As the parent of a toddler, I've taken an increasing interest in comics regarding parenthood, which in itself is a relatively new phenomenon in alt-comics. Carol Tyler and Joe Chiappetta were two of the first to do so, but there are quite a few more cartoonists close to my age who are exploring the full range of emotions regarding parenthood: joy, grief, terror, frustration, etc.
Lauren Weinstein's "If This Is All You Get" is a four-page minicomic drawn from the upcoming anthology, The Big Feminist But.
It's a hilarious take on the ways in which she internalized her
mother's own urge to be perfect and save the world, mixed with the
push-and-pull of her youthful pledge to avoid motherhood in favor of
being a "real" artist and the realities that a loving relationship offer
later in life. Weinstein confronts head-on the anxiety that women who
have children often express about having children: the possibility that
they may never be able to create again, especially during the demanding
early years of motherhood. This comic is both an attempt to grapple with
these issues and the product of that very struggle with the creative
process and the guilt felt for carving out time to create. Weinstein
amusingly gets at that feeling as she hears her daughter say "I love
you, babysitter" as she walks away to her studio. At the same time, I
admire and identify with her total sincerity in the statement "The baby
is the product of your undying faith and hope that your husband and you
have in each other." It gets at the way that having a child is a gift.
Rina Ayuyang's comic Outta This Comes The Crazy
is a sketchbook diary surrounding her pregnancy and the next few months
after the birth of her son. Ayuyang, like Weinstein, is a witty and
upbeat artist who chooses to draw in a style that's a series of quick,
simple smudges and lines that retain the spontaneity and vitality of the
moment. Ayuyang's comics mix excitement and anxiety as she details
trying to finish her first book before she gives birth; that metaphor of
twin births quickly gives way when the real birth happens. There's an
amazing page where Ayuyang captures the push-and-pull of emotions with
great precision: sadness that her husband will have to go back to work
soon after the baby was born, despair over ever getting her life back,
confusion over whether the feeling that "this kid is kicking my ass" is
due to hormones or "because I'm not cut out for this?" There's a scene
where she's in bed trying to catch up on some much-needed sleep but
worries that her baby's been asleep for five hours. She fears the worst
until she hears her baby pass gas--a fitting gag to defuse that horrid
feeling. The book ends on a note of uncertainty, the final page a
drawing of three blank-faced individuals, with Ayuyang saying "Now
what?"
That sense of uncertainty and occasional terror is encapsulated perfectly in Tom Hart's fantasy tale Daddy Lightning (Retrofit Comics).
It's about a father traveling with his baby in a forest with limited
resources. Hart gets at the mania one feels when trying to soothe a
crying baby while trying to answer one's own biological needs, that
visceral sense of permanent emergency that accompanies having a baby.
The setting of the story places the real basics of childcare into sharp
relief, as he has a limited supply of milk, diapers and money as the
titular character is trying to create a new life for himself and his
baby. As the main character picks up new skills like swaddling (an
absolutely crucial technique that was utterly mysterious to me as
someone who had no prior experience with children), he's faced with
obstacles like trying to think of inspiring fathers in literature and
history (Chronos? Oedipus? Abraham?), hiccups, making money to buy food
and milk, winning a contest, facing off against a warrior trying to get
his shopping cart and desperately trying to get a waffle.
This
rollicking, scatological story has the cadence of a folk tale, one that
belied the grim reality of Hart's actual daughter dying at the age of
two. He had written but not drawn the story before her death, and the
comic became a sort of invocation for her return, a way to make her come
to life on the page. The comic is beautiful and funny because that's
how Hart thought of his daughter. The sense of presentness in this comic
is remarkable. It's a story that's about nothing but the present
moment, and Hart never deviates from being in the moment of the rush of
exciting terror that is fatherhood. My wife was hospitalized a few days
after our daughter came back from the hospital and I was forced to fly
solo with a preemie for several days. I didn't allow myself to feel
terror in that moment because I knew I couldn't afford to feel it, and I
instead just focused on the next task: feed, change, burp, sleep,
repeat. In reading Hart's comic, that sense of terror came flooding out
for the first time as I felt so closely connected to Daddy Lightning,
and doubly so for knowing just what's at stake. I'm in awe of Hart's
willingness to grapple with that grief and share it so publicly.
Showing posts with label tom hart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tom hart. Show all posts
Friday, January 18, 2013
Monday, December 17, 2012
Fundraising for SAW (Sequential Arts Workshop)
I can't think of a better comics-related cause than to donate money through an Indiegogo campaign to the Sequential Arts Workshop (SAW) in Gainesville, FL. SAW is the brainchild of the great Tom Hart for an affordable school for comics education. He keeps tuition low for this purpose, and depends on donations and support from the comics community to help fund his fledgling school. I've seen the work of a few of the early students, and there are certainly some promising talents. The donation incentives are pretty amazing, so please consider a donation, great or small.
Sunday, November 20, 2011
Tom Hart and Leela Corman Need Your Help
In an unspeakably heart-rending tragedy, Rosalie Lightning, the young daughter of cartoonists Tom Hart & Leela Corman, died unexpectedly this week. Their friend Lauren Weinstein is setting up a Paypal fund to help defray the awful expenses at this time, as well as possibly establish a scholarship in Rosalie's name at Hart & Corman's new Sequential Artists Workshop (SAW) in Gainesville, FL. Hart found a working space for the school just a few weeks ago and released the first curriculum for the 2012-2013 school year, when SAW will open. Here's the link to Weinstein's Paypal account. Please consider making a donation if you can.
Wednesday, November 16, 2011
SAW-Related Comics and Broadsheets
I've previously mentioned the Sequential Artists Workshop that Tom Hart & Leela Corman are opening in Gainesville, FL (home of the University of Florida). Recently, the school announced its initial curriculum for the fall of 2012. Hart spent years at the School of Visual Arts in New York and is writing a text on teaching comics; he's a fine writer about and critic of comics as well as being one of the best cartoonists of the Xeric generation that sprang up in the early 1990s. Hart is known for his close relationships with many of his students, and as such he's been selling two broadsheets at conventions that reflect his interest and guiding hand.


