Showing posts with label African-American. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African-American. Show all posts

Sunday, July 09, 2023

Ronald Wimberly interviewed by Julian Lytle at Fantom Comics (photos)

 Here's Fantom's video.  That cut out a little before the end of the interview. Here's clip 1 and clip 2 concluding the interview.

We're hosting artist and writer Ronald Wimberly (Now Let Me Fly, LAAB Magazine, Prince of Cats) here at the shop in conversation with local creator Julian Lytle! It's been a couple years since they've been in the store last to come on by for their return! They'll be chatting about art practice in general, Ronald's new book NOW LET ME FLY: A PORTRAIT OF EUGENE BULLARD—and maybe even that upcoming GratNin physical edition from beehivebooks? Stop on by to listen to the discussion!

Here's my pictures:

Ronald Wimberly and Julian Lytle
























Wimberly, Shawn Martinbrough, and Lytle

Wimberly, Shawn Martinbrough, and Lytle, Sarahti G., and Jim Dougan

 

 

Friday, March 10, 2023

April 27: Arlington Reads: Jerry Craft

Arlington Reads: Jerry Craft



"Get Graphic" with Jerry Craft

Join us for a conversation between author Jerry Craft and Library Division Chief Peter Petruski about Jerry Craft's novel "New Kid," and the newest installment "School Trip." 

The conversation will be followed by an audience Q&A and a book signing.

RSVP for an event reminder. Attendance is first-come, first-served until seating capacity is reached.

The event will also be livestreamed and available as a recording for 30 days on Arlington County's Youtube channel; please RSVP to receive the online link. 

For more information, contact LibraryPrograms@arlingtonva.us

For our current policies on masking, please see our Library Operations Update.

Date:
Thursday, April 27, 2023
Time:
6:00pm - 8:00pm
Location:
Barbara M. Donnellan Auditorium
Library:
Central Library
Audience:
Events for High Schoolers Events for Middle Schoolers
Categories:
Author Talk
Calendar:
Arlington Public Library

Registration is required. There are 160 in-person seats available. There are 484 online seats available.

About the book

Seventh grader Jordan Banks loves nothing more than drawing cartoons about his life. But instead of sending him to the art school of his dreams, his parents enroll him in a prestigious private school known for its academics, where Jordan is one of the few kids of color in his entire grade.

As he makes the daily trip from his Washington Heights apartment to the upscale Riverdale Academy Day School, Jordan soon finds himself torn between two worlds—and not really fitting into either one. Can Jordan learn to navigate his new school culture while keeping his neighborhood friends and staying true to himself?

Universal Pictures has acquired film rights to New Kid, with LeBron James' The Spring Hill Company on board to develop and produce. Craft will be an Executive Producer.

About the author

Jerry Craft is the New York Times bestselling and Newbery Medal winning author of the graphic novel, New Kid.  His second graphic novel, Class Act, publishes on October 6, 2020. Craft is also the creator of Mama's Boyz, an award-winning comic strip which won the African American Literary Award five times. He is a cofounder of the Schomburg Center's Annual Black Comic Book Festival. He received his BFA from the School of Visual Arts.

About Our Events

Accommodations in the Library

Arlington County provides accommodations to individuals with disabilities upon request. Please contact us at least five (5) business days in advance.

Saturday, December 19, 2020

Meet a Local Cartoonist: A Chat with Black Cotton writer Patrick Foreman

by Mike Rhode

I'd like to start by apologizing to Patrick Foreman for the late appearance of this interview. He responded quickly to our usual questions, but I dropped the ball and let it slip down my email page. So for bonus content, at the end of this interview, find a link to some other interviews with him about his upcoming Black Cotton comic, as well as the ordering page from Diamond's Previews.

Set in an alternate reality where the social order of “white” and “black” is reversed, an elitist family, the Cottons, are rocked by a tragic shooting that begins to unravel long standing family secrets that could not only destroy the family but also divide the fragile social climate of the world. Elijah Cotton, the modern patriarch of the Cotton family and business mogul of Black Cotton Ventures, tries to manage the public outrage and fallout from his police officer son, Zion Cotton’s, shooting of a young white woman. Meanwhile, Qia Cotton, the only daughter of Eljiah and the CEO of Black Cotton Ventures, attempts to assuage the situation by paying off the victim and her family; Xavier Cotton, the youngest Cotton and sophomore in high school, works on a history project that takes him down a rabbit hole of family history.

