Showing posts with label Joe Sumrall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Sumrall. Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2011

A look at Lighten Up! by Joe Sumrall









Above: samples from Joe's book.

Although this title is no longer available from Bear & Company, I thought I'd give it a rare review in this blog. Sarah managed to track down a copy of Joe Sumrall's Lighten Up! : a Book of Enlightened Humor (1990) and I just finished giving it a read.

Sumrall has been mentioned earlier in this blog. My fellow local cartoonist was murdered almost two decades ago and this case remains unsolved. He should not be forgotten.

In Lighten Up!, Sumrall employs a fairly traditional cartoon drawing style. He uses lots of shading film and has a careful line style in his chiefly one-panel gags. You don't sense this guy is really cutting loose and getting wacky.

But the subject matter he covers is far from conventional. Joe intended his cartoons to be enjoyed by an audience familiar with some basic New Age premises. In 1990 this group was a much smaller subculture than it is today. It is also not a movement that strikes me as having a great sense of humor, and I can't help but wonder if Sumrall's attempt to bridge cartoon gag comedy with the spiritually esoteric was frowned upon by those who were attempting to institutionalize these philosophies into cults or profitable ventures. Such charlatans don't mind being the object of scorn, but being laughed at is another matter.

The closest work I can compare this to is the film Stuart Saves His Family by Al Franken. By poking fun at a take-themselves-serious subculture from within (in Franken's case, the 12-step movement), an awkward dynamic takes place that requires an acquired taste.

Lighten Up! stands as an oddity in the cartoon world, which makes it all the more interesting to read. But not in funny har-de-har-har way.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

City Limits Gazette # Brass angel at high tide (Nov. 1992)













Logo by Michael Stengl, giant cartoon heads in deadly combat, quotes out of context, my typewriter breaks, Joe Sumrall's murder is still unsolved, Bil Keane Watch by Mark Campos, another Bil Keane Watch by Steve Lafler, comix reviews by Lynn Hansen, bad cover versions of Yesterday, Bil Keane Watch, Comics Journal appendix references to the small press by Gary Usher.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Who Killed Joe Sumrall?







I recently posted an issue of CLG that had a contemporary mention of the murder of our cartoonist colleague Joe Sumrall in 1992. And it reminded me how bothered I still am that the case has never been solved.

Why does this particular instance get to me when there so many others out there also unsolved? Perhaps because I felt a bit of a kinship from afar with him as a fellow comic artist. He also seemed to not be entirely taken with the whole J.Z. Knight/Ramtha nonsense, which I am convinced was inspired by an aspect of Hitchcock's Family Plot.

The Olympia area experienced another cartoonist homicide with the killing of David George in 2003. But that case was more or less settled.

Joe Sumrall's killer has never been identified so far as I know. This is a cold case worth warming up. We have not forgotten you, Joe.

Update: An interesting YouTube finding by Sarah:
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zxJyfqeaKU8

Monday, July 18, 2011

City Limits Gazette # Milk of Human Kindness (Apr. 1992)













Logo by Mark Campos. Mark's logo here is one of my faves. OK, I might be coming across as a heretic here, but did Brando ever make an appearance in a movie that was worth a damn after The Godfather? I mean, he was always interesting to watch no matter how bad the film, but in his whole career you can count the really good films on one hand and still have enough fingers left over to deliver a Moe Howard style poke in the eyes to a pretentious film buff who declares Brando a genius.

Mark Campos and Nils Osmar weigh in on a panel discussion at Cartoonists Northwest, Comics F/X news, cartoonist Joe Sumrall murdered in Rainier Washington and the case has not been solved to this day, Bil Keane Watch, A.P. McQuiddy comments on Lynn Hansen, naked man quacks like a duck in a bank, comix reviews by Lynn Hansen, a tip of the hat to the great people at Pip (now out of business), comment by Ted Delorme, bad cover versions of She Loves You, She Said She Said, She's a Woman, She's Leaving Home, Something, Scott Johnson's resub.