Sunday, July 29, 2012
Saturday, July 28, 2012
"Clouds"
Actually at temperatures of around fifty-below in the Interior, one does generate a personal mini-cloud of vapor, which is a useful metaphor for those of us that tend to mentally pass much of the day that way.
And for those of our viewers keeping score at home, yep, those are the Talkeetnas, which are seeping into the background more and more, as every day they dominate the view from the chalet.
And for those of our viewers keeping score at home, yep, those are the Talkeetnas, which are seeping into the background more and more, as every day they dominate the view from the chalet.
Friday, July 27, 2012
"Good Boy..."
As compared to the initial doodle, the concept got flipped around, as oftentimes reality is funnier than fiction, and watching someone delude themselves with superiority over a cat is true comedy. Living in a dual-species, pet-owned household has over the years taught us many a humbling lesson, not to mention observing how personality traits manifest themselves best when projected upon something that will either A) obey or B) not really care what you think.
Unless the litterbox is full, or the food bowl is empty.
Unless the litterbox is full, or the food bowl is empty.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Interlude: Talkeetnas
Uploaded a couple dozen highlights from a splendid hike in the backyard: was dropped off at the Reed Lakes trailhead off Archangel Road (up Hatcher Pass Road about half-way to Independence Mine State Park), and spent four days exploring both that popular route and a little bonus side-trek up into Snowbird Mine and further on up to Glacier Pass.
Also managed to officially kill the camera: time to say goodbye to the indomitable Canon Power Shot S3, which after slowly dying from a dreaded "lens error" finally just locked up. It had also been showing signs of losing it's digital mind by inexplicably and mysteriously reverting to taking only thumbnail-sized resolution images, which is all understandable given how much it had been bashed about Acadia and back and forth across America. So these pictures are a both a bonus and great post-script.
Random notes excerpted from the field-journal after the jump...
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Not Funny: Selective Controversy
There's some interesting criticism over cartoons that have appeared within the context of the Aurora tragedy. One in particular is this Broom Hilda strip by creator Russell Myers:
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| Art by Russell Myers/dist. by Tribune Media Services |
Sunday, July 22, 2012
"Context Is Everything"
Comparatively small but outstandingly vivid panel in an earlier weekend's edition of the Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. Bonus: nice touch on the page layout.... next to both Otto @ the UAF Museum + an ad for therapy...
Saturday, July 21, 2012
"Excalibeaver"
Dennis: Listen. Strange women lying in ponds, distributing swords, is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical aquatic ceremony!
King Arthur: Be quiet!
Dennis: You can't expect to wield supreme power just 'cause some watery tart threw a sword at you!
King Arthur: Shut up!
Dennis: I mean, if I went 'round saying I was an emperor, just because some moistened bink had lobbed a scimitar at me, they'd put me away!
King Arthur: Shut up! Will you shut up?!
- Scene Three
Friday, July 20, 2012
"The Mythical Merbeav"
As it turned out, this one's pretty much a takeoff on the "Maine Mythology" panel - even one of the depicted characters is essentially rotated 180° for dramatic effect. Indeed as it would have to be, upon seeing such a sultry creature in the wild.
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Superheroes
Another "Best-Of" list - which are specifically designed to provoke indignant little tirades like this - this time via Newsarama on the All-Time Best Comic Book-based Movies. An utterly predictable roster of Hollywood-blockbuster bastardization of a worn-out, stereotyped genre. With the notable exception of 300 (Dark Horse) and Scott Pilgrim (Oni Press) - both of which bring up the surefire default critique that original source material is usually better than the movie - the list should probably be subtitled the best-of Marvel/DC movies.
Notably absent are such alternative titles such as Persepolis (Marjane Satrap), American Splendor (Harey Pekar) and Ghost World (Daniel Clowes), but one should consider the source, if not my own obvious bias. Hell, even Hellboy and Watchmen could have stood in for two of the three listed Batman movies.
One wonders when it will stop... Iron Man VII, Batman Again, X-Men XX? Will the current reboot of Spiderman get rebooted itself after an inevitable sequel and prequel? Not to conflate age versus maturity, but it amazes me to now be old enough to get thoroughly bored of traditional superheroes for the second time in my life: at some point there's more to entertainment than bigger boobs and louder explosions.
That said, adventures like this one make for better stories than most movies or comic books... way to go Spectral Motion, the Make-A-Wish Foundation and Ron Pearlman.
Sunday, July 15, 2012
"Jack & Jill"
Subverting cherished childhood icons again: all that's left to wonder is who's gonna be the first to reach that shining outhouse on a hill.
The final design was altered somewhat in process - conventional wisdom would naturally point towards a strong vertical composition, but rules are made to ignore (contrary to what an art teacher says in the classroom).
The final design was altered somewhat in process - conventional wisdom would naturally point towards a strong vertical composition, but rules are made to ignore (contrary to what an art teacher says in the classroom).
