on October 22, 2007..." Seating is limited, so if you're in the area and you're a Trudeau/Doonesbury fan, don't wait to snag your ticket ASAP!

    Furthermore, Garry has generously donated a Doonesbury original (pictured above, from his recent spring 2007 'Vermont Town Meeting' sequence) to the CCS fundraising effort; CCS will be actively promoting this online auction beginning October 17th, but here's the current announcement:

    EBAY AUCTION
    ORIGINAL COMIC BY GARRY TRUDEAU

    Original comic art donated by Mr. Trudeau to be auctioned online. The piece comes professionally framed in a black metal casing and white and black matting, compliments of Junction Frame Shop.

    Size of original framed:
    12 1/2" x 22 1/4"

    DATE AUCTION BEGINS: Wednesday, October 17
    DATE AUCTION CLOSES: Tuesday, October 23

    A direct link will be posted here on October 17.
    You will be able to click here to place your bid!


    Ditto from here. More info as we get closer to Garry's visit...
    __________

    The leaves are changing color here in Vermont, and it's fall, folks. As an email from Jamaica (VT) amigo HomeyM notes this AM, "All leaves have embedded in them three pigments: chlorophyll (green colors), carotenoid (the yellow, orange and brown colors), and anthocyanins (red, blue and purple colors). During the long days of summer, chlorophyll is continuously being produced, resulting in green leaves. As the days get shorter and cooler, chlorophyll production slows and eventually ceases. When this occurs, the carotenoids and anthocyanins present in the leaves are unmasked and show their colors. The timing of these colors varies by elevation and by tree species." It all adds up to the trippy Vermont autumns I love, just by opening my eyes every single morning!
    ___________

    That's all for today, have a terrific Tuesday... "Tenderfoot" peek tomorrow, and more!

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    Friday, August 24, 2007

    BLUR Vol. 1 Has Arrived!

    Still a bit bleary-eyed, unable to deal with computers or even watch TV due to the lingering blur of pinkeye (see my Wednesday post, below), after Marj headed out to work yesterday at 7 AM I drove myself down to our remaining two rented storage spaces. Determined to complete the final heavy task of summer, and knowing the cool temperatures and overcast skies of this week were coming to an end, I shouldered myself (and my car) into the four-hour chore of consolidating two storage spaces into one -- the smaller (and cheaper monthly rental) of the two. I worked up a solid sweat and got it done, feeling better for the physical exercise and duty done.

    With my car carrying the second of two loads of boxes of books and comics I shuttled home, and greatly relieved that it would be the last such haul for this month, I was instantly rewarded with some goodies in the mailbox -- and a surprise delivery from UPS propping open our front screen door.

    My first batch of copies of Blur Volume 1 had arrived!

    It looks mighty fine, and orders are now being filled --
  • -- so order without further ado from Black Coat Press, pronto!
  • (Black Coat Press has a number of new releases available now, so take a moment to explore the site.)

  • There's nothing like holding a new book you've had a hand in, much less holding it for the first time. It felt -- feels -- good.

    I spent a couple of hours scouring the text and wincing over the few things I wish I'd done differently, but it's still a cool little book and an accomplishment. As noted before, this is the first of four volumes of Blur, collecting all my weekly newspaper "Video Views" columns written and published 1999-2001; the second volume is about done, and CCS alumni and cover designer Jon-Mikel Gates is showing me Volume 2's cover this weekend, so there's already more on the way.

    Here's the full cover spread, designed by Jon-Mikel Gates;
  • Jon-Mikel's website, bio, specs, blog and more awaits you here!

  • All this does is whet my appetite for the archival projects ahead. After completing Blur's four volumes, I'll plunge into Gooseflesh, an illustrated book series collecting all my genre articles, essays and interviews from the past two decades. With the winter months, I'll also be forging ahead with the final draft of We Are Going to Eat You! for FAB Press, and other projects, all the while savoring the third year teaching at The Center for Cartoon Studies.

    More news later; I'm catching up on the two days+ of pinkeye aversion to the computer, including pressing workloads, so I'll be back here later today. I'm doing much better, thanks, though the eye drop treatment continues and I'm not sleeping much as yet.

