joshreads:

Several years ago, in one of the most fanboy-awesome moments of my life, Alison Bechdel commissioned Tony Millionaire to draw my portrait. Now it’s made it into his book! The original still sits at the corner of my desk, always watching (and judging).

Holy smokes, the Comics Curmudgeon himself rendered by Tony Millionaire! (PS: my list of books that I need to buy this holiday season keeps getting longer)

joshreads:

Several years ago, in one of the most fanboy-awesome moments of my life, Alison Bechdel commissioned Tony Millionaire to draw my portrait. Now it’s made it into his book! The original still sits at the corner of my desk, always watching (and judging).

Holy smokes, the Comics Curmudgeon himself rendered by Tony Millionaire! (PS: my list of books that I need to buy this holiday season keeps getting longer)

Life is a circus, Zippy! It can be a circus of pain or a circus of delight!
As the Bil Keane RIP notices started flooding across the net yesterday, my friend Julien reminded me of the bizarre phenomenon of Zippy the Pinhead making a crossover appearance in Family Circus back in 1994 (go look at it, it’s weird!). It wasn’t a single-panel affair: that out-of-context Family Circus strip was a followup to a week in which Bil Keane literally drew his characters into the surreal world of Zippy as a sort of exchange project. From a speech by Zippy artist Bill Griffith:

Here’s an example of something that kind of blew my mind, and a number        of readers. I did a number of comic strips in 1994 in which the idea was        that Zippy and Griffy were going to, at least Zippy, enter, literally, the        world of The Family Circus, a single panel comic. Into the        strip a few days I thought, “What the hell, I’ll call Bill Keene. I’ll get        his phone number, and I’ll see if he wants to literally jam this strip with        me.” I figured the chances were zero, but why not? I called him up; he was        incredibly friendly. He lives in Phoenix, where Zippy is published in the        local paper. Loves the strip; reads it every day. Y’know, at the end of        the phone call I thought, “He’s my blood brother. We’re like the two surreal        comic strip artists.”

Behind the sticky-sweet facade of everyone’s favorite round newspaper comic, it’s good to know there was an artist of subversive humor and warmth for his fellow cartoonists, appreciative of both parody and collaboration.

Life is a circus, Zippy! It can be a circus of pain or a circus of delight!

As the Bil Keane RIP notices started flooding across the net yesterday, my friend Julien reminded me of the bizarre phenomenon of Zippy the Pinhead making a crossover appearance in Family Circus back in 1994 (go look at it, it’s weird!). It wasn’t a single-panel affair: that out-of-context Family Circus strip was a followup to a week in which Bil Keane literally drew his characters into the surreal world of Zippy as a sort of exchange project. From a speech by Zippy artist Bill Griffith:

Here’s an example of something that kind of blew my mind, and a number of readers. I did a number of comic strips in 1994 in which the idea was that Zippy and Griffy were going to, at least Zippy, enter, literally, the world of The Family Circus, a single panel comic. Into the strip a few days I thought, “What the hell, I’ll call Bill Keene. I’ll get his phone number, and I’ll see if he wants to literally jam this strip with me.” I figured the chances were zero, but why not? I called him up; he was incredibly friendly. He lives in Phoenix, where Zippy is published in the local paper. Loves the strip; reads it every day. Y’know, at the end of the phone call I thought, “He’s my blood brother. We’re like the two surreal comic strip artists.”

Behind the sticky-sweet facade of everyone’s favorite round newspaper comic, it’s good to know there was an artist of subversive humor and warmth for his fellow cartoonists, appreciative of both parody and collaboration.

Do you enjoy newspaper comics? Want to learn more about their history and place in the world through interviews with a laundry list of comic artists? Then you might be interested in helping these guys in Kickstarter finish out their documentary: STRIPPED: The Comics Documentary

(Via The Comics Curmudgeon)

superhappy:

I’m gonna post every Mark Trail until this goose is okay.

Not to steal a joke from The Comics Curmudgeon, but my first thought on seeing today’s Mark Trail was “Oh yeah, Mark’s gonna punch a goose!”

superhappy:

I’m gonna post every Mark Trail until this goose is okay.

