Sunday, December 1, 2024

"Bearioki"

This digitally colored panel pushed the limit on how far I'm comfortable with going a bit too "photoshoppy" for my aesthetics. As mentioned earlier I have recently been inspired by the simpler, flatter palette of Peter Gallagher's "Heathcliff." Next week I'll post an excellent example of how I'm experimenting with backing off/scaling down the effect-driven technologically saturated approach. A cleaner + brighter palette is also much quicker to render too, and after sitting back to contemplate this one, I'm left more dissatisfied than usual.

Also this was one of a recent series that frustrated me to no end because panel after panel took more than the normal tweaks after scanning in the pen + ink linework. In other words I wasn't paying enough attention to making my marks, and upon review, required additional editing in order to arrive at a better, tighter, more efficiently designed composition. It's frustrating but at least easy enough to compensate for and hopefully shift some more focus on the task at hand, at least behind the drawing table.

Also there's a bonus homage to A.A. Milne (and by extension - not in craftsmanship - to E.H. Shepard's phenomenal illustrations). Here's a link to the solution for the obscure reference. After a couple of live demo sessions down at the cafe while the show was up I was able to bounce this one off random observers, and sure enough, a majority missed out on the hat-tip, which doesn't necessarily dilute the joke. Like life, it's just not as fully appreciated when you miss the comedic connections.

Friday, November 29, 2024

December 2024 Baked Alaska Show: Puttin' the "LOL" in "Pakalolo"

This makes the seventh exhibition for this season, and I figure why not one from the usual distillery gig now to a dispensary: Pakalolo Supply Co. was Alaska's first state-licensed recreational marijuana retail dispensary to offer recreational cannabis products in their Tasting Room & Coffeeshop (@pakaloloak). Cool vibe, good folks, and I'll be on site for at least the opening on December 6th's 1st Friday from 5-8pm (maybe some popup demos over the month TBA).

"Measuring the drapes": Customized venue virtual layout

Along with a couple dozen panels on display I'll have fifty copies of a rebooted ("revised & expanded") collection culled from the five-year run of my "Baked Alaska" feature as it appeared on the pages of the Alaska Cannabist magazine.
*Folks Outside or in the Lower 48 check out my titles over on LuLu.com (link here).

Sunday, November 24, 2024

"Polar Bowler"

As regular readers will attest to, I frequently blog about the in-class demonstrations of how the process happens when creating a cartoon. I know of no better example to set than seeing the direct unfolding of an idea into concept sketch to refinement and then publication. It's an invaluable asset to see firsthand a spontaneous exercise in linear perspective evolve into a finished drawing, in addition to the instigating idea.

"Put your mind in the gutter"

And anyone who has ever taken one of my classes knows, my approach to teaching drawing is built upon the idea that creating the convincing illusion of depth on the pictorial plane usually involves perspective (linear + atmospheric). And so many of the initial exercises in Beginning focuses on learning how to see and utilize the visual cues such as foreshortening, overlapping elements and so on.   

18x24" newsprint demo done on site

And there was a serious, philosophical dimension to consider here as well - very much a part of the creative process. Meaning, what quote would make an appropriate caption? Spoiler: turns out didn't need one. Honorable mentions: "obviously you're not a golfer Alaskan, "Mark it zero,: Mark it eight, Dude," OVER THE LINE," "I'm thrownin' rocks tonite! Mark it, Dude," and lastly the top personal pick: "Strikes and gutters, ups and downs."

Line art, value study, and digital color

On a final note, the absolute pinnacle of experience comes with these special show & tells where the concept is literally illustrated by demonstrating how reality can be inspiring, and dovetail quite nicely with making stuff up - believably.

Creating Comics summer session camp at UAF

Sunday, November 17, 2024

"Watch Your Step"

I know, I know, we need to express gratitude and support for the most important renewable resource driving the economic engine of Alaska. Please enjoy your stay!

