Wednesday, December 1, 2010
End of the Earth and Turn Left
This jam with Clint Hollingsworth was published by him under the Kage Comics label in Pullman, Washington, 1986 (I know, I know, the copyright statement says 1985, but it wasn't printed until 1986). I believe he only printed 50 copies in enlarged digest size.
I first met Clint when he was an employee of Kinkos in Pullman. I had seen one of his comics for sale in a comics shop in neighboring Moscow, Idaho and tracked him down as the only other self-publishing cartoonist in the area at the time. He was active in martial arts and his comic art reflected this interest. Clint later found a job with Washington State University, where I worked, and we sent this jam back and forth through inter-campus courier. I enjoyed visiting with him and having the opportunity to talk with another cartoonist in person while living at the left turn at the End of the Earth.
Today Clint lives in the central part of our state and, I'm happy to report, is still very active in drawing. I see by this link we share having an abundance of cats.
Trivia:
Page 5: I love the old eye poke.
Page 9: Those of us who were raised in the Puget Sound area used to joke about the "Aroma of Tacoma." In fact, once when I was a little kid we were going up to Seattle on Highway 99 and as we drove through Tacoma I announced, "I didn't do it!" But since the paper mills and other industries have vanished or cleaned up their act in the past couple decades, the aroma is almost gone.
Page 10: Leavenworth, Washington is Clint's hometown.
Page 16, panel 1: Paraphrases from Camus and Sartre in this feelgood comic of the year.
Page 22, panel 6: Ignatz! George Herriman was one of my cartoonist heroes.
Page 24: Clint is making a reference to a then recently published jam I had with Brad Foster called One Normal Guy Talking With a Nut.
Page 25: "Use as tool for evil plan!" They just don't make sound effects in comix like that anymore.
Page 27: Actually I really did like Pullman. Working at WSU wasn't all that wonderful, however. And yes, being born in Spokane, I am a native of Eastern Washington.
Page 38, panel 4: Although I really hate it whenever this happens, I must say this bit by Clint is one of my favorite panels in the whole comic.
Inside back cover. A little plug for Will Shetterly. We regarded him as one of us independent press guys. In 1985-1986 Will was really becoming well known and we were excited to see one of our own make it big. I still have my signed copy of Will's first book, Cats Have No Lord, which considering the title makes Will's "Viva Morty" inscription sort of ironic!
Labels:
Big G,
Cats Have No Lord,
Clint Hollingsworth,
elves,
End of the Earth and Turn Left,
jams,
Kage Comics,
Morty the Dog,
Moscow Idaho,
Pullman,
Spokane,
Washington State University,
Will Shetterly
The Man in the Morty the Dog Suit
Yes, that's me a long time ago with a full grown citizen, taxpayer, parent, two-grad degreed, white collar professional, homeowning responsible adult wearing a Morty the Dog suit.
The frightening part is that whenever anyone met this man while he was in civilian garb, he convincingly came across as a mild-mannered sane person.
The occasion was a surprise birthday bash. One of the attendees put together a collage of the event (which included Chrislip and Campos!) and that is the source for these photos.
Labels:
Bob Richart,
Bruce Chrislip,
Mark Campos,
Morty the Dog
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Random Drawings
A few random drawings surfaced recently. A couple are from the early 1980s (yellow paper), and a floater in the Marc Myers envelope looks to be from the 1990s (on the back of library card catalog card).
Monday, November 29, 2010
Olympia Power & Light: Bezango
Hey, Olympia Power & Light is online, covering Oly news, celebrating frivolity, and giving space to us lowbrow culture types. They have provided some of my Bezango columns on their website under the "Frivolity" category, I'm happy to report!
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Edgar Allan Poe in McCleary
My brother, Bryan Willis, wrote a great one-man play centered on Edgar Allan Poe. The work was first presented to the world right here in little old McCleary in 1998. The play has continued to make the rounds to this day.
Although caricature is not really my strength as a cartoonist, how can one resist making a try at drawing a face like Poe's? This drawing was recently used again as part of our local library's Poe art show.
Saturday, November 27, 2010
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