Earlier this month I headed down to NYC for the MOCCA Art Fest. MOCCA is the Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art, and it’s located in Manhattan. The Art Fest is a small press convention they put on each year. I call it the “other” convention because there was another, larger con going on in New York the same weekend - the Big Apple Comicon. That one held no interest for me, though, as it would have been dominated by the big companies and superhero comics (plus probably a lot of non-comics stuff).
The trip to the city began with me driving down to Norwalk, CT, where I got on a train into Manhattan. That let me off at Grand Central Station, where I got onto the subway. Before going to the subway, though, I had to be a typical tourist, and take some pictures of the station’s famous main concourse (hey, I’d never been to Grand Central before). I took some pix from the topof the steps, showing other tourists taking pictures:


and then I went down to the railing on the landing to get a less obstructed view of the floor:


The con was held at the Puck building in Soho (it’s located just South of Houston St.), which is a couple of blocks from the actual museum.
I got to see a number of comic artists I like, and have photos of some of them. First off, one of the first people I saw was Andy Runton, who does the cute all-ages comic Owly.

I had him sign a book that I’d brought, and I picked up a copy of the first book and got it signed for my nephew, who will have his 4th birthday this Fall (don’t tell him!). The person who had been in line right before me had given Andy a present - a little crocheted Owly:

Most of the convention took place on the first floor of the building, but there was also some space being used on the seventh floor. For some reason, while there was air conditioning in the former space, the latter didn’t have any. The temperature in NYC that day was in the upper 90’s. When I got up to floor 7, I felt extremely sorry for the artists up there. I’m glad I went up there, though, as I got to meet Spike, creator of Templar, Arizona (which I reviewed here not so long ago).


She was doing sketches for free of her characters, so I asked for one, and she spent quite a while working on it. I was amazed she went to that much work for free. Of course, I have pre-ordered both book collections so far of the strip, and mentioned that. The money from those pre-orders is what allows her to pay for the print runs of the books. Still, since she had gone to the effort, and it was so stifling up there, I bought her a soda (what are fans for if not to do favors for artists, after all?).
One of the guests of honor at the con, and someone whose presence made me feel I had to be there, was Lynda Barry. If you don’t know who she is, you obviously weren’t reading alternative weekly newspapers in the ’80’s or ’90’s. She drew the very long running Ernie Pook’s Comeek, as well as writing a couple of novels and some other comics. As her contemporary Matt Groening has said, she is the funk queen of the universe! I happened to go to the table where she would be signing just before her scheduled signing time. I ended up being 4th in line when she started. She was very friendly and enthusiastic, grasping my hand in both of hers when I greeted her. I bought her new book, What It Is, which is sort of a treatise on writing, and had her sign a couple of strip collections. I pointed out that one of the books was my favorite, because of the dialogue on the cover. She said she didn’t think she’d read that dialogue since the book was published in the early ’90’s.
Some pics of her:


Toward the end of the day, Shaenon Garrity was signing at the Friends of Lulu table. I had found out only a few days earlier that she was going to be there, making a rare East Coast appearance. I took advantage of the opportunity to have her sign a couple of Narbonic books.


Other artists I visited (but did not take pictures of) include Jim Ottaviani, Keith Knight, Pat Lewis, Jessica Abel, Jennifer Camper, Mo Willems, and Stan Yan. I recommend them all.
While on the sweltering seventh floor, I took some pictures of the view. This is looking West along Houston St.:

and this is looking North, sort of along Lafayette:

After the con floor closed for the day, I went for a walk to look for dinner. Before actually settling on a restaurant, I wandered over to the Hudson River area. There’s a bike path near the water, and I saw this memorial along the path:



Then I wandered out on a pier (I forget the number) to see the river proper. This shot looks downriver:

In the distance you can see the Statue of Liberty:

This is the view upriver:

A firefighting boat was parked at the pier:

and heading back to dry land, I saw this view of the city:

