Sunday, May 22, 2011

Olympia Comics Festival 2011 Report, Pt. 4


Megan Kelso (in green sweater) as she prepares for her afternoon "long" interview. As it turned out, her "brief" morning discussion with Jon-Mikel Gates was actually longer since most of the later session was taken up with a great visual presentation/narration overview of her cartooning career. Since I had agreed to be her interviewer, this made my task much easier!

I must admit although I was very aware of Megan's stature as a cartoonist, I had not really been exposed to much of her work until last week, when I was conscripted into the Fest as an emergency measure. This is no reflection on her, since I confess in addition to not being a comic collector, I'm also not much of a comic reader! Go figure. Actually I'm not much of a reader in general, either. So why am I a cartoonist and librarian? But this isn't about my existential mind taffy, so let's move on.

Anyway, I took a self-imposed crash course on her work and career and found an intriguing artist I'll enjoy watching for the next few decades. She graciously signed a copy of Artichoke Tales for me (which will go to the WSU collection) and treated all my questions with serious consideration.

I felt a real kinship with some aspects of her development as a cartoonist. Both of us were born and raised in Washington State, we both attended The Evergreen State College, we both lived on the East Coast for awhile and found ourselves missing the special kind of rain and mystery our corner of the world possesses.

But in many other ways her work was very foreign to me, as I mentioned in the interview. Most comix create a lot of noise in the head of the reader, but her show-not-tell style is very quiet and nuanced. The Japanese film director Ozu was one her stated artistic influences, whereas I was emotionally touched by Jim Varney's Ernest movies. But we did have Lynda Barry in common. And like Lynda, Megan came to the world of cartooning during her time at TESC.

I really enjoyed Kelso's Watergate Sue series and hope she expands the concept of exploring that era through the eyes of the little girl that she was during the first half of the 1970s. Such a great way of storytelling on many different levels. Megan's insight here is nothing less than astounding considering she was working from the memory of child. I'm speaking as one who was a McGovern volunteer at the time.

Generally Megan takes more risks in her writing than she does with her graphics, which creates the effect of a cautious visual lid on the cauldron of emotion in the story, of which there is plenty. And since she doesn't use captions, this creates a sophisticated tension. She makes comix for grownups. And does it well.

She seems at a crossroads, which is where any good artist should frequently find themselves. Hope I get a chance to have the long interview with you in a few more years, Megan, to catch up on your interesting journey.


For some reason, and this has never happened before with my phone photos, my shot of the photogenic Katy Ellis O'Brien got eaten by the pixel monster. So I'm substituting the promo sheet she handed out.


G. Fling and Eight and a Half by Eleven Comics


The Comix Jam Workshop hosted by Chelsea Baker with me as her co-pilot. I was gratified to see almost half of the people in the room were left-handed. At the table in the foreground, 3 out of 4 were lefties! Hopefully, Chelsea will be scanning and the posting the results of this effort on the Fest blog. In the space of an hour several coherent and very funny jams were produced.


The right-handed gentleman is Mr. Rex N. Munger. He is my oldest friend. We have known each other since Eisenhower was president. Rex and I were avid comrades in comic book collecting during the 1960s and early 1970s. He also has many of my earliest publishing efforts when I drew superhero and funny animal comic books. So if friendship includes mutual blackmail, Rex has the goods on me! But don't mess with him, he's an attorney.

Rex is also an astute student of sequential narrative and any comic art scholar would benefit from hearing his observations.

The left-handed gentleman is Steve Blakeslee, who came up with great laugh out loud zingers to conclude a few comix jams.


Chelsea Baker was the 4th member of our comix jam table. Perhaps there is no other cartoonist in Olympia history who has done as much to create a community of comrades in our art form. Given our natural contrary nature, this is an objective with many inherit obstacles.


OK, I'll only say this once. I'm not much of a joiner, but if I was, I'd join these guys. This trio really projected a true love of our genre. It is great to see their kind of creative energy in Olympia. Having gone from Kindergarten through college in Oly, I never would've dreamt this sort of interest would ever happen here, especially in the days before Evergreen landed.


Jon Mikel-Gates apparently said something that made the poor guy at the table cover his face. Meanwhile, Angelica Blevins, the artist who created the poster for this year's Fest, looks on with the kind of detached amusement we cartoonists are noted for.


So, there is a young woman who slid out of the middle chair and under the table rather than appear in this phone photo. I was tempted to lift the tablecloth and snap a shot of her crouching underneath. Charlie Daugherty handed me a microcomic in the meantime.


Rick Perry gave an excellent presentation at the morning stage show on the different social interpretations of Superman during the last 70+ years.

Phone photo 436


Yakima, Washington

Olympia Comics Festival 2011 Report, Pt. 3

I first met Jim at the launch party for the Newave! book in Seattle early last year


Rapt in Fear


Max Clotfelter and Kelly Froh
Max and I had traded comix via *gasp!* snail mail a few months back, and I enjoyed meeting him in person at last. Kelly and I had met at the Newave! launch party last year. Two artists I most definitely want to keep track of. Hopefully we'll have other opportunities to get together.


