This is a partial and rough English version of my blog Just Indie Comics (Banner by Pat Aulisio)

sabato 8 febbraio 2014

Malachi Ward's Ritual #3 preview


I've already included the new Ritual in my Best of 2014 list some weeks ago. But now, courtesy of David Nuss of Revival House Press (thanks Dave!), I can post a wonderful page from the new issue, titled Vile Decay (out at the beginning of June with distribution from Alternative Comics). Since it's already known how much I liked Ritual #1 and #2, I'm happy that this excerpt gives me an opportunity to talk specifically about Malachi Ward here on Just Indie Comics. The Californian cartoonist writes complex comics, in which he deals with such themes as time, life, death, love and so on. In addition, he's known not only for Ritual but also for his self-published books, such as Utu, The Scout and Expansion, a sci-fi series realized with Matt Sheean. Sheean and Ward also worked on an Image Comics book by way of Brandon Graham's Prophet. This page from Ritual #3 is illustrated in a fascinating 2-color process and as usual brings the reader to a mysterious new world... A world I can't wait to explore.

venerdì 7 febbraio 2014

Yeah Dude Comics 2014 Subscription


Among the various fundraisings based on comics, today I want to talk about the campaign launched by Pat Aulisio's Yeah Dude, of which I already talked about here. The goal of this Kickstarter campaign is the publication of a semi-monthly, 16/24 pages anthology, with one/three comics from different artists in each issue. The first issue will be Stoner Alien by Aulisio and the line-up of the following books includes cartoonists who already published for Yeah Dude Comics or working in the Philadelphia area, with some guest-stars. So we'll see comics by Box Brown, Ian Harker, Laura Knetzger, Skuds Mckinley, Conor Stechschulte, Emma Louthan, Tom Toye, Josh Bayer, Aaron Lange, Tara Booth, Keenan Keller, Nikki Burch, Victor Kerlow, Josh Burggraf, Sean T. Collins and Will Laren. Pat Aulisio will obviously be the editor of the anthology and I'm sure he'll be good at creating the right mix of art, experimentation, madness and funny jokes. The campaign will be available until the 6th of March but you'll better hurry since some "sets" including comics from Yeah Dude catalogue are limited. I'm sure it'll be worthwhile, this year Yeah Dude Comics will amaze you.

lunedì 3 febbraio 2014

Irene #3

Various Authors, Irene, October 2013, perfect bound, 136 pages, black & white, A5, $ 13.


Irene is an anthology mostly realized by artists coming from Center for Cartoon Studies in White River Junction, Vermont, a school that during the last years has produced a large number of talents. Edited by dw, Andy Warner and Dakota McFadzean, Irene was created at the end of 2012 and since then it's published regularly, which is not an usual thing for alternative anthologies. The latest issue dates back to last October and it's a 136 pages perfect bound book containing short stories and some dw's illustrations with the band Veronica & The Good Guys as theme. Here I'm talking about this third issue, giving more attention to the contents I appreciated particularly.
The book starts with Alabaster's Gin, a tale in which the cartoonist from Ridgewood, near New York, uses the characters from her Mimi and the Wolves series. The allure of this comic is in the interesting and original structure of its pages and in the contrast between the drawings, gracious in a minimalistic way, and the deep and sometime raw topics. I reckon that not so many cartoonists would think to handle the complexity of interpersonal relationships by telling the romance between a little girl and an alpaca, but Alabaster did it and did it well.


Jess Worby's The Sasquatch in Brooklyn is certainly among the best contributions. Drawn in a french style and told in a journalistic way, it narrates the quest for the Bigfoot in New York and it stands out for using the ink-wash technique, prevalent in the last pages, where form and content are efficaciously combined. After Mark Connery's Whut It Means, brief but funny, and Andy Warner's Boatlife, a snap-shot of two teenagers in a turning point, it's time for the suggestive Nap Before Noon by Libian cartoonist and filmaker Barrack Rima, a dream pictured as a movie, with undefined silhouettes moving on black and grey settings. Rima's work is considerably different from the other contents of the book and it's particularly good at mixing a dreamlike story with political topics and author's family vicissitudes.


Dakota McFadzean's drawings in the following Ten Minutes' Break, written by dw, are more traditional, even if the contents are all but conventional. The two authors succeed in making us imagine a story of futurist civilization through the pause of two workmen who can't stop to repeat "Yeah man". Ben Horak's What're fiends for? is instead an extremely funny tale and it's followed by two silent works, Leif Goldberg's Newton's Mist and Dan Rinylo's Find "Sleepy". In Edna II Sophie Goldstein is mysterious and touching at the same time. The setting is in some way similar to that of dw and McFadzean, as similar is the process of creating a distopic and undefined future that the reader can barely grasp. Luke Howard's Dance Yourself to Death closes the book with a dark story in which an artist in creative crisis wants to recover his inspiration no matter what.