What type of comic work or cartooning do you do?

Brian and I are the creators and writers of Black Cotton, a comic book series published by Scout Comics.  Black Cotton is actually my first comic book writing project, while Brian has been writing for years and has several amazing issues coming out. He has a self-published comic called Don’t Ever Blink Chapter 2 on Kickstarter right now and Devil’s Dominion with BlackBox Comics comes out in December.

Overall, we have an amazing Black Cotton team with  art done by Marco Perugini, letters done by Francisco Zamora, and graphic design done by Jerpa Nilsson.

How do you do it? Traditional pen and ink, computer or a combination?

As a team, we do a combination of it all.

When (within a decade is fine) and where were you born?

I was born in the 1970s,  in Crossett, Arkansas, but raised mostly in Virginia Beach.  In Arkansas, I lived in a very small town called Hamburg.  Many may lose their heads on hearing this (lol) - because another famous person who played basketball with Michael Jordan is from there too -- you know him, Scottie Pippen.  He is actually in my yearbook!  Our town was so small -- there was only one school at that time so when I was in kindergarten, he was in High School… Same school, same year book.

Why are you in Virginia now?  What neighborhood or area do you live in?

I got stationed at Quantico, VA back in 2014.  Then I retired after 25 years in the Marine Corps in 2018,  and the wife and I decided to stay here in Virginia.

 What did you do in the Marines?

I was a Career Planner.  So I helped the Marines make mutually beneficial decisions for themselves and their families while doing the same for the Marine Corps Institution.  It's basically the HR section for the Marine Corps. 
 
What is your training and/or education in cartooning?

I’m actually mostly a collector.  I grew up reading comics and from the start I would always buy two copies, one to read and one to put away.  I still enjoy comic books today  --the artwork, masterful storylines.  Brian has been one of the greatest teachers and mentors I have had throughout this process. He was able to take our conversation and layout a roadmap to where we are today.  Much Respect to Brian.

Who are your influences?

Definitely Dwayne McDuffie, Todd McFarlane.

If you could, what in your career would you do-over or change?

I wouldn’t change a thing.  Everything I have gone through thus far has grown me to the person I am today… Led me to my beautiful wife and molded me for the future places before us.  Still learning and still growing – those things will always remain constant.

 What work are you best-known for?

Actually, I am best known for two things: my 2020 award winning gospel song “He’s Able" featuring David Scott and my magazine with Todd Dubose, Returning Citizens Magazine, which is currently viewed by more than 1.2 million Incarcerated Individuals daily across the nation.

What work are you most proud of?

I am most proud of Black Cotton.  Black Cotton is a world changer.   Black Cotton is a comic, yes, but it is also a mindset; it’s a mindset being explored in a comic.  The Black Cotton Mindset.

How did you start to work with Scout Comics?
 
Co-Creator Brian Hawkins has made some great connections throughout his career.  Meeting and becoming good friends with Brendan Deneen, the CEO of Scout Comics, was one of them.   We talked out several options about how to bring Black Cotton to the world and Brian mentioned Scout Comics.  We decided to show it to them and they loved it.  They came back saying they would love for us to join the Scout Family.  It was off and running from that moment forward. 

What would you like to do  or work on in the future?

I would love to see Black Cotton on the TV screen.

What do you do when you're in a rut or have writer's block?

I go play Ultimate Frisbee.  Nothing like a good game of Ultimate Frisbee to get the juices flowing and a great break from the grind.

What do you think will be the future of your field?

I am looking forward to the evolution of comics.  I feel this Covid Era has given many a time to pause and go back to their creative stages.  We were so busy before that we didn’t have true time to just be creative – brainstorm, look at it – step away and come back.  We had hard deadlines to meet.  We have time now.  The question is what are they doing with that time?  These next few years will answer that question.

What's your favorite thing about DC?

The museums.

Least favorite?

Traffic.

 What monument or museum do you like to take visitors to?

