Updated weakly.

John P. has a PATREON. / King-Cat 78 is OUT.



Wednesday, March 16, 2011

MARCH TOUR DATES


Hey, so I'm heading out on a short "tour" later this week.  If you're in Columbus, Pittsburgh, or good ol' Chicago, please come by and say hello!

* * *

Sat. - Sun. March 19 - 20
COLUMBUS, OH


Tues. March 23;  7 PM
PITTSBURGH, PA
Slideshow, Q+A, and booksigning:


Fri. March 25;  5-8:30 PM
CHICAGO, IL
1331 Milwaukee Ave.

ZINES: THE NEXT GENERATION
(Youth Zine Reading, 5 – 6pm)

EXHIBITOR READING, 6:30 – 8:30pm
With readings by:  Jeffrey Brown, Victoria Akpan, Maranda Elizabeth, John Porcellino, Victor David Giron, Jake Snider, Al Burian, Lara Dendel, Ben Spies, Aaron Cometbus, O'Shell, and Cindy Crabb.

(An ASL interpreter will be in attendance at this event.)


Fri. March 26; 10 AM - 5 PM
CHICAGO, IL

I'll be tabling all day with Roctober Genius Jake Austen, and participating in a panel discussion with Liz Prince on making a living doing your art! (4 PM)

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Look for more events coming up in April and May!


Monday, March 14, 2011

LIBRARY HAUL No. 2


Pictured: Art of the Postmodern Era, Irving Sandler; Masterpiece Comics, R. Sikoryak; Dick Briefer's Frankenstein, Craig Yoe, ed.;  Joseph Cornell: Master of Dreams, Diane Waldman; Strange Suspense and Unexplored Worlds by Steve Ditko, Blake Bell, ed.; 365 Days and My Most Secret Desire, Julie Doucet; Ghost World, Daniel Clowes; Mr. Fluxus: A Collective Portrait of George Maciunas, Emmett Williams, Ann Noel, Ay-O, eds.; Sublife, John Pham; Peanuts: Volume One, Charles M. Schulz; ACME 19, Chris Ware; Souls Grown Deep, Vol. One and Two, Paul and William S. Arnett, eds.; and Basquiat, Brooklyn Art Museum.

My many thanks to the Rockford Illinois Public Library for keeping me sane.


Monday, March 7, 2011

MY DENVER


Colfax Avenue, looking west from Corona.

Pulling into Denver after the last tour was odd for me, and a little difficult.  Because for the first time (aside from my initial visit in '92 to check it out) I was coming into Denver without the intention of staying there.

I spent a week or so, and took a few pictures, said hello/goodbye to a bunch of good friends.  I don't know why I love that stupid city, but I do.  Here's a brief personal history.

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In late 1991, my good friend Donal got job-transferred to Denver and began pestering me to move there: "It's dirt cheap! It's beautiful! The weather is perfect!" So I took a trip out in March of 1992, saw he was right, and went back to Illinois to give notice at my job. In June I drove out there in a U-Haul with my dad, and the next chapter of my life began.


I moved into Apartment 101 in the Don-Edward (above) at 9th and Emerson.  I lived with Donal and his new cat Maisie, and drew comics.  I began my little comix distribution company Spit and a Half, and started working hard at forging an independent life for myself as an artist.  My rent was $175 a month.



In 1994 Donal made the wise decision to buy a house (above, 2929 W 33rd Ave.) in the Highlands neighborhood in Northwest Denver.  I moved there with him and Steve, but only lasted a month.  My old apartment at the Don-Edward was still open, so I moved back in.  I stayed in the Don-Edward 'til I left Denver in 1998.



From '98- 2002 I lived back in Illinois, in Elgin (a whole 'nother blog post...).  But in '02, Misun and I returned to Denver, settling into this building at 1220 Marion Street, a few blocks from Cheesman Park-- my favorite park in Denver.  I worked at the health food store a few days a week, and otherwise drew comics and studied Nutrition at home.  But after a year, we up and moved again, to San Francisco.



After 3 years in San Francisco I couldn't wait to get back to Denver.  By now rents had skyrocketed and we couldn't find an affordable place in Capitol Hill.  So we moved into this duplex building in the West Highlands, on Vrain Street, just a few blocks from the border with Wheat Ridge.  I loved it out there, it was so suburban, peaceful, and quiet.  I'd go on nightly walks to look for foxes and raccoons and follow the old irrigation ditch as it wound through the neighborhood.

The Highlands sits up on a big hill, and at night you could see the lights of Denver and the suburbs spread out forever.  It was beautiful.  But it was weird.  It was a total yuppie neighborhood, and just far enough from downtown to be annoying.  After a year and a half we reurned to Central Denver, to the Speer neighborhood.



We lived at First and Grant, a few blocks from the Mayan.  It was so nice to feel part of the life of the city again, the sound of cars going by and people on the sidewalks.  I started to feel at home again.  I lived here for two and a half years, until Misun and I split up and we lost the lease.  Since then I've been adrift.

