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Tuesday, 25 November 2008

Tuesday, 10 June 2008

  • MoCCA speed run Part II

    -I met Jillian and Mariko Tamaki, cousins that made the comic book graphic novel called "Skim". At $15 dollars for this hardcover I couldn't pass up. Not knowing what it was I was pleasantly surprised from inside the work.

    I was pretty depressed in high school and into all sorts of strange things and so is the protagonist Mariko. It is her story of falling in love in all the wrong ways, but despite it all, overcoming conformity with friendships and experiences. It was a real heartfelt comic that felt very real to me. I know it's fiction, but it read like a very autobiographical work. Beautiful art also complements the mood of the work. It's something we should see in libraries across America.

    Mariko also wrote a comic for DC's Minx line called, Emiko Superstar. At first it looked a little too pop princess, but as I read I realized that it was so much more. It delved into the performance art scene, the nature of surburbia, with the story of Emiko finding herself after stumbling onto an art scene called the factory.

    The pretty art was balanced by gritty characters, with conflicting relationships. I really felt the change that Emiko goes through by the end of the graphic novel. It's gonna be cheap when released and it's a complete story so I recommend you check it out.

    -Then there was Michael DiMotta an illustrator with gorgeous work. He has small printings of these comics designed by his brother. Beautiful detailed work with a real kineticism, tells intricate and creative stories that build off well conceptualized stories. Kind of reminded me of Pixar. He told me a but about his process which involves using the layer system in adobe, and he uses this tool like the best of them.

    His work is really funny, and some of his prints are absolutely gorgeous and hilarious at the same time. Check him out. He'll be selling work once he figures out the underpinnings of an internet store.

    -Miriam Libicki was there with her comic Jobnik about being in the Israeli Army. It's a pretty engaging story that shows you the workings inside a military unit. It reminded me of an episode of This American Life that dealt with soldiers. You can feel the loneliness of the character who barely speaks Hebrew as she falls in and out of relationships throughout the series and as the events taking place from 2000 on become more hectic and dangerous for her. You can sense the looming danger as the pages go on.

    I'll be looking out for future copies as she has only gotten through a year of her experience as a soldier.

    -Ayo, who doesn't have a site, has these great mini-comics, hand made at kinkos. He studied art at a tech school. His style reminds me of great paintings in a gallery. Personal vignettes that can be interpreted in infinite ways make for a great comic. His work can be found at the better bigger comic book stores in the city. I asked him if he was going to collect his work, a series called, "Little Garden" that would work as a coffee table book.

    His work also made me laugh out loud. I'll be on the look out for anything he makes.

    -The first guy I spoke to on the first day of the con was Mathew Swanson. He makes hand made picture books with his wife. They have a great design sense and are really gorgeous books. There is no single theme to the comics he and his wife make. His wife as a wonderful visual style that changes with every volume. The stories have a subtle dark humor to them and are great reads for all ages.

    The books are like museum pieces. I cannot emphasize this enough. Volume III of the books that are available with a subscription is an ambitious comic that has cut up pages that can be turned in different sections creating 10,000 combinations for surreal stories. You have to see it to believe it and it really works.

    He told me there was going to be a $20 discount on the subscriptions (Which were $80). For the quality and originality of the work I think it's well worth it. When I have more money and a coffee table in a nice apartment you'll see the books ready for anyone to read.

    -There was a short comic by Peter Quach called "You Don't know Anything About Jesus". I was initially attracted to the work because he had a banner that displayed the words, "Jesus vs. Bruce Lee." You have to buy something with a marketing line like that.

    After reading it I realized how poignant the story was. The first page was a howler, but soon I realized the story was much deeper than the title would suggest. It's a story of alienation, that really works as a small vignette.

    He said it was his first comic and first time at a table. "You just gotta make it and get a table." He told me. And for a dollar the comic was well worth the price.

    -----------------

    I might have forgotten to mention a few people but these were mostly the folks I had a close connection with. I totally felt high at this convention without any drugs. It was the proverbial high on life conundrum that too seldom happens.

    I'm going to the next MoCCA in 2009, hopefully with a table.

Monday, 09 June 2008

  • MoCCA speed run

    I went to both days of the MoCCA art festival. I would show up upon opening and leave around 2 because I had work all weekend closing at the cafe. I heard there was a fire alarm that the attendees initially ignored on Sunday after I left. People didn't go outside because of the first massive heat wave in NYC. (95 degrees)

    It was on Lafayette off of Houston street in the Puck Building which has a golden cartoon statue hanging high up on the building.

