Canadian Comix News & Culture

   Monday, October 13, 2008  
Winnipeg Comic Convention

:: Posted by Bryan @ 10/13/2008 01:57:00 AM
The Winnipeg Sun reports on The Manitoba Comic Convention & Sci-Fi Expo. The event featured several actors who have played in sci-fi and superhero films and tv series, including Lou Ferrigno:

"Oh, yeah. Look at that woman right there -- she's Supergirl. I've seen some nice costumes. But it's hard to pay attention to the costumes when I'm signing autographs all day."

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Blogs:

1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7.

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   Wednesday, April 09, 2008  
Midweek Madness

:: Posted by Bryan @ 4/09/2008 12:32:00 AM

  • Jeet Heer vs Michael Chabon: Wow, Jeet can't seem to stay out of the scraps this week. On the heels of his dust-up with Bart beaty last week, his review of David Hadju's 10 Cent Plague for Salon has drawn a lengthy rebuttal from novelist and comics fan Michael Chabon (for good measure, Beaty chimes in as well).
  • Chris Butcher posts the 20 bestselling comic books/floppies at the Beguiling from last week.
  • Johanna Draper Carlson reviews Hope Larson's new graphic novel for young adults, Chiggers.
  • Cameron Stewart is interviewed about his Transmission X webcomic, Sin Titulo, at the Digital Strips site: part 1 part 2 Stewart has just finished work on a new graphic novel for Oni, The Apocalipstix.
  • The World Press Freedom Day 10th Annual Awards Luncheon, featuring an exhibition of the winning and runner-up cartoons of the international political cartoon competition on the theme of "Re-writing History", will be held May 2nd, in Ottawa.
  • An ad for a car dealership has stirred up controversy and the ire of the Winnipeg police. (see above)

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   Friday, April 04, 2008  
Weekend Links

:: Posted by Bryan @ 4/04/2008 03:05:00 PM
I found this blog post that journalista linked to yesterday, about the impending death of paper comics and the various devices vying to replace them, very interesting.

This is a long-ish report on the Toronto Animecon that took place a few weeks ago. The article is a primer on the cosplay phenom and the range of participants.

Jeet Heer extends his Wertham article, incorporating the critiques of Bart Beaty, for Slate.

The Winnipeg Police get a free propaganda forum in the form of a comic strip in the Saturday Winnipeg Free Press.

Eli Green reports on Art Spiegelman's talk in Toronto last night for the Comic Book Bin.

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   Friday, March 28, 2008  
This Weekend: Winnipeg Comic Expo

:: Posted by Bryan @ 3/28/2008 10:37:00 AM
Winnipeg Comic and Toy Expo
Sunday, March 30
Canad Inns Fort Garry, Winnipeg
10am - 5pm
Admission $2.00


(see here for a list of upcoming conventions)

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   Monday, March 24, 2008  
This Week

:: Posted by Bryan @ 3/24/2008 12:04:00 AM
A busy week:

Toronto Comic Jam
Tuesday, March 25, 9pm
Cameron House, Queen W.
torontocomicjam.com

Skim Booklaunch
This Is Not A Reading Series
Wednesday, March 26th. 7:30-12pm
The Gladstone Hotel, Toronto
Free
Mariko and Jillian Tamaki will be interviewed by Toronto writer Jessica Westhead, with Brad Mackay introducing.

INDUSTRY NIGHT: NEGATIVE BURN and COMIC EYE BOOK LAUNCH
Wednesday, March 26th, 7pm-10pm
The Victory Cafe, 581 Markham Street, Toronto
FREE
NEGATIVE BURN #17 and THE COMIC EYE, a new book-length anthology of comics about comics. Published and Edited by Hamilton's Mark Innes.

Montreal Comix Jam
Bar des Pins, 3714 Park, Montreal
Thursday,March 27 at 8 PM

Bax Bear
Toronto Artists design Vinyl Toy
Keep Six Contemporary gallery
938 Bathurst Street, Toronto, Canada, M5R 3G5
Friday, March 28 6-10pm

Winnipeg Comic and Toy Expo
Sunday, March 30
Canad Inns Fort Garry, Winnipeg
10am - 5pm
Admission $2.00


Edmonton Pop Culture Fair
Sunday, March 30
10 am to 4:30 pm
Edmonton Aviation Heritage Centre
11410 Kingsway Avenue

(see here for a list of upcoming conventions)

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   Wednesday, March 12, 2008  
Comic Shoppe Talk: Comic Cave, Winnipeg

:: Posted by Bryan @ 3/12/2008 01:00:00 AM


Boy, I haven't done one of these in a while.

This time around, James Cassels of the Comic Cave in Winnipeg, Manitoba, agreed to answer a few email questions about the shop he works in. Comic Cave occupies
1000 sq ft at 1104 Corydon Ave in the 'Peg and has been in operation for 11 and 1/2 years. The set-up: "New Material and Comic Sets are set up on the eastern half of the store, Back Issues and Subscription Racks/Sales Counter on the western side. Other merchandise will likely be located near the back issues although gaming material is located behind counter." Cassels is in charge of Product Orders.

Q. What is the general age/gender breakdown of your customers? What is the culture of your store?

Mostly Male 20's - 30's. Most have been collecting since they were younger. People who recently pick up comic reading are often book purchasers. No particular culture.

Q. What do you sell more of by volume?

Still sell more monthlies although a substantial amount of trades are sold.

Q. Do you have a store specialty or area of expertise? What makes your store unique?

Active subscription service with discounts.

