New Figures, Old Injuries

Somehow, I managed to re-injure myself after my neck trauma from a week or two ago, which meant a weekend of lying around on my back in a lot of pain again. I don’t like pain. I don’t like being inactive. So the minute I managed to get to the chiropractor and start healing, it was back to the drawing board. Fueled by the anxiety of not being able to draw for two days in the midst of a ton of deadlines, I’ve been churning through things like crazy. Sometimes I feel like it’s never enough, but there’s light at the end of the tunnel. In the meantime, here’s some figure drawing.

For figure drawing this week, I picked up one of those Pentel pigment pens at the art store because I hadn’t had time to go home and get my regular supplies. I’m not going to lie, I really struggled this session. My figures felt lifeless and poorly planned, painting with the brush was tricky, I invariably used too much ink, I couldn’t get the essence of the model on the page. But I pushed on, and by the end of it I’d done two pieces I was actually quite proud of. I debated putting them up here in isolation, but I want to own up to the days when I’m just not feeling it, so here’s the whole bunch.

This is a pattern I experience time and time again (feeling like my work is rubbish, drawing anyway, getting through it, and arriving at a place of excitement and inspiration), and the more it happens, the more I can say “I know you think this horrible now, but just keep drawing.” It doesn’t make the despair of the earlier stages less horrible, but practice teaches me that it’s just a phase. Hopefully one day it’ll be gone altogether, but given that I hear about it from just about every artist I admire, I don’t have my hopes too high. And that’s okay.

Trek in the Park

Got to sit in on a dress rehearsal for Trek in the Park a few nights ago. Look at these COSTUMES!

For those who don’t know, Portland is awesome enough to have a theater company devoted to re-enacting classic Trek episodes in various parks every summer. This year the crew tackles Journey to Babel, a tense, diplomatic drama with lots of explosions and shouting.

Shows run Saturdays and Sundays for the rest of the month at Cathedral Park in St. John’s. They’re free to the public, but make sure you get there well in advance of the 5pm showtime to bag prime seats. For more info, click through to the Atomic Arts website!

Portraits, Neck Injuries, You Know The Drill

Art’s been on hiatus since I injured my neck last week (boo!), but here’s a commission I did recently to keep you occupied.

Matt was one of my Kickstarter backers, and I was thrilled when he contacted me about doing a portrait to commemorate his first wedding anniversary. These two apparently cook up a storm together, though their kitchen parameters may leave something to be desired. By the end of the painting process, I felt disproportionately happy for them. There’s something about drawing people that makes you get to know them better.

Still learning my way around watercolor scanning, so I apologize for the overly-garish yellow in this version!

Hopefully I’ll be showering you all with new comics in the next few weeks!

Sketchdump and CrapComics™!

Today I got stuck in a big, fat

You can’t see that letter. It’s an R. For ART RUT.

Y’know, those days when you feel like you’ll never draw well ever again, all your ideas are crap, life is pointless, etc etc.

BOOOOOORING.

So I spent all of the Sip and Sketch this afternoon busting through it with a variety of sketches and whiny journal comics. Good for what ails you!

First up, we had this furry guy.

Then this angry-lookin’ lady with a very orange collar.

And, finally, some quick ‘n dirty journal comics to prove that by golly I can draw things in a narrative fashion if I damn well please.

NOW ONWARD TO GLORY.

General Kickstarter Update & A Local Appearance!

Heads up, Portland friends! I’ll be tabling at the Portland Zine Symposium’s AmaZine Fest THIS SATURDAY (June 23rd) at the IPRC (1001 SE Division). The general idea for the event is a Farmer’s Market for zinesters, so come on down pick up a fine selection of fresh-pressed comics and zines. I’ll have Baggywrinkles 1 & 2 on hand.

What else is new in Lucyland? Well, after selling out of all my backstock at VanCAF, I’ve been facing a reprint avalanche of older titles on top of the new True Believer run. In the last three weeks I’ve printed, hand-punched, and sewn 500 copies of Baggywrinkles, cleaned up, laid out, and printed the first edition of Wherefore, and spent hours figuring out how best to prepare True Believer for the offset printing process.

I’m also gearing up to do a new run of Tales from the Fragment, which is the most labor-intensive comic I’ve made to date. Each copy needs to be scored in 13 places, cut out by hand, and folded into its final form. What was I thinking when I made this thing?!

More progress by the numbers…

I’ve painted a boat a day for over a week (here’s a sampler)…

Sketched in 45 special edition comics (more samples)…

Pinned 150 buttons to bits of card stock…

Printed and packaged 9 oversized prints and three original pages…

AND cooked one backer dinner.

 Remember, kids: real cartoonists eat vegetables for breakfast.

To wrap up, I’m currently in conversation with Portland’s own Modified Printing about the run of FIGHT FOR YOUR ART t-shirts, which is getting exciting, and I’m finally moving ahead with quotes from various offset printers for True Believer.

PHEW.

Of course, to top it off I got mega sick this week, so bear with me while I try to stop looking like this:

And on that cheery note, I’ll see you all next week! Stay heathy, comics lovers.

Still Truckin’

Slogging ever onward through the deluge of orders. Custom prints wrapped up today, limited posters signed and numbered, offset print run in the works…it never ends! Just put in orders for t-shirts this morning as well, so if you’re excited to get some True Believer swag you’re in for a treat. To keep the blog active in the meantime, here’s the latest commission I churned out for a backer who happens to be both a doctor and violinist! What strange and wonderful times we live in.