I had dinner at a nice Indian restaurant, in which I was the only diner. This was probably because they had no air conditioning. I didn’t care, as I just wanted t get off my feet and eat something. After dinner I walked around a bit more, then went to the Lulu Awards ceremony at MOCCA itself. Following that, I skedaddled out of town and headed for home.
My goodness. I saw this linked from Rich Watson’s blog, and I don’t know quite what to say. I’ll merely present the link: Mr. T Versus
Would one be foolish not to read the series?
Let me mention another online comic. Dicebox is a comic I’ve been reading for just over 5 years now, and it is a planned long-format story (it’s just about 25% of the way finished currently); you could call it an online graphic novel. As to genre, it might best be called anthropological science fiction. It follows 2 main characters, Molly and Griffen, who move from planet to planet in search of work but with seemingly no overarching plan for their lives. There are certainly interesting aspects to the worlds they find themselves on, as well as interesting technologies, but this comic is all about character development and interactions. 5+ year in the reader is still finding out stuff about the characters all the time, and the creator, Jenn Manley-Lee, is great at writing her characters, dialogue, and situations.
What I really love about Dicebox, though, is the art. It’s beautifully toned, as though it were painted. In fact, while she pencils the comic by hand, the coloring is all done in Photoshop.
This past December, she announced that she wouldn’t be updating for a few weeks, but offered that the first dozen or so people who e-mailed her could get custom watercolor
images of characters from the comic for a mere $15. I jumped at the chance, and actually got in under the wire.
I asked simply for Griffen wearing the long coat that can be seen on the comic’s front page and in the first chapter. The painting I got is below (click image for a high-res version):

I particularly like the flower petals.
I’ve updated several pages on my website over the last few days, which included adding links to some webcomics that I hadn’t linked to before. I’ve also added links to these in the blog sidebar (over there on the left and scroll down a bit), but I thought it would be good to give them some explicit recommendations in an entry.
First up, I’ve had Shaenon Garrity’s comic Narbonic listed on my comics recommendation page for quite a while, but haven’t had her in the sidebar. She has several strips that she’s done online, som in collaboration with others. This seems like a good time to list her, as she has a new strip that started 2 weeks ago, called Skin Horse. I’d give a description of the strip here, but it’s a bit hard to categorize as yet. There’s certainly a sci-fi element, and it’s humorous like all her work, and this one is rather surreal so far as well.
Next, I had heard about Questionable Content for a while, but just started reading it about 4 months ago. It took about a month to get through the 1000 strips. Jeph Jacques (pronounced ‘jacks’) is the writer/artist, and he lives in Easthampton, an adjacent town to me. The strip is sort of romantic-comedy-slice-of-life-indie-music-fan type stuff, if that makes any sense. It also seems to take place in a world just a little different from our own, as there exist little sentient robots known as AnthroPCs. The strip has well-written characters and is often really funny. The strip also spawns various T-shirt designs, which Jeph sells on the site.
Last, but not least, is Templar, Arizona. Spike is the name of the artist, and she is wildly hilarious. This strips cracks me up to no end much of the time. The setting of the strip is a fictional city in a sort of alternate history Arizona. The rest of that world might resemble ours, but not so much Templar. This is another comic with excellent characters, whose personalities contrast with each other greatly, but where details of the city and backgrounds are very important as well (so don’t just pay attention to the people). I actually discovered Spike a few years ago when she had a different strip running on Girlamatic, and have been following Templar almost since it began. Besides her wonderful writing, I love her art style - lots of heavy lines and subtle sepia tones over grayscale.
I scored as a non-dyke, though. I find it interesting that my main result is the one man in the bunch (maybe gender is that significant!).
 |
Which Dyke to Watch Out For Are You?
created with QuizFarm.com |
You scored as Stuart You are Stuart, partner and co-parent with bi-dyke Sparrow. You believe that values need to be backed up with action, which can make you a bit impulsive at times. Make sure to budget time and money in order to afford the winter-length utili-kilts and Air America Radio shirts you’ve had your eyes on.
| Stuart |
|
70% |
| Toni |
|
65% |
| Lois |
|
50% |
| Mo |
|
40% |
| Sparrow |
|
35% |
| Clarice |
|
35% |
| Sydney |
|
25% |
|
Last month I drove up to Vermont for the first time since we moved to Massachusetts. I had only been in Vermont once before, on a camping trip with my father and brother about 17 years or so ago.
This trip was to Brattleboro, which is not far away - only 45 minutes from Noho. I hadn’t made it up there during the previous 2 years simply because I didn’t have a reason to go. This time I had a pretty good reason - Alison Bechdel was giving a reading and signing as part of the tour for the paperback edition of her graphic novel Fun Home.
She did a tour last year when the book first came out in hardcover, and she actually appeared in Northampton that time. Unfortunately for me, I didn’t know she was appearing there until the day after it happened. So this year I was determined to get to see her.
She was appearing at a dinky little theater right on the Connecticut River. You can see across to the large hills on the New Hampshire side:

