Tuesday, September 18, 2007

FALL FOLIAGE SEASON is Coming --
Center for Cartoon Studies and Bissette Goodies Await You at the Quechee Gorge Village Antique Mall!

For some of you, this is known stuff, for some this is new -- in any case, read on:
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FACT: I've paid out $438.98 to CCSers since May 1st from sales of their work and/or items in the Quechee Gorge Village Antique Mall on Route 4 in Quechee, VT.

So, while the individual check(s) every 2 weeks cut to the students, faculty and community members may seem modest, this retail experiment has begun well for the CCS community, sans any real promotion outside of my modest blog efforts.

CCS student and alumni comics and minis -- like Sean Morgan's Capsule -- are always on sale at the booth!

Now, this isn't about me. I'm still in a loss (though close to moving into profit this month at last), paying the booth rental fee out of my pocket. My goal is to build a vital retail venue for CCSers -- students, instructors and the community -- in the mall, which has much livelier foot traffic than any White River Junction location at this time.

This is where the CCS student, instructor and community's work is made available to the public in a one-stop venue from 10 AM to 5 PM every day. It's working: CCS creations now sell every week now, from individual student minicomics to novels (mystery novelist and CCS writing instructor Sarah Stewart Taylor's novels are always available there, signed, and three sold in a single transaction last week!) to original art (Cayetano Garza's paintings are usually showcased, and we sold one of Cat's originals last week). All the minicomics, comics, graphic novels and books are signed by their creators.

We're also racking a lot of collectibles from our private collections: vintage comics (priced well below Guide, bagged and boarded, or in bargain-priced 'bricks' with a dozen to 50 comics per 'brick'), rare books, paper, records (lots of unusual and outsider music LPs from CCS senior Blair Sterrett's collection), DVDs (most new & factory sealed, including DVDs with our work featured, like Lance Weiler's Head Trauma), videos, curios and oddities... priced from 50 cents and one dollar to dearer prices (though nothing is more than $40 or so).

As of this writing, over 700 items have been racked at the booth since mid-April -- that's a lot of retail traffic in one small booth space! There is always an abundance of unique, sometimes one-of-a-kind collectibles, comics, artwork, oddities and curios at the booth, at your fingertips.

Here's the scoop, folks:
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Looking for comics, books, art and collectibles by/from The Center for Cartoon Studies students, artists, instructors?

Visit Steve Bissette’s booth at the ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES MALL in QUECHEE GORGE VILLAGE!

It’s just 5 miles from White River Junction -- take ROUTE 4 WEST, from WRJ -- or off Interstate 89, Exit 1, just 2 1/2 miles on ROUTE 4 WEST --
QUECHEE GORGE VILLAGE is on the right, just before the Quechee Gorge -- open every day, 10 AM to 5 PM!


ASK TO SEE DEALER BOOTH #653

For more information, go to http://www.quecheegorge.com/antiques.html
or call 802-295-1550, extension 106.
Email is also an option: quechee@quecheegorge.com
Or write to: Quechee Gorge Village / U.S. Route 4, PO Box 730 / Quechee, VT 05059
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One of the booth's exclusives: Bissette Coffee Zombee mugs, each hand-painted and glazed, each one of a kind, and only available at the booth!

For CCS and yours truly, this is a dream venue. Furthermore, the QGV Antique Mall folks only take a percentage two months out of the year -- they take 6% from September and October sales -- so your purchases go directly to the students and CCSers directly, helping them make ends meet and supporting their creative lives.

If you're in the area and you haven't been to the booth as yet, make the trip. The Antique Mall itself is a pretty amazing local resource, well worth a visit.

If you're going to be touring the state this or next month, enjoying the fall colors, plan to stop by the Antique Mall and pay us a visit.
  • Here's the link, make the trip.
  • Enjoy!

    Have a great Tuesday, one and all...

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    Saturday, June 02, 2007

    New Generation Rising
    and Shameless Hucksterism 101


    Having now completed the five-part interview with Gabby Schulz aka 'Ken Dahl' (final installment was posted late yesterday, see below), I'm going to take a wee blog breather -- noting, however, a plethora of interviews coming up this month.