The African-American Museum, but start at the bottom first though.  It is a lot to take in just one day.  It really is a two day venture.

Do you have a website or blog?

https://www.scoutcomics.com/
and BlackCottonComic on Facebook & IG.

How has the COVID-19 outbreak affected you, personally and professionally?

I have been blessed during this time.  My wife and I are both retired Marines and both of us work for the federal government too, so with our jobs we were able to switch over to telework fairly easy.  I feel for the nation and cannot wait till we are looking back on this moment in our history.

 Preorder your copy from your LCS using Diamond Code DEC201650 from Scout Comics. https://www.previewsworld.com/Catalog/DEC201650

More interviews:

Interview: Brian Hawkins and Patrick Foreman Talk BLACK COTTON From Scout Comics
By AJ O. Mason
December 5, 2020
https://monkeysfightingrobots.co/interview-new-scout-comics-series-black-cotton/

Two Scout Geeks
Lucky Ep #13 with Patrick Foreman and Brian Hawkins.
https://www.ageofradio.org/twoscoutgeeks/

Interview with Brian Hawkins and Patrick Foreman (Creator of Black Cotton)
Bearded Comic Bro
Dec 16, 2020
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XMIpPMm-jBs

SCOUT COMICS WANTS YOU TO PICK "BLACK COTTON"
That Indy Comics Guy
Nov 28, 2020
https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&feature=youtu.be&v=lNWDaFENlkE

Saturday, February 17, 2018

Sean Damien Hill talks about his "Black Power" exhibit

by Mike Rhode

Sean Damien Hill's drawings of African-American superheroes opened this week at the University of the District of Columbia's Gallery 42 (my cell phone pictures are here). The exhibit is open from February 13-28 and solely features Sean's drawings of notable black superheroes. I interviewed Sean just a year ago, and he graciously again answered questions about his new exhibit. (Photographs of the opening reception are by Bruce Guthrie)

Where did the idea of the show come from?

About a year ago Daniel Venne, head of the Art Dept. at UDC had the idea of doing a comic book themed show for Black History Month. We had known each other for some time and he was growing more and more familiar with my work, and he knew I did freelance comic work also.

Is this your first solo exhibit?

Yes it is. I’ve seldom done any art shows in the past. When I did, it was always with a buddy of mine, and I only had include one to three works or something like that. Doing this one was incredible but the anxiousness of it being MY SHOW was crazy. I’m an introvert by nature so I’m never craving that much attention so being the center of it for an art show was wild.

How many pieces are in the show?

About 20 pieces or so.
Sean Anderson from Route 3, courtesy of Sean Hill

How did you find or decide on the characters to draw?

A lot of these characters are some I’ve already been familiar with. All the DC and Marvel comics characters were creations I’ve enjoyed in the past and that aren’t being used to much right now. My favorite from DC Comics is of course Icon from the old Milestone Comics studio (published by DC) in the 90’s and of course Green Lantern John Stewart. Indy characters I included are Dreadlocks from Urbanstyle comics, Vigelance from creator Sean Mack. Anakulapo from Mshindo Kuumba, and of course Sean Anderson from Route 3 from Robert Jeffrey (and me).. I really wanted choose some heroes that are not too well known so it could also be an educational experience.


How did you draw them? Digitally, traditionally, or a combination?

The 20 drawings were done traditionally with Pentel brush pens, Copic fine liners on 500 series 11x17 and 16x20 Bristol board. The three colored prints are digital illustrations from the clip studio paint program I use all the time for most of my published work.

What's the difference between drawing digitally and drawing with pen and ink?

For me, it's always more comfortable drawing traditionally, as there is a certain amount fluidity to it. Drawing decisions are made a lot quicker even if I’m building on a lot of rough sketching and ground work to get things going. On paper, I have a better sense of how I’m going to use the space because it’s not something I can change with a zoom key. Overall for me, that’s the down side of drawing digitally, as paper size becomes so relative it’s hard to figure out ( at least for me who draws too many lines to begin with) where to focus more of my attention.

DC / Milestone Comics' Icon
Some of the drawings are done in blue pencil and then inked, can you discuss why you do that?