Update: As it happened, I was idly flipping through an old moldy hardcover collection of ancient New Yorker cartoons, and this panel by Charles Addams - one of the all-time greatest single-panel cartoonists in history - caught my eye. Having never seen it before, though honestly it might have been subconsciously buried from exposure as a child (it has happened before with Kliban panel), it serves as a good example of great minds flowing through the same gutter (ie multiple discovery). 

The direct inspiration for mine came from all the attention being paid locally to recent and ongoing work being done on an iconic section of the single road into Denali National Park, that has been closed on account of landslides and necessitating extensive repairs. Anyone who's ever been on a vehicle and looked out the window while traversing this particular stretch of Polychrome Pass will immediately recognize the scene. Similarly, I can see how anybody familiar with Addams' piece would be forgiven if they would find it familiar as well - maybe he once vacationed in Alaska?  


UPDATE: After this was posted I just-so-happened to be flipping through an old book (2007's "Nuggets" compilation) for another reason and stumbled across this panel. So guess it's even worse than it looks: I plagiarized my own damn work. If things are that getting that bad that I'm repeating myself maybe it's time to put the pen down and back away slowly from the sketchbook? At the very least I am reminded of how long overdue it is to release a decades-worth of backlogged material in book form. I started doing doing that maybe five years back, but as with everything else it gets subsumed by the teaching. But I  envisioned (still do) a hardcover coffee-table caliber book, with most of the material in color. Even designed the cover! Add that to the list: a book of edits, another one of 24-Hour comics, another of comics poems, and last but not least a few children's books and a couple graphic novels. Now one can begin to see why I'm suspending any more public gigs for a while - in theory that's where some time + energy can be shunted. After the newspaper stuff. And teaching. Note to self: and no way not blogging or anything...

(cue King Crimson lyrics from "Indiscipline" 2016)

Nuggets Sketchbook: "Currants," "Mosquitoes" & "Narwhale/Snowman" and other "Cartooning Problems" (Updated w/64th!)

Ganging together on this post a few recent examples from the "Nuggets Sketchbook" series that occasionally punctuates the regular panels. For some unknown reason there was an unusual number of them this year: these three which were published in the paper this past July, September and October, plus previously ones in March and August (both of which were uploaded here earlier in another set of sketchbook samples). "Currant Mood" is sorta special to me as it's about something that most newspaper readers probably aren't familiar with, so they'll never get it, and those that would probably get it never read the newspaper, so they'll never see it. But fortunately it went on to occupy a third dimension...

Update: This particular panel was the only one out of four submissions of mine to get accepted for the 2024 "64th Parallel" annual juried exhibition of the Fairbanks Arts Association (the others were "The Lodge," "Rush Hour" and "No Lives Matter"). This was the first show my work's been selected since 2017, o fourteen years - maybe half of which work was entered... the meta-lesson here being just never give up, don't ever stop chumming the water. Incidentally the fifth of six (possibly seven) shows this year alone, and that's why for 2025 I'm gonna swing to the opposite extreme and not do any, take a few years off from the endless marketing.

Regular readers know that these "Sketchbooks" are little offshoots are a special insight into creating the cartoons where I feel it provides a nice little break from the more commercial (some think contrived) vibe or visual feel of the regular feature. Put another way the aesthetics are a bit more spontaneously or raw, as opposed to the comparatively more controlled and polished look of the formal pencil > ink > digitally colored process for the "normal" panels. 

The origins actually arose from when I was essentially homeless, couchsurfing at a girlfriend's cabin, and without access to my accustomed computed + scanner setup. So I temporarily resorted to just submitting images shot directly from the pages of my sketchbook. One meta-lesson that gave me insight into my work was how essentially incidental the whole professional standards of production were: nobody particularly gave/gives a shit that I use specialized equipment and rarefied, arcane tools (ex: and insistence on archival materials etc.), aside from other geeks. The only factor that really matters is the content ie how funny it is. This is reflected in the industry mantra "a good joke will sell a bad drawing, which goes a long way towards explaining the style of many a successful cartoon. Nevertheless I have always continued in my quest towards self-improvement - 2019's reboot of "Spring Breakup" illustrates this perfectly, as some measure of pride in craftsmanship is inherent in any artistic pursuit. 