    The first day I saw Brian Wood. I met a bunch of creators and though it was somewhat Air conditioned, I was sweating a lot. I was nervous and anxious to see so much talent surrounding me. I bought way too many books and could barely say anything to the creators as I didn't know them or their work.

    So Saturday night after work I did my homework. I read everything I bought so I would have something to talk about the next day.

    -Xeric award winner Michael LaRiccia was there with his book Black Mane. I read it and holy shit what a great comic. It's raw and original, surreal, yet I could relate to it very much. Michael LaRiccia is the protagonist of his work, and as dark skin Italian confused for other ethnic groups, he is an all together interesting and refreshing new character. He deals with issues of masculinity in a way that is both thrilling and subdued. It reminded me a lot of the comic book "Slow Jams" by David Choe that is nearly impossible to find.

    I read part 1 of his second graphic novel and can hardly wait for the next one.

    -I met Sarah Glidden the second day after buying her books from someone else the day before. She is the author of How to Understand Israel in Sixty Days or Less. It's an exciting and really personal account of her trip to Israel on the birthright trip. She has two chapters of her mini-comic on her, and there are 8 more to go. The protagonist is skeptical, but open minded about the mission of the trip, illustrated by a scene where she is in dialogue with herself in a trial, wondering if one of her guides is a propoganda machine. She is the defense lawyer, prosecutor, judge, and jury. It's a wonderful creative flourish that shows the power of comics.

    The second chapter has a scene where she is looking at a scale model of the Golden Heights in the region and visualize the history of the area right on the model. There are also a lot of travel moments where she realizes the reality of her situation in the historic holy lands. And it's funny.

    I read about her comic on the Broken Frontier website, and it was much better than I expected.

    -I met Spike who is the creator of Templar, AZ . She has a big online following as she is the creator of an online comic. She was really welcoming at the con and insisted on showing me her comic. Her protagonist is an adopted South Korean that lives in an alternate world, trying to get by in a strange city as a writer. There's a couple of nice little surprises in her first volume of the comic. I really enjoyed it.

    As I was talking to her I realized Spike had a vast fanbase. A superfan was there too tell me how great her comic was. I told her I wrote comics and asked her if she made a living on the comic. She said she did. She gave me all this great advice about how to get an online comic and make a really good living. I have asked my artist what he thinks of this route.

    -I talked to artist Stan Wan who works on his online comic and he did a mini-series for Ape. What a nice guy to talk to. I talked about issues of the industry with him and got a little info on Ape Entertainment. He has a nice cartoony style reminiscient of Alex Robinson. I think his webcomic work is really strong, with fun character designs and a great line work.

    Will continue this post again.

Friday, 23 May 2008

  • Bruce Lee out of context.

    So right, there's this interview of Bruce Lee that was made before Enter the Dragon came on and it features Bruce appearing on the pierre berton show.

    And I really admire Bruce Lee. He's a philosopher. He majored in it at when he was in university in the US. He wrote philosophy, taught fighting. Combining the two he created or rather developed a martial art that has a legacy that is very much alive today.

    In Batman Begins and the Dark Knight, Batman fights in a martial art form called Keysi. The Keysi Fight Method was developed as a very real world tactical street fighting technique. It was developed by two former practitioners of Jeet Kune Do, Bruce Lee's martial art that promoted the merging of the powerful qualities of various styles and leaving what is useless.

    Okay, so anyway, there's this interview and what really gets to me, really pisses me off all the time, is that this interview had been seen by millions of people, but it was always clipped. Clipped OUT OF CONTEXT. And why? To make Bruce seem like a weirdo. And exotic wise Chinese man.

    This is the clip in question. It even starts with a line like, "In the martial artist's own words."



    This the a clip of the full interview. It's over twenty minutes but it is well worth it. I'm guarantee you it is entertaining. Bruce Lee is a very engaging and charismatic guy. He's laughing, joking. And I could swear he is high. Rumor has it Bruce would partake in herbal medicines from time to time.



    Wasn't that cool?

    Now the first clip was within the second clip but did you notice the difference?

    Bruce Lee pauses before the beginning of the short clip. He's doing it to recall in his memory LINES FROM A SCRIPT. These lines were made for a role he did for television where he was supposed to play a Chinese guy that dressed in traditional Chinese clothing. As you can see from the interview Bruce did not dress like that. He was a Seventies man. An American.

    I just think it's a shame the way he's clipped. Show the real Bruce. He's more remarkable than his posters make out.

TheGrayRival

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