    Have a great Friday, and check in later today and this weekend for more on Blur... the books, not the infection.

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    Saturday, August 11, 2007

    The Blur is Here! S.R.Bissette's Blur Vol. 1 is Out!
    Place Your Order Now...
    ___________________

    Note: I posted at length last night -- see below -- on recent international news; please see that post, below, and
  • this is the latest news story (as of 7 AM this morning) I find on the issue.
  • Small comfort to know the Securities and Exchange Commission is examining major Wall Street banks to determine their vulnerability to home-loan defaults,
  • when this completely dubious bon mot is immediately floated (which President Bush will no doubt conflate); note, per usual, that any truly accurate figure for our national deficit must also add the amount of the national surplus Bush inherited and immediately squandered.
  • But enough on this; I have a personal announcement to share. Just wanted to be sure you read my Friday evening post, if you're so inclined, and that I posted a bit of followup this AM.

    But here's the topic of the day for me...
    ___________________

  • Blur Vol. 1 is now available -- as of today! -- and you can place your order immediately, via this link.

  • This first of four volumes launches my first major archiving of my past work as writer and artist. Dumb luck (and time-limited) access to past digital files, and my own s-l-o-w-l-y growing computer skills, determined that the archiving of my weekly "Video Views" columns (1999-2001) was the first project to see print. This is just the beginning, and I hope I can count on your interest and support throughout -- starting with your order of Blur Vol. 1.

    While I know all of you would much rather see my comics work back in print first and foremost, the massive project of sorting, restoring, scanning, digitally restoring, and preparing my 30+ years of comics story and illustration work has yet to begin. This will take, quite literally, years, and hopefully I'll find partners in this venture as the archiving projects gain their respective critical mass. Thanks to Rick Veitch's own ongoing archival restoration and republication of his past work, a wee bit of our collaborative work (as Creative Burnouts) is beginning to enjoy restoration and reprint, beginning with Rick's spring 2007 release of Shiny Beasts
  • (which you can order, here and now, via this link from the good folks at PaneltoPanel.net, with the limited edition signature plate signed by Rick, Alan Moore and yours truly -- likely the last place on Planet Earth you'll be able to get those three signatures together in this lifetime!).

  • More of the Creative Burnouts material is already in Rick's hands, and that restoration and reprint process is underway; in time, our collaborative work will all be back in print.

    But I still have three decades worth of art, stories, and much writing to resurrect -- all while creating new work! -- and to that end, Blur Volume 1 marks the true beginning.

    Each volume of Blur is over 250 pages. That's a lot of solid reading; once completed, this four-volume set will offer you over one thousand pages of my writings on film, and that's just the tip of the iceberg. Every volume of Blur is jam-packed with my extensive reviews, articles, interviews and essays on the many feature films, anime, animated features and other (e.g., Maya Deren's films, etc.) landmarks of the video marketplace between 1999 and 2001. These were the key transitional years between videocassettes and DVDs, which includes the first-ever release of a film on DVD before its vhs release (Detroit Rock City was the fateful, forgettable title setting that benchmark). These were also the vital years in which the truly independent production and distribution of features were being co-opted by the major studios; the rise into mainstream culture of the long-fringe-market Christian feature films (via the boxoffice hit The Omega Code, the first Christian production to pop up on Variety's weekly top boxoffice grosses); the definitive embrace of anime by the major studios (via Warner Bros. theatrical release of Pokemon and Disney's initial manhandling of Hayao Miyazaki's masterpiece Princess Mononoke) -- all that, too, is here, in the Blur volumes. That makes these volumes further invaluable in charting a major period of Millennial change in our pop cultural landscape, preserving the ebb and flow and shifts in a way few other books have.

    It's my plan to be publishing all my extensive writing on horror films, comics, and begin the archiving and reprinting of my past comics works, too, within the next couple of years. That I can do so at all is thanks primarily to the help and support I've received from my wife Marjory, my beloved friends Jean-Marc and Randy L'officier at Black Coat Press, and everyone at the Center for Cartoon Studies, primarily Jon-Mikel Gates at this critical juncture.

