Showing posts with label Matt Feazell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matt Feazell. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Morty Comix # 2488


We had our family holiday gift exchange a couple days before Christmas. Susan gave me a potato gun with two spuds to use as ammo.



It does NOT shoot up to 50 feet, as we shall see. However, I am looking forward to years of service. We'll get back to this gift in a bit, but let's move on to ...

... a somewhat revolting present from Bryan and Zach. These dismembered plastic monkey parts are in a bag. And as if that wasn't creepy enough, the monkey's eyes on the severed monkey head BLINK!
 
Stay with me now. All will be be revealed by the end. I made a grid with 50 little squares on a sheet of cardboard.

Then I arranged the disgusting monkey parts on a TV tray. 

The grid was placed under and behind the tray.

I shot several potato pellets at the monkey parts, which were precariously balanced at the edge of the tray. Although the little spud bullets hit the targets, they lack the required velocity to knock them to the floor. So when the label declared "Shoots Harmless Potato Pellets," they meant it.

So it was time to haul out a more advanced technology to achieve my goal. I went to the toybox and extracted the gyroscope.

 You can tell the monkey's expression is politely apprehensive at this juncture.

 I let the gyroscope rip

It did not fail me as it knocked over two revolting monkey parts. A foot landed on numbers 27, 28, and 32.

Now it was time for the next phase, but I knew the potato gun would not be able to do the job. Mr. Spud himself told me this was all a half-baked idea anyway, and he took his leave. But I thanked him for helping me with the initial parts of this project.

  
So I made a much simpler grid, narrowing the field to three.

And this time I brought out the heavy artillery,  foam darts!
 
It took a few tries, but in less than 3 minutes I knocked a repulsive monkey hand into the grid. It landed on number 32.
 
32. That means Minnesota, the 32nd state, admitted to the Union in 1858. I've been over Minnesota in a passenger airline but have never set foot there, but hopefully someday I'll be able to pay a visit.

None of my ancestors parked there on their way West in the pioneer era (but a few were next door in Wisconsin in the 1850s-1860s).

Minnesota has a great tradition of creative comic art, was one of the hotspots in the Newave era, and today remains a prominent place for our brand of comix. Meeting Matt Feazell at SPACE 2011 was a real honor and even though he now lives in Michigan, I nominate him for Minnesota's Cartoonist Laureate for his amazing past contributions.

 Anyway, I rolled the dice the for the next step. As you can see, the number was 7. That's lucky!

And the 7th largest city in Minnesota is Plymouth. I consulted a map of that city and decided to just pick a street name I liked, and Cheshire was my choice. A co-worker calls me the Cheshire Cat and I admire that character.

So I randomly selected an address on that street, which turns out to be home to a business enterprise. I'm mailing it tomorrow morning. This issue of Morty Comix will probably be tossed in the trash or recycling, but I hope you readers enjoyed the narrative. Actually, in many ways, these blogposts are the real Morty Comix, the hardcopy product is residue.

Obscuro comix in action!


Monday, July 18, 2011

City Limits Gazette # Pete Best Isn't (Apr. 1992)












Logo by Wayno, Chad Woody's relatives, news and comments from Mark Campos and Matt Feazell, Bil Keane Watch, Hank Arakelian defends himself against the onslaughts of Jim Ryan, comix comment by Lynn Hansen, Hector chain cartoon, Bruce Chrislip profile, bad cover versions of Paperback Writer, Penny Lane, Piggies, Please Please Me, Polythene Pam, Rain, Revolution, Rocky Raccoon, Run For Your Life, Savoy truffle, Sexy Sadie, Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, She Came In Through the Bathroom Window, She Loves You.

Sunday, July 17, 2011

City Limits Gazette # Kitty McAdoodledoo (Feb. 1992)





What does it mean to sell out?, Daniel Sotomayor dies of AIDS at age 33, Bruce Bolinger claims his boss Don Martin says he enjoys the Bil Keane Watch (Martin later called me up), Lynn Hansen has a complaint about Artie Romero, Matt Feazell's first minicomic.

CLG bonus for this issue: State of beings # 7. Connecticut

Saturday, July 16, 2011

City Limits Gazette # Feverish clambake (Dec. 1991)








What is selling out?, Bil Keane Watch by Troy Hickman, Jay Kennedy on the Guide and also Bil Keane, Hector chain cartoon, Lynn Hansen comix reviews, news from Matt Feazell, Jim Danky describes the State Historical Society of Wisconsin comix collection, bad cover versions of Long and Winding Road, Love Me Do.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Outside In # 3






1st edition, 1983, 150 copies on white cardstock.

2nd edition, December 1983, 20 copies on white cardstock.

3rd edition, 1984. Seattle, Washington : Starhead Comix, regular stock white paper.

J.R. Williams, George Erling, Par Holman, Jim Ryan, John Mobbs II, Bruce Chrislip, Matt Feazell.

A lineup of the classics in their classic poses, almost all of them part of the central core of the Newave comix movement. I got to meet Matt Feazell in person for the first time at SPACE last March, and I can't really explain it, but he actually does look like the self-portrait he contributed here! I'm impressed.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

SPACE 2011 Report, pt. 13

Matt Feazell gave a presentation on his Cynicalman movie. One of the actors was none other than Sean Bieri as Lone Shark! The thing that was most striking to me was how it was obvious the cast was enjoying the task of making a film. You can tell Matt has a large group of devoted friends.


I am looking forward to seeing the final motion picture. In the meantime, Matt gave me a stack of books for the Washington State University Library comix collection.


Above: Carol Tyler's presence at SPACE gave our corner of the room some class at least for Saturday. Here she is contributing to a jam page.

Above: Itamar Reiner lives in Columbus and shared his portfolio. Although it looked like he was engaged in lots of technical drawing, it was his landscapes that really grabbed me.

Above: I got a photo of Colin Upton getting a photo of the one and only Tim Corrigan. In the background you can see Sean Bieri and Max Traffic visiting with John Porcellino.

Tim was every bit as decent and caring as I imagined him to be. His devotion to small press comics impresses me when he relates stories about how our art form helps people find a voice during difficult times in life. He introduced me to Larry Blake and gave me some new Mightyguy comix.