Artemis Draws

My musings on making a graphic novella
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    Inspired by Modigliani

    by artemisdrawsblog on 28 March, 2018 at 10:23 pm
    Posted In: drawing

    Just the other week I managed to catch the Modigliani exhibition at the Tate Modern before it closed on Easter Sunday. It was inspirational, far better than the Picasso exhibition that featured the work he did in 1932. The Picasso exhibition made me come away feeling vaguely unsettled particularly by his depictions of his mistress. Genius he might have been but it was difficult for me to feel sympatico with Picasso.

    So I came home and many days later, sat down and made an ink drawing, a rendition of one of my favourite Modigliani paintings, a portrait of an unknown girl in deep reds and browns.

    My version of the Modigliani painting

    My version of the Modigliani painting

     

    My India ink has dried up, it has become a gloopy thick jelly stuck inside the bottle but I managed to pick up enough ink with my wet brush to use it for this drawing. Thankfully the Liquitex ink still worked so I used that for the fine hatching work with my Deleter pen. The brush had lost many of its bristles so it was hard to make a decent line. Still, it was all done within half an hour and it felt satisfying to be drawing something again, as if I was working out an elegant solution to some mathematical problem.

    I don’t yet know if I have the stamina to start planning another story. Perhaps I will have to wait for inspiration to strike a second time.

    Thoughts on the Small Press industry in the UK

    by artemisdrawsblog on 19 December, 2014 at 10:43 am
    Posted In: musing

    It has been a good while since I last posted on here, various distractions and other occupations meant that I didn’t have time (or the energy) to devote to keeping this blog updated. I have also been working on some digital art – for some GPS-based games I have been writing and coding, nothing much more serious than that. It isn’t much fun for me to try drawing anything with a stylus on a computer, but I can see how it has its attractions for those people who are more practised and skilful at digital art. Nothing like smearing ink over a page or knocking over a bottle of India ink over your last finished panel…! But I did manage to produce some acceptable graphics that won’t be too closely scrutinised by the players. Anyhow, not wishing to digress any further, I came across this blog on Broken Frontier which resonated with me particularly over the last few months, since the last Comiket fest at the British Library.

    http://www.brokenfrontier.com/state-small-press-nation-self-micro-comics-publishing-uk-growing-faster-potential-audience-part-1/

    http://www.brokenfrontier.com/state-small-press-nation-self-micro-comics-publishing-uk-growing-faster-potential-audience-part-2/

    I self-publish all my own books on a rather small scale and also don’t do much about marketing them – I sell them at Foyles (but they rarely grab attention since they are stored sideways in cramped shelves, and my books do not have any lettering on their spines). A lot of the observations in Andy Oliver’s articles above coincide exactly with my own, and it is a concern that we are not reaching the wider public, and for sure, the lack of curation doesn’t help (although I cannot propose any fairer alternative). Like articles and other stuff on the web, there’s a lot of white noise out there and filtering out the wheat from the chaff is getting increasingly difficult with time. Moreover, some of the chaff out there know how to market themselves extremely well. Perhaps I’d never properly understood or appreciated how crucial marketing really is to selling a product. It is something that I am also astoundingly bad at, and it is no good pretending it doesn’t truly matter.

    It doesn’t help that I suspect that I don’t write or draw comics for people who usually read and enjoy graphic novels. I don’t have a target audience in mind or if I do, they’re most likely the sort of people who spend their time browsing in the Fiction or Poetry sections of a bookstore, steering clear of anything to do with comics, god forbid!

    I haven’t spent much time pondering over my next issue of Cabaret Voltaire, because I have so many issues of The Street Dancer’s Romance to sell and with only one comics festival under my belt this year, it looks like I have to be a bit more organised about attending these festivals and fairs in 2015 to sell more of my stock. Thought Bubble in Leeds 2015? Have wheels, will travel!

     

    My Comiket poster

    by artemisdrawsblog on 13 August, 2014 at 10:27 am
    Posted In: festivals

    Well, the weekend is coming and I have finally made my poster for my tablet at Comiket!

    ComiketPoster1

    Yes, I got inspiration from one of Frans Masereel’s woodcuts in “The City” while I was trawling around wondering what on earth I could draw. I really wasn’t feeling in the mood but anyway, managed to pencil and ink this in about an hour or so. Went to the printer’s to get it printed (in colour) and laminated, and voila! Quite pleased with the results, it is probably more eye-catching than the last one I did for Painting Stories.

    See you at Comiket!

     

    Comica Comiket Aug 2014

    by artemisdrawsblog on 9 August, 2014 at 7:27 pm
    Posted In: comics, festivals

    Well, it is here at last, the much awaited Comica Comiket festival!
    I will be selling my books at a table by the wall in the central conference hall in the British Library on Euston Road this Saturday, August 16.

    Come and look and buy! I will be selling Painting Stories and copies of Cabaret Voltaire vols I and II. Some at cut-down prices. Everything must go!

    comica-firecat-comiket-16-august-2014-480pxw

     

    See you there!

     

    Now stocked at Books Actually, Singapore

    by artemisdrawsblog on 10 June, 2014 at 7:06 pm
    Posted In: comics

    I have taken quite a break with my blog posting and am only catching up retrospectively here. I am spending part of my summer break abroad, in SE Asia, and I guess the highlight of the month of June has been my visit to Books Actually, a well-known independent bookstore in Singapore. I’d sent a copy of Painting Stories a year ago to the proprietor Kenny Leck about a year ago, and he most kindly agreed to stock my books in the bookstore. I am really grateful for his unstinting support of SE Asian artists and writers, many of whom are just trying to get work distributed to a local audience.

    So, you can now purchase copies of Painting Stories and Cabaret Voltaire vol II at Books Actually in Tiong Bahru, Singapore. The street address is: 9 Yong Siak Street, Tiong Bahru, Singapore 168645. An afternoon spent browsing in the bookstore should be considered time well spent. They are also located in one of my favourite neighbourhoods in Singapore, Tiong Bahru, whose art deco architecture has made it a candidate for a ‘heritage’ listing by UNESCO. Hipsters have recently claimed Tiong Bahru as their own and the place is changing rapidly (some would say for the worst). There are also a few trendy cafes in the area now, one located directly opposite the bookstore – finding a free table is not necessarily easy on hot weekend afternoons, where do all these hipsters come from?!

    On another note, I am mulling over short stories for a third issue of CV; it looks likely that I will have to skip producing anything in 2014 and set a deadline for the following year, I would like to sell some more of my back catalogue before printing yet another issue. I had a flash of inspiration after watching an (admittedly very bad) movie about the poet, Elizabeth Bishop and spent some evenings mulling over a prose-poem I might eventually write, something about how autobiographical films don’t ever accurately portray the reality of someone’s life but will always be mostly a fictional construct. The next issue of CV will probably contain two short stories but that is really all I can reveal for now.

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