  • I'm happy to see Blur has already attracted some unsolicited notice online,
  • noting of course that Tim Lucas is an old friend; still, the post was unsolicited, and bodes well. (Curious aside: Tim notes Blur in the context of Bryan Senn's new McFarland book A Year of Fear; the cover collage image of all four Blur volumes is composed in part from imagery and textures lifted from elements of Mike Dobbs and my long-defunct A Year in Fear 1992 16-month horror calender, published by Tundra back in the day. Mere synchronicity, but still, amusing to this ol' codger.).

    In any case, my first 20 copies of Blur are en route to me now from Black Coat and Lightning Press, and I'll be posting review copies later this week. But don't wait -- please, order from Black Coat Press knowing your copy could be in hand this month, too!

    The full wraparound cover; collage/painting by yours truly, cover design by Jon-Mikel Gates; thanks, Jon! Covers to Blur Vol. 2-4 to be posted soon.

  • Note that Blur is only one of the many new titles available from Black Coat Press, an international publisher worthy of your attention and support.

  • More on the Blur book series -- including tantalizing excerpts -- in the days to come. Hey, I'm a shameless huckster, folks, but I'll be sure to keep the ballyhoo always entertaining and break it up amongst other posts of interest.

    Have a great Saturday, one and all!

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    Monday, August 06, 2007

    Monday Musings

    Hey, check out yesterday's post if you're in the VT/NH/MA area -- these tickets are begging for a home for tonight's Emmy Lou Harris concert, and Sparky really means 'best offer.' Damn, wish we could go!
    ___________________

    Governor's Dorm, Johnson State College -- no, you can't see the subfloor in this shot. We were beneath notice then, and whoever is there now is likely living the subterranean life, too.

    An explanation of the poem concluding yesterday's post:

    In my two years at Johnson State College, where I met Sparky (aka Mark Whitcomb), Peter Jillson dubbed all we 'subhumans' (habitants of the sub-floor at Governor's dorm) with ludicrous nicknames.

    I was knighted "Roadside Frog," which some of my JSC amigos still use when contacting me; the heart-rending poem was Sparky's moving testimonial to the Roadside moniker.

    Composed under the influence? Oh, heaven forbid!
    ____________________

    Met with CCS grads and good friends Jon-Mikel Gates and Colleen Frakes here at our happy home last night, savoring some coffee and conversation on Marge's new screened-in backyard porch while Jon-Mikel showed me his cover design for S.R. Bissette's Blur, Volume 1 (1999-2000), coming soon from Black Coat Press. This initial cover determines the template for all four volumes, so Jon's properly focused on this first cover to wrestle with the needs of the entire series.

    Jon's working with two collage-paintings I completed last year for the project, designed to work as four interlocking covers. The challenge for me, given the current corporate proprietary monitoring of images from their films, was to evoke the 'blur' of three years of video/DVD viewing (and the content of the books) without utilizing recognizable (read: actionable) imagery from any specific films. I worked with abstractions of 35mm film and TV monitor frames, each containing evocative teases of organs, images, textures and motion. Jon-Mikel has embraced the challenge admirably, and I'm happy with the initial results.

    It's looking good, and we'll be posting the cover (and that of the subsequent three volumes) here as soon as Jon's wrapped up the design work.
  • Here's the current info/order site at Black Coat Press; these are fat reads at 250+ pages per volume, collecting all my 1999-2001 weekly film and video reviews; more news as the covers are completed and books are ready to ship!
  • _____________________

    The summer has hardly been 'down time' amid the Center for Cartoon Studies cartoonists community.

    Even as we lowly faculty are working through our class plans for the coming semester, the CCSers are already hard at work on a new anthology for the upcoming SPX this fall.