The first is Seriously Comics, a broadsheet that Hart says was inspired by Peter Bagge's classic I Like Comics fanzine from the 90s. Hart wanted a goofier, more irreverent take on comics than something like The Comics Journal or Comic Art and wanted it in a cheap, disposable format. As such, this broadsheet is a great success. While Hart is all over this publication, his former student Stephanie Mannheim is the engine behind nearly every feature, which functions as the most entertaining school newspaper ever. The cover functions like an issue of The Onion, with snippets of "stories" like "Webcartoonist Just Can't Seem to Make Cathy Existential", "Is Dewey A Gay Icon?" and "Pizza Island is WOMEN!" mixing with teasers for actual stories. The combination of Hart's enthusiasm and sincerity with Mannheim's boundless energy and smartass attitude results in a publication that's more than just a lark. Indeed, the interviews with Dash Shaw, Gary Panter and Keith Mayerson (yes, this is a highly SVA-centric publication) are substantive and revealing.

That said, it's the ancillary material, the frosting on the cake, that sets this apart from other comics publications. In addition to a page of comics by Aaron Renier, there's a good old-fashioned fumetti strip featuring "Stacey Nightmayer" and various cartoonists, a photo feature on the amusing "Ballpoint Boxers" event (wherein female cartoonists drew on men, a flip of an event from 1950 wherein a bunch of male cartoonists drew on women in bathing suits), and a hilarious feature called "Vote For Your Favorite New York Cartooning Couple". This send-up of tabloid journalism was perhaps a little in-jokey, but most of the people buying this will probably get the references. I hope that Hart & Mannheim can keep this going.

The other broadsheet Hart's been selling is Isra Rushes Out Of The Sandcastle, a collection of one-page comics from various of his students hand-picked by Hart. It's a surprisingly strong anthology given that much of it is student work (with some stories directly adapted from assignments), featuring a number of different visual approaches. There's delicate, image-driven comics as poetry from Alexander Rothman, brush-heavy confessions from Li-Or Zaitzman and a hilarious, scatological manga-inflected comic by Kendra Wells for starters. There are excerpts from larger works (like a surreal, expressively-drawn story from Maria Sputnik and a page from a Mannheim comic that frankly doesn't make sense outside its larger context. Not everything in here sparkles (Hillary Allison's crack at a daily, gag-driven comic strip features fairly stale observations and Shauna Grant didn't have the chops to pull off her manga-meets-classic-cartooning stylings), but it's all at least solid and some of it is outstanding. In particular, I thought the last three cartoonists featured all had distinctive visual styles. Henry Fernau's kinetic woodcut-style piece had a wonderfully expressive economy of storytelling. Alabaster did a fine job of channeling classic cartooning and balancing it against classic literature. Finally, Katie McEwen's delicate illustration reminds me of the fragile work of Aidan Koch or Amanda Vahamaki.

