Friday, January 21, 2011

Mythic Residue

































1st edition, spring 1978, Olympia, Washington, 30 copies, letter size leaves bound with a plastic strip which I think is called velobinding. Dark blue covers with light blue guts.

2nd edition, 1983, Pullman, Washington, 30 copies, light blue covers, enlarged digest size.

3rd edition, print-on-demand, 1996, probably regular digest size.

1st Danger Room reprint edition, July 2005, 5 copies (4 blue, 1 red), regular digest size. This is the one scanned and posted here.

My fifth comic was drawn for a class at The Evergreen State College called "Old Stories/Re-Creations." Part of the focus was finding universal themes in world literature throughout history. Our final project was to present a re-creation of an old story. So this was mine.

Actually it was more of an exercise in learning how to loosen my drawing hand. In my previous comic, An Untitled Portfolio (1977) I had finally turned some corner in developing a fluid style, so in this book I was going hogwild.

The next book wouldn't come until 1981, but by then I had calmed down a bit.

One of my classmates was my friend Steve Charak. The faculty who worked with me on this project was Hazel Jo Reed (1938-2009), who we all called Josie. She was a mathematician with a Ph. D. from the Carnegie Technical Institute and had no previous experience with comic art at all-- which means she was an excellent teacher! To this day I can barely add or subtract, and when Josie gave me artistic feedback she was responding from a side of the brain I seldom visit.

Having a mathematics Ph. D. as a comic art teacher was a great experience, and was probably only possible at Evergroove and only in the 1970s. Josie had a great sense of humor and allowed me to develop my own style.

But on the flipside of TESC, as I recall, when I went to pick up the finished copies at the campus print shop, the guy behind the counter was loudly telling his co-worker for my benefit what a piece of crap and waste of time this book was to print and jeez, what is the world coming to when garbage like this is encouraged in college? He was pretty intense and riled up about the whole thing. It was real charming. Looking back I think that experience probably chilled me from producing any more books while I was at Evergreen, but I also saw firsthand how simple lines on paper could evoke some hot reactions.

Trivia:

Only the first edition had illustrated covers (pictured here), subsequent editions merely had the title on the cover. The later editions included an introduction from my then-spouse, Robin.

My usual formula was to draw 4 panels and then make a line at random over the whole page. Then I would incorporate the line into my narrative.

Page 1: I believe this might might be the first of many times I have drawn someone using hot dog buns as shoes.

Page 2-3: The Odyssey was one of our class texts.

Page 5: Obviously in hindsight I was anticipating Reagan.

Page 15, 21, 26: I retold 4 panels from various old comic books.

Page 23, panel 4: Self-portrait.

Page 25, panel 4: Jobbo Bonobo. All hail Jobbo Bonobo!

Phone photo 247


Elma, Washington

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Mukey the Mutant Membrane

















I'm trying hard not to get a cold today. How fitting to be posting this, of all comix.

1st edition was available as a print-on-demand comic in 1996, I'm guessing about 100 copies out there. This and following editions are regular digest size.

Special ultra-rare goldenrod edition, 3 copies, 1999. Entirely goldenrod.

1st Danger Room Reprint edition, July 2005, 5 copies, green (of course)

This book was used as a vehicle to explore my always uncomfortable relationship with capitalism. I figured using this big piece of snot would be too disgusting for anyone to take seriously as a commercial character. After all, I invented Mukey about 1972-1973 and he hadn't gained much of an audience in all those years.

I was wrong. I think Mucinex should pay me a royalty for their Mr. Mucus character. Another example of the mainstream catching up to us obscuro guys.

Mukey has been a supporting character in many comix over the years, but this is the only comic where he is the focus. I keep hoping one day my brother, Bryan, will write a play about Mukey. A musical. And then it will be turned into a movie. And then the franchise rights will ...

Oh.

See? See what this character does to my thinking? He's dangerous.

Trivia:

Pages 12-15 are entirely true. Page 15 anticipated the publication of Sean Tejaratchi’s Kool Man.

Back cover and inside back cover. My daughter Rose felt that Mukey was "disgusting" while Gumby was "refreshing." Personally, I always thought Gumby was terrifying.

Attached is a photo of her art piece, made at the same as this comic, "Mukey and Gumby in a fight (and Morty)." Gumby says: "I could beat you any day in looks" Mukey replies: "Ya. You wish." Morty observes: "Can't you to be quiet. I need to think!"

Phone photo 246