Michael Dowers just sent me a huge package of original art I had apparently lent to him since the 1980s I had forgotten about. Thanks Michael! What an unexpected arrival in PO Box 390! A treasure trove of memories!
This work will probably be made available for sale very soon, as in starting today or tomorrow.
In taking an inventory here's what I find:
Stories (I will eventually track down the original publication source for all of them):
"No Cigar" (12 p.)
"Dredging" (4 p.)
"Rainmaker Painraker" (12 p.) from Storm Warnings. Conventional mainstream minds liked this piece, but I hated it. Go figure.
"Slim Chance and Fat Fate" (7 p.) also from Storm Warnings.
"Chow Time" (4 p.)
"I Love, Er, Like Seattle!" (2 p.) This was the only piece I drew as an original work just for the Seattle Star that was not a reprint aside from a cover for one issue.
Entire books:
Cranium Frenzy # 7 (1994). (19 p.)
Bezango (1994). (24 p.). I am torn about offering this art for sale for three reasons. First, this comic was later reprinted as a nationally distributed comic under the Starhead label with the title Bezango Obscuro. That jacks it up a notch. Second, as a nationally distributed comic, it left the fold of the obscure and my character Floating Baby Head was widely read. This character is now used in the Disney cartoon Phineas and Ferb, and I am still interested in investigating possible legal action against Walt's regime for stealing my idea. I know, it's a David v. Goliath scenario, and if I try I'll be crushed like an insect in a manner that will ruin me. But that concept was mine first in a national commercial comic and the original art can serve as a court exhibit. I feel very ripped off, even if it was possibly unintentional. Third, the upcoming documentary on NW cartoonists is called Bezango WA and I suspect this "Bezango" term will not go away. If that is the case, I now hold a precious primary source document that should reside in a public depository, like the Washington State University Comix Collection.
Xenophobic Knives and other Love Songs, Pt. 2 (1991) (12 p.)
In addition, Michael sent three pages of an unpublished work called "Outside-In, the History of a Comix Series." Looks like it was drawn in 1989. Michael says he left p. 4 in a scanner, so when he sends that one I'll post the whole thing here. I must admit I have no memory of drawing this thing or why I drew it.
Still deciding whether or not to sell each page individually or as a set. I'm open to offers before I post. You can check out my other art and comix for sale here:
http://www.mortythedog.com/p/comix-art-25-sale-includes-new-items.html
[Update: "I Love, Er, Like Seattle!" is no longer available]
[Another update: "Dredging" has been spoken for]
Showing posts with label Bezango (comic). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bezango (comic). Show all posts
Saturday, November 10, 2012
More Original Art!
Labels:
Bezango (comic),
Bezango (film),
Bezango Obscuro,
Disney,
Floating Baby Head,
Michael Dowers,
original art,
Outside In,
Phineas and Ferb,
Seattle Star,
Storm Warnings,
Xenophobic Knives and Other Loves Songs # 2
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Attention Phineas and Ferb Fans: Meet the ORIGINAL Floating Baby Head
It came to my attention that a popular animated cartoon has a character called Giant Floating Baby Head.
I wonder if any the folks behind the show saw my Floating Baby Head character comix in the 1990s? And if not, what sort of collective memory were we tapping into?
State of Beings # 1 (1991)
Bezango / Bezango Obscuro (1994)
I wonder if any the folks behind the show saw my Floating Baby Head character comix in the 1990s? And if not, what sort of collective memory were we tapping into?
State of Beings # 1 (1991)
Bezango / Bezango Obscuro (1994)
Wednesday, July 13, 2011
City Limits Gazette # bezango (March 1991)
This issue of CLG might've been my first use of the word "Bezango" in print.
An innocent mention of King Features editor Jay Kennedy and his connection with Family Circus artist Bil Keane is the first fine line crack in the dam that will soon burst.
I provide a brief synopsis on the comix career of Ronald Gabriel Vicens II, better known as "Gato."
Bad cover versions of And I Love Her, And Your Bird Can Sing, Ask Me Why, Baby You're a Rich Man, Baby's In Black, Back in the USSR, Ballad of John and Yoko, Because, Being For the Benefit of Mr. Kite, Birthday, Blackbird, Blue Jay Way, Can't Buy Me Love, Come Together, Continuing Story of Bungalow Bill.
Dog Boy drawing by Steve Lafler.
Labels:
Beatles,
Bezango (comic),
Bil Keane Watch,
City Limits Gazette,
Dog Boy,
Jay Kennedy,
Ron "Gato" Vicens II,
Steve Lafler
Saturday, May 28, 2011
What is "Bezango"?
Last October 9th, when I posted the Bezango/Bezango Obscuro story I made a stab at the etymology of the word "Bezango."
It was just a word I made up. I liked the sound of it. I had used it as an expression of joy for awhile, perhaps starting as early as the 1980s. The first instance of this word seeing print, so far as I can ascertain, was in the 1994 comic of the same name. But perhaps I used it in City Limits Gazette 1991-1993. When I post those I'll keep my eye out for it.
Later "Bezango" became a geographic place in the Bezango WA 985 series, an 8-issue run that began in late 2001. Bezango was another name for the weird and unusual people and places tucked away in these moss-covered hills of Southwest Washington.
The word was revived for the Olympia Power & Light column in 2009. To me, the word has evolved into some kind of catch-all for the stories that fall between the cracks, the oddballs, the weirdos, and the celebration of frivolity. We'll get into the story behind that last descriptor in good time.
Bezango WA 985 has also been on stage and shown as gallery art.
Labels:
Bezango (comic),
Bezango column,
Bezango Obscuro,
Bezango Wa 985,
City Limits Gazette,
Olympia Power and Light
Saturday, October 9, 2010
Bezango / Bezango Obscuro
My first comic of 1994 (January), 100 copies. Rose colored covers in enlarged digest format.
2nd ed., around Feb.-March 1994, 50 copies with a salmon cover, also enlarged digest size.
Starhead Comix reprinted the comic in commercial form later in 1994 and retitled it Bezango Obscuro. I'm not positive, but I think Michael Dowers told me he printed somewhere in the neighborhood of 700 copies.
The cover color was supplied by Art Penn, an amazing artist chiefly known under another name as an illustrator of children's books.
Because the comic was originally drawn for the digest size, there happened to be extra space in the margins. This was filled by employing an academic Michael had met in a bar. Dr. Whidbey interviewed me once on Michael's front porch. I recall he was drinking something that smelled like high octane mango, and wore black socks with his sandals. Howerton College, a private school somewhere up north, went under awhile back due to bad investments. Or maybe the whole thing was just a dream.
My only comment on his comments is the use of the word "claim." I know not this "claim," it just is.
There was more padding by including part of Morty Comix #2018, and three issues of State of Beings, which were initially released as comic supplements with the biweekly City Limits Gazette during my editorship, 1991-1993.
The 1st Danger Room Reprint Ed. of June 2005 was a return to the original form, except the 5 copies with red covers were printed in digest form, not enlarged.
"Bezango" is a word I just made up, I like the sound of it. "Obscuro" was a term I began to use frequently while editing CLG. By the early 1990s the Newave was dead and I started using "Obscuro" as another word to describe the kind of comix we produced. Michael picked up on that and added it to the commercial release. I'm not sure if Michael himself or Art Penn created the second part of the cover title logo.
I'm including a scan of the enlarged digest cover, the original color of the cover (a gift from Michael which I prize) with and without the acetate overlay, and commercial comic itself. Whidbey has saved me the trouble of adding trivia notes.
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