Category Archives: cartooning

Drawing is Always a Struggle – An Interview with Art Spiegelman

I am reading an interview with Cartoonist Art Spiegelman. Right away he gets to the essence of comic art:

In my line of work, one is always hunting for that essentialization. Comics do that especially well. They permit you to boil down an image and a thought to its essence, with the two circuits mixing the words and images.

He talks about Emil Ferris’s My Favorite Thing Is Monsters.

What I admired about her was that she had taken so long to gestate her first book—she was nearly fifty, I think—and that she had to relearn how to draw after West Nile virus left her unable to hold a pencil.

Wow, a first book at fifty? I will need to look into this book and it’s author. And put Spiegleman’s Maus book on my wish list.

Pajama Student

Last fall, I was a sub for a colleague who had to be out of town. I just proctored an exam they were taking. One student turned his test in to me wearing polar bear PJ bottoms and a Monopoly t-shirt. I thought it was hilarious so he made it into my sketchbook. These are a few drawings I made recently based on that sketch.

Four Gospels Drawing

I found this image in an 11th century illuminated manuscript The Four Gospels.

I did a quick freehand sketch in pen and ink and then decided to color it in. It has some obvious problems with scale and perspective, but instead of working it all out in pencil first where I could make corrections, I wanted to try my hand at going directly with pen and ink. Even with the problems, I like this copy I made. I will probably return to this source for more images and practice.

In recent years, many of these ancient hand-made books have been digitized and put online. I became interested in illuminated manuscripts when I attended a presentation at Kansas State University about the St. John’s Bible, which was the first bible / book made in the old style (hand drawn on parchment) in several centuries.

Many people do not give much thought to the fact that before the invention of the printing press, every book ever made was written completely by hand. This made books very rare and very expensive. And while we might think about the importance of the printing press, another technological development was required before we could have inexpensive books for the general population to read and enjoy – paper. Yes, these illuminated medieval manuscripts were not written on paper, but on parchment made from animal skins, making the cost of a single book astronomically expensive; as in more expensive than a man could earn in many years of working. It should make us all the more appreciative of the many inexpensive books we have access to nowadays. Heck, with things like Project Gutenberg, we can easily access digital e-books that are completely free!

 

 

 

More Pen and Ink Drawings

Still getting used to the new dip pen.

You can see a smudge on the top one where I stuck my pinky in a still-wet line of ink. Oops!

Both of these are photos that I found in a box of my grandma Peg’s pictures. I don’t know if there are any relatives in these, I imagine the family in the second one is probably related in some way. While I don’t know anyone in either photo, I loved both of these pictures and decided to draw them.

*edit. I learned from family member Wava that the second picture is indeed of our family. The two adults are my great grandparents on my mother’s side along with four of their ten children. The second smallest person, the one with the big hair is my grandmother Bernice.