Traditionally blue pencil was used by artist to avoid the extra process of erasing pencils after inking. It save time because back then most printing was based on photography and cameras couldn’t pick up such a light blue. Now the digital age has caught up to all that, so now it’s more of a preference to better see your final line work over top the initial blue pencil sketch. It’s sort of become ingrained in the culture of comic illustration and digital comic drawing programs like Clip Studio Paint even have an option to turn your linework blue. Even traditional inkers print out pencils in blue nowadays so their line work is a lot clearer.

There are three color pieces in the show, where they done completely digitally?

Yes the color prints are completely digital. I have process videos on my YouTube channel of my digitally drawing two of them: https://youtu.be/sETbPU93TP0 and https://youtu.be/bWEtIVz3XjA


Val Zod, courtesy of Sean Hill
I noticed the art in the show is for sale. Is there a market for original art drawings? Does this affect the convenience of doing material digitally at sometimes?

Yes, there is definitely a market for traditional comic art. Sometimes a lot of artists who draw pages traditionally will sell the originals after the books published. It’s a major incentive to stick to traditional which is probably why half the artists in comics still do.

Which are your favorite pieces in the show?

I have three. One is Val Zod, an African-American Superman. It has to do with the fact I drew him as though he’s contemplating something; narrative is huge when doing any illustration and if you can portray that, it tells something about the subject. The others are Sean Anderson from Route 3. And Icon, my drawing is literally a man with the weight of the world on his shoulders.


20180213_190454
Yasuke (photo by Rhode)
Can you tell us more about your superhero character?

Yasuke is my love letter to all those Hitori Hanzo, Mifune and Highlander movies I watched as a kid. He is based on the real Yasuke who was an African slave made a samurai during Ido-period Japan. In my story he is an immortal cursed to make amends for serving an evil emperor. His journey is about moral questioning and if there is an objective right or wrong. Through that journey he discovers the reason for his curse.

Did you grow up on superhero comics? If so who are your favorite characters? Favorite creators?

I was raised around comics like Avengers, Teen Titans, Legion of Super-Heroes, with plenty of Batman and Superman too. My mom and grandpa would read them all the time. Grandpa actually introduced books like Will Eisner's the Spirit and Dick Tracy to me, and Mom loved the the Avengers and Teen Titans.

My favorite heroes have always been Batman, Icon, and Magneto (even though he was a villain).

Who or what would you like to work on from one of the major publishers?

If I had a chance, I’d love to do Luke Cage or Black Panther, and Batman of course, but even to have a shot at Superman because it would be fun drawing that giant square jaw and boy-scout smile.

20180213_193624
Introductory exhibit text (photo by Rhode)

What are your thoughts about African-American representation in the comic books? 

Well of course I’m all for it. Our media reflects our world and our beliefs. If we have different types of heroes in our media, it’s only because we believe different types of people can have a great potential, and even reach that potential. But if we only see one type of people in that role throughout our media, it’s then widely believed, at least on a subliminal level that only that particular kind of people have that potential. And that sends a sign that the rest shouldn’t bother.

On there other hand, I do think diversity in comics is a bit larger than what people credit, where some are just looking in the wrong place. I really believe if the audience gave more attention to Indy titles they might find the type of diverse storytelling we all need. It’s getting easier to self-publish nowadays and people have a lot of stories to tell.
Marvel's retconned first Captain America

Typically when someone says they want diversity in comics, it’s really a lot of the time just wanting the big two (DC and Marvel) to deliver it, but those companies have heroes that had been created and gained a lot of footing during a time where diversity was not on the table. Now to be fair, those companies have tried to diversify their heroes, but it’s often nothing original and usually a repackaging of something they already have. To me that’s not true diversity, because it can both hurt the fandom that loves that particular hero and also tells the audience being catered to that they aren’t worth investing in a new hero for.

Do you think the race of the writer/ artist should be under consideration when it comes to drawing an African-American character?

I won’t say who should be hired for what, but I think we have a responsibility help create a culture of diverse creators behind comics. Right now it’s still widely white males on the credits of most mainstream titles. I’m not saying a white writer couldn’t do a great Cyborg story because Marv Wolfman did and white creators are responsible for Black Panther, Luke Cage, Spawn, Misty Knight ... a lot of those characters [in this exhibit]. But we should create a culture in comics where the creators are diverse just like the world we live in.