Not to steal a joke from The Comics Curmudgeon, but my first thought on seeing today’s Mark Trail was “Oh yeah, Mark’s gonna punch a goose!”

"Animation and comics are false siblings. They resemble one another but they’re two completely different things. The relationship a reader has with a comic is nothing like the one a viewer has with a film. When you read a comic, you’re always active, because you have to imagine all the movements that happen between the frames. In a film, you are passive: all the information is there. And when you make a comic it never happens that you have 500 or 1,000 people reading it in the same place at the same time, all reacting."

Marjane Satrapi, creator of Persopolis, talks about how she found success in adapting her acclaimed two-part graphic novel into an animated feature.

Bonus tip: cast Iggy Pop.

(Via Mayerson on Animation)

"The principal factor in my success has been an absolute desire to draw constantly. I never decided to be an artist. Simply, I could not stop myself from drawing. I drew for my own pleasure. I never wanted to know whether or not someone liked my drawings. I drew on walls, the school blackboard, old bits of paper, the walls of barns. Today I’m still as fond of drawing as when I was a kid — and that’s a long time ago…"

— The incomparable Winsor McCay, quoted in a Los Angeles Times blog post that points out that this is the 100th anniversary of McCay’s short film Little Nemo. If you’ve never seen his animated shorts — they’re among the first examples of the medium, and yet still technically brilliant — you should hit up the YouTube and get started with Nemo

austinkleon:

Cat and Girl » Archive » Internship Camp
via @douglaswolk:
Do it for love. Do it for money. But don’t ever do it for “exposure.”

I love Cat and Girl. Here’s one of my favorites, from last summer: Metaphors, Cheap

austinkleon:

Cat and Girl » Archive » Internship Camp

via @douglaswolk:

Do it for love. Do it for money. But don’t ever do it for “exposure.”

I love Cat and Girl. Here’s one of my favorites, from last summer: Metaphors, Cheap

Actually, he does. Donald Duck accidentally (and somewhat accurately) described the chemical compound methylene nearly two decades before real-world scientists:

In 1963, the Disney Studio learned just how wide and faithful a  readership [Carl] Barks had. A letter arrived from Joseph B. Lambert of the  California Institute of Technology, pointing out a curious reference in  “The Spin States of Carbenes,” a technical article soon to be published  by P.P. Gaspar and G.S. Hammond (in Carbene Chemistry, edited by  Wolfgang Kirmse, New York:  Academic Press, 1964). “Despite the recent extensive interest in  methylene chemistry,” read the article’s last paragraph, “much  additional study is required…. Among experiments which have not, to our  knowledge, been carried out as yet is one of a most intriguing nature  suggested in the literature of no less than 19 years ago (91).” Footnote  91, in turn, directed readers to issue 44 of Walt Disney’s Comics and  Stories. … A  year later, the Studio received a letter from Richard Greenwald, a  scientist at Harvard. “Recent developments in chemistry have focused  much attention to species of this sort,” Greenwald commented. “Without  getting technical let me say that carbenes can be made but not isolated;  i.e. they cannot be put into a jar and kept on a shell. They can,  however, be made to react with other substances. Donald was using  carbene in just such a manner, many years before ‘real chemists’ thought  to do so.”

(Via Cracked’s 5 Amazing Things Invented by Donald Duck [Seriously])

Actually, he does. Donald Duck accidentally (and somewhat accurately) described the chemical compound methylene nearly two decades before real-world scientists:

In 1963, the Disney Studio learned just how wide and faithful a readership [Carl] Barks had. A letter arrived from Joseph B. Lambert of the California Institute of Technology, pointing out a curious reference in “The Spin States of Carbenes,” a technical article soon to be published by P.P. Gaspar and G.S. Hammond (in Carbene Chemistry, edited by Wolfgang Kirmse, New York: Academic Press, 1964). “Despite the recent extensive interest in methylene chemistry,” read the article’s last paragraph, “much additional study is required…. Among experiments which have not, to our knowledge, been carried out as yet is one of a most intriguing nature suggested in the literature of no less than 19 years ago (91).” Footnote 91, in turn, directed readers to issue 44 of Walt Disney’s Comics and Stories. … A year later, the Studio received a letter from Richard Greenwald, a scientist at Harvard. “Recent developments in chemistry have focused much attention to species of this sort,” Greenwald commented. “Without getting technical let me say that carbenes can be made but not isolated; i.e. they cannot be put into a jar and kept on a shell. They can, however, be made to react with other substances. Donald was using carbene in just such a manner, many years before ‘real chemists’ thought to do so.”

(Via Cracked’s 5 Amazing Things Invented by Donald Duck [Seriously])

austinkleon:

Kate Beaton’s Fargo/Charlie Sheen mashup
I saw Fargo for the first time the other day (I know right) and became totally enthralled by Marge Gunderson. I figure, you know, with all this Sheen nonsense going on these days there is only one person who can really sort it out.

austinkleon:

Kate Beaton’s Fargo/Charlie Sheen mashup

I saw Fargo for the first time the other day (I know right) and became totally enthralled by Marge Gunderson. I figure, you know, with all this Sheen nonsense going on these days there is only one person who can really sort it out.
An art world / comics story I hadn’t heard before: in November of 1978, a Peanuts strip ran in which Snoopy expresses his love for Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s ephemeral environmental installations. 25 years later the artists responded by presenting the Charles Schulz Museum with an actual reconstruction of Wrapped Snoopy House.
(Image above from Landfall Press, where you can buy a litho of the artists’ working collage for this piece)
UPDATE: there’s a nearly identical post over at Dinosaurs and Robots, dated almost exactly 24 hours before this post. I’d honestly not seen that when I posted this, so there must be something freaky going on in the collective unconscious…

An art world / comics story I hadn’t heard before: in November of 1978, a Peanuts strip ran in which Snoopy expresses his love for Christo and Jeanne-Claude’s ephemeral environmental installations. 25 years later the artists responded by presenting the Charles Schulz Museum with an actual reconstruction of Wrapped Snoopy House.

(Image above from Landfall Press, where you can buy a litho of the artists’ working collage for this piece)

UPDATE: there’s a nearly identical post over at Dinosaurs and Robots, dated almost exactly 24 hours before this post. I’d honestly not seen that when I posted this, so there must be something freaky going on in the collective unconscious…

From the New York Times, a notice on an exhibition entitled “The Courtroom and Comics” at the Yale Law Library:

The medium serves as a guide to what was going on in society at the  time, he said: “Comics are very much a reflection of pop culture.” The  law has long been a part of that, whether it’s Perry Mason grilling a  witness or Denny Crane blustering.
In the exhibition, many of the images have the power to delight,  especially for those who collected comics in their youth. If your day  job happens to be anything like mine — I’m the national legal  correspondent for this newspaper — you will certainly notice that the  comic book creators’ knowledge of law had a few gaps. For starters, the  little girl in that Superman cover would have been seated in the witness  chair, if in fact taking sworn testimony from a minor in open court was  allowed in the Metropolis jurisdiction, and Superman would have been  elsewhere in the courtroom. But you probably won’t mind that the  creators sacrificed a bit of reality for drama, which is also why, you  know, the main character can fly.

Mike Widener, the rare book librarian mentioned in the article, formerly oversaw the Law in Popular Culture collection at our own Tarlton Law Library here in Austin, which houses a great array of movies and books with lawyerly angles.
(Via the NY Times)

From the New York Times, a notice on an exhibition entitled “The Courtroom and Comics” at the Yale Law Library:

The medium serves as a guide to what was going on in society at the time, he said: “Comics are very much a reflection of pop culture.” The law has long been a part of that, whether it’s Perry Mason grilling a witness or Denny Crane blustering.

In the exhibition, many of the images have the power to delight, especially for those who collected comics in their youth. If your day job happens to be anything like mine — I’m the national legal correspondent for this newspaper — you will certainly notice that the comic book creators’ knowledge of law had a few gaps. For starters, the little girl in that Superman cover would have been seated in the witness chair, if in fact taking sworn testimony from a minor in open court was allowed in the Metropolis jurisdiction, and Superman would have been elsewhere in the courtroom. But you probably won’t mind that the creators sacrificed a bit of reality for drama, which is also why, you know, the main character can fly.

