Showing posts with label Posters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Posters. Show all posts

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Retreads 13














1st edition, December 2005, 25 copies, white cover, regular digest size.

Trivia:

Cover, etc.: There are several images here from the final Morty Comix of the 20th century. Some of them were drawn in Kent, Columbus, and Worthington, Ohio during a business trip in November 1999. Interesting these should surface as I prepare to visit the Buckeye State again next month, but this time for fun-- SPACE!

Page 7: This was an unfinished story originally comprised of perhaps 4 pages. After I decided not to complete the thing I turned it into a Morty Comix.

Page 11: The gentleman with the flute is a portrait of John Barcellona and was used on a poster for an Olympia, Washington concert.

Page 12-13: A guide to Morty Comix originally compiled for OlyBlog.

Page 16-17: Clay Geerdes talked me into interviewing myself, but obviously I wasn't really in the mood at the time.

Page 20: In addition to this newspaper ad I also painted a big sign in color for Salt Creek Farm that had the same basic design as this panel. You can find the owners of this farm on pages 21-23 of How Two Ex-Presidents Went Up My Nose.

Pages 22-23: I miss Loafers in hardcopy and enjoyed drawing covers for them.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Retreads 11














1st edition, November 2005, 25 copies, white cover, regular digest size.

Trivia:

Page 4: Nancy and Steve were both writers. It just hit me that I drew book covers for both of them. I have already posted Steve's. Nancy's book cover is soon to come.

Page 5: I don't ski. However I can pose with the gear for a photo shoot and if my expression is suicidal enough I can look convincing.

Page 8: In addition to talking me into drawing posters for his plays, my brother Bryan asked me to draw this ad for his dog running service when he lived in New York.

Page 10: Drawn during a time when several of those electronic evangelicals were exposed in various scandals for being the hypocritical con artists they are.

Pages 13-22: The remainder of the East County Comix strips I posted here in the Larry of McCleary and Other Characters book.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Retreads 10














1st edition, November 2005, 25 copies, white cover, regular digest size.

Trivia:

Page 6: I'm told I fell down some stairs when I was a small child in Spokane. This is a frequent dream image for me.

Page 12-13: This supposedly really happened to the brother of a friend of mine.

Page 18-19: Hey, you draw cartoons! Draw some posters for us! It'll only take a minute!

Page 20: A real knee-slapper in academic philosophy departments. I think the original art is still around here somewhere, but the felt tip is fading fast.

Page 21: The cataloger cartoon has made the rounds since it was originally published in PNLA Quarterly. I have seen it taped up on cubicle walls of catalogers from Ocean Shores, Washington to some little town in southeast Ohio. That copy of AACR2 is soon to be replaced by a new set of rules called RDA. We librarians love our acronyms.

Page 22-23: Two drawings of Wayno's character, Howie.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Retreads




































1st edition, 1983, Olympia, Washington, 46 copies, salmon cover, enlarged digest size.

1st Danger Room Reprint edition, July 2005, 5 copies, blue cover, enlarged digest size.

Retreads was a way for me to collect a lot of my work that had been published hither and yon and round it up in one series.

Some of the drawings appear out of context, but I'm sure as this blog continues we'll revisit them in their native state.

Most of the work in this issue dates back to college and much of it makes me cringe today. Really cringe. A lot.

Trivia:

Channel 14 was the name I chose for a comic strip. Obviously this was before cable TV really took hold. In broadcast television days Channel 14 didn't exist, at least around here it didn't. That's Dixy Lee Ray, our pro-nuclear, pro-supertankers in Puget Sound Governor at the time on page 4. Cartoonists loved her the way we loved Nixon-- easy to draw and such an inviting target. She wasn't our worst governor in my lifetime (Gary Locke gets that distinction) or the most arrogant (Locke wins that one too), but she was the most entertaining and loony.

I drew posters for the weekly film series at The Evergreen State College for awhile. Page 10 has drawings I made for a John Ford movie, and another for a Hitchcock triple feature.

Page 16, lower panel: That's Joan Armatrading, I think.

The bottom of page 21 has the very first appearance in print of "Mortie" the Dog, as far as I know. It was probably drawn in 1978, but wasn't printed until 1980-- after I had graduated TESC. The school newspaper, The Cooper Point Journal, published more of my work after I left Evergreen than when I was a student, taking illustrations from a big pile of artwork I left them.
"Art Laboe" was among the many fake names I used when I signed my work. I was part of a band in college called "Art Laboe and the Happy Martyrs." Although we had one guy who could really play the piano, we never performed or even practiced. But we did have a band because that was expected of all Evergreen students and at parties you could say, "Yes, I'm with a band," which was supposed to make the mystique meter go up a notch.

Page 25: I had given a pile of original art to Lynda Barry as a gift when we were fellow students at TESC. Apparently she had several of my comix from this present I made printed in the University of Washington Daily after she left TESC, and my name was forged on the panels. Although this was flattering, I didn't find out these had seen print until a couple years later. I have no idea how many were published, but a friend did supply me with the issue of the Daily that had the lower panel here on p. 25.

Page 31: Originally compiled and titled by the CPJ editors, Starhead's Michael Dowers took Life With Skippy and reprinted it into a bonafide minicomic. I always liked this one. "Life With Skippy" was later used as the title for a non-existent television show as part of an elaborate marketing hoax.