Q. What do do you sell more of by dollar value? What percentage of your business is comics? What is the state of the back-issue market?

Comics of either format make up most of the business. New comics are bread and butter although back issues are still important.

Q. Bestsellers?

Amazing Spider-man, JLA, JSA, Avengers, Astonishing X-men, All Star Superman, All Star Batman, Any Ultimate title, The Boys, Captain America.

Q. Bestselling graphic novels?

Walking Dead, Fables, Y the Last Man, The Boys, any Ultimate TPB. Most Vertigo series that are kept in print continue to sell. Superhero trades are generally weaker sellers. Most people would rather maintain their collection as monthlies.

Q. The manga question.

I sell a modest amount of it mostly to non-manga fans who just happen to latch on to a particular title. Not being located near either of Winnipeg's Universities inhibits manga sales.

Q. What do you see as the major trends in graphic novels and comics retailing over the next year? The next 5 years?

More large collections of back material coming out.

Q. What comics do you find yourself recommending the most?

The Boys, Scalped, Ultimate Spider-man, Punisher (Max), Black Summer, 100 Bullets, Blade of the Immortal and more. Pretty much anything that's on my pull list.

Q. What are your favourite comics?

Maus, Watchmen, From Hell, V For Vendetta, Transmetropolitan, Adolf: A Tale of the 20 Century, Sandman, DC: The New Frontier, Brat Pack, Planetary.

Q. What comic would you recommend for an 8-year-old girl? A 40-year-old urban professional?

Not sure anymore although in the past I would normally recommend manga since manga publishers actively make comics targetted at young girls.. Not up on current manga series for younger girls. Generally, I don't like recommending comics that I don't read.

Q. Why are you a comics retailer?

Beats working for some corporate dirtbag.

Q. What bothers you the most about the current comics industry?

Too much emphasis on marketing grandiose super soap operas. I get that some people like a big shared universe for their men in pervert suits but it seems the story is secondary to the event sometimes. Not nearly enough emphasis on self-contained stories. I don't normally recommend super hero comics but two properties I tend to recommend (Ult Spiderman and Punisher MAX) are very self-contained.

Q. How important is the web to your business?

We do a modest amount of mail orders but most sales are local.

Q. Winnipeg is a very artistic city. Both the Royal Art Lodge and Captain Canuck have roots there. What is the comics scene like in Winnipeg? Are there any local creators/zines/minicomics that you promote in store?

Minimal. I'll willingly promote local work but nothing much seems to be happening.

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COMIC CAVE
www.comiccavewinnipeg.com
1104 Corydon Ave
Winnipeg, MB Canada
R3M 0Y8
phone:204-284-2210
email:comiccave@shaw.ca

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   Friday, February 29, 2008  
In Production: Gustav Hayes by Morgan Jeske

:: Posted by Bryan @ 2/29/2008 12:01:00 AM
Vancouver web start-up Zeros 2 Heroes asserts that it is publishing its first comic book, a post-apocalyptic adventure called Gustav Hayes written by first-timer Morgan Jeske.

From the press release:

Zeros 2 Heroes Media is currently producing Gustav Hayes from Winnipeg creator Morgan Jeske. Jeske is working with editors and artists provided by Zeros 2 Heroes Media to bring his comic to life on the page.
"With 'Gustav Hayes' I hold the genre close to my heart. Science Fiction has always appealed to me, more so than Fantasy for instance. My hope is that some people read the book, and decide that they'd like to read more stories like it. In all seriousness, the fact that I'll have had a comic book published, is an amazing event for me," says Jeske on the excitement around his book.
Gustav Hayes centers on a broken anti-hero amidst the post apocalyptic nightmare of a world he is in. Gustav is a former 80's-style pop singer that battles hordes of evil creatures sent to destroy the remnants of civilization. Morgan Jeske is currently working with Zeros 2 Heroes comic editors and artists to produce his very first comic. As part of the agreement, Zeros 2 Heroes Media not only produces Jeske's book, but they will be working to get fan and media driven publicity from his hometown of Winnipeg Manitoba.
"I've been interested in the potential of Web comics for a long time," says Zeros 2 Heroes Editor-in-Chief Paul Dini. "I thought that was a very supportive way to bring new talent into what has generally been a tough business for novices."
Zeros 2 Heroes Media will be providing Jeske with his own online publication as well as putting together a plan to help get the word out to various media sources. The intention is to have not only a piece of professional work for his portfolio, but also to help him launch his professional writing career.
"Morgan's talent and creativity shines brightly in his story I think Gustav Hayes is one of those pieces of work that has potential," says Zeroes 2 Heroes Media Chairman Paul Gertz.
"This cross-platform entertainment opportunity is exactly what we're looking for in terms of our corporate mandate," says Western Region Director Earl Hong Tai of Telefilm Canada. Telefilm Canada plays in integral part in the development of Canadian writers and artists and helping pitches come to life with Canada Comic Creation Nation is another way for them to lend a hand.

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   Monday, February 25, 2008  
Comics 101: Is the Canadian Shield Made of Platinum?

:: Posted by Bryan @ 2/25/2008 06:00:00 AM

  • The Comic Book Bin's Christopher Moshier takes a page from the Overstreet Price Guide and probes the early "Platinum Age" history of DC Comics.
  • International: in a move sure to be reflected on Canadian bestseller lists, VIZ has announced the publication of a new Naruto series, following the adventures of the titular ninja student as a teenager: the launch of the long-awaited new NARUTO manga story arc begins with Volume 28, "which is the first to feature Naruto as a teenager. The volume is expected to hit stores nationwide on March 4 with an estimated retail price of $7.95"
  • Robin Bougie and co-conspirators are interviewed on the Inkstuds podcast about the recent launch of Cinema Sewer and Sleazy Slice.

