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Page 1 of 5 This interview is reprinted in its entirety from MOME Vol. 5.
Andrice Arp was born in 1969 in Altadena,
California, where she grew up in the '70s and '80s. Her
mother was an artist — a sculptor, performance artist
and, most recently, a novelist — and probably influenced
her future vocation. Her father is an astronomer,
whose profession apparently did not influence her quite
as much. She was by no means a comics geek. She remembers
reading beautiful childen's books when she was
a little girl, as well as the work of Edward Gorey, Charles
Addams, B. Kliban, and Tove Jannson's Moomintroll books. Later, she read Asterix and Krazy Kat.
 Jar Life, 2003 She was drawing as far back as she can remember, encouraged
by her parents, but she didn't have a burning
passion to become a cartoonist. It wasn't until she attended
college and stumbled onto a volume of RAW in
the early '90s that she recognized the artistic potential of
the medium and became seriously interested in pursuing
it herself.
She graduated from Cornell University in 1992, and
proceeded to work as a graphic artist at a restaurant PR
firm and then as a production artist for a packaging firm,
which she continued to do on a freelance basis after leaving
that job.
In 2001, she co-edited (with Howard John Arey, Joan
Reilly, and Bishakh Som), designed, and self-published
Hi-Horse Comics, which ran four issues, an anthology
that featured her and several of her artist friends;
she subsequently edited a book collection, Hi-Horse
Omnibus, published by Alternative Comics.
Arp's uniqueness is manifested in both subject matter
and technique: Thus far, most of her comics stories
have been adaptations of ancient fables (predominantly
from Japanese sources) and most of her stories have been
painted rather than drawn in pen and ink. We discuss
both of these aspects of her work in an interview that was
conducted on May 1.
—Gary Groth
andrice arp: I first started reading RAW
when I was [attending Cornell],
which really inspired me. And I
was doing these drawings in black
pen at the same time, and I just
realized that, you know, I like to
read comics and I like to do these
drawings — that I could just start
drawing comics. And that was kind
of like "duh," when I finally figured
that out.
So what happened was after I got
out of college — I think this was
around '95 — I got this idea for a
comic that I wanted to do and it
was a two-page comic. But I just
didn't have the skills to do exactly
what I wanted to do with the comic.
So I decided that I needed to take
some classes and learn how to draw
better, basically. So, I started taking
classes at the Academy of Art here
in San Francisco. I took a bunch
of illustration classes and painting
classes and things like that. And so
then like five years later I finished
that comic. That was kind of where
I got started painting too.
gary groth: When you picked up RAW when
you were at Cornell, was that really
your introduction to what we might
call art comics?
aa: Yeah, I think so. I remember
looking at RAW before that. The
first one that I had was the first
of the small ones. I think it was
Volume Two #1. And I remember
looking at an earlier version of
RAW in stores, and I didn't understand
what it was. Like, maybe
I just opened to the pages that
weren't comics. But I was like, this
is a magazine but what is it about,
I don't get it. But then once I finally read it I was like, "Wow, this
is great." And then, coincidentally,
there were these people that were
putting together a comics anthology
at Cornell that I got involved
with. And that happened all right
around the same time.
gg: And what was the name of this
anthology?
aa: It was called Strip!, with an exclamation
point; very original.
gg: And how did you get involved in
that? What did you do?
aa: Well, it was a collective. And
we got money from some kind of
student resources committee. And
whoever wanted to be in it could
basically be in it and we all put it
together. You know, we were doing
old fashion paste-ups. And we had
a lot of meetings, although I'm not
sure what they were about. I think
it started in '89 or '90. I was in
about six or seven issues, I think.
 Bunny Boat, 2005
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