    The CCSers are descending on the upcoming New York City comic con MoCCA in three weeks with their new work. I'll be whetting appetites, introducing these artists and their work, and previewing it all here (with online links, too, for those of you who, like me, won't be attending MoCCA).

    Ah, the new harvest of comics and mini-comics from
    the Center for Cartoon Studies no-longer-freshmen class!
    Photo by Joe Lambert.


    In the meantime, allow me to note that there's now over 300 collectibles, curios, comics and items of interest displayed and for sale in my booth (Dealer #653) at the
  • The Vermont Antique Mall at Quechee Gorge Village on Route 4, just a fifteen minute drive (tops) from the Center for Cartoon Studies.

  • Many of the CCS artists and students have their current work for sale in the booth, too, along with rare issues of my own work (Swamp Thing, Taboo, Tyrant, comics, zines, etc.), mystery novelist and CCS instructor Sarah Stewart Taylor's complete trio of books, and more -- all signed by the creators.

    There's also original art for sale, including some stunning paintings by Cayetano Garza aka Cat, creator of the venerable online comic The Magic Inkwell, and clever packaging of work by folks like Colleen Frakes (whose copies of her new comics series Tragic Relief are for sale with an original ink panel from the comic packaged with every signed copy!).


    Some of these are selling well, including gems like Alex Kim's unique silkscreen rock posters, which are real beauties!

    I've also begun painting one-of-a-kind zombie coffee mugs -- a bit pricey ($35-40), but they are each original Bissette zombies, in color and preserved in ever-lasting ceramic glory, for your morning java fix, each unlike any other, so it's still a bargain.

    These are the kind of items and original collectibles folks will be kicking themselves over not having nabbed them -- and at these kinds of prices! -- years from now, when folks like Colleen and Alex and their CCS peers are big-time cartoonists and Cat's paintings are high-ticket items in international galleries.

    And your coffee would taste so much better, right here and now, being sipped from a Bissette Coffee Zombee (TM) mug!


    Along with these one-of-a-kind items, I've also jam-packed the booth with all manner of knick-knacks, tallywhacks, dogbones and oddball wonders, priced from just 25 cents to -- well, nothing's more than $35-40, which is pretty much a threshold I intend to maintain. I've also racked a ton of great DVDs, most of them brand-new factory-wrapped classics and curios, with the more adult material (Peter Jackson's Meet the Feebles, Jess Franco, Jean Rollin, giallo, spaghetti westerns, Euro-Trash horrors, etc.) locked in the glass cabinet with the signed issues of Taboo, SpiderBaby Comix, and so on.

    There's tons of comics from the collections of CCS students, too, and some of Blair Sterrett's amazing LP oddities (including LPs from Mexico, Canada, Germany and elsewhere), and that money goes directly to the students. Again, save for the really precious collectibles, these have all been priced to sell, including huge bricks (and I do mean bricks -- 25 to 60 comics bagged together, in VG+ to mint condition!) of runs, mini-series and title selections from the '80s and '90s, including popular characters & titles from Marvel, DC, Image, Disney, etc.

    So, something for everyone, really.

    Marge and I will be snapping photos to post here in the coming week -- including shots of those "Zombee Coffee" (TM ) mugs.

    So, if you're planning any part of your summer around visiting mid-state Vermont, or the Center for Cartoon Studies, make sure to set aside some time to shop our booth at The Vermont Antique Mall at Quechee Gorge Village -- it's the only ongoing non-internet retail venue for my work and the new community of CCS artists!




    Have a great weekend, see you here tomorrow...

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    Saturday, May 05, 2007

    The Site is Up!
    Well, upright --

    Kudos to Cat! The website -- in its fetal form -- is up!
  • Well, the home page is, in any case,
  • and we'll be packing every nook and cranny with content -- memories, reveries, art, photos, diatribes, screeds, homages, eulogies, threnodies and melodies -- in the coming weeks. Thanks, Cat, and bless you!