And just outside the entrance to the place is this interesting railing:

The presentation was in a few sections. She read a section of the book while showing slides of some of the panels. Then she showed a slideshow that documented her creative process, including reference photos she took. She apparently took lots and lots and lots of reference photos for the book, including several of herself dressed as her father, for drawing him in the story.
After that slideshow, she did another reading section with projected panels, and then took questions. After that, it was time for the signing. I got Fun Home and the most recent DtWoF book signed, and then took a few pictures of her as souvenirs. I probably shouldn’t have gone without a flash, though, as my pix turned out blurry. Here is the best one (i.e. the only one where her head isn’t blurry):

It was a very fun evening, and I highly recommend Fun Home to everyone (though most who read this blog have probably already read it, or at least know about Alison).
I’ve been reading her stuff for well over a decade (maybe 15 years at this point), and think she’s just awesome. It was a little hard not to be starstruck when I talked to her.
Yeah, so go read some Bechdel if you never have. 
I found out about these quizzes from the blog of Mr. Matt Quirk. Both results are surprising - I wouldn’t generally identify with either of these characters. (the less geeky among you are probably wondering why I’d identify with any comic book character…)
Your results:
You are Superman
| Superman |
|
75% |
| Spider-Man |
|
60% |
| Hulk |
|
55% |
| Robin |
|
53% |
| Supergirl |
|
53% |
| The Flash |
|
40% |
| Catwoman |
|
35% |
| Green Lantern |
|
30% |
| Iron Man |
|
30% |
| Wonder Woman |
|
28% |
| Batman |
|
20% |
|
You are mild-mannered, good,
strong and you love to help others.
 |
Click here to take the Superhero Personality Quiz
Your results:
You are Mr. Freeze
| Mr. Freeze |
|
58% |
| Poison Ivy |
|
39% |
| Apocalypse |
|
30% |
| Dr. Doom |
|
30% |
| Dark Phoenix |
|
30% |
| Juggernaut |
|
29% |
| The Joker |
|
28% |
| Lex Luthor |
|
27% |
| Green Goblin |
|
25% |
| Mystique |
|
25% |
| Catwoman |
|
21% |
| Kingpin |
|
20% |
| Magneto |
|
20% |
| Venom |
|
13% |
| Two-Face |
|
9% |
| Riddler |
|
8% |
|
You are cold and you think everyone else should be also, literally.
 |
Click here to take the “Which Super Villain am I?” quiz…
I’ve added two new blog links to the sidebar, and you can tell they’re men of distinction, because they’re both named Sean.
Sean Pronay is a friend from Cincinnati, who I met through a local Dennis Kucinich group during the 2004 election. In addition to sharing many of my political perspectives, he also is a video/media guy. His experience comes more from the advertising world, as opposed to my work mostly being in the public sector - as such, he is certainly more knowledgable about persuasion than I am. And if you happen to have stereotypical ideas about what advertising people are like, then you need to learn more about Mr. Pronay.
Sean Bieri is a minicomics artist in the Detroit area. I’ve been a fan of his work since the early ’90’s, but have not ever posted a link to him before. This is because, until a week ago, he never had a web presence to which one could link. Much of his work is wonderfully irreverent, and I look forward (and you should, too) to it being posted on his new blog.