Mannheim's own Nate The Nonconformist Crashes A Party minicomic is over-the-top social satire in the vein of Peter Bagge's Hate! Mannheim employs a similar kind of grotesque, exaggerated figure work to take aim at the sort of self-styled punk "non-conformist" who thinks a t-shirt bought from Hot Topic is a cultural and political statement. The targets are broad and a little easy in this comic, but Mannheim makes up for that with bugged-out eyes, sharpened teeth and some pretty trenchant jokes. (Having songs like "Whip My Hair" and "Black & Yellow" playing at the party was pretty amusing, for example.) Having the titular character crash an intervention because he mistook it for a party was another great gag. Mannheim is more directly parodic than Bagge in terms of her targets (no one in this comic resembles a realistic character), edging more towards Johnny Ryan in terms of the way she sets up gags and how far she's willing to take them. She definitely has her own style, however, and it's fully-formed and distinctive.

That said, it's the ancillary material, the frosting on the cake, that sets this apart from other comics publications. In addition to a page of comics by Aaron Renier, there's a good old-fashioned fumetti strip featuring "Stacey Nightmayer" and various cartoonists, a photo feature on the amusing "Ballpoint Boxers" event (wherein female cartoonists drew on men, a flip of an event from 1950 wherein a bunch of male cartoonists drew on women in bathing suits), and a hilarious feature called "Vote For Your Favorite New York Cartooning Couple". This send-up of tabloid journalism was perhaps a little in-jokey, but most of the people buying this will probably get the references. I hope that Hart & Mannheim can keep this going.

The other broadsheet Hart's been selling is Isra Rushes Out Of The Sandcastle, a collection of one-page comics from various of his students hand-picked by Hart. It's a surprisingly strong anthology given that much of it is student work (with some stories directly adapted from assignments), featuring a number of different visual approaches. There's delicate, image-driven comics as poetry from Alexander Rothman, brush-heavy confessions from Li-Or Zaitzman and a hilarious, scatological manga-inflected comic by Kendra Wells for starters. There are excerpts from larger works (like a surreal, expressively-drawn story from Maria Sputnik and a page from a Mannheim comic that frankly doesn't make sense outside its larger context. Not everything in here sparkles (Hillary Allison's crack at a daily, gag-driven comic strip features fairly stale observations and Shauna Grant didn't have the chops to pull off her manga-meets-classic-cartooning stylings), but it's all at least solid and some of it is outstanding. In particular, I thought the last three cartoonists featured all had distinctive visual styles. Henry Fernau's kinetic woodcut-style piece had a wonderfully expressive economy of storytelling. Alabaster did a fine job of channeling classic cartooning and balancing it against classic literature. Finally, Katie McEwen's delicate illustration reminds me of the fragile work of Aidan Koch or Amanda Vahamaki.

Mannheim's own Nate The Nonconformist Crashes A Party minicomic is over-the-top social satire in the vein of Peter Bagge's Hate! Mannheim employs a similar kind of grotesque, exaggerated figure work to take aim at the sort of self-styled punk "non-conformist" who thinks a t-shirt bought from Hot Topic is a cultural and political statement. The targets are broad and a little easy in this comic, but Mannheim makes up for that with bugged-out eyes, sharpened teeth and some pretty trenchant jokes. (Having songs like "Whip My Hair" and "Black & Yellow" playing at the party was pretty amusing, for example.) Having the titular character crash an intervention because he mistook it for a party was another great gag. Mannheim is more directly parodic than Bagge in terms of her targets (no one in this comic resembles a realistic character), edging more towards Johnny Ryan in terms of the way she sets up gags and how far she's willing to take them. She definitely has her own style, however, and it's fully-formed and distinctive.
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Help Fund The Sequential Artists Workshop
Tom Hart & Leela Corman's new venture, the Sequential Artists Workshop, is seeking funds to seed their new comics school in Gainesville, FL. Please check out the varied and remarkable rewards at Indie Go-Go and considering making a donation. Hart is a great teacher and this has the potential to be a great resource for those interested in another option in pursuing their craft. There's only a day left to get to their goal of $7000 and they're about $1400 short.
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