Of all of these latest ones in the series, this particular panel to me is a touch more special than the rest, in that not only was the printed version a reworking of the original doodle (from the initial one done on a scrap of paper > then translated into the sketchbook variation), but the charming simplicity of the piece really stands out. The only aspect of it altered was the digital spot-coloring of the heart, all else is marker + water-soluble wash. Incidentally the pen is a Micron (08), which I after many, many years of using ballpoint pens for the sketchbook doodles, I have adopted full-time this year, mostly because erasing the underlying pencil without waiting for it to dry so as to avoid smearing the ink is a pain in the ass - this is much quicker and also more opaque. It's still a "dead" line, meaning no line weight variation which is the hallmark of dip-pens.

Bonus: this is also one of the relatively rare non-verbal panels, which is another factor in its primitive clarity... reflective of my current relationship situation. It's quietly exceptional enough that I selected it as one of the three pieces showcased in the annual faculty exhibition in the UAF art department - subverting expectations with a thumb in the eye of artsy-fartsy elite.

Friday, November 15, 2024

Pop-Con 2024

Got a surprise last-minute gig: taking the opportunity to run a couple tables for the twelfth annual UAF Pop-Con on campus in the Wood Center this weekend (both today/Friday & Saturday, 11am - 6pm). It's been a decade since I last sat in at this event, and along with doing some service for the university, plus promote the Art Department, I get to hang out amongst others of my kind... and get some work done.

I'll be showing off artwork done by my drawing students over the many years from teaching comics + the current Cartoon & Comic Arts course. Be doing demos all day along with some special guest appearances by cartooning alum... stop on by!

Update: Day one was good, with many new introductions to really cool and very nice people, and seeing some long-time friends & folks, previous & current students... all on both sides of the tables. Looking forward to tomorrow, which is surprising given how bleak and stressful it has been as of late. These are my people.

UAF Parking Design: More NookieBear

You know shit's gettin' real when you see the legal name

Contest for the new UAF Parking Decal is now live. Click here to cast yer vote (about as useful as my last one). gotta have a UAF email to sign into the Google Form. It closes in a week... December 22nd!

There's a LOT of other good designs, my personal bias notwithstanding. Actually I didn't even vote for myself. Meanwhile this little logo of mine originally done for the CLA is continuing to molt and morph into new outfits - this one is the most adorable and my fave.

Sunday, November 10, 2024

"Ant-lers"

Long-time friends & fans are well aware of my weakness for the worst gags in the world, and I'll admit to only a relative handful of my own panels are so good/bad that they'll make me giggle to myself. Which is rather weird when sketching out alone in public, hence the reason I camp out at cafes in the early morning so as to not disturb fellow patrons. 

While the initial doodle - the ant with antlers - was amusing enough, flipping the concept on the second take was even better, and was refined a bit more in ballpoint with the revised, second sketch. Also uploaded here a process piece with the penciled panel + pre-inked verbage (more often than not the usual order, mostly so as to have a better, more clear idea of where to start and stop the inked-in lines), and then lastly a fully inked example before erasing the pencil lines that are still visible.

Sunday, November 3, 2024

"Toilet-trees"

Okay so, no pontificating here: really bad punnage aside, this was basically just an excuse exercise in drawing a classic double-take.  

Friday, November 1, 2024

"Tricksters & Sourdoughs" Anchorage Museum Exhibition

As of this posting, this marks at least six shows I've been in for the year: the annual Ursa Major, another Flossie & May's, "Thinking Made Visible" at UAF Museum, the annual Art Department faculty show, the 64th Parallel juried exhibition (first time in fourteen years), and now I think for the first time ever, four panels will be appearing at the Anchorage Museum: "Tricksters & Sourdoughs: Humor & Identity in Alaska." (special thanks to photographer John Hagen - websites here + here).

Thanks to Sarah (@saraanndexter) for the sneak peek

Don't know if the Significant Otter and I will be able to migrate south for the show, but on the offhand chance any of y'all are in that neck of the woods the big city, check it out - opening is tonite from 6-8pm.