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   Thursday, January 17, 2008  
2008 Convention Schedule

:: Posted by Bryan @ 1/17/2008 12:16:00 AM
Below is a rough draft of the 2008 Convention Schedule for all comics and comics-related conventions in Canada. Sequential will hopefully be issuing several of these updated schedules throughout the year, as well as promoting the individual events as they occur. If you have any additions or corrections, please email us. Sequential is interested in all comics-related events that take place across the country and we will do our best to link to your event, even if it is only a relatively tiny, single-day collectibles show in a small town. Please let us know.

2008 Conventions

Wintercon (anime event)
Jan 19-20, 2008
University Education building, University of Alberta, Edmonton
http://www.bakaclub.com/news.php
http://www.bakaclub.com/con1.php
more

Vancouver Comicon
Sunday, January 20th, 2008
11am to 5pm
Heritage Hall, 3102 Main Street (corner of Main and 15th Ave)
http://mypage.uniserve.ca/~lswong/Comicon.html

Toronto Comicon
Feb 3, 2008
Metro Toronto Convention Centre
http://www.hobbystar.com/hobbystar/ConventionsPoster_20080203.html

Animaritime
March 7-8, 2008
Delta Beausejour hotel, Moncton, New Brunswick
http://www.animaritime.org/index.html


Toronto Anime Con
March 15-16, 2008
Metro Toronto Convention Centre
http://www.hobbystar.com/hobbystar/Conventions.html

March 16 -- Vancouver Comicon
Heritage Hall, 3102 Main Street (corner of Main and 15th Ave)
http://mypage.uniserve.ca/~lswong/Comicon.html

Winnipeg Comic and Toy Expo
March 30th, 2008
Canad Inns Fort Garry
10am - 5pm
Admission $2.00
http://manitobacomiccon.com/index.php

Edmonton Pop Culture Fair
Sunday, March 30, 2008
10 am to 4:30 pm
Edmonton Aviation Heritage Centre
11410 Kingsway Avenue
http://www.popculturefair.com/

Toronto ComiCON Annual Fan Appreciation Event
Metro Toronto Convention Centre
http://www.hobbystar.com/hobbystar/Conventions.html
April 12-13, 2008

Montreal Toy Con
Sunday, May 4th, 2008
10am to 5pm
COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT MONTREAL AIRPORT
7000 Place Robert-Joncas
St-Laurent, QC
http://site.toysonfire.com/montreal_toy_con/montrealtoycon.html

Anime North
May 23-25, 2008
Doubletree International Plaza Hotel
Toronto Congress Center
Renaissance Toronto Airport Hotel
http://www.animenorth.com/index.php


May 25 -- Vancouver Comicon
Heritage Hall, 3102 Main Street (corner of Main and 15th Ave)
http://mypage.uniserve.ca/~lswong/Comicon.html

July 6 -- Vancouver Comicon
Heritage Hall, 3102 Main Street (corner of Main and 15th Ave)
http://mypage.uniserve.ca/~lswong/Comicon.html

Paradise Toronto Comicon
July 12-13, 2008
Holiday Inn on King Street
http://torontocomicon.com/

Montreal Comicon
June 15, 2008
http://www.majorcomics.safeshopper.com/ - site may be down? [google cash and myspace]
mtlcomiconATyahoo.ca

Fan Expo Canada
August 22-24, 2008
Metro Toronto Convention Centre
http://www.hobbystar.com/hobbystar/Conventions.html

August 24 -- Comix & Stories, Vancouver
Heritage Hall, 3102 Main Street (corner of Main and 15th Ave)
http://mypage.uniserve.ca/~lswong/Comicon.html

September 7 -- Vancouver Comicon
Heritage Hall, 3102 Main Street (corner of Main and 15th Ave)
http://mypage.uniserve.ca/~lswong/Comicon.html

Montreal Comicon
Sept 13-14, 2008
http://www.majorcomics.safeshopper.com/

VCON
Vancouver’s Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Gaming Convention
October 19-21
Radison President Hotel, 8181 Cambie Road, Richmond, BC
http://www.vcon.ca/

November 16 -- Vancouver Comicon
Heritage Hall, 3102 Main Street (corner of Main and 15th Ave)
http://mypage.uniserve.ca/~lswong/Comicon.html

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   Monday, October 22, 2007  
Weekend Roundup

:: Posted by Bryan @ 10/22/2007 12:01:00 AM
Some news items from the world of Canadian comic books and graphic novels:

1. Chris Oliveros is profiled by the Montreal Mirror on the occasion of the launch of the D+Q store and the translation of Pascal Blanchet's White Rapids.

2. Shawn Houde covers the comics price war in Winnipeg as the Canadian dollar continues to trounce its wimpy U.S. nemesis.

3. This past Saturday was 24-Hour Comics Day. An example: from Elfsar Comics in Vancouver. Please send your reports, links and comics to Sequential.

4. Chester Brown auction ends tonite!

5. Trampoline Hall: Comics stenography
is tonight! Come see a phalanx of Toronto's top cartooning talents record the proceedings of Toronto's top literary salon.

