Monday, January 31, 2011

Project ELF - Eliminate Legal-size Files


OK, so it has been a very long time since I went to a print shop to have one of my comix reproduced. And the experience has given me yet another in a growing number of Rip Van Winkle moments.

30 years ago we generally had three sizes of photocopied comix. There was the minicomic, those little 8 pagers which were letter size folded twice and cut; regular digest size, which was letter size folded once; and enlarged digest size, which was legal size folded once.

Throughout the 1980s I published a lot of comix in enlarged digest size, and eased into regular digest size by the 1990s.

So when I decided to use the original enlarged digest master copy to reprint some old comix from the 1980s for the Mortyshop I discovered legal size is, as one printer told me, "obsolete." In fact, trying to find legal size card stock for the covers of these things was a lost cause. The four print shops I approached don't even have it. The covers of these reprints had to be cut from larger paper, which, of course, made printing them much more expensive.

Then I learned about this thing initiated as a cost saving measure called Project ELF (Eliminate Legal-size Files) and pushed by the Association of Records Managers and Administrators. This apparently started in the 1980s (at the same time I was happily publishing in legal size) and has grown into an accepted standard since that time.

Meanwhile, Sarah has tracked down a place where I can order legal size card stock online.

In the meantime, it is weird to see printers more vexed over the form of my material than they are over the content. That's new.

Phone photo 263


Dreamer and the Beckoning Cat

Elephant on a Bicycle



The flooding of the studio forced me to move a bunch of boxes I had sort of forgotten about, and while I'm putting things back together some lost pieces of the past are resurfacing.

Here's something from the early to mid-1960s, I'd guess. An elephant on a bicycle. Not something you see every day.

Phone photo 262

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Pacemaker Defect













Back in 1982 I thought Pacemaker Defect would've made a great name for a band I wanted to start. Only problem is I can't play any musical instruments. Or read music. Or sing. So I drew a comic instead.

1st edition, 1982, Olympia, Washington, 30 copies, pink cover, enlarged digest.

1996, print-on-demand, regular digest size.

1st Danger Room Reprint edition, July 2005, 5 copies, red, regular digest size.

This is sort of a companion to another half-comic I drew around the same time, Fun in Acapulco.

Pretty much a cathartic cranium streamo comic. The question "I wonder what the Hell happened to my other karmic half?" has been something I've been asking myself in real life ever since I drew this.

Phone photo 261

Saturday, January 29, 2011

A Fork in the Road

Phone photo 260


Dreamer

Natural Functions now in Mortyshop!


Reprinted from the original quarter-century-old master copy! 36 pages plus a Morty Comix tossed into the deal. The most beautiful print job this comic has ever had. Check it out at Mortyshop!

Natural Functions
was posted here January 22.

Phone photo 259


Dreamer and the Bear

Obscuro Presidents: Monroe and Harrison



I found a couple more pencil drawings of United States Presidents (Monroe and Harrison) in my studio the other day. I think these are more recent than the set I posted not long ago, Washington to JQ Adams.

As I recall I was going to start a series on the obscuro Presidents and started with James Monroe and William Henry Harrison. I have a particular fondness for Franklin Pierce, but I didn't get that far.

Phone photo 258

Friday, January 28, 2011

OlyBlog T-Shirt





OlyBlog was one of the first community blogs in the country to bill itself as "hyperlocal" when it was started by Rick McKinnon in 2005.

In the early days of the blog we OlyBloggers would meet at the Brotherhood Tavern (locally called the BroHo) in Olympia on occasion. Some of us had a little problem about the caimans in Oly's Capitol Lake and made an issue out of it. I even drew a comic about the sordid affair called Fetid Lake of Doom.

Anway, I drew a logo for OlyBlog using the caiman image about mid-2006. As you can see by perusing through this Morty the Dog blog, drawing giant reptiles has been a theme of mine for years.

OlyBlogger Visudha De Los Santos, a former neighbor of mine here in McCleary, took the logo and produced about 10 or 12 of these shirts. They were distributed at the BroHo in January 2007. The shirt is blue and the logo is white, but my phone photos have sort of changed the color of everything.

Phone photo 257

Self-portrait

Thursday, January 27, 2011

New URL


We are changing our URL from:

http://mortydog.blogspot.com/

to

http://www.mortythedog.com/

although the old URL should still get you here eventually. The changeover should be complete by the end of the week.

Phone photo 256

Junction City, Washington

It's not a junction. It's a dead end. And it's not a city.

So there you have it.

Junction City, Washington

One Way Flight to Anywhere But Here




1st edition, February-March? 1977, Olympia, Washington, 50 copies, orange cover, 33 leaves of various colors, letter size stapled at margins.

A work so cringe-worthy I only mention it here for the record. I'll scan and post a couple of the few edible parts. There are two comix from the 1970s I will never reprint, and this is one.

Phone photo 255

In Cosmopolis, Washington, there is a fading mural on some kind of water treatment plant that sits behind a nasty barbed-wire fence. This picture depicts the first territorial governor, Isaac Stevens, in an historic pose while in the act of stealing the land from the Native Americans.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

One Normal Guy Talking With a Nut!