    Title: Dead Man's Hand. Sample logo (by Cayetano Garza aka Cat) above -- not the final logo per se, but the first shot (pun intended) as work is underway on a variety of western tales. Jon-Mikel started our powwow last night by showing me a sketchbook exercise for his story. The storytelling muscles are flexing, the fingers twitching over pencils and pens, eyes narrowing for the showdown --

    More news when everyone is damned good and ready to announce something; I've already said too much!
    ________________________

    Let's wind down today with another Sparky poetic concoction from the mid-'70s JSC years, to be read with Henry Gibson's Laugh-In vocal delivery ringing in your head:

    Detente Or Debutante

    Detente or Debutante
    That is the question
    One says
    Put away your missiles
    The other says
    Is that a rocket
    In your pocket

    Spark


    (an ode to Henry Gibson)

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    Wednesday, June 20, 2007

    Morning Amid MoCCA Mania...

    Jon-Mikel Gates's cover art for the I Know Joe Kimpel catalogue, debuting at MoCCA on Saturday. BTW, that's a spot-on rendition of CCS's Colodny classroom, and all the Joe Kimpel crew!

    The MoCCA mania continues, with the first wave of CCSers heading south to NYC today while others scramble on their respective projects. It's a heady couple of days ahead, all cresting when MoCCA opens its doors on June 23.


    Among the drama is some unfortunate trauma: Sean Morgan, whose anthology Capsule debuts at MoCCA (featuring the story "Area Stoned" with uncanny alien art by Sean and yours truly), broke his left hand Monday night! Man, talk about crap timing!

    Still, Sean shoulders on -- fortunately, he's right-handed (actually, he says, ambidexterous), and he's wrapping up work on Capsule today and getting it to the printer in the nick of time. If all goes well, Sean will be at MoCCA with comic, cooler (his cast has an attachment to a cooler to circulate cold water through the cast to keep swelling down) and his usual cool, and be kind to him when you see him, folks. Oh, and buy a copy of Capsule, natch.


    The first Tyrant page in a decade, awaiting scanning last Friday night -- debuting in Sundays on, uh, Saturday. Don't miss it!

    OK, interview to follow later today -- just wanted to be sure to get this quick update online this AM as early as possible.
    ________________

    En route to his pending veto of yet another stem-research bill, President Bush says it's "immoral" to use tax funding to "destroy human life..." What the fuck is the Iraq War??

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    Monday, June 04, 2007

    Tragic Relief, Indeed!

    Cover: Tragic Relief #1 by Colleen Frakes;
    interview with Colleen awaits you, below!


    Morning, all -- and a rainy Monday it is too, here in Vermont.

    A big happy birthday to Bruce Dern, my favorite character actor next to the late, great Strother Martin and the still very-much-with-us Eli Wallach. Bruce Dern home film fest to follow!

    Tomorrow, I'll write a bit about Ichii and Me -- yep, I'm part of a new DVD release, in stores and online everywhere, and I'll blarf about it here.
    ______________

    If you love Ichii, you must have savored the Republican debate on Fox News last week.

    Marge and I watched the Democratic debates last night (on CNN and our local New Hampshire public television station), and it was engaging and enlightening -- far superior to the race-to-fascist-bottom of the Fox News Republican debate, which I found completely alarming and discouraging. If one of these Republican shits denounces the likes of Hostel II after the verbal torture-fest they all (with the notable exception of Senator McCain) reveled in on Fox News's debate, they'll have a lot to answer for. When Mitt Romney boasted he'd double the size of Guantanamo, my gorge rose (along with my blood pressure).

    If anyone had written a sf novel 15 years ago proffering the reality of the Fox News Republican debate, word for word, I simply wouldn't have believed it -- much less believed it possible. What a sad, sick time we live in. It'll be interesting to see what tomorrow night's NH Republican debate brings after the rabid fear-mongering of the Fox News event. Did the network or the candidates set the tenor, tone and content? We'll soon know.

    Anyhoot, The Democratic debate was an oasis of rational conversation by comparison, though Wolf Blitzer (the moderator)'s ongoing rewording of audience questions into increasingly polarized, extremist 'what if?' scenarios and 'raise your hands if you agree that' reductionism was a sad reflection of the Fox News polemics and loopy 'what if?' questions. The candidates last night finally refused to engage in such nonsense, and the debate was the richer for it.