DC Comics' Vixen
The Black Panther movie obviously has the issue of black superheroes on everyone's mind right now; are you interested in seeing the movie?

I am, and I’m very interested to see how it’s going to effect our medium afterwards. I know it won’t make book sales jump and stay steady, because none of the movies have been able to increase comic readership for the long term. But it’s definitely going to have an influence on how diverse stories can be told. Ultimately though, it;s up to us to determine what impact this really has, but so far it’s really hopeful.

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

An SPX Interview with Jeremy Whitley

Whitley at Big Planet Comics in 2012
by Mike Rhode

Jeremy Whitley has been writing his comic book Princeless for a few years now, and along the way, it's picked up Eisner and Glyph Awards. I personally enjoy it very much, although it's not aimed at me as you can see from Wikipedia's description: "Princeless tells the story of Princess Adrienne, a strong-minded, brave, and intelligent black princess who questions and challenges expectations and stereotypes associated with princesses. From a young age, Adrienne resents any limitations placed on her as a princess and struggles against them in order to define her own role. On her 16th birthday she is tricked into imprisonment in a tower, as is the expected fate of any princess in the land. Instead of waiting for a prince to rescue her, Adrienne escapes from her tower with the aid of her guardian dragon, trades her dress and crown for armor and sword and sets out to rescue her six sisters from their own prisons." I had the first trade collection from when he signed it at Big Planet Comics Vienna a few years back, but just bought another complete set so I can read it from the beginning.


What type of comic work or cartooning do you do?

I am a comic book writer.  I am the writer/creator of "Princeless" and its sister book "Raven: The Pirate Princess".  I also write for Marvel's "The Unstoppable Wasp" and "Hulk Vs Thor: Champions of the Universe" as well as IDW's "My Little Pony: Friendship is Magic" and it's many offshoots.

How do you do it? Traditional pen and ink, computer or a combination?

Well, as a writer I generally start in a notebook or if I don't have one on me, by making notes in my phone.  Slowly those ideas grow and connect into something a little more substantive and I start script writing on my computer.  Sometimes I have to go back to the notebook to hash some things out, but I try to do everything I'm going to need to save on my computer, because it's much easier to keep track of and move around.

When (within a decade is fine) and where were you born?

1984, Southern California

What is your training and/or education in cartooning?

I went to college for English and Creative Writing.  I never had any training or education that formally related to comics.  All of that I picked up from reading comics and scripts, as well as the occasional  book on how to write comics.

Who are your influences?

Kelly Sue Deconnick, Matt Fraction, Gail Simone, Brian K Vaughn

If you could, what in your career would you do-over or change?

I would have started writing comics sooner.  I had a period of a couple of years after college where I basically sat on my hands and waited for something to come to me.  I feel like that's lost time.

What work are you best-known for?

Probably "Princeless" as it's a creator owned property that myself and my illustrators brought up from nothing.  "Unstoppable Wasp" probably had a wider distribution though, because it's a Marvel comic.

What work are you most proud of?

Princeless. I've been working on it for six years now and it's like a child to me.  Every time I get some hyperventilating little girl run up to my table to tell me it's her first or favorite comic, it does my heart good.

How did you end up writing for Marvel?

Persistence.  I emailed a lot of editors and sent them pdfs of or links to comics I had been working on.  I listened to suggestions they had and kept working on other books while I was waiting for opportunities to become available.  Once I had one, I got stories turned in in a timely fashion and was receptive to any suggestions editors gave me.

How has the experience been?

Overwhelmingly positive.  Everybody I've worked with at Marvel has been wonderful and there's a real sense they want you to succeed.  We don't always agree about every turn a story should take, but they're always respectful of my ideas and happy to talk things out.

Do you have a future project for them?

Well, right now I'm working on Hulk Vs Thor: Champions of the Universe, which is a six-issue mini-series which just released its second issue today.  After that, there's nothing I can announce, but we're always talking about ideas for future books.

What would you like to do or work on in the future?