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SOME OF MY FAVORITE DENVER PLACES



The Capitol Hill Post Office where I held a PO Box off and on for 18 years.



The "Queen" Soopers at 9th and Corona, two blocks from the Don-Edward.  I practically lived here from '92-'98, shopping at 3 AM with the drag queens and other assorted rebels.  Look how spiffy their new remodel job is!



The seminal Wax Trax record store at 13th and Washington.  First place that ever sold King-Cat in Denver, and my home away from home.



Kilgore Books opened a few doors down in one of the old Wax Trax spaces (at its heyday, Wax Trax businesses took up almost the whole block--  there was a new vinyl/CD store, a used store, a non-rock store, and "Across The Trax" which sold posters, T-shirts, patches and other ephemera.)  Kilgore quickly became a champion of the Denver independent comics scene, and still is.  Awesome guys.



Washington Park


After my surgery in 1997, I came to Wash Park every morning and did a lap around the south lake to help rebuild my strength.



Sloan's Lake, in NW Denver, which was once a cow pasture.  Farmer Sloan dug a new well one evening, and the next morning found a 200 acre lake in his backyard.

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A BIT OF DOWNTOWN DENVER



Where downtown begins, at Broadway and Colfax, in front of the Capitol.



City and County of Denver Building, from the Capitol steps.



Colorado State Capitol:  The dome is covered in actual gold.  Every once in awhile some wag suggests they pull it down and pay bills with it.



The thirteenth step measures exactly 5,280 feet above sea level.





Like many cities, Denver destroyed much of its historic architecture to make way for laundromats and parking garages.  Every once in a while you see a block like this, and it breaks your heart.



Downtown Denver is home to many diagonal pedestrian crossings, once known locally as "Barnes Dances."







The Sixteenth Street Mall, one of the most successful urban redevelopments in American history.



Those yellow awnings mark the Barnes & Noble, where Noah and I used to meet for our walks around downtown.





Despite all its modern construction, downtown Denver has managed to hold on to many of the beautiful old buildings.  Noah and I would wander around for hours looking at them and sighing.



Looking at these pictures nearly brings tears to my eyes. Why did I ever leave?

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Monday, February 28, 2011

THE EVOLUTION OF A DRAWING

Ahem, ahem, in case you didn't know, in addition to my comics (ahem) I support (???)  myself (hint) by doing commissioned artwork for people (among other sundry jobs).  I thought it might be interesting to show the evolution of a drawing I made recently.


King-Cat reader Marguerite Insolia (she's an actress--  hire her!) asked me to do a portrait of her and her cat Mija, based on the photograph above.

Here's my first rendering:


Turns out she was looking for something more in my "King-Cat"-y drawing style, so I sent her the sketch below, which she approved, asking just that the cat be colored black.


And here's the final drawing:


For what it's worth.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

UNITED WE STAND, DIVIDED WE FALL


I don't know exactly what you'd call my politics, but I have to think that capitalism has failed us when our national government, mass media, and even our health care systems have become nothing more that corporate fronts.

There are people in this country who would want you to believe that our teachers are lazy and privileged.  Well, I know plenty of teachers and in my experience they are neither.

Those people want to divide us, and they want to keep us uneducated.  They want us doped with sex, TV, and bad food.  The truth is right in front of us!

I am SICK AND TIRED of corporations in this country being treated better than HUMAN BEINGS.

 

Monday, February 21, 2011

WHITE BUFFALO GAZETTE: THE MILLENNIUM ISSUE


This post is just kind of an adjunct to my recent three part history of the the long-running Obscuro Art zine The White Buffalo Gazette (see below for links).  In 2000 AD, editor Jeff Zenick published his last Gazette, one of the most lovingly produced zines I've ever seen.  It included hand-silkscreened covers (featuring the artwork of the great John Miller), hand-embellished back covers, unique hand-glued found imagery, and, of course, the art, writing, and comix of dozens upon dozens of underground artists (all in alphabetical order!).

I recently pulled my copy out and thought I'd include some snapshots of it.  This isn't of course every page from the issue, but should give you a good idea of what a Zenick-edited issue of White Buffalo Gazette was like.  In my opinion, this issue was the crowning achievement of 90's obscuro publishing.

(Clicking images will enlarge them.)


Cover by John Miller, with lettering by Jeff Zenick.

Inside front cover and page one of contributor's list.

The brilliant Jim Conatser.  I sure hope he's still making comics.

Delaine Derry-Green

Kevin Huizenga

Erik Kaye and Linda Hedges

Dave Kiersh and James Kochalka

David Lasky and Carrie McNinch

One of John Miller's amazing comix.

Andy Nukes

Joel Orff

John Porcellino

Mike Roden and Jerry Sims

Maximum Traffic

Steve Willis and Chad Woody

Jenny Zervakis

Jeff Zenick and Inside Back Cover

Hand-glued and embellished back cover; artwork by Eric Schaller.

* * *

A HISTORY OF THE WHITE BUFFALO GAZETTE: