Posts Tagged: interview


11
Jan 11

New Year, Old News

I’ve been meaning to blog here about quite a few thing recently, things I’ve tweeted about and intended to create a more permanent archive for, but with the new year gathering pace it felt odd to dedicate posts to each bit of activity, so I’m putting it all in this one round up, staring with the most recent.

Richard Bruton over at Forbidden Planet International, wrote a hugely positive review of The Everyday Collection Four.

I was asked to contribute an illustration for Hype Machine’s Zeitgeist 2010 rundown of the top 50 Musical Artists of the year. I drew one of my favourites, The National who ranked at number 3. I’ve added this illustration to my Gallery too.

As part of Dan Berry’s wonderful ‘Snapshot Interviews’, I was interviewed over at his blog The Comics Bureau. Many of the comic artists and writers he interviewed were asked the same questions, so it’s interesting to compare the different backgrounds, processes and views on the current UK scene.

One of the Dan’s questions was “What does your workspace/studio look like?” so instead on describing it I took some photos of my studio in my new(ish) flat. Here’s a Flickr slideshow of them all.

I was also asked a single question as part of Avoid the Future’s One Question Interviews. On the back of my story in Solipsistic Pop 3, the question was about the influence of video games.

Speaking of Solipsistic Pop 3, since it’s launch at Thought Bubble Festival last November, I have completely neglected to promote it here on my blog. Well, if you’re a regular reader you should know by now that SolPop is the foremost anthology of UK comics talent. Volume 3 has an all ages theme inspired by the comics of our youth, The Beano and The Dandy etc. I have a 2 page autobiographical story drawn in a Beano style called ‘The Best Day of My Life (So Far)’ which opens the book, after Marc Ellerby’s wonderful Chloe Noonan cover comic (concluding on the back of course). I’ve put page 1 of my story in my Gallery.

The book got numerous reviews back in November, of note are the FPI review and Paul Gravett included it in his ‘Great British Comics Now’ feature saying my story was “A strong opener” and “…warm without being sentimental.” All 3 volumes of Solipsistic Pop are available in the SolPop Shop.

I’ve redesigned the site a little bit and added a Blood Blokes section with a fancy preview  of issue 1 which will be coming out sometime this year. I’ve also added a few recent illustrations to my Gallery, the complete 6 page comic ‘The Tears of Tommy Cooper’ from Solipsistic Pop 2 and a few pages of a Lego Pirates comic I did for Lego and Kickers.

This came about through We Are Words + Pictures who organised a comics workshop at Legoland Live last Summer. Myself, Kayla Hillier and Mike Leader were paid to go to Legoland in Windsor for 2 days one sunny weekend in July and encourage kids to draw comics. It was awesome. There’s a full report on the WAW+P blog. After which I added extra story and activity pages and coloured it all, ready for kids to download. Though now it’s finally done I’ve not be told where online Kickers have put it! I could write a whole other blog post about the back and forth involved in dealing with two large companies at the same time, but I won’t. Instead here’s a photo of the Lego I just had to buy for reference and one of me at Legoland (more photos at the WAW+P blog).

“Aarrrgh, me hearties, we’re tax deductable! Aargh!”

I think that about covers it for all the 2010/very early 2011 news. Thanks for reading my humble blog and I hope you enjoy all the work I’m planning on unleashing in 2011.


27
Aug 09

Squidge Magazine Interview

Squidge magazine screengrab

Hey, look, I have an interview up at Squidge Magazine! It’s a sleekly designed web magazine that I really enjoy looking through, full of inspiring articles accompanied by plenty of great images. The interview covers my webcomic The Everyday, working freelance, Manchester Comix Collective and the influence of Dan Clowes. I hope you enjoy it.


3
Aug 09

Redeye magazine

The interview I did alongside Jim Medway has been featured in the first issue of the relaunched Redeye Magazine, available in pdf format for only £1! Here’s the blurb:

The future of comics begins with REDEYE 2.1, a pdf-only monthly magazine with all the news, reviews, features and stuff worth talking about, including:

Interviews with Leah Moore and John Reppion on The Complete Dracula and The Trial of Sherlock Holmes with artists Colton Worley and Aaron Campbell; Cartoonist and festival organiser Oliver Smith talks about throwing out the rule book for the small press and building something better; New York born and raised illustrator Liz Baillie discusses her comics, her love for the Bouncing Souls and her Jabba the Hutt face; Ben Dickson talks to Garen Ewing about Rainbow Orchid blossoming under a new deal with publisher Egmont; Northern Irish illustrator Bridgeen Gillespie talks about curious rabbits, hissy fits and being open to interpretation; and as part of his 100 Days, 100 Cartoonists series, Citizen Badham talks to creators Adam Cadwell and Jim Medway about unconventional narratives, the value of the everyday and deflated balloons.

Plus a THE SECRET HISTORY OF… IRISH COMIX, as Niall Kitson uncovers the growing Irish Comics scene ready for the international stage, and a report on the long awaited LUC@176 event..

REDEYE MAGAZINE ISSUE 2.1
114 pages, colour, PDF format, 82mb direct download from http://enginecomics.co.uk/redeye/reframeset.htm. Just £1/$1.80!

It’s a wonderfully designed magazine and they’ve got some great creators involved, the features and interviews are all very thorough and thoughtful. Well worth a single pound. Print out an article at work and read it on your lunch. Click here to purchase and you can follow the magazine on it’s Facebook page.