Well, there's always more Princeless and Raven coming and right now I'm hard at work on Vampirella at IDW.  Beyond that, I'd love more chances to work with both Marvel and Dynamite.  I'd really love to work on a book with Misty Knight over at Marvel.  And there are a number of characters over at DC I'd love to get my hands on.  I've also got several creator owned projects in the works, so I guess the answer is everything.  I hope to work on everything.

What do you do when you're in a rut or have writer's block?

Edit.  I got back and look at what I've got already.  I find that often if I have writer's block on a story that the problem is that I've already messed up.  A character is doing something out of character or has made a misstep in the plotting.  Sometimes you can find what you did wrong and the story just opens up in front of you.

What do you think will be the future of your field?

Just saying "diversity" is a cliche, but it's a true one.  Diversity of characters and creators, diversity of experience on and behind the page. diversity in genre and tone, diversity in format and experience.  I think comics is at a very similar point to where the book market was only a few years ago.  It's a question of finding the new inroads without necessarily closing off the existing ones.  Comics has had a boom recently and we're in a natural period of contracting, but it's not going away.  Libraries and schools are really starting to get a feel for how valuable comics and graphic novels can be for them and I think they're going to be a lot more of the future market for comics.

How was your SPX experience? How often have you attended it?

SPX was fantastic as always.  I love SPX and try to come every year.  Last year was the first year in a while I've missed and being back this year was a rejuvenating experience. It always gives me an insight into what comics could be like and makes me wish it was like that all the time.

Do you have a website or blog?

I do, but it's fairly useless at the moment.  It's JeremyWhitley.com but my twitter @jrome58 and my tumblr princelesscomic.tumblr.com are much more informative. 

What's your favorite thing about DC? 

It used to be the monuments and those are still great, but the older I get, the more I have to say "the food". The food in DC is amazing.

Least favorite?

Is it ever not muggy in DC?  I mean, I live in the south so I'm equated with humidity, but it seems like it's always muggy in the summer and icy in the winter.  A dry and temperate day or two would be nice.

What monument or museum do you like?

I like the FDR monument.  I'm a sucker for a water feature on a monument to begin with, but the feeling of peace and calm in that monument really appeals to me.  Not to mention I love that ol' progressive dude.

How about a favorite local restaurant?

Oh!  Now that's hard.  I've been to a half dozen restaurants in Chinatown alone that I would easily put into my all time top 20.  Overall, though, I think I have to go with Busboys and Poets.  The combination of art, literature, and atmosphere with great food is my ideal. Who can pass up a restaurant with a book shop?

Monday, September 28, 2015

Meet a Local Cartoonist: Chatting with Afrofuturist's J.T. Wilkins

JT with Rafer Roberts' banner
by Mike Rhode  

JT Wilkins was at Small Press Expo this year as part of the DC Conspiracy, and selling copies of his new Afrofuturist comics. He kindly agreed to answer our usual questions.

What type of comic work or cartooning do you do?


 I'm known for Black Dayz, The Afrofuturist, and stuff in Magic Bullet.

How do you do it? Traditional pen and ink, computer or a combination?


I'm a Pen and Ink type of guy.


When (within a decade is fine) and where were you born?


Call me an 80's Child!

Why are you in Washington now?  What neighborhood or area do you live in?


I live in Southeast, but I'm really from Maryland.

What is your training and/or education in cartooning?


Drawing and Sketching got my groove on!

Who are your influences?

Spain, S. Clay Wilson, Crumb, Fletcher Hanks, Wood, Kirby, Beardsley, Ditko, Lee, Kubert, Lynch, Panter, Knight just to name a few.

If you could, what in your career would you do-over or change?


I would have never gone in the military!

What work are you best-known for?

Mostly my Magic Bullet stuff, but my indie stuff stands the test of time.


What work are you most proud of? 


Everything!

What would you like to do or work on in the future?


Anything art-related that would make me happy.


What do you think will be the future of your field? 


Computers world wide!

What local cons do you attend? The Small Press Expo, Intervention, or others? Any comments about attending them?

MOCCA, SPXPO, PIX, STAPLE, BCC, CC.

 
What's your favorite thing about DC?

The Museums!

Least favorite?

Crowds.

What monument or museum do like to take visitors to?

The Smithsonian.

How about a favorite local restaurant?

Anything with seafood.

Do you have a website or blog?