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   Tuesday, July 31, 2007  
Winnipeg Anime Con: Ai-Kon

:: Posted by Bryan @ 7/31/2007 12:01:00 AM

Ai-Kon, the anime and manga convention, took over downtown Winnipeg this past weekend, and boasted 1500 attendees as well as comics dealers and artists. A few links:

-Winnipeg Sun

-a live-journal blogger reflects on the perils of mixing romance and cons

-the Ai-Kon forums host tons of photos and reports

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   Monday, July 16, 2007  
Weekend Round-up: The Weekend Papers

:: Posted by Bryan @ 7/16/2007 12:45:00 AM
News from hither and yon:

1. The Winnipeg Free Press reports on Lynn Johnston's induction into the Order of Manitoba:

Johnston, 60, rose to fame in the 1980s with her comic strip For Better or For Worse, now seen in over 2,000 newspapers worldwide.
Johnston, who now lives in northern Ontario, said she was "flummoxed" at the recognition.

"I'm ready to move back now," Johnston said, adding she feels a special place in her heart for our province.

"It would be great to call this home," she said.


2. The National Post interviews George Zotti, manager of Toronto comic book store Silver Snail, about what it takes to work for his elite organization:

if you want to work in his Queen West store, you'd better know your She-Hulk from your She-Ra, because Zotti has more questions than the Riddler when it comes to hiring a new clerk.

Do you like manga? Do you like action figures? Do you have a collection? And perhaps most crucial of all, are you a Marvel guy or a DC guy?

"That kind of gives me an idea if they know what they're talking about or if they're just trying to bluff," says Zotti. "Just because you have retail experience doesn't mean you're qualified to work here."


3. The Globe and Mail examines new trends in male-centric homedecorating, where the action figure is king. Interview subjects include Tom Spurgeon and Bart Beaty:

Bart Beaty, a University of Calgary professor who writes about comic books as visual culture, has confined his collection of comics and graphic novels to two areas of his house: The pamphlet-style Batman and Superman comics are in a closet in the basement, but the 3,000 European graphic novels he collected while researching his next book are on display in his dining room.

"We have people over for dinner and they sit there and stare and go 'What the hell is that?' " he said. "But I like the way it looks."


4. Toronto pop culture nerds are flocking to Friday Fright Night at the Bloor Cinema, according to The Globe:

Some horror fans are skeptical of Fright's claim that they screen real prints. But a visit to the projectionist's booth proved the reels were, in fact, real. Three months ago, the cinema acquired new, smaller lamp houses for their projectors, which help to create sharper colour and image.

Steve Manale, a 34-year-old comic-book artist, was one who noticed. "That print was perfect," he said, "I didn't see one scratch or splice."


5. The Globe's James Adams takes the pulse of Raincoast Books on the eve of the publication of the final Harry Potter novel. Raincoast is also a big graphic novel distributor, counting D+Q among its clients. Now that the Harry Potter craze may be winding down, how does Raincoast plan on filling the gaps in its publishing schedule?

As the Potter boom unfolded, Raincoast did expand editorially, buying the Polestar and Press Gang imprints in 2000, while moving more into children's literature (earlier this year it hired Tonya Martin, a New Yorker from Rowling's U.S. publisher, Scholastic, as children's books editor).

It had earlier brought in Joy Gugeler, managing editor for Vancouver's Beach Holme Publishing, to supervise a new Canadian adult-fiction program. But that program was folded last year, and while Raincoast's staff of 130 is almost double what it was a decade ago, the growth has been on the distribution, sales and marketing side.


Adams will answer questions online today at 1pm about Harry Potter, Canadian publishing, and book pricing, about which he writes:

"Still, you have to think that, had the latest Potter been released later this year, or in the spring of 2008, its suggested Canadian list price likely would be lower than $45, given the lag in price adjustment that seems to occur: in strictly mathematetical terms, the current price is actually a 2004 price"


6. Also for the Globe, James Rusk ponders the likely fate of Mirvish Village, home to beloved comic book store The Beguiling, now that Ed Mirvish is gone. Will Mirvish's son David seek a total redevelopment of Markham Street and the landmark Honest Ed's retail outlet?

That is not the case with the Honest Ed's store site, which would mean both the demolition of an iconic building and a jump across Bathurst for the development that has been creeping west along Bloor out of the city core.

Deputy Mayor Joe Pantalone says that the city has not seen a proposal to redevelop the site. But if it does, he thinks redevelopment should not include Mirvish Village, the retail strip of converted houses along Markham Street, which the Mirvishes turned into arty stores and restaurants decades ago.

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   Friday, July 06, 2007  
Comics in Canada: Friday Miscellany

:: Posted by Bryan @ 7/06/2007 05:14:00 AM

some comic book and related links from across Canada:

-above: Scott McCloud likes Colin Upton's comics

-Cree artist Steve Sandersen is profiled by Global TV about his comic book, "Darkness Calls"

-Halifax's Rachelle Goguen writes about superhero friendships

-The Vancouver Comics Jam is looking for a new home

-not exactly comics but who's counting: The National Post profiles the remaining 3 members of the Royal Art Lodge and their new show in Winnipeg

-not exactly comics but who's counting #2: a profile of Tina Seemann who teaches animation at Max the Mutt School in Toronto

-one more Paradise con report: this time in French by Michele Laframboise
-Haida manga creator Michael Nicoll Yahgulanaas is taking a break from comics and returning to sculpture for a giant museum installation in Vancouver

-Stuart Immonen rounds up recent comics-related stuff from the CBC: a rare 19th Century First Nation's pictograph that is arguably a comic, and a radio show about comics hosted by the Barenaked Ladies' Steven Page

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   Monday, May 14, 2007  
Lynn Johnston: Order of Manitoba

:: Posted by Bryan @ 5/14/2007 12:36:00 AM
Cartoonist Lynn Johnston is among the inductees of the Order of Manitoba, announced announced Friday. Johnston, already a member of the Order of Canada, is one of twelve people to be inducted at a ceremony in July. The order is the Province of Manitoba's highest civilian honour.

