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Blog: Red Fish Circle (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: PW -The Beat (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Holidays, Culture, road trip, art school, portfolio reviews, Schulz Library, Working for a Living, The Center for Cartoon Studies, Copacetic Comics, grpahic novels, Jen Vaughn, Saranac Arts Project, Add a tag
BY JEN VAUGHN - Like any good cartoonist and comics evangelist, a road trip cannot just be days of blasting Mates of State and stopping at roadside attractions like Corn Palace. No, no, on my trip from The Center for Cartoon Studies in White River Junction, VT to Fantagraphics in Seattle, WA will be punctuated by a few stops to conduct portfolio reviews and drop off some Schulz Library tote bags at great comic book stores across America.
Bill over at Copacetic Comics is nice enough to host comics portfolio reviews from noon-2pm on Monday, June 4th while Spokane’s Saranac Art-Projects Gallery will host an event on Saturday, June 9th from 2-4pm (thanks to cartoonist Allen Duffy). You can bet that I’m staying with a cartoonist in EVERY. SINGLE. CITY. More in a future, post-road-trip post!
For more stops and details visit the Schulz Library Blog. Tweet at me @theJenya or @CartoonStudies if you have questions or know of the BEST coffee shops to draw in along the way.
P.S. Don’t forget to VOTE FOR THE EISNERS! If you qualify, that is.
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Jen Vaughn definitely brought some board games in her car, just saying. We could play Civilization or Power Grid instead of sleeping on the road trip.
Blog: sruble.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I attended three illustration workshops in January and February. The talks were given by Steve Metzler (Dutton), Patrick Collins (Henry Holt), and Regina Griffith (Egmont). Here are some notes from those sessions that I thought might help both illustrators and writers.
Steve Metzler gave a talk about Dutton, then reviewed several portfolios, including mine. I learned almost as much from what he said about other portfolios as I did from what he said about mine. If you have a chance to have him review your portfolio, take it.
- Characters are selling in picture books and graphic novels, especially quirky characters (like Fancy Nancy, Skippy Jon Jones, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, and Baby Mouse).
- A good character leads to a good story.
- He likes to see people in portfolios, not just animals.
- 2012 is supposed to be the height of the new PB market (baby boom in 2006).
- If you’re an illustrator, also be a writer.
- He works on everything from PB to YA.
- Sees a need for graphic novels for boys (7-9 year olds).
- Don’t ever do a PB dummy where it’s all the same (all full page spreads, all vignettes, all single pages, etc.)
Patrick Collins gave portfolio reviews to three lucky people, followed by Q&A at a local SCBWI meeting. He didn’t review my portfolio, but I learned a lot from the portfolios he did review.
- A publisher might choose your art or your writing, but not always both – even if you do both.
- Try to have a focus in each image. How do you get the focal point of the image to come forward and have everything else fade into the background? Try varying the tones/values.
- Kid’s books are all about characters and storytelling.
- Pay attention to how you draw people and animals and how you incorporate them into your backgrounds.
- You really need to put in the time to make progress if you want to have a career in art.
- Make sure you have character in your characters. They should look like living people, not mannequins. (You can achieve this through expressions, body language and interaction between characters.)
- Need to have more than one perspective/point of view.
- Think about how you can show focus in a busy image. You don’t want people to miss the important part of the scene.
- The reason an art director looks for a consistent style is so they know what you can/will do if they hire you. You can always market a different style later. Show your best style at the time.
Regina Griffith gave a talk about Egmont, then reviewed several portfolios, including mine. As with Steve Metzler’s talk, I learned almost as much from what she said about other portfolios as I did from what she said about mine. Regina was really great about reviewing a portfolio and then talking about what was working or not with the whole group. If you have a chance to have her review your portfolio, take it.
- Not publishing many PBs right now. Focusing on older books.
- She’s looking for a broad range with real kid appeal.
- Most of the books on their list right now are US books, but they do have a couple that are foreign books.
- No graphic novels yet, but maybe in the future.
- Can’t imagine not liking animals in clothing. It depends on the text though. (In response to a question about anthropomorphized animals.)
- Picture books should have a plot.
- In a crowd scene, everyone should have different personalities.
- Page turn surprises in picture books are a good thing.
- It’s good to show you can fill a page with spots/vignettes or with full page spreads.
- It’s good to have black and white images in your portfolio when picture books are in a slump.
Ah… too bad you’re skipping Iowa.
As for road trips, oral games are the best.
There’s alphabetical memory games…
“I went to the comic shop and bought Action Comics.”
“I went to the comic shop and bought Action Comics and the Ballad of Halo Jones.” etc.
I like to keep track of license plates. Can you find all 50 States? Bonus points for provinces and foreign countries.
Or make up crazy phrases from license plate letters. “JMT” … Japanese Monster Trucks, just my toe, Jamaican Mountain Time… First person to laugh loses. Sketch each winning phrase, including the license plate.
And if you’re really bored… pick a fly speck on the windshield. This is your gun sight. Move your head around until the sight is centered on your target (license plate in front of you, roadside sign, grazing cow)…FIRE!
You can also do Radio rundown. Start at the low end of the FM dial. Start listening. When you can’t stand the station, move the dial slowly to the right, until you pick up the next station. Listen for at least five minutes. See how long you can last before you hit the other side of the radio.
Radio dramas are also good. Hitchhiker’s Guide, Fourth Tower of Inverness, Star Wars… or whatever is playing on NPR.
If you’re really REALLY bored, start workshopping stories. It helps if you have a data recorder of some sort. Maybe even record the story as a radio drama!