Even if the most of the authors has a cartoon or comic-strip style, Irene is an heterogeneous anthology and it's impossible to find an element that can put together all the contributions. This doesn't compromise its success, since these comics are full of ideas and they try to use the medium in an original way, pushing it beyond its habits and conventions, but without crossing the border of the gratuitous experimentation. The fourth issue is already in process and as a reader I would be satisfied if it'll be on the same level of this one.

giovedì 23 gennaio 2014

Frontier #1-2

#1 by Uno Moralez #2 by Hellen Jo, Youth in Decline, San Francisco (USA), May and September 2013, 32 pages and $8 each.


The most of you probably already know Frontier, the "monograph art and comics series" published by Ryan Sands' new imprint, Youth in Decline. Frontier debuted last May with an issue realized by Russian artist Uno Moralez, followed in September by Hellen Jo's book, and it has a very good schedule for this year, with four new publications (you can check the online subscription here). Ryan Sands' wish is to display innovative and stunning art and I'm glad to say with the first two issues the goal is totally achieved.
Uno Moralez's work is one of a kind. As you can see on his website, he's mostly a digital artist, able to realize animated gifs. One of these animated drawings is reproduced in printed form on Frontier #1 cover, an evocative scene of a burning shack with a man at its side in which the pixel effect, a trademark of Moralez, seems to light up the flames and at the same time gives an enigmatic aura at the man. The same topic is also inside the book, but this time the house is in the background: the main subject are two girls on the run and an anthropomorphic bird carrying an human head, making us ask if they deal with the fire and if the building is the same reproduced on the cover. This is a way a lot of figurative artists work and Moralez follows this method, because all his images are full of cross references and recurring themes. He does also some narrative and mute comics, as the one at the beginning of the book, rendered in a beautiful two-color, teal and black. 




The first image recalls immediately David Lynch's Blue Velvet. The visionary director is a clear source of inspiration for Moralez, who doesn't hide this fascination, in fact on his website we find also a portrait of agent Dale Cooper from Twin Peaks. With a style and an atmosphere recalling fifties comics (I see something of Basil Wolverton here), Moralez tells the story of a girl singing in a club about a distant lover. After the show she is humiliated by her boss and then robbed and raped by two guys. When she goes to tell the cops her drama, she is completely ignored. So she goes home and prays in front of a statue of Virgin Mary and a portrait of her and her boyfriend, a sailor. At this point the comic becomes a sort of nightmare and we literally enter in a vortex made of holy images and references to Russian folklore. The lovers are symbolically brought back together in the ocean, but this isn't a good omen.




It's interesting to notice how some of the themes in this first tale come back in other parts of the book. Moralez seems to have a passion for vortexes, monsters, long tongues, long hairs, men in uniform, brunettes, mermaids, sailors, strange wall paper and this allows him to create a well-defined world and a recognizable style, that goes further beyond horror-art. He's also a talented artist when he uses the color, as we see in a beautiful illustration in fluorescent pink, and a manga lover, as we can appreciate in a drawing of a two-faced women threatened by a snake and in a comic about a boy running away from a monster. The last image of the book shows another proof of his skills. He decontextualize an image published on his website and make us ask why the strange beast who is abusing a woman in a white dress is scared while she seems pleased. Well, in the full image there are also some men approaching with a torch and a cross in their hands to save the woman, but the readers of the book who won't check the website will never know. Thanks to Ryan Sands and Youth in Decline to let me know this amazing artist.




I already knew Hellen Jo as a cartoonist from her first and till now only issue of Jin & Jam, published in 2008 by Sparkplug Comics and then self-reprinted in 2012. In Frontier #2 there is only the work as an artist of the thirty-year old and San Francisco-based Jo, even if some of the girls painted and penciled in this book can remind the characters Ting and Terng from Jin & Jam. However, the drawings are now more refined and we can see a remarkable evolution of Jo's style. The characters of Jo's art are mainly teenage girls and in particular, as she says in the interview at the end of the book, "the girls I admired & despised on the schoolyard, girls whom I secretely wanted to be, girls who treated me like shit". So we have groups of girls smoking, skating, painting on the walls, going to college, applying lipstick, doing haircuts and wearing piercings, swimsuits, hats, leopard dresses, feather boas, big sunglasses and so on. They have white, grey, blue, green, red and blonde hairs, most of the time they are in a gang with a cool name and have a threatening gaze, as if they want to hurt you. And they hurt themselves for sure, since Jo's girls are often covered in blood. Frontier #2 is one more great book from an imprint that isn't missing a shot. I'm already waiting for issue 3 with three comics by German cartoonist Sascha Hommer, coming in February, followed in the next months by Ping Zhu (April/May), Sam Alden (September) and Emily Carroll (November).


sabato 18 gennaio 2014

Support SAW!