    Cat's been raring to go all week; alas, it's been my busy schedule keeping me away from the process. CCS duties (especially in our final weeks of this crucial semester), speaking gigs (yesterday I was in Fairlee, VT, speaking at a gathering of VT librarians at the opulent Lake Morey Inn, on the shores of Lake Morey) and family obligations (Happy Birthday to Maia -- and we'll seeing Danny for breakfast in a couple of hours) have kept me away, but thankfully the Cat will play with or without me -- hence, the site home page, up and running.

    I'll be at it with Cat this week and every week hereafter, though, so keep an eye on the site daily. After CCS graduation (May 19th), we'll really be arming for bear, so look for big advances and changes later this month. Soon, this blog will be the appendage, rather than the focal point. Still, I'll keep it fresh and as daily as I can!
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    A reminder, too, as we move into spring proper and early warm weather travel for some of you, that my booth is up and running at the Vermont Antique Mall in Route 4's easy-access Quechee Gorge Village. This is my retail venue, and I'm working hard to ensure it's also a venue for Center for Cartoon Studies students -- if you're curious about what the artists at CCS are up to, this booth will provide an ongoing retail space for their work.

    As of yesterday, I've placed well over 200 items in the booth, jam-packed now with CCS mini-comics (all $ go to the students who made 'em), Bissette collectibles, rare DVDs and videos, tons of comics (including 'bricks' of 1980s and '90s comics bargain priced), books, curios, doodads, movie promo rarities, and much, much more (including one of Marge's needlepoint creations).

    In fact, CCS artist (and soon to be pioneer class graduate) Colleen Frakes has already upped the ante by offering her mini-comic for sale with a panel of original art in every bagged copy!
  • (If you can't make it to the booth in person, contact Colleen directly through her site and mail-order your mini-comic-with-original-art now, while they're still available -- don't dawdle, now, as quantities are limited, and tell Colleen I sent ya, please!)

  • All these goodies are signed by their respective creators, and there's even handy, fairly-priced (a bargain for you, but still earns for the creators) pre-packs and 'bag o' comics' collecting multiple issues and collectibles together. I'm doing all I can to make this booth a one-stop-shop delight for anyone into sampling the works of CCS artists -- and my own humble efforts, of course.



  • Here's the link to the Vermont Antique Mall venue at Quechee Gorge Village, including directions, hours, and so on.
  • I'm dealer #653 -- ask at the front desk, they'll happily take you there! -- and Marge and I will be posting photos of the booth and pix of my line of painted ceramic originals, which will be available exclusively at the booth.

    More on this -- including links, pix, and more -- later this weekend.

    PS: The first Quechee Gorge Village outdoor flea market is this Sunday, starting at 7 AM -- get there early if you want to beat me to the best deals, bunky!
    __________________

    Now that I'm no longer actively able to preorder my DVDs via my old video store source, I'm scrounging around for info and venues like everyone else. Among the most eagerly awaited of the upcoming summer crop of DVDs for this avid omnivore is
  • the upcoming Media Blasters "Tokyo Shock" release of Ishiro (aka 'Inoshiro') Honda's Frankenstein Conquers the World/Furankenshutain tai chitei kaijû Baragon (1965) -- here's the link to Tim Lucas's Video Watchblog post on this divine visitation (as a two-disc set, no less!).


  • All of which reminds me I've been meaning to ask the help of the gathered Myrant readership in an ongoing search of an issue of Esquire magazine from my youth.

    I'm guessing the issue I seek came out sometime between 1971 and 1973, though I could be wrong; I'm pretty sure I picked it up while still in high school (I graduated in '73). I've scoured the Esquire website -- which does not list issue contents, sadly -- and vainly searched Esquire covers in hopes of recognizing the cover for the issue I seek, but no memory bells have as yet rung, and I've peeked at every single cover from 1966 to 1976.

    The Esquire in question was an issue with an odd short, illustrated article on 'Good/Bad Monster Movies,' prominently featuring Frankenstein Conquers the World and The Beast of Hollow Mountain in that lineup, both with full-page pix. If memory serves, each film enjoyed a single-page writeup and one large black-and-white photo image, and it was a short piece -- no more than six pages, as I recall. Still, the author clearly loved the films, and it was an early landmark in the fusion of the broader pop culture with the rarified realm of the monster magazines. It was also a key work (by my reading experience, anyway) in the gradual elevation of what the mainstream had habitually dismissed as 'bad movies' into the strange, privileged status of sought-after treasure -- a tentative bridge between Susan Sontag's "Notes on Camp" and her essay on science-fiction disaster films and the Medved Brothers's books on "turkeys" (the tomes that elevated Ed Wood to posthumous star stature as the patron saint of 'bad movies').