    I'm still stunned, though, that no one is truly calling Bush on the budget issue -- that is, the ongoing refusal to incorporate war funding in the annual Federal budget, making the continuing spectacle of these sidelined war funding bills such a hot spot.

    Not once did the Democratic candidates articulate this simple fact -- thus, the core issue (the Bush Administration's refusal to include the cost of war in the annual Federal budget) again gets a slide, and the Bush Administration's ploy of 'blame game' nonsense is sustained. Why do the Democrats fall for it? Because they do, the American public does.

    Call a spade a spade: THE WAR COST HAS BEEN SIDELINED since the war began in Afghanistan in 2002. This is Bush's tactic; let him eat it. We're sick to death of it, and the only thing more disgusting and tiresome than this ongoing spectacle is the Democratic Party's continual rising-to-the-bait of the President's ploy. Colbert Report got it right: it's identical to Charlie Brown falling for Lucy's football stunt every goddamned year.

    Well, enough on that for now. Let's look to a brighter immediate future:
    __________________

    It's time for lift-off --


    As mentioned Friday, the upcoming MoCCA comics convention in New York City (June 23 and 24) will offer a venue for you to meet, greet and sample the Center for Cartoon Studies graduates, artists, students and their creations.

    As Robyn Chapman notes, “The CCS table will be B5, a prime location near the front door of the first room,” and it’s my understanding that at least one group of CCSers may have another table, too, at the show.


    In anticipation of that event, I’m going to offer a series of interviews here with some of the artists -- students and our first-ever graduates! -- who are planning on being at MoCCA with their comics, mini-comics and zines for sale.

    These will be spread over the weeks to come until the weekend of the 23rd. These will also give you a peek at some of the artists who are part of the CCS scene -- and please, don’t forget you don’t have to wait for MoCCA or (if you’re not going) some other event. Many of the comics you’ll be seeing previewed and discussed in this series of blog interviews are
  • available right now, at the I Know Joe Kimpel site; check ‘em out, check some out!


  • First up, recent CCS pioneer class graduate Colleen Frakes -- take it away, Colleen!
    _________________


    Colleen Frakes: Tragic Relief

    SB: Colleen where do you herald from?

    COLLEEN FRAKES: I'm from Washington State, born in Walla Walla, but the family moved a lot within the state so I grew up all over the place. When I was 12 we settled down for a while on McNeil Island, where I lived until my second year of college.

    SB: When did you first get into comics -- as a reader?

    COLLEEN: I first got into comic books in the second grade. I was out of school for a few weeks with chicken pox, and spent almost the entire time on the couch reading my dad's old issues of Mad. This led to some benevolent family member getting me a subscription. Beyond Mad, I didn't read many comics until I got to college. Living on an island, even things like newspapers were hard to come by.

    SB: You’re among the CCS graduates who had already graduated from college before you became part of CCS’s pioneer class --

    COLLEEN: I graduated from the Evergreen State College in 2004 (other cartoonist alumni include Lynda Barry, Craig Bartlet, Charles Burns, Matt Groening, David Craig Simpson, Megan Kelso, Tatiana Gill, and many more). Evergreen is a big hippie school -- no grades, departments, tests, majors, requirements, etc. I went there planning on becoming a history teacher, but ended up taking mostly book arts and writing classes.

    Colleen Frakes; photo by Elizabeth Chasalow, 2006

    SB: What got you into creating your own comics, and what were some of your first?

    COLLEEN: I first started drawing comics in 2002. Until then, I'd always thought comics were beyond me. Draw the same thing more than once, I could never do that! It was in 2002 that
  • Curtis Retherford, then comics editor of Evergreen's Cooper Point Journal, encouraged me to submit a weekly comic strip. So I did, and it got a surprising amount of response, both positive and negative. The attention amounted to less than five e-mails and a handful of comments from professors, but it was enough to start something.