According to the CBC:

Johnston lived in the northern Manitoba community of Lynn Lake, 815 kilometres north of Winnipeg, for six years in the late 1970s and early 1980s. She now lives in northern Ontario.

When she heard she'd been nominated, Johnston said she tried to turn it down.

"I said, 'I think this is wonderful, and I appreciate it, but I think it should go to somebody who lives in Manitoba and has lived all their life and, you know, people would probably complain,' " Johnston said.

"Then, I have a friend who lives in Winnipeg ... and she phoned me and said, 'You know, it's not really about how long you lived in Manitoba. It's mostly about the story line you did on the native community.' "

The story featured in the comic strip saw one of the family's daughters, Elizabeth, travelling to a northern aboriginal community as a student teacher.


Order Home

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   Wednesday, March 14, 2007  
National Newspaper Awards

:: Posted by Bryan @ 3/14/2007 12:05:00 AM
The nominees for the National Newspaper Awards were announced last Friday. The nominees include 3 political cartoonists. According to a press release, the awards will be handed out "in Winnipeg on Friday, May 11. This marks the first time the awards have ever been presented in Winnipeg. Winners will receive cheques for $1,500 and a certificate of award. Runners-up receive citations of merit and cash awards of $250 each."

Editorial Cartooning Finalists:

Marc Beaudet
, Le Journal de Montreal
Brian Gable
, The Globe and Mail
Graham Harrop, The Vancouver Sun


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   Wednesday, January 17, 2007  
Manitoba Metis plan Riel comic

:: Posted by dave h @ 1/17/2007 04:45:00 AM
This piece of news just in from Regina's Leader-Post:
Manitoba Metis plan Riel comic

Canadian Press
Published: Tuesday, January 16, 2007

A Metis organization plans to present the controversial history of Louis Riel in a colour comic that is every bit as colourful as Riel's personality.

The 50-page, hard-cover graphic novel is to be published in both official languages. The proposal includes an interactive DVD, a teacher's guide and student workbook, and an interactive, animated Web site.
There's no mention of Chester Brown's comic-stip biography Louis Riel. It is to be a 50 page 'graphic novel' - though novella may be more appropriate - but I suspect it will be chiefly a teaching aid. Here's the link to the article.

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   Monday, January 08, 2007  
2006 in Review

:: Posted by Bryan @ 1/08/2007 07:54:00 AM
2006 in Review
by Bryan Munn


Let's see what I forget...

1. Publishing
2006 was quite an impressive year for comics actually published in Canada. Besides the predictable demise of Toronto's ill-fated Speakeasy, the year was generally positive for publishers and, by extension, the cartoonists they publish. While I'm sure most of these outfits are struggling and very few cartoonists (can you name more than twenty?) actually make a decent living from comics and must make ends meet with illustration gigs, teaching, etc, the ability of a large group of small presses to relatively thrive is news in itself. 2006 saw the surprising continued survival of Mr. Comics, one of the few publishers to try appealing to the traditional superhero/adventure comics monthly pamphlet market. In 2006, Hope Larson became a publisher and several more established presses produced a huge amount of books. L' Oie de Cravan, Mecanique Generale, Conundrum Press, Les 400 Coups, and Drawn and Quarterly all had banner years in terms of quality and quantity of published comics. Toronto's Kiss Machine and a variety of self-publishers, mini-comics engines, webcomics sites and tiny boutique presses also published some interesting work. So much is going on it is sometimes hard to keep track: were there more than 100 comics published in Canada in 2006? 200? 300? I have no idea.

2.Cartoonist milestones
While the major story continues to be the seemingly ever-increasing respect that comics and cartoonists in general are getting from readers and the media, 2006 was a pretty good year for a select group of cartoonists. Off the top of my head, creators like Michel Rabagliati, Bryan Lee O'Malley, Mark Bell, and Seth all achieved high profile publishing deals, coverage and recognition that would have seemed like pipe- dreams a few years ago. As well, many of the cartoonists and writers who toil away in the traditional world of U.S. genre comics continue to carve out (some quite successfully!) viable careers for themselves --see the massive list put out by the Shusters people last week to understand the amount of work being done for that market. Maybe J. Torres and Darwyn Cooke exemplify the heights that have been scaled there.

3. Awards
Sequential did its best to link to coverage of the major comics-related awards in Canada in 2006:

Shuster Winners

Political cartooning

Prix Bedelys

Expozine

Bedeis Causa

Doug Wright Awards

4. Passages
2006 saw several cartoonists pass away, including editorial cartoonists Ed Franklin and Sid Barron. 1940s Canadian Whites cartoonist Michael "Bud" Riley and pioneering graphic novelist Bus Griffiths also passed away.

2006 also saw the deaths of Winnipeg-born Playboy magazine cartoon editor Michelle Urry and comics scholar Lillian Robinson.

5. Censorship and cartoon criminality
Unfortunately 2006 did not see the end of comics censorship in Canada. Canada Customs continued its practice of blocking the import of comics on obscenity grounds using an arbitrary and ignorant system and hassling many legit retailers and average consumers. Lost Girls was the most high-profile case but there are many more examples. One case we didn't link to was Elizabeth McClung's ordeal trying to bring some manga into Canada, as she documents on her blog Screw Bronze!.

