Archive for April 26th, 2007

Matthew Forsythe for the Montreal Mirror

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

mirror-final_resize.jpg

On his blog coming up for air, Canadian illustrator and cartoonist Matthew Forsythe mentions that he’s done the cover to the most recent issue of the Montreal Mirror with an illustration on internet security. He also gives some insight into the creative process of this illustration, and focuses on some details he’s added.

Bertozzi !

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

pourhouse_invite_resize.jpg

If I were in the area, I’d be here tonight (but then, I’m only following the DC scene from quite a long way away). Nick Bertozzi made this invitation for the presentation of his new book The Salon and also stands up for the cause. Go Nick !

Incidently, I’m currently reading Bertozzi’s Houdini (which he did with Jason Lutes), which is quite nice - a good mix between Berlin and Kavalier And Clay.

ACME Novelty Toy Gallery

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

rocket01_resize.jpg

Niem Tran is a man of patience and manual prowess, who has assembled all of Chris Ware’s toy and craft designs and is exhibiting them at the ACME Novelty Toy Gallery. I am officially jealous now. Or maybe not - at least now I know the things actually work…

I was also pleasantly surprised by the very original navigational device Niemworks.com uses, withNiem, Shop, Work and… Else.

(via the all-knowing Fantagraphics blog)

The Right Number

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

24-01-2006-17331126-04-2007-85933_resize.png

This has probably been blogged to death by now, but I like the gesture so much, that I just couldn’t stop myself promoting it.

Scott McCloud, comics’ homo universalis par excellence, has decided to make his online comic, The Right Number, available free of charge. Before, you had to pay what McCloud insists on calling a micropayment for the right to read it, but now it’s there in all its glory.

It’s an intriguing story about a young man becoming obsessed with the idea that there is a pattern behind the girls he’s known in his life and their telephone numbers, and that somewhere there’s a girl with the perfect number, who would be perfect for him. The story is particularly engaging, though, because McCloud has decided not to put the panels one next to the other, but to embed them in each other, continuously drawing the reader further into the story, and into the main character’s obsession.

Sarah Mensinga exclusively in New York Magazine

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

16_foreverbox1_lg_resize.jpg

Flight is, in my humble opinion, one of the best, or at least most beautiful comics anthologies around today. I first came in contact with it through the Free Comic Book Day special that Image (if I recall correctly) put out a couple of years back. What amazes me is how the amazing people behind this project continuously this level of quality across the board, not only in storytelling, but also in graphics.

And it turns out to be a good carreer move to be in there as well : once you’ve been in Flight, well, at least you start to get noticed. Case in point : Sarah Mensinga’s ‘The Forever Box’ (from the upcoming Flight Four) is presented exclusively in installments on New York Magazine’s Vulture blog. They have started a new feature, the Comics Page, aiming at introducing the casual comics reader to

“brand-new graphic novels by the world’s best artists and writers. Manga, superheroes, indie comix — we’ll cover them all as our editors select the best the exploding comics world has to offer”.

They coulnd’t have found a better place to start…

(via Flight itself, naturally)