Showing posts with label Timberland Regional Library. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Timberland Regional Library. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Happy Day After National Donut Day!















I hope the Timberland Regional Library realizes what a gem of a librarian they have with Kelsey Smith. She has become a regular figure at the Olympia Comics Festival, promoting reading and creativity through comic art. In 2012 she passed around a moveable feast of a jam comic. I got in it early but never saw the final results until recently.

The roster of artists is quite diverse: Jason Shiga, Steve Willis, Carter Welliver, Dominic Moreschi, Rhett Nelson, Harper, T.A. Nelson, Tom Dillon, Alex Paul, Lily, Brittany Dalberg, Anna Boyle, Phung Lu, Greg, Fiona Avacado, Aaron Brassea, Shannon Wheeler, Tim Basaraba, Greg Hatcher, Corin See, and Forrest Johnson.

Kelsey gave me permission to scan and post this. She told me there are still copies available if you ask at the Olympia Timberland Branch.


Friday, September 21, 2012

Morty Comix # 2437




Morty Comix # 2437 was tucked into the back inside jacket flap of a library book, a biography of George Harrison, and then returned to a branch of the Timberland Regional Library.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Morty Comix # 2435



Morty Comix # 2435 was left in the Friends of the Library book sale area in a branch of the Timberland Regional Library.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Morty Comix # 2401

The idea for Morty Comix # 2401 came to me in a meeting at work. I quickly jotted down the basic concept while pretending to look serious and intelligent.


So then I came home and drew six faces. The next stop was my little photocopier.


But guess what? I hadn't used my photocopier since Mini-Comics Day last may 26th. So when I opened the lid for scanning I found the original art for The Floating Head of Humptulips, a jam by Frank Young, Paul Tumey, Jim Gill and myself was still in there! A cartoon bomb for me for a change!

So I took that art and it became the first item in a box of material I'll be sending to the Washington State University Comix Collection when it fills up. I just sent WSU a big box of comix and related material earlier this month.

The box, by the way, was originally sent to me by Michael Dowers, one of several filled with copies of Newave! The Underground Mini Comix of the 1980s.

That hideous and frightening doll hanging above the box was given to me by my daughter many years ago as a joke. It is part of my Bulletin Board project.

 Then, for good measure, I tossed my original draft drawing for Morty Comix # 2401 as well.

Well, my my, we certainly got sidetracked, didn't we? So, back to the six faces:


I ran the images through my photocopier, and reduced them in size, on astrobright pink paper. Maybe about 15 copies. Then I cut them into little squares.

All the little squares were then placed inside a styrofoam cup. The cup itself was titled, numbered and dated.

 The original art, which was ballpoint on graph paper, was burned in my woodstove.

The next day, which is today, I visited a Timberland Library branch north of here and found a great place to leave Morty Comix # 2401 as sort of a cartoon bomb ...

 ... right under a dictionary stand.

And so I bid farewell to another Morty Comix left out in the world all on its own to face an uncertain fate.

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Morty Comix # 2385

Morty Comix # 2385 was placed inside a library book about Marcel Duchamp.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Olympia Comics Festival 2012, pt. 1


The 2012 Olympia Comics Festival, the 11th year this event has taken place, was dedicated to our comrade Dylan Williams.

I didn't catch the stageshow portion this year, but I made it to the Olympia Community Center in time to get a shot of the set-up. In the foreground is librarian Kelsey Smith, from Timberland Regional Library. She is a real champion of our art form and deserves some kind of medal for her efforts to promote comic art and self-publishing as a method for expression for people (children and adults alike) who like to draw and write.








Fran Victor attempts to find a quiet place to collate DVD covers