The government did have some luck in finding some seemingly real comics contraband in a few cases.

Censorship wasn't limited to government agencies in 2006. Bookseller Chapters/Indigo was lambasted over its refusal to carry an issue of US magazine Harper's because of controversial content related to the Danish Cartoon Controversy. General fallout over the Danish controversy (the biggest comics story worldwide for the last few years) continued well into July and still hasn't abated in some quarters.

On a related note, Sequential covered several other international stories with a Canadian connection, including the trials of Iranian exile Nik Kowsar and of Mana Neyestani. Sequential also interviewed Marc Pageu, the only Canadian cartoonist who wanted to have anything to do with Iran's ridiculous and generally hateful Holocaust cartoon contest.

---
That's about it. Sequential tried to be a daily (well, at least every weekday) guide to all that was newsworthy or at least interesting in the world of Canadian comics and cartooning in 2006. We didn't always catch everything and sometimes our linkblogging was a little late or amateurish but we hope that some of the things that turned up here were of use (or maybe just entertaining) to some part of our tiny readership. Here's to a better and more professional 2007 for Sequential and team Canada comics!

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   Tuesday, December 12, 2006  
Winnipeg Cartoonist Sets Comic in Home Town

:: Posted by Bryan @ 12/12/2006 03:24:00 AM
The Winnipeg Sun profiles Greg Waller whose new comic book series Magnitude is being published by San Diego, California's Ape Entertainment. The comic has lots of local colour:

His all-ages series is filled with references to or cameos of the city's recognizable personalities, landmarks, and businesses.

"I'm proud of being from Winnipeg," said Waller, 31, who lives in North Kildonan. "It's my way of giving something back to the city, I guess."

Friend Adrienne Batra, provincial director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, is given a starring role as the inspiration and likeness for the character Gen. Batra.

"I'm very excited and honoured Greg chose my name to represent one of his characters," Batra said. "She is so integral in helping Magnitude."

Mayor Sam Katz, Sun city editor Kathleen Martens, and Coun. Russ Wyatt also make cameos.

Transcona City's landscape is dotted with images of Esplanade Riel, Fort Garry Hotel, and Canad Inns Stadium.


Waller's website: www.voltagecomics.com

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   Tuesday, November 07, 2006  
Tracking Chester - some photos from Chester's book tour on flickr

:: Posted by max @ 11/07/2006 03:33:00 AM
Mark Saunders gets his book signed by Chester Brown at the recent signing at McNally Robinson in Winnipeg.

This was taken by local artist Allan Lorde. There are more photos on his flickr site here.

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   Tuesday, October 17, 2006  
Michelle Urry, R.I.P.

:: Posted by Bryan @ 10/17/2006 05:43:00 AM
Editor a Significant Force in Post-War Cartooning
by Bryan Munn

Michelle Urry, longtime cartoon editor at Playboy Magazine, has died of cancer in New York.

Raised in Winnipeg, Urry (born Michelle Kaplan in 1939) was an early fan of comic art. According to a 1995 New York Times interview, "What no one knew at the time was that as a kid I had the biggest comic book collection of any girl I knew, just stacks and stacks of Wonder Woman and other characters. I expected to grow up to wear gold bracelts and fly. [...] I was a snob even then --a comic that wasn't well drawn didn't interest me. But give me a well-drawn comic with a good story and I was hooked."

She later moved to the U.S., was educated at UCLA and ran a fashion design business in Los Angeles before moving to Chicago in search of employment. Hired as a typist at Playboy in 1965, she was soon noticed by publisher Hugh Hefner and promoted to assistant cartoon editor and then to cartoon editor. For 40-odd years it was Urry's job to sift through thousands of submissions to Playboy on a monthly basis before presenting the cream of the crop to Hefner for his seal of approval. In this way, Urry became one of the most prominent and respected gag cartoon editors in the field, helping to discover and develop the careers of many successful cartoonists, including B. Kliban, Howard Cruse, Bill Plympton, Harvey Kurtzman, Jules Feiffer, Arnold Roth, Shel Silverstein, Gahan Wilson, and Chris Brown, who has called Urry "one of the greatest comics editors ever." In a 1970 article on humour for the Chicago Tribune, Urry tried to explain the appeal of the cartoons she published, many of which targetted women and sexual politics: "The rise in sexual and erotic humor is often viewed with alarm but it may, in fact, indicate a generally healthier society. You cannot laugh at anything unless you have mastered your anxieties about it, and the airing of these previously forbidden areas with more acceptance by society means that they are no longer so frightening. In order to laugh at a cartoon, for instance, one must be able to perceive the hidden hostility and be stimulated by it, but the cartoonist has to make it clever enough so that you don't feel guilty because you identify with it."

Along with The New Yorker, Playboy remains the most important market for freelance panel cartoonists. On the continued prominence of cartoons in Playboy (from that same NYT interview): "Mr. Hefner, because he loves cartoons so much, was the one who decided that cartoons would be an important part of the magazine, and he created a budget for them. I started off at Playboy being wildly spoiled. Now everyone fights for space --photgraphers, writers, advertising reps, the fashion department. I think this is true of all magazines. Increasingly, cartoons are viewed as expendable, they're just fillers."

Urry, who once claimed she bought "approximately a million dollars worth of cartoons a year" for Hefner, also worked as a consultant for other magazines and edited several collections of Playboy cartoons over the years. She often shared her experiences with comics fans and young cartoonists at many conventions and forums and was an articulate writer and critic of the artform (she contributed an essay on Jack Cole to the third volume of DC's Plastic Man archives).

