“A Process Not a Product”: An Interview with Ronald Wimberly
The creator of Prince of Cats and Black History in Its Own Words talks about his new magazine, art school, animation, and Walt Disney.
The creator of Prince of Cats and Black History in Its Own Words talks about his new magazine, art school, animation, and Walt Disney.
Raina Telgemeier, Megan Kelso and Ellen Forney discuss the period in between projects.
In this exclusive excerpt from Reid Psaltis’ graphic novel Kingdom/Order, we ride shotgun with one man on his symbol-laden journey through the relationship between human and beast.
Mourning, the daily struggle, the experiences of time and history: taking a look at the present and moving forward. Sarah’s got the story.
In his first example of the “Event” comics, cartoonist and publisher Tom Kaczynski looks at Ted McKeever’s Eddy Current, from 1987.
If you only read one comic featuring a concise critique of backseat coaching today, then you probably read this one: it’s Sarah Horrocks, Day Four!
Finding an emotional echo within the work of action based entertainment, pouring inspiration into creation: Day 3 is here.
Coming off the career making success of Chew, artist Rob Guillory returns to his roots, in more ways than pun, with Farmhand. It’s being published by Image and colored by Taylor Wells–but everything else is up to Rob. Alex Dueben has the score!
The best part of drawing comics is the part where you have to…pack a bunch of envelopes? Ya heard, it’s true, Day 2: Sarah tells it like it is, in today’s television criticism heavy installment.
In this installment of the Fine Arts and Cartoonists discussion series, Joe Coleman talks about the emotional roots of his work, ranging from Hieronymous Bosch to ’50s schlock cinema.
Music criticism, donut questions and the Temple of the Golden Pavilion: it’s a heady stew that goes into Sarah’s melting pot, here at Day One of her Cartoonist’s Diary!
A reflection on the life of Steve Ditko, best known for his many contributions at Marvel and across the comics industry.
In this installment of Retail Therapy, Leef Smith talks about what it takes to stand out and succeed in comics retail.
In this interview from 1979 (The Comics Journal #53), Gary Groth and Harlan Ellison talk about plagiarism, the potential of the medium, Hollywood, and more.
Science fiction’s enfant terrible passed away June 27 at the age of 84. He was born in advance of the boomer tide, but in a sense, Ellison was the voice — or a voice — of that generation.