Saturday, July 14, 2012
"Hey, Hey, Go Waggaloo" (Woody's Centennial)
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| Art by Woody Guthrie |
A brief note on the occasion of Woody Guthrie's anniversary, especially what with all the corporate personhood, rich, slimy politicians, union-busting and bigotry, his message still reverberates now today more than ever. And without any autotune,
lip-sync or
flashing any nipple either.
A lesser-known aspect of his work was the drawings that he did as a commercial artist and cartoonist:
"Contrary to popular mythology, it was with paint brushes in hand, not a guitar, that Guthrie hit the road for California. He had hocked his guitar . . . and it was his artistic skills that he brokered for room and board." – Nora Guthrie
Aside from coming to mind annually for his New Year's Rulins', the funny thing is how I was just thinking about him yesterday while hiking through some posted land.
“As I went walking I saw a sign there
And on the sign it said "No Trespassing."
But on the other side it didn't say nothing,
That side was made for you and me.”
- This Land is Your Land
"Serenade"
Some of the very best times I've had have been listening to impromptu jams from random musicians that jut so happen to coalesce on a porch or around a stove. It always reminds me of many a long night spent drawing down in one of the infamous cellar studios ("Tomb of the Unknown Cartoonist") back in New York ("Old School"): sometimes a friend would hang out with their guitar, trying to emulate the current acoustic rage - usually something by the reigning king at the time Steve Howe. Still gets the creative juices flowing...
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| Live @ the Golden Eagle in Ester, Alaska |
Friday, July 13, 2012
"5-Second Rule"
While on a recent road-trip to and fro Fairbanks I caught sight of a stunned bird flapping on the side of the road. While pulling over to put is aside might have been a misplaced gesture, it reminded me of all the years commuting via bicycle, or traveling by canoe and boot, and the insight gained by slowing down. There's a sense of perspective from going through a place, as opposed to going over it; of moving with it, instead of passing it by via mechanized means.
Thursday, July 12, 2012
Interlude: Hitting the Trail
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| View from approx. half-way up the trail looking towards the Matanuska Peak massif. |
Finally managed to get in a good day's hike with a bonus breakout of decent weather: a ten-mile ramble in the Chugach State Park up the Matanuska Peak trail. Along with Lazy Mountain, this cluster of peaks is situated right next to Palmer, and sits in-between the Matanuska and Knick rivers which in turn border the Chugach and Talkeetna ranges respectively.
Fresh snowfall, an encroaching front plus hitting my own personal wall meant bailing out before the final mile/last thousand feet up to the summit itself, but I gained enough elevation to catch Hatcher Pass peeking out on the horizon, and spent hours sitting on the tundra taking in magnificent scenery. The alpine meadows were carpeted with brilliant blooms, and marmots, ground squirrels, magpies and songbirds filled the air with their calls. Far off in the distance immense clouds of glacier silt rolled across the view, and the muffled roar of runoff made for a white-noise backdrop. The trail emerged from woodland and a confusing network of false paths after weaving underneath a towering canopy of eight-foot stands of
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| View from base of Matanuska Peak towards Lazy Mountain and Talkeetna Range. |
Unfortunately the solitude was marred by a couple of jerks on motorbikes violating the non-motorized park rules, but karma being a bitch, they were probably greeted at the trailhead by a friendly ranger (not a good idea to piss off a hiker with a camera and a cellphone). The other annoyance was some loud, flashy joggers who left behind a pile of trash and food while they went on for the last two miles up to the peak. It was obviously too much of a hassle to pack everything, so they opted to bait and habituate wildlife with their litter instead. This brand of careless ignorance leads directly to such tragic results as seen on a recent race, and doubtless these folks and another individual I saw were in training for a similar event on that same trail later in the season. Of course it's arguably only a matter of degrees in perspective that separates criticism of people who mindlessly charge through nature from some idiots who just simply hike into it, but it does speak for itself that I happened to actually be admiring some pretty flowers when they first went stampeding past. One of the invaluable lessons wilderness teaches is that life's not a damned race, and one of the core reasons behind seeking solace in the outdoors is to get away from those that do.
Minor disturbances aside, overall it was a nice trek into the next-door wilderness that hems in the masses of humanity here in Alaska - as opposed to the reverse situation in most of the Lower 48, where isolated oases of nature are instead surrounded by encroaching civilization. And along with my poor knees, it served as another reminder that this definitely ain't Acadia anymore...
A few more images uploaded here.
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| "HEY - What's for LUNCH?" |
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Join, Or Die (In Context)
As a crucial component in not just the history of cartooning but also for American history, this iconic image has started off many a lecture in my art classes, yet I hadn't ever seen it within the context of the surrounding text. From The Comics Reporter via a 4th of July-related comics post comes mention of Benjamin Franklin's "Join, Or Die" editorial cartoon forecast to fetch over $100k at auction. This "Signature Historical Manuscripts Auction" by Heritage Auctions features the woodcut as part of a lot containing one of the only two known original copies (the other is in the Library of Congress) of the iconic editorial. First published by the Pennsylvania Gazette in 1754, Franklin's is believed to be the first instance of the editorial cartoon artform appearing in America... of course it also helped if one happened to own the paper too.
