| Things to see: 9/3/10 | |
| Written by Mike Baehr | Filed under Tony Millionaire, Things to see, Steven Weissman, Steve Brodner, staff, Renee French, Paul Hornschemeier, Michael Kupperman, Matthias Lehmann, Marco Corona, Maakies, Kevin Huizenga, Kaz, John Hankiewicz, Jim Woodring, Jason, Frank Santoro, Floyd Gottfredson, fashion, Debbie Drechsler, Bob Fingerman, Archer Prewitt | 3 Sep 2010 2:43 PM |
Periodic clips & strips -- click for improved/additional viewing and possible artist commentary at the sources:
• Michael Kupperman illustrates a New York Times op-ed piece written by William Gibson
• This video posted by Jim Woodring has a surprise ending
• At Comics Comics, Jeet Heer reminds us of Kevin Huizenga's tribute to Floyd Gottfredson in Or Else #2
• Another stage in Matthias Lehmann's scratchboard work in progress
• An unpublished 1987 Bob Fingerman drawing of young zombies in love
• The cover of the first comic Jason ever made, circa 1979 (it means Tim and Tom On the Go!, not Tim and Tom Are Farting!, you sillyhead)
• This week's "I, Anonymous" plus church sketches and more sketchbookery by Steven Weissman
• Another page from a comic-in-progress by John Hankiewicz
• Pegasus progress pics from Frank Santoro
• An illustration by Marco Corona for Internazionale, with commentary in Italian
• Debbie Drechsler draws the belted kingfisher, with commentary
• From Renee French: fly, fly people
• Steve Brodner draws Abel Meeropol and former Sen. Alan Simpson, with commentary
• Ooh, pretty record cover art for Coil Sea by Archer Prewitt (via Presspop)
• A new animated Underworld cartoon by Kaz & co. (via Ben Schwartz)
• This week's Maakies by Tony Millionaire (still on Facebook for the time being)

• Our own Jacob Covey just posted a bunch of his drawings on vintage postcards to Facebook — I'm not sure what his privacy settings are but some of them are on Flickr too if that link doesn't work
• Paul Hornschemeier's latest t-shirt design for his Forlorn Funnies Shirt Shop — Biggeespeare joins the protagonist of Set to Sea in the ranks of hulking poets


