    That the Esquire article chose Frankenstein Conquers the World was, at the time, a fascinating turn of events; after all, even Joe Dante Jr.'s review of the film in Castle of Frankenstein's "Movieguide" (a fixture of what was definitely the most intelligent and adult of all '60s newsstand monster zines) had villified the film, and even Forrest J. Ackerman had apologized in the letter pages of Famous Monsters of Filmland for running a cover photo-feature on the film (with an eye-popping beaut of a Ron Cobb cover painting!). At the time Esquire ran the piece, the only extant 'movie guides' with capsule reviews (beyond TV Guide's blurbs -- many written by Bhob Stewart, another CoF vet -- and regional TV schedule publications) were the Steven Scheuer Movies on TV paperbacks, which by and large dismissed any and all genre fare, and, for the diehards, the ongoing serialized "Frankenstein TV Movieguide" in Castle of Frankenstein. All of these reviled the 1960s Toho sf and monster films; even CoF despaired of the Toho formula after Ghidrah, The Three-Headed Monster initiated the 'monster rally' formula so beloved today.

    This Esquire article also predated Take One magazine's affectionate article on the Godzilla films, and hence stands as perhaps the first mainstream acknowledgement of the subversive charge of the Toho daikaigu-eiga. Thankfully, Greg Shoemaker of Ohio was already publishing his fanzine Japanese Fantasy Film Journal (alas, I gave my set away back in the mid-70s during a move, though I kept one fateful issue -- Greg published my first fan art in JFFJ), so we diehard Toho fans were beginning to recognize one another and our mutual love for films like Frankenstein Conquers the World, but there weren't many of us, and there were certainly no mainstream venues for such sentiments -- other than this elusive Esquire aberration, which I need to track down, and soon.

    So -- can anyone help me locate that issue of Esquire? I'd welcome guidance, suggestions, links, photocopies, or anything, really, at this stage. Thanks!
    _______________________

    As if you needed more proof that zombies are truly 'in' --

    As of this week, Google's 'Blogger Buzz' intro page (where we bloggers all sign in) has opened with the following:

    Old Blogger is dead! Long live Blogger!

    Today at Blogger HQ we accomplished one of our most significant milestones ever: we changed old Blogger’s monitoring from “page us when it goes down” to “page us if it comes back to life in a horrifying, zombie state.”

    Now, "a horrifying, zombie state" is a curious enough turn of phrase, but it's also an active link
  • to this Jonathan Coulton music video by Adobe Program Manager Mike Spiff Booth, which is a pretty strong push from Google for a specific vid, don't you think?

  • I'm happy for Jonathan Coulton and all the attention his song "re: Your Brains" is thus earning -- hmmm, how do the rest of us schlubs land a Google push? "Jonathan makes his songs available online
  • (www.jonathancoulton.com)
  • via the Creative Commons license, which enables projects such as this video. He has a podcast called Thing A Week where he puts out a song a week to keep his creative juices flowing. He's said he's going to keep it up until someone pays him to do it for real.
    " Alan Moore fans take note: "The song at the end of the video is "Mandelbrot Set", another great Jonathan Coulton song."

    And that's all the plugging Jonathan gets from me for now. He's got Google on his side, and needs no other.
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    I'm outta here -- have a great Saturday, one and all!

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    Saturday, April 14, 2007

    More Uncle Sam Zombies...

    Now that I've opened this can of worms, everything's coming up maggots!

    I posted an announcement about
  • Leah Moore and John Reppion's Raise the Dead comic series earlier this week,
  • including a peek at the cover art -- and now there's Uncle Sam zombies crawling out of the woodwork.