A of the hallmarks of a successful editorial cartoon is that it transcends the topical nature of whatever political issue is in the headline, and endures over time. Given the divisive arena of American politics today, to quote Pogo, we have met the enemy, and it is us.
Sunday, July 8, 2012
"Spearfisher of Souls"
“May the devil make a ladder of your backbone -
While he is picking apples in the garden of Hell” - Old Irish toast
Seems I'm still stuck in a creative Hell, or at least mining it for inspiration. This recent run of fishing gags might leave the mistaken impression that I like to fish, but in all my years of Alaskan residency I've yet to extend my subsistence past the seafood isle in the supermarket. Hell, I don't even like salmon, unless it's smoked to perfection.
“I don't eat Salmon because I identify too much with spawning, thrashing around and death.”
- Michael Feldman
Saturday, July 7, 2012
"The End of the Run"
Closest thing to a zombie panel I've done (excepting Sun Zombies), and not too far off the mark from what I've seen of some weekend fish warriors trying to top off the freezer. That includes the eau de salmon.
Friday, July 6, 2012
"Seasonal Migrations"
At least they don't litter the place up. With their decaying corpses I mean.
The subsistence aspect of Alaskan salmon fishing translates into a seasonal opening that is a ritual for hordes of urbanized weekend warriors. Then there's combat fishing - the outdoorsman version of Black Friday sale mobs, quite the contrast with my adolescent memories of the hours of solitude in the swampy marshlands of WNY while fishing for carp. In this way I have a degree of empathy with hunters who aren't so much into the "sport" of just simply shooting something, it's an opportunity to get outdoors and enjoy some peace & quiet.
The subsistence aspect of Alaskan salmon fishing translates into a seasonal opening that is a ritual for hordes of urbanized weekend warriors. Then there's combat fishing - the outdoorsman version of Black Friday sale mobs, quite the contrast with my adolescent memories of the hours of solitude in the swampy marshlands of WNY while fishing for carp. In this way I have a degree of empathy with hunters who aren't so much into the "sport" of just simply shooting something, it's an opportunity to get outdoors and enjoy some peace & quiet.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Declaration of Internet Freedom
Coming as a result of the recent SOPA/PIPA protests, organizations and individuals who support a free and open series of tubes can sign up and sign on here.
Update: as opposed to these libertarian trolls.
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
A Stiff Hairy Pelt
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| "...mmm..." |
One of the nicest and unexpected things to happen over the weekend's events was reconnecting with some friends - including one legendary character from my past in Fairbanks, who showed up sporting one of the infamous embroidered "Stiff Hairy Pelt" caps. These were part of the apparel that came out around the release of the "Beaver Fever" collection back in 1999. A coveted fashion memorabilia like this would be worth tens of dollars, if he hadn't actually put it on.
Hat-tip (literally) to the legendary Grunditz.
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
Recap: Wall of Balloons + Doodles from Down East
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| A Used Cartoon Salesman (photo by Jen) |
What an awesome trip back to the 'Banks: blitzed in & out with a 29-hour trip-time. A lot of thanks go out to my friends (hat-tip to Da-ka, Jeri and Steve) for their kind hospitality and some tech support too. The preliminary show & tell at the Literacy Council of Alaska was a great little gig to warm up with: an intimate assortment of folks hung out for the Doodles from Down East talk, and a few old friends showed up early during setup just to say hi. Got a lot of amazing feedback on the "Down East Dispatch" article in the newspaper, which I finally got to see a copy of after stopping in the News-Miner offices to reconnect. Met some new fans, caught up with a few former students, and the bonus couple individuals who learned about the work of the Literacy Council for the first time. Plus I sold out of Bad Clams, which meant the road-trip was funded and fueled.
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| Comics Reporter post |
More pics after the jump...
Monday, July 2, 2012
Hard Copies
Scavenged some samples while up in the Interior over the weekend - posters of the upcoming 2012 Run of the Valkyries + the splendid coverage of "Down East Dispatch." I'll have a more detailed report on the gigs in a coupla days.
49 Designs
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| Creative Juices at College Coffeehouse (image Heather Taggard) |
One of the fabulous friends I crossed paths with over this past weekend's events (more detailed post upcoming later in the week) was photographer Heather Taggard, who has a business and website both worth checking out: 49 Designs.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Cartoonist Portraits
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| Milt Caniff and Fans |
Mike Lynch is on a tear over on his blog with a flood of fantastic photos featuring a who's-who roster of cartooning: take a look at the whole series (Part Six here). What an absolute treasure trove of inspirational images...
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