There are still a few days to support the Sequential Artists Workshop fundraising campaign on Indiegogo. SAW is a comics school based in Gainesville, Florida, defined by its creators as "unconventional, non-institutional, rebellious, lively and serious all at once". In addition to the lessons, SAW's founder Tom Hart and his partners organize various workshops with alternative cartoonists: at the moment this year's schedule includes Dash Shaw and Gabrielle Bell in Gainesville and John Porcellino in Chicago after the Chicago Alternative Comics Expo.
The target of the fundraising campaign is to bring more artists to Florida to teach, expand the library, upgrade the equipment, expand the studio space and obviously to keep prices low for people who decide to follow the SAW's single-year program. And there are also a lot of nice gifts for the funders, such as 16 mini-comics realized by Josh Bayer and Pat Aulisio, Sarah Glidden, Nick Bertozzi, Dylan Horrocks, Rich Tommaso, Jessica Abel, Fran Lopez, Box Brown, Jess Ruliffson, Trevor Alixopulos, Steve Weissman, Erin Curry, Kurt Wolfgang, Matt Madden e Tom Galambos (with two books). And then postcards, posters, t-shirts, original art and the mini-comics done by the students during the year. Support SAW!


sabato 11 gennaio 2014

Koyama Press Special part 1: Blobby Boys & Everything Takes Forever


Let's start taking a look at some of the 2013 publications by Canadian Koyama Press I have guiltly ignored so far, except for the review of Lose #5 by Michael DeForge. Right now, the Koyama is one of the best publisher around and for sure during this year it's bound to deserve this definition, since it presented a very interesting publishing plan, which I have already mentioned here some days ago. 
Blobby Boys is a collection of short stories by Alex Schubert already seen online and in other comic books, plus a bunch of unpublished ones. Schubert, born in 1983, is a very dynamic contributor of the website Vice.com, works in the animation industry and created a series of toys inspired to his characters. The colors used for his illustrations, his dialogues often full of brutal sarcasm and the use of the very same and well defined characters can make him appearing quite similar to Daniel Clowes, although Schubert is different from him, especially because he prefers joking about the present time rather than filling his stories with the vintage and nostalgic elements prefered by the author of Ghost World. In addition to this, the wordiness of Clowes' characters is replaced here with an harsh style: Schubert's trademark is the sharp and meaningful sentence that ends unexpectedly the story making fun of narrative conventions. Schubert is able to create simple and short stories, where even just one page or strip or sentence contribute to a full narrative universe.


The main characters are obviously the Blobby Boys, an alien music band on drugs and ready to kill. As the very same cartoonist suggested in a recent interview, the Blobby Boys are a  bunch of nihilists and if we consider that the nonsense is the main element of his comics, his style can be well described as nihilistic nonsense. Other characters of Schubert's universe are the Cyber Surfer ("I'm a strong robot, and I like to surf" is his motto), the Aging Hipster, who desperately tries to follow the trends, the Punk Dad, the "experimental band" The Spoiler, the art critic who can’t stand anything he sees because, in the end, “everything sucks” (Schubert was a critic himself), and the Zine Police, a sort of police who checks on the fanzines and bans them, when necessary.
I totally recommend Blobby Boys, as everything else made by its author. 


While Schubert’s signature style is nonsense, Victor Kerlow's comics are about the logic behind the dreams. They often seem daydreams, where the line between reality and imagination is undefined. As in Blobby Boys there are as well some recurring characters in his collection Everything Takes Forever, starting with Taco-Head, the protagonist of some funny gags. Kerlow is well known in the United States as an illustrator and a contributor of magazines such as The New York Times and The New Yorker. His style can be considered not well-defined at first glance, but if you look at his work more carefully, you can notice his refined touch, especially when he draws the human figure. Also his use of the ink-wash technique, used for example in Weird Things, Downstairs, gives elegance to the illustrations and improves the black and white of the panels. Unfortunately not all of his stories are very much meaningful and the longest one of this collection, Little Guy, is a clear example. It seems like Kerlow’s stream of consciousness style is still more a limit than a peculiar detail, on the other hand his illustrations skills and very good ideas showed in the shortest stories make of Everything Takes Forever an enjoyable reading. I look forward to read Bad Party, the new collection of the cartoonist, published in these days by Future Shock Empirical.

sabato 4 gennaio 2014

Just Indie Comics in 2013


I already posted on my Italian website a list of the main articles I did in this half-year, since I started the blog the 21st of July. Now in every post you'll find a link to the English translation (if I did it), but for your convenience I recap here every piece available in the English (and sometime rough) version. Have a good read.

- Golem Stories by Sammy Harkham
- Lose #5 by Michael DeForge
š! #13-14
- The Bookshelf vol.1: Optic Nerve #13 by Adrian Tomine, We Will Remain by Andrew White, Alamo Value Plus by Rusty Jordan
- Monster, edited by Paul Lyons and Roby Newton
- The Comic Arts Brooklyn experience, a report from the festival
- The Comic Arts Brooklyn experience part 2
- Comics People: Pat Aulisio
- A Look is the Fire Itself, report from Anna Deflorian's exhibition
- Life Zone by Simon Hanselmann
- Sequential Vacation #1-2 by Sar Shahar
- Best Indie Comics of 2014, a preview of the new year