    As already noted, I first "saw" the image in a screenplay Tim Lucas wrote and shared with me 20 years ago; at that time, Tim had come up with something original and unique. Alas, the script was never filmed, so that specific image never reached the public eye -- but here it is again, the unsung pop image of 2006.

    Clearly, "its" time has come. Though no one "owes" a debt to Tim, per se, it's still worth noting for the record that his script is the first eruption of that image I personally encountered. Now, Undead Uncle Sam is everywhere.

    Berni Wrightson's ad art for the high-def horror channel Monsters HD includes a fun riff on the old Jack Kamen Creepshow poster art, featuring the nervous young lad with a remote in his hand, Alex Gordon/Edward Kahn's The She Creature playing on TV, and Berni's take on the She Creature malingering outside the boy's bedroom window, peeking in. But relevant to this topic at hand is Wrightson's "Eye Want You!" parody of the famous Flagg Uncle Sam recruitment poster, looking a little worse for the wear
  • (here's the link to the site's liveliest use of Berni's Uncle Sam zombie painting!).

  • (For those of you with long memories, this recalls Wrightson's stylishly done Howard the Duck for President poster, which I still have somewhere in my collection.)

    Well, OK, with Wrightson doing his take on zombie Uncle Sam, you'd think that would be enough. Nope, the new wave of zombie comics has embraced the image like a long lost patriarch come home at last.

    Not counting the Captain America zombie Art Suydam painted for the Marvel Zombies series (itself satirizing the iconic Jack Kirby 'Cap is Back' cover from the '60s), along with the stirring Uncle Sam alternative Raise the Dead cover for Leah and John's series (likewise painted by Art Suydam), it turns out there's a "Cover B" alternative cover to
  • Mark Kidwell & Nat Jones's Image Comics one-shot '68, their undead-in-Vietnam opus (alternative cover pictured as this post's lead; here's a review of their comic by Don MacPherson at Eye on Comics).

  • Even better, to my mind, is Art Suydam's mock Norman Rockwell zombie cover for Raise the Dead #2, which you can get to
  • here, just click on the entry to the Raise the Dead preview link below the double-cover preview image.

  • I would have posted it here, but I wanted to be sure to give you a reason to revisit and spend a little time at Leah and John's site this weekend, which was all I was really trying to do earlier this week anyway.

    And that's enough on that subject, don't you think?
    ___________________

    So, I now have a retail venue in our new home area here in Vermont...

    If you're touring Vermont this spring or summer or fall, and you find yourself on Route 4 in Quechee, VT -- a real easy, short (less than two miles) drive off Interstate 89 -- pop on over to
  • the Quechee Gorge Village
  • and enter
  • the Vermont Antique Mall --
  • -- and visit my collectibles sales booth!


    Hey, my stuff's now in one of those booths crammed with insane, gotta-have-it, gotta-buy-it stuff!

    I'm dealer #653, and the booth is now up and running -- comics, including signed copies of my own publications, are waiting for you there, along with a plethora of collectible books, DVDs, videos, toys, and odds (very odd) and ends.

    They're open seven days a week (July 4th-Labor Day, from 9:30am-5:30pm; Labor Day-July 4th from 10:00am-5:00pm), they're awful nice folks, and this seemed an ideal means of at last giving folks access to my and the Center for Cartoon Studies' work, creations and collectible curios. No, we're not there, but our stuff is -- priced to sell! -- and I'll be refreshing and restocking the booth biweekly, so there will always be something of interest waiting for you there.

    This space prominently feature work from the CCS students, too, with all sales income from their work going to them -- providing a one-stop shopping venue for those of you interested in picking up the students's comics, mini-comics, art, pottery, etc., all signed by the creators. I'll post pics once the booth is closer to its intended status (gotta start somewhere, and right now it's in its infancy) -- but this is likely to remain my (and CCS's) sole retail venue, so make a point of visiting our booth in the Vermont Antique Mall this year!

    Of course, those of you wanting to sample the CCS student comics, graphic novels and minicomics now for sale online can immediately go to
  • the "I Know Joe Kimpel" site and support the next generation of cartoonists with your hard-earned dollars and interest.
  • ____________________


    The Bava Book is Coming -- SOON!

    Have a great weekend...

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