Mike Widener, the rare book librarian mentioned in the article, formerly oversaw the Law in Popular Culture collection at our own Tarlton Law Library here in Austin, which houses a great array of movies and books with lawyerly angles.

(Via the NY Times)

austinkleon:

My two favorite things!

This would look great on a t-shirt.
Related: Do you think too much? (this joke’s been bouncing around at least since the Usenet era, but I still find it mildly funny)

austinkleon:

My two favorite things!

This would look great on a t-shirt.

Related: Do you think too much? (this joke’s been bouncing around at least since the Usenet era, but I still find it mildly funny)

A paper in the academic journal Palliative and Supportive Care analyzing perceptions of death and dying through the lens of New Yorker cartoons. Science!

“Personification of Death” (n = 38) included a subtheme of “Bargaining with Death.” The main theme included representations of death with human attributes, such as the Grim Reaper. Examples are the Grim Reaper sitting in a bar talking to another man; the caption reads, “Sometimes I give myself the creeps” (from 2005; Mankoff, 2006. p. 28). The subtheme involved people negotiating for more time to live. Many of the cartoons in this theme show the Grim Reaper standing at someone’s door as he or she tries to negotiate his or her way out of dying. For example, one such caption read, “Couldn’t I do a couple of hundred hours of community service instead?” (from 1990; Mankoff, 2006. p. 46). This can be seen as the legacy of death (Elgee, 2003), that we are all its slaves.

(Via NCBI ROFL)

From a recently declassified history (PDF) detailing the NSA’s computing equipment up to 1964, comes a description of their house-sized computer ABNER’s mercury-powered memory banks:

A succession of pulses (signal or no-signal) travels through an acoustic medium, say mercury, from one end to the other of a “delay line.” […] At the input end of the line is a crystal that converts an electrical pulse to a mechanical wave which travels through the mercury to the other end, where another crystal reconverts it to an electrical signal. The series of electrical signals is recirculated back to input, after passing through detector, amplifier, and driver circuits to restore the shape and strength of the pulses. Also, in the part of the cycle external to the delay line are input and output circuits and “clock” pulses for synchronization. In mercury, the pulses travel at the speed of sound, which is much slower than the speed of electrical signals, and thus the delay in going from one end of the line to the other constitutes a form of storage. […] In ABNER, the mercury tank was a glass tube about two feet long; the delay time was 384 microseconds, or eight words of 48 bits at one-megacycle-per-second rate. Thus the 1,024 words were contained in two cabinets holding 64 mercury delay lines each.

ABNER was named after comic strip character Li’l Abner, reportedly because it was a big, hulking machine that “didn’t know anything”.
(Via Bruce Schneier)

From a recently declassified history (PDF) detailing the NSA’s computing equipment up to 1964, comes a description of their house-sized computer ABNER’s mercury-powered memory banks:

A succession of pulses (signal or no-signal) travels through an acoustic medium, say mercury, from one end to the other of a “delay line.” […] At the input end of the line is a crystal that converts an electrical pulse to a mechanical wave which travels through the mercury to the other end, where another crystal reconverts it to an electrical signal. The series of electrical signals is recirculated back to input, after passing through detector, amplifier, and driver circuits to restore the shape and strength of the pulses. Also, in the part of the cycle external to the delay line are input and output circuits and “clock” pulses for synchronization. In mercury, the pulses travel at the speed of sound, which is much slower than the speed of electrical signals, and thus the delay in going from one end of the line to the other constitutes a form of storage. […] In ABNER, the mercury tank was a glass tube about two feet long; the delay time was 384 microseconds, or eight words of 48 bits at one-megacycle-per-second rate. Thus the 1,024 words were contained in two cabinets holding 64 mercury delay lines each.

ABNER was named after comic strip character Li’l Abner, reportedly because it was a big, hulking machine that “didn’t know anything”.

(Via Bruce Schneier)