This one suffered the axe from the book. Just didn’t fit in to the flow…
Of note: we broke 600 fans on Facebook!
This one suffered the axe from the book. Just didn’t fit in to the flow…
Of note: we broke 600 fans on Facebook!
Valentine’s day is tomorrow: are you running low on time? Print out this PDF, fold it in half, fold it in half again (like we used to do in elementary school), and write an old-fashioned deep-fried love letter to your valentine!
DOWNLOAD THE FREE NEWSPAPER BLACKOUT POEMS VALENTINE CARD!
Link expires in 3 days, so hurry!
The link has expired!
BONUS ROUND: Why not take a photo of your loved one with their valentine and add it to the Newspaper Blackout Poems Flickr pool?
Another one cut from the book.
The cartoonist Tom Hart (Hutch Owen) has a fantastic blog called “Cartooning Like You Mean It,” and he’s been posting recently about mark-making, poetry, and drama. Here’s a clip from his post, “Drama vs. Poetry“:
Drama is the manipulation of characters and events in opposition with each other. In its most extreme, it is superficial and distancing: tired action movies about good guys and bad guys. In it’s best examples, characters are deeply drawn and communicate, questioning and exploring the themes of the drama both in their behaviors and thoughts.
Poetry I would argue is the single image designed to provoke or evoke other impressions and ideas in the mind and inner eye of the audience. Poetic image is created using the images of our society: people, places, and time etc. At its most extreme and superficial, it is cloying, simplistic, Hallmark cards and childish posters. At its most astute, it uses hints of drama to offer up enough action, enough motion and opposition between the characters and other elements to suggest worlds within the audience and to allow meditative space within them.
(Emphasis mine.)
I’ve often thought of my poems as little scenes from stories told in images made out of words. In fact, when I started making them, almost four years ago, they began as writing exercises to generate ideas for short stories. (Short stories are what they teach you to write in college, and so I tried to write them.)
In the book, Meg and I tried to string the poems together in an order that suggested a rise and fall, a sense of time and place, of movement…of some kind of narrative.
We’ll find out in another year whether we succeeded. The new sale date is February 9, 2010. A year from two days ago.
Who even knows where we’ll all be by then?
(Thanks to Derik Badman for pointing out the Hart quote.)
No idea whether I plagiarized this or not. If not, we might have to make t-shirts…
Mike Judge, creator of Beavis and Butthead, King of the Hill, Office Space, and Idiocracy, visited the University of Texas tonight for an RTF “Master Class” with John Pierson. I told John I was a huge fan, and he was nice enough to invite me. Of course, I brought my sketchbook.
Note: if you want to cartoon someone, don’t sit front row. Distance = better abstraction.
Mike lives right here in Austin, Texas, and came off as a really smart, down-to-earth and unpretentious guy. He was even nice enough to make a Sharpie doodle of Butthead in my sketchbook!
Last night there was a party in town to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Office Space (I missed it, but heard it was great.)
You can read some good quotes and watch some of my favorite clips by him over on my tumblelog.
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