Eroyn Franklin with Martine Alicia and
Neoglyphic Media


S. Mann's Eye Bot
I bet she was a good pupil in art school


Chelsea Baker's table, but she was so busy making the exhibit area run smoothly that it was rare to catch her here


There must've been a disturbance in The Force when I snapped this phone photo of
Jordan M. Dalton of Vancouver, Washington

Vancouver is technically in Washington State, but is right across the Columbia River and considered a suburb of, yes, you guessed it, Portland! I'm at a loss to explain it, but I think this fact has something to do with the photo oddity.


The Art Bureau


That seated gentleman with the serene smile is
Aron Nels Steinke
His work is wonderful!

Phone photo 435

Olympia Comics Festival 2011 Report, Pt. 2



Dracula Sauce, Tom Van Deusen


Stun Nuts and Crappy Comics


Sparkplug Comic Books


Theo Ellsworth


An abandoned table when I came by, but I like the art


Family Style, homemade comics and zines


Breanne Boland

Phone photo 434


Yakima, Washington

Olympia Comics Festival 2011 Report, Pt. 1




This year the Oly Comics Fest filled 40 tables. I'd say the majority of attendees were from Portland, reflecting how our neighbor has become the cartoonists magnet of the Pacific Northwest while the Seattle scene fades into the background. Either way, Olympia is lucky to be situated between these two great cities.

I took a whole bunch of phone photos and apologize for the poor quality. Think of it as an impressionist impression of the event. Yeah, that's the ticket. I also didn't get quite all the tables or catch everyone's names, but sometimes it's more fun to visit than to document.

Spritual Succesor(us)


Larry Gonick, Megan Kelso, Paul Chadwick, the special guests. At the stage show all three had to endure a short interview, and then survive a longer interrogation in the afternoon. I had the pleasure of talking with Larry in preparation for this, and then later on stage in front of an audience of maybe 100 people.

Since I didn't have a lot of time, my questions were pretty off the wall, just serving as a preliminary for his later interview. Larry never considered himself fully a member of the small circle of underground cartoonists when he produced work for Corporate Crime Comics, Tales From the Ozone, etc., but rather on the periphery. But he still regards that association as a very positive thing.

Larry does have one Newave comix title he contributed to: Unfunny Animals in 1981, published by Clay Geerdes. When I asked him about this before the show, he couldn't really recall it.

I was also fascinated by the fact he is the only cartoonist I've met who had Jackie Onassis as an editor. According to Larry, she was something of an advanced doodler/cartoonist herself!

A true Renaissance Man cartoonist covering a wide variety of topics, it was a pleasure to meet him.

Kelsey Smith is a librarian with Timberland Regional Library and is an energetic activist for promoting comix and zines for library use. She is one of those people who makes me feel good about being a librarian. It's impressive and forward thinking for Timberland to have a presence at this event.

Chelsea Baker, cartoonist, Evergreen alum, and one of the Fest organizers, announcing the agenda of workshops and presentations.



I love the accidental symmetry these Portland cartoonists provided here


Julia Gfrörer


I wish this photo had turned about better. A quiet gentleman came up, introduced himself and made me about fall over when he told me his name. This is none other than Wade Busby from the Comics F/X years of the late 80s/early 90s! It was so nice to see someone else from the old days. Fewer and fewer of them are showing up each year.





Phone photo 433

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Olympian: Evergreen Grad Finds "Life in Hell" Amusing




Bart Potter wrote this profile of Matt Groening for The Olympian, January 20, 1987.

Due to my dithering along aimlessly and quitting a couple times, Matt got out of Evergreen a couple years ahead of me. During that time he sent me his Life in Hell self-pubbed comix in the mail before it had morphed into a strip. Matt's talent wasn't something that grew and developed to professional level while at TESC in the 1970s. No. Rather he was already an excellent cartoonist from the minute I first met him, when we became neighbors in 1974.

To me the format and distribution of the Life in Hell photocopied books in the 1977-1979 era qualifies Matt as taking part in the Newave genre, although he probably didn't know that was what it was being called at the time.

Well, come to think of it, neither did I.

Phone photo 432

Friday, May 20, 2011

Miscellanea Unlimited Press Catalog




I think this MU Press catalog was produced in 1989. I believe Morty the Dog vol. 1 was, in fact, already published and distributed at the time this catalog was produced. Morty the Dog vol. 2 wouldn't be releashed (get it, a little dog publication wordplay, nyuk, nyuk) until 1991.

Phone photo 431

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Karma Lapel # 5


Here is the cover of Karma Lapel # 5 (winter 1994).

This drawing employs three old tricks I have used for decades:

Crosshatching (a time honored tradition), and then two more I cooked up in the early 1980s and have used since as part of my "look": the double lines and the pointalism rays. I think the most effective use of the latter technique was in the Woofer the Psychic Dog poster.

Heath Row had a nice publication here and he had a knack for writing thoughtful reviews of obscuro comix.

Phone photo 430


Wapato, Washington

Chad Woody's Obscure Cartoonists Series

Our comic comrade Chad Woody kicks off his series on obscure cartoonists in The Rumpus, starting with a fellow some of you might know.

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Phone photo 429


Wapato, Washington

Fremonter Offers Comic Relief



"Fremonter Offers Comic Relief" by Bill Hayes in the January 1986 Fremont Forum, a weekly serving Seattle's Fremont neighborhood. Michael Dowers is pictured sitting on a toilet with a copy of The Seattle Star.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Phone photo 428


Stairs to Nowhere
Wapato, Washington

Monday, May 16, 2011