  • In the spring of 2003, I wrote an independent contract to spend the quarter working on a comic book. My advisor, Peg Tysver, took on three other students with similar projects that quarter. The way I'd set up the project, I ended up only having a month to write and draw the 18-page booklet, then self-publish and distribute it at the Olympia Comics Festival. Because of this, it's a pretty surreal and badly drawn story, Peg called it "refreshingly female". I ended up destroying most of the copies. But, as horrible as that first experience was, I learned a lot from it, and the zine I put out the following year, It's Always the Quiet Ones, is far less shameful.

    SB: So, what led you to CCS?

    COLLEEN: In my last quarter at Evergreen I met Jon-Mikel Gates while working with him at the school's literary magazine, Slightly West. His best friend, Pat Mapp, owns Olympia's downtown comic book shop, The Danger Room. We'd hang out on the couch there a lot and read comics. I'd been looking into grad schools, and had been advised by my favorite professor at Evergreen to figure out who I wanted to learn from, then find out where they were teaching. One day at The Danger Room, people started talking about this new comic book school that was starting in Vermont. Everyone I wanted to learn from was teaching there, so it sounded like my best option.


    SB: Your latest comic is Tragic Relief, which is already a series -- could you tell us about it?

    COLLEEN: Well, the back cover says "Tragic Relief is a bi-monthy series of zines self-published by Colleen Frakes. These largely silent comics, based in world folklore, meditate on sex, love, and the 'unknowable other'." These started out as just something to do while taking a break from working on my CCS [senior] thesis, but eventually turned into the thesis itself. I'll have the first three issues available at MoCCA, but right now you can buy #1 at Jim Hanley's Universe in New York, and both #1-2 at iknowjoekimpel.com [see link above].


    SB: Tragic Relief grew out of a planned longer work based on a Russian folktale. What was that, and how did that energy get channeled into this new series?

    COLLEEN: The Russian folktale adaptation, Marya and Death, grew from a short story I wrote in 2003 as part of a writing class with Bill Ransom about a woman who discovers the physical manifestation of death inside of an egg. Then, with the help of CCS writing prof Sarah Stewart Taylor, it was expanded into a comic script during the freshman year, and I spent the first half of our senior year working on that as my thesis. Sometime in late January, for a variety of reasons I won't go into here, I ran out of steam.

    Since I didn't have the energy to work on my thesis at that point, and since not drawing has never been an option, I started doodling on scraps of bristol. That grew into the first chapter of "Mother's Son", which I took into class critique that week. The response from my classmates (mostly positive, a little horrified) was enough to encourage me to continue.

  • Greg Cook illo, copyright Greg Cook; one of Colleen's inspirations

  • SB: That was a pretty amazing crit session. Given the breezy nature of your storytelling and art in TR -- however grim the emotional content at some points! -- I'm wondering if Greg Cook's work was an inspiration or springboard for Tragic Relief.

    COLLEEN: I haven't read many of Greg's comics (much to my shame) but his visit to CCS and lecture was a definite inspiration. His talk about dissecting his own visual style and attempting to tell a story with as few lines and little visual information on the page as possible was what inspired the spare, paneless look of Tragic Relief.

    SB: 'Paneless,' yes, but Tragic Relief is painful reading at times; the emotional content hits surprisingly close to home! Do you derive any inspiration from some of the 'textless' graphic novelists of the 1920s and '30s, like Lynd Ward?

    COLLEEN: I can't think of any that I've read (again, I am full of shame). My comics have never had much text to them, which just comes from my background as a writer. Omit, omit omit! Take out anything that isn't essential to the story! Also, Jason's comics have been a huge influence since before I attended CCS. He's the reason I stuck with the six panel grid for so long, and I've always admired his ability to tell long, emotional and engaging stories with so few words.

    SB: Who is Jason?

    COLLEEN: "Jason" is the Norwegian cartoonist who doesn't use a last name, he did Sshhh!, Hey Wait, The Living and the Dead, etc. Wikipedia tells me his real name is John Arne Sæterøy.

  • Photo: Jason aka John Arne Sæterøy, photo from AtomicBooks.com

  • SB: The fusion of humor and the macabre is also quite distinctive in Tragic Relief, but you handle it with such disarming candor. There's a philosophy of life that informs all the stories thus far --

    COLLEEN: Thanks! Um...I have no idea what that philosophy is. But when in doubt, quote Charles Schulz, "drama and humor come from trouble and sadness, and mankind's astounding ability to survive life's unhappiness." Yup, that'll do.