In the late-1960s Urry was briefly married to Jack Altman before marrying the sculptor Steven Urry (d.1993), with whom she had a son, Caleb. She later married screenwriter Alan R. Trustman, with whom she lived in New York and Sag Harbor.

More:
Google's cache of cartoonist Skip Williamson's reminiscence of his time working with Urry at Playboy.

(with files contributed by Jeet Heer)

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   Thursday, October 12, 2006  
Chester Brown Western Tour Day 2

:: Posted by Bryan @ 10/12/2006 03:17:00 AM
Yesterday Chester Brown was in Winnipeg (sorry, missed it)

Today he is in Brandon, Manitoba to continue promoting the paperback release of Louis Riel, his comic strip biography of the father of Manitoba (this historical fact I learned from the back cover of a Captain Canuck comic circa 1978).

Thursday, October 12th - Brandon, MB
3pm - 5pm: Signing at Pennywise Books. Location: 1031 Rosser Ave, Brandon
7pm - 9pm: Event at the Art Gallery of Southwestern Manitoba. Location:
710 Rosser Ave, Brandon

Tomorrow he is in Saskatoon.

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   Friday, September 22, 2006  
Cartoonist's Brother Gets Burial

:: Posted by Bryan @ 9/22/2006 07:30:00 AM
Cartoonist Roy Peterson, in my mind most associated with Alan Fotherinham columns in Maclean's during the 80s (do they still do those?), attends the funeral of his brother who died in battle during WWII.

winnipegsun.com - Winnipeg News - Aircrew to go to their final rest

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   Friday, September 08, 2006  
Chester Brown on Tour

:: Posted by Bryan @ 9/08/2006 05:59:00 AM
According to THE BEAT, Chester Brown will be touring the Western part of the country to promote the paperback release of Louis Riel. The tour really gets started with Chester being interviewed by Seth next Thursday at the Wright Awards, but the rest of the tour, beginning with a stop at McNally-Robinson in Winnipeg, doesn't get properly underway until October:

Wednesday, October 11th Winnipeg, MB McNally-Robinson

Thursday, October 12th Brandon, MB Pennywise Books

Friday, October 13th Saskatoon, SK McNally-Robinson

Saturday, October 14th Calgary, AB Calgary Wordfest

Monday, October 16th Edmonton, AB Greenwoods Bookshoppe

Tuesday, October 17th- Saturday, October 21 Vancouver, BC Vancouver
International Writers Festival (exact date TBA)

Sunday, October 22nd Victoria, BC Bolen Books

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   Thursday, September 07, 2006  
New Hellish Books: Jim Reaper & Burnt Soul

:: Posted by Bryan @ 9/07/2006 04:42:00 AM
A few blurbs about the "thriving" Canadian publishing industry:

Webcomic becomes paper comic

Jim Reaper: Week One, with art by Mathieu Benoit, has hit stores after a long delay.

Review at Silver Bullet Comics.

(courtesy BDQ)

Chicken Soup for the Burnt Soul

According to a press release, a Winnipeg creative team and publisher have announced the release of a graphic novel called Burnt Soul. The press release is pretty funny:

"Following in the footsteps of Sin City, Burnt Soul seeks to bring the same sensibility to the comic book medium and will hopefully appeal to fans of Frank Miller's acclaimed series."

(courtesy SilverBulletComics)

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   Friday, June 23, 2006  
WAG Does Funny Papers

:: Posted by Bryan @ 6/23/2006 12:33:00 AM
The Wnnipeg Art Gallery de-mothballs two comics-related exhibits from the 1970s. One is a small collection of Marvel Comics originals and production scraps and the other is an editorial cartoon exhibit. Both are part of the gallery's permanent collection and are being showcased with newer works from Royal Art Lodge, etc.
Funny Papers

In the 1970s, The Winnipeg Art Gallery began an initiative to push the boundaries by asking the question “is this Art?” in relation to objects such as comic books, quilts, pinball machines(!), editorial cartoons, craft, and even photography. One of the first groundbreaking exhibitions of this period was The Structure of the Comic Book (1973) which sought to investigate the techniques of storytelling used by comic book artists with a secondary motive to address the debate between notions of high and low forms of art. An impressive and exhaustive exhibition, approximately 50 works were borrowed directly from Marvel Comics in New York City.
[...]
Another exhibition that explored the illustration versus art debate was Canadian Political Cartoons in 1977. A particular focus of the exhibition dealt with the issue of Separatism supported by drawings from cartoonists across Canada. It was from this area that an important body of work by two significant editorial cartoonists was collected. Ranging in date from 1963 to 1977, the Gallery holds ten works by Peter Kuch (1917–1980), who worked for the Winnipeg Free Press, and eleven works by Duncan Macpherson (1924–1993), who worked for the Toronto Star.

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   Thursday, June 15, 2006  
Government Comic Book to Protect Kids?

:: Posted by Bryan @ 6/15/2006 03:07:00 AM

The Alberta government has produced a comic book intended to teach kids about online predators and safe internet use. Called Zoe and Molly Online, the book uses 2 children characters to get across its lessons. It is to be distributed across the province at a cost of $30 000. It was
"created by Kids in the Know, a division of Child Find Manitoba and brought to Alberta by Children's Services. Kids in the Know is a safety program designed to empower children and reduce their risk of victimization."


