The Artist is Not Present: A Conversation with Adrian Tomine
on the occasion of his Adrian Tomine’s new book Killing and Dying, Anne Ishii talks to the cartoonist about his authorial voice, sense of place, and fatherhood.
on the occasion of his Adrian Tomine’s new book Killing and Dying, Anne Ishii talks to the cartoonist about his authorial voice, sense of place, and fatherhood.
Odd efforts this week; tilting at windmills, chasing ghosts.
In one image, Daniel Clowes defeats the superhero. Also: Eugenics, Fetishes, Word Games, Race, Feminism, Fredric Wertham, Corporate Branding, Libertarians, Pajamas, Stan Lee, Graffiti, The Austrian School of Economics, and much more!
Grandma’s 95th birthday party, and the ride home.
Returning a library book by Alice Munro, while prone to tears
Frank Santoro here, this week we have a double column about the CAB festival. I’ve got a brief report and then John Kelly will take over to give a much fuller account of the activities. John and I will both have more on CAB next week as well. The 2015 Comic Arts Brooklyn (CAB) presented… Read more »
Going to Lincoln Center, and remembering Moonstruck.
The stereotypical weekly visit with his snarky gay Jewish therapist.
One day there will be art here, but for now: commerce.
On the fifth installment of Comic Book Decalogue, the Crickets #5 creator talks Edward Hopper and the evolution of Kramers Ergot.
Mean neighbors.
Old vs. Young and the identity politics of publishing.
Cartooning legends from Jack Cole to Harvey Kurtzman drew for the deep-pocketed, wannabe cartoonist Hugh Hefner, but there were some significant downsides.
The creator of the extremely popular webcomic, Hark! A Vagrant, talks about growing up in Nova Scotia, navigating social media, and creating her first children’s book.