    SB: There's also a rather uncanny fusion of the timeless aura and 'authority' of myth with the feeling these stories are inventing themselves as they progress. These should be at odds, but everything just flows, as a reader. Are you drawing from specific folk tales at this point, seeking them out, or drawing from memory of past readings and just letting the stories flow, or are these wholly invented?

    COLLEEN: It seems like all of these folktale and mythic elements are such a part of my subconscious now they creep their way into everything I write. For the most part, I just draw until the story starts to form itself, then go back later and flip through books trying to figure out where the hell I got these crazy ideas from. There's a lot of editing, too. Half of what I draw never makes it into the comic, a lot is added later after I've shown a few people the first draft. I already want to go back and re-draw book one.

    SB: Given the taboos you've rather blissfully broken from the first issue, is there anywhere Tragic Relief won't go?

    COLLEEN: I don't think I could draw bad things happening to kids. I'm not much for blood and gore either, and usually keep it out of frame. I'm against kicking puppies. So, yes! I guess there are a lot of places Tragic Relief won't go. I didn't think of anything I draw as taboo-breaking because so much of it draws on myth and folklore traditions where murder, cannibalism, abductions and sex with weird things are common themes.

    SB: Fair enough. How far do you foresee going with this series, in terms of issues or length?

    COLLEEN: I'm dedicated to sticking with it for a year, so, at least seven more issues. Beyond that, I'll quit when I get bored or when I can't afford to do it anymore. Whichever comes first.

    SB: Will we be seeing your original planned graphic novel Marya and Death as well, or do you think that will become an installment of Tragic Relief?

    COLLEEN: It definitely won't become part of Tragic Relief. I already tried re-drawing it once in that style and it just didn't work. I think I will eventually complete it, I just need to find the right working method.

    A happy reader of one of Colleen's kid-friendly creations (photo compliments of Colleen Frakes)

    SB: What other projects are you working on this summer?

    COLLEEN: I've been doing painted comics for the show "Arts, Crafts, and Jackalopes! Area craftswomen exhibit top-notch wares" at the Main Street Museum. It opens this Friday, June 8th (for more information, contact curator Josie Whitmore at josie.whitmore@gmail.com). Gabby will be there playing the banjo!

    And I did a piece for this amazing Sundays Anthology a group of the CCS freshman have put together, which is also debuting at MoCCA. You can find more about that
  • here.
  • [Note: I'll be interviewing the Sundays creators here, too! -SRB]

    I'm also writing a series of short stories about failure, several of which have already been rejected by prominent literary magazines.

    SB: You've just graduated from CCS. What are your current plans in this big, bad world?

    COLLEEN: Just to keep drawing. I now have an extra eight hours a week to draw that I use to spend in class! Long-term plans include learning to play the ukulele and maybe some contra dance classes.
    ________________

  • For more of Colleen's thoughts, art and comics, along with those of Jon-Mikel Gates, visit cowboyorange.com -- Enjoy!

  • See you here tomorrow -- Ichiiiiiiiiiiiiii...


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    Saturday, January 27, 2007

    Weekend Retreat:
    Meet the CCSers!
    (First in a Series)

    First off, last night's opening of the Fine Toon Vt Cartoonists exhibition at the Helen Day Art Gallery
    in Stowe, VT was a real treat (see yesterday's post for links, info). It's definitely the most expansive and
    comprehensive collection of Green Mountain cartoonists to date, and the gallery has given the major
    portion of their opulent spread to this selection of work. Don't miss this show!
    More info, photos, etc.in the coming weeks, for sure.

    I meant to post links to the various Center for Cartoon Studies student sites some time ago, but the vagaries of dial-up-only access in my prior Marlboro digs and the complications of the past couple of months (the move!) kept me from seeing to it.

    With the permission of those listed, here's a snapshot of just some of the students cooking up a whole new generation's worth of trouble in the inky universe!