Comic book teaches kids about online safety

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   Thursday, April 20, 2006  
Lost Canuck Classics

:: Posted by Bryan @ 4/20/2006 04:08:00 AM
The amazing John Adcock has dug up another lost Canadian comic strip.
Dickie Dare was a short running strip in the Winnipeg Grain Grower's Guide. Dale is most famous for his political cartoons and for his Doo Dads comic strip. Dickie was a kid's adventure strip at a time when such things were rare (think The Gumps, Orphan Annie, Minute Movies, and few others in the late-20s).

yesterdays-papers

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   Saturday, April 08, 2006  
Images Festival - Tours, Talks, Walks, Workshops, Residencies & more April 13-22 Toronto

:: Posted by dave h @ 4/08/2006 06:38:00 AM
from www.akimbo.com


Be in the know, get in the loop with Images Festival's Education Programs!


2006 IMAGES FESTIVAL'S INSTALLATION GUIDE AND HANDBOOK
Ready for download, this map and handbook will allow you to explore installation work and new media projects in Toronto's gallery district at your own pace. A brief summary of the concepts in installation art, pre-visit activities and questions to provoke discussion while visiting the installations are included in this free handbook. Visit www.imagesfestival.com to download your copy.

A GUIDED WALKING TOUR TO THE 2006 IMAGES FESTIVAL'S INSTALLATION PROJECTS:
Saturday, April 15, 1:00 PM to 5:00 PM
Join Toronto artist, curator writer and IF tour guide Sally McKay for a free guided walking tour of the installation and new media projects exhibited in this year's Images Off Screen.

INSTALLATION AUDIOWALKS:
CD-Roms and downloadable mp3's will be available for keen installation art viewers who wish to explore Images Off Screen works at their own pace. Artists discuss their work, motivations and process in this invaluable resource for new and seasoned installation art fans. Cost for CD-Roms is $1; downloadable mp3's (available at www.imagesfestival.com) are FREE.

YOUTH SCREENINGS:
The NFB Mediatheque in partnership with the Toronto Animated Image Society and The Images Festival present a series of youth oriented screenings that serve as a good introduction to experimental film and video for students in grades 10 through 12. All screenings will be presented from April 18-20, @ 2:45pm at National Film Board of Canada's John Street location. Screening Cost: $2.00 per youth with pre-booked group; educators accompanying a group are free. Check the Images website for program details!

ADULT WORKSHOPS:
Sunday, April 16 - 1:00 to 4:00 PM
Trinity Square Video (376-401 Richmond Street West)
Internationally exhibited artist and TSV Artist-in-Residence, Michael Campbell, will discuss the challenges and opportunities for expanding video beyond the single-projection. Space is limited to 10 students. Admission: $25 Trinity Square Video members / $30 non-members Check out www.trinitysquarevideo.com for more details or email aubrey@trinitysquarevideo.com to reserve a space.

Tuesday, April 18 & Thursday, April 20 - 6-10 PM
L.I.F.T - The Liaison of Independent Filmmakers of Toronto (171 East Liberty Street, Suite 301)
Internationally renowned experimental filmmaker Nicky Hamlyn will teach this two-day evening workshop which will include a full Bolex camera introduction, hands-on instruction and group discussion of works created in the course. Admission: $70 for members / $85 for non-members. Workshop fee includes materials. Check out lift.on.ca for more details or email workshops@lift.on.ca to reserve a space.

THE WITNESSED CITY: A PRODUCTION RESIDENCY AT CHARLES STREET VIDEO
Screening time: Thursday, April 13, 8:00 PM
Images Festival and Charles Street Video present Nobuo Kubota and Annette Mangaard's Sounds Kubata Sounds a 10 minute experimental collaboration that chronicles the history of free form sound art in Toronto from the 1960's through to present day. This history is told through the eyes, sounds and memories of Nobuo Kubota who has been, and continues to be, an active member of the sound-art community.

*Nobuo Kubota will also be performing live immediately preceding Susie Ibarra and Lori Freedman in concert Tuesday, April 18, 9pm at The Gladstone Hotel. Tix are $20. Buy your tickets for the Ibarra/Freedman performance online at www.imagesfestival.com

FREE ARTIST TALKS:
For audiences interested in more thorough dialogue about contemporary media art, Images is hosting a series of afternoon discussions with many of the key artists represented at the festival. Of special interest is Images' new "Talk to the Pie" speakers series, an unbeatable combination of totally profound cultural discourse and FREE PIE (while it lasts). All discussion events are free to attend and open for audience questions and comments.

Friday, April 14 - 3:00pm - 5:00pm @ A Space (401 Richmond Street West, Suite 110)
Dutch artist and cultural analyst Mieke Bal in discussion with Canadian film/video artist Mike Hoolboom, creator of Images' Opening Night feature Fascination. Moderated by Lisa Steele

Monday, April 17 - 3:00pm - 5:00pm @ Gladstone Hotel Art Bar, 1214 Queen Street West
Artists Tony Cokes, Steve Reinke, Deirdre Logue and moderator Daniel Cockburn discuss pop music, memory and the body.

Wednesday, April 19 - 3:00pm - 4:30pm @ Gladstone Hotel Art Bar, 1214 Queen Street West
Artists Laiwan, John Oswald and moderator Chris Gehman discuss varied uses of music and sound.

Thursday, April 20 - 3:00pm - 5:00pm @ Camera Bar, 1028 Queen Street West
Artists Vincent Grenier, John Price and moderator Jeremy Rigsby discuss their recent film works.

Thursday, April 20 - 5:00pm - 7:00pm @ Goethe-Institut, 163 King Street West
Guest curator Marc Glöde