1st edition July 1985, Pullman, Washington : Kage Comics. Letter size cardstock stapled at margin.

2nd edition, 1985, Pullman, Washington : Kage Comics. Letter size cardstock stapled at margin.

Available as a reprint-on-demand title, 1994, regular digest size.

Clint Hollingsworth originally published this in a format that makes it difficult to scan, so you Morty the Blog readers are stuck with my posting the digest size version, which is unfortunate given the amount of fine detail work by Brad Foster. Also you'll need to extra enlarge the images to read the thing.

My personal copy is the 2nd edition and it is pink. I don't know if Clint used different colors in his printings. As a note to you bookpeople, Newave collectors tended to regard printings as editions, something that was more or less institutionalized in the network by Jay Kennedy in his Official Underground and Newave Comix Price Guide.

Clint's original editions included some extra material: Foster's short pieces "The Button" and three whimsical illustrations, and my story "A Glimmering Ray of Despair." These extras were all excluded from the print-on-demand version.

This was a very enjoyable jam with one of the most prominent artists associated with the Newave comix movement. Sending this thing back and forth between Washington State and Texas was like a long game of chess with a master. We made attempt after attempt to trap each other in this visual gamesmanship.

Brad and I are from the same generation and shared a somewhat parallel development as cartoonists, growing up with shared influences. We also, and I think I can speak for Brad here, found the Newave network to be a great outlet for our artistic freedom and expression. An outlet that was fairly unique at the time.

With those things in common, the differences were in the details. And we had fun with those differences in this jam.







Phone photo 254


Elmer Fudd's stove

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

McCleary, Washington Does Not Exist!




According to this map in the 2010 Traveler's Companion : the Definitive Guide to Southwest Washington and Northwest Oregon, my town does not exist!

I have circled where McCleary is supposed to be. Apparently our town exists in another dimension. Actually that might explain a few things. On the highest point in the road between Oly and the beach, I've always said we are in that narrow Twilight Zone where the Aberdeen and Olympia spheres of influence don't quite touch.

Actually there are quite a few other towns missing, including Oakville, Satsop, Brady, Cosmopolis, Bezango, Cathlamet, Tokeland, Humptulips, Bucoda, Rainier, and many more.

Phone photo 253

Number 9






After Lynn Hansen's death in April 1995, I provided some assistance to the Hansen family in dealing with the estate, particularly with Lynn's comix and Beatles collections. Eventually both of those chunks of popular culture found an academic home in the Washington State University library system.

Then there was the problem of what to do with Lynn's unfinished manuscript, Number 9.

This was a book Lynn had been writing for at least a decade. The first time I proofread it was back in my days at Pullman, so that would've been between 1983-1986. Sometimes he would ask my help in researching trivia and details.

He was fascinated with the Paul-is-dead hoax from the Beatles era. He developed his own original theory about the event and kept fine tuning it over the years. His goal was to have the thing commercially published.

An interesting topic, to be sure. But not nearly half as interesting as the circumstances surrounding Lynn's final year, as covered in the memorial volume Interrupted Song.

To make a long story short, Lynn called me in August 1994 and said he was sending the Number 9 manuscript to me for safekeeping, since he was sure he would soon be dead or have to go undergound very soon. He made me promise to see that the work would be published.

According to Lynn's father, a newer version of the manuscript was found by the front or back door when the police went to Lynn's house and discovered his body.

Through phone calls and correspondence with Lynn's parents in Boise, we worked out a deal where I would edit the text and they would foot the printing bill-- although I think I paid for extra copies to distribute. I can't remember what the print run amounted to, perhaps as many as 100 copies or more. Some of them were given to libraries.

The final product was v, 77 leaves on letter size, held with comb binding.

The Hansens and I were at a loss to locate some of the people Lynn thanked in his introduction. As it has turned out over the years since his death, I have learned Lynn led a highly compartmentalized and enigmatic life. Among those in his comix circle I knew him as well as anyone, but I am still constantly amazed by strangers and the truly odd characters who find me and share some weird tidbit of info about Lynn that portrays a very different person than the Lynn I had known.

Editing this manuscript six months after Lynn died was quite difficult. He had a good outline. He had good essay hooks. He was just a clumsy and awkward writer. How do you edit something like this without losing the voice of the person who created it? Especially when it is impossible to return it to the author with suggested revisions? In addition to that, my mind wandered to an almost unthinkable direction.

This was a book about a death hoax. Death hoax. Lynn was immersed in planted clues, secret messages, creating an illusion. Today I am sure Lynn is really dead (even if he doesn't show up in the Social Security Death Index!) but in September 1995, right after I had finished transcribing and editing this book (on a typewriter!) I wasn't so sure. The surrounding events had been weird enough to make me wonder if I had been set up as I replayed 1994-1995 in my head.

Maybe one day I will draw a comic about this whole thing. Actually I have started to write it several times, but I keep waiting for enough clues in this real life bizarre mystery to show up so I can make sense out of it. I might be waiting forever.

I'm posting the covers and intro material to Number 9. The illustration for the cover was also used in promotional material when Washington State University held an exhibit of Lynn's Beatle collection in 1997, From Penny Lane to Abbey Road: the Beatles, 1964-1970.