    In no particular order, here's today's lineup:

    SEE!


    ...the behemoth that wails
    and beats its chest in the night,
    wielding all that is and can be carved
    from that which can only be called
  • Fresh-meat (freshman) Joe Lambert (aka Sleepy Joe) and his Amazing Electric Congtulabufabulon!


  • GASP!



    ...at all that can be found
    beneath & beyond
    the realm of that
    which has been
    spawned by
  • Ambulatory Andrew Arnold and his Stunning Kickapooflibejaba Ray!




  • SEE!



























    All that is both
    Holy and Unholy,
    tearing holes in the
    very fabric of reality
    with mere paper clips
    and permutations
    from the ashes of Pompeii,
    erupting from
  • The Mortifying Prefabulations of Morgan Pielli!


  • WITNESS!




    The Brain-Spew
    that claims all that is
    not its own as its own,
    consuming the rubble of
    the Box that Ate Everything
    That the Bag Ate
    and more, more, insatiably more
    as YOU flee
    the unslakeable
    appetites that rule...
  • The ReDisorienting Universe of He-Known-As-Dane! (Martin, that is)


  • SEE!



    Erupting from
    unimaginable realms
    of the Unspeakable
    and Unspoken,
    the Unseen
    and Unheard,
    the Irrepressible
    and the
    Irreplaceable...
  • That Which Can Only Be Created via the two-headed, four-limbed wonder known as Colleen Frakes & Jon-Mikel Gates!


  • More tomorrah,
    including my movie viewing tips
    (
    Pan's Labyrinth, etc.)
    plus pix of the new Bissette digs
    (the viewing room carpentry is done at last!)
    ... and more!

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    Sunday, January 07, 2007

    Another Day, Another Load --

    -- and at last, the end is in sight for this move!

    Yesterday, three of the CCS crew still here during vacation break -- Jon-Mikel, Bryan and Joe -- accepted some cash, lunch, beverages and dedicated their day to helping me pack books and comics and zines down in Marlboro.

    This utterly bizarre winter weather meant we drove to Marlboro in almost 70 degree comfort and arrived to find -- mud season. I'm a seasoned vet mud driver, but we still scraped bottom for a stretch and the mire almost sucked the Toyota to a dead halt at one point, but we got through and to the old hacienda. I think it threw the trio with me, but better this muck then three feet of snow, drifts and below-zero weather for the move. This completely screwy winter thus far is unnerving and scary, but has been an unexpected and unpredictable boon for Marge and I and the demands of the move. I'm counting our blessings, folks.

    We got a lot done, and I think with the additional time I put in later this week and one more push with three more folks next weekend, we'll at last be done. (I'm pretty fried, though, so likely I'll scrape up the dough for professional movers to move the boxes in one shot thereafter -- I have to complete this process, and soon.)

    Still, the new owners-to-be are excited and have been great to work with. They've enjoyed popping in at the house, which we encourage, and are already measuring and making their plans for their soon-to-be new home. We close the sale before the last week in January, and they're eager to move in -- just as eager as I am to be out! Marge, bless her, is done with her part of the move, and has made our new Windsor home just that -- a home.

    When Jon, Joe, Bryan and I got back to Windsor last night, Bryan and Joe's wives Amanda and Becca were here, and Marge had a delicious supper waiting for one and all.

    It was a great way to cap a busy day, and a real treat to entertain in our new digs. Good food, great company, good conversation and the highly entertaining feline hi-jinks of Tuco and Lizzie (Amanda had 'em both leaping like they were in a circus arena, playing with the cats and their new toys) made for a memorable evening. Thanks, one and all!

    I finally fell down around 10:30, after everyone had headed back to White River Jct., and slept soundly till 6:30 this morning, which is late for me these days. Then I was up and out for one more packing stretch and carload haul -- before the weather turns nasty tonight. Sigh.

    Time to get back to painting the viewing room -- hopefully, sometime soon, I can begin my own process of "nesting" (as Marge calls it). I'm looking forward to it -- maybe soon...

    Have a great Sunday, all.

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