Sep 24, 2023

Mischievous Bitz

Excerpt from Smash Hits, January 7 - 20, 1982, "Bitz" section, page 10.
TRANSPORT OF DELIGHT
They're really a caution these pop groups, aren't they? The latest artistic wheeze from David Jay, bassist with ever so serious Bauhaus, is to play a gig on an ordinary double decker bus as it plies its regular route around his home-town of Northampton. He plans to pull it off with his spare-time outfit The Sinister Ducks who also feature Sounds cartoonist Curt Vile.
The whole point, he says, is that there will be no advance warning to Press, public or passenger transport authority.
The lads will just wait at a request stop with their instruments, battery amps and so on, go upstairs and set up whether the audience is a full house of choking smokers, three men and a dog or just the conductor.
When his associate outlined the scheme, Bauhaus singer Peter Murphy observed: "You are mischievous, Dave. It's a nice idea, but don't you think as an event it's really rather obscure?"

Sep 18, 2023

Occupy the world of comics!

Above, excerpts from Buster Brown At The barricades: Foment in the funnies and comics as counter-culture, a long essay written by Alan Moore to support the Occupy movement and serialised in the three issues of Occupy Comics, published in 2013 by Black Mask.
Alan Moore: [...] The present generation, those who mostly (although by no means exclusively) make up a large part of the modern protest movements, are the first who've grown up since the comic book upheavals of the 1980s and therefore the first who've grown up in a world where comics were a natural and accepted feature of the cultural landscape. This is perhaps evidenced by their gleeful appropriation of comic book iconography and highly-visible cartoon theatrics. It would seem that there has never been a generation for whom comics as a tool or an effective weapon are more eminently suited, nor a time of social crisis better able to lend comics a true sense of urgency and purpose. Times like these are arguably exactly those which comics were created to engage with.

So, by all means, occupy the world of comics. Occupy the doorsteps and the lobbies of the industry if you've a mind to...certainly the comic industry is as deserving of such treatment as is any other greedy and unscrupulous business concern...although it might be thought that mainstream comics are best left to manage their own imminent destruction, this being the one task which they've demonstrated a real attitude for over the last seven decades. A more positive and useful protest might be to support the families of the true titans of the medium, the cheated giants like Jerry Siegel or Joe Shuster or Jack Kirby or the scores of others that have never received fair remuneration or redress, in their courageous efforts to confront these massive corporate entities with their immense resources and battalions of lawyers.
[...]

An even more effective long-term strategy would surely be to occupy the medium itself. The many glories of comic strips past have never been so instantly accessible to the would-be comic creator, giving him or her the means to steep themselves, to educate themselves, in an astonishing array of concepts and techniques, from Little Nemo through to Jimmy Corrigan. Thus armed, with nothing more than a blank page and some variety of drawing implement, dissenting voices can refine and broadcast their ideas more widely and compellingly, while at the same time possibly making their protest into an enduring work of art that can enrich the medium and the broader culture in which it exists. Today's technology has made self-publishing more easily achievable, and in addition there are an increasing range of small and honourable publishers with a more flexible approach to new material, allowing access to new formats and fresh concepts which perhaps have a potential to transform the medium.

[...] If you care about what you are saying, if you seek a more effective way of saying it, then pick up that brush, pencil, pen, that mouse or even that discarded cardboard box out in the alleyway and pour your heart, your mind, your self into as many little panels as it takes to make your statement. You may find it opens up modes of expression and dissent that you have previously not considered or imagined.

You may even find you've got yourself an occupation.

Alan Moore
Northampton,
May-June 2012

Sep 17, 2023

Black Lives Matter

Excerpt from an interview published on The Telegraph site the 13th of September. Also available on MSN.com site, here.

Is it true that he refuses all money he is entitled to from the film companies, asking for it to be divvied up among the film’s writers and other creatives? “I no longer wish it to even be shared with them. I don’t really feel, with the recent films, that they have stood by what I assumed were their original principles. So I asked for DC Comics to send all of the money from any future TV series or films to Black Lives Matter.

Read the complete interview HERE.

Sep 16, 2023

Top 10 posse by Gene Ha

Art by Gene Ha
Above, a stunning Top 10 commission created by the amazing GENE HA during the recente Baltimore Comic-Con. Pure gold, with a nice Jeff Smith's Bone homage too! Well done!

Sep 4, 2023

Alan Moore by Lee Moyer

Art by Lee Moyer
Above, an ingenious portrait of Moore, full of references to his works, by illustrator and designer Lee Moyer. The illustration has been used for an article published on Aeon.co in 2014.
 
For more info about the artist: Official site - Instagram - WordPress

Sep 3, 2023

Moore from the shadows

Art by Daniele Serra
DANIELE SERRA did it again! Above, you can admire an awesome watercolour portrait of our Bearded Man by acclaimed Italian award-winning illustrator and comic book artist DANIELE SERRA. Mille grazie, Daniele!

For more info about Daniele Serra visit his website: here.