2014 in Review: Tricky Walsh

What have been your personal cartooning/comics highlights of 2014?

Well, this year I managed to get another Hoppers out of my head and onto paper which seems like a not-so-large achievement but I guess to me it signifies a bit of “Oh this thing is actually happening.” I also scratched out the entirety of the series and have set myself some deadlines of “finish it before you’re eighty” which is also at this point (should it happen), an achievement.

What are some of the comics you've enjoyed in 2014?

I went to Japan last year and saw the work of Yuichi Yokoyama and pretty much bought everything I could get my hands on. Colour Engineering is spectacular – it really bridges the comics/art media in a way that I really appreciate. I’ve also got a copy of Brecht Evens’ The Making Of and Simon Hanselmann’s Megahex sitting on the shelf waiting for the festive season to sneak off and read too.  My comics reading doesn’t seem to line up that well with “Things released in that year” but Sam Wallman killed it all with A Guard’s Story and Katie Parrish’s work is stunning.  

What is something non-comics that you have enjoyed in 2014?  

I enjoyed a lot of art making this year. In particular I got to do a bunch of research on Daphne Oram and her oramics machine – a 1950’s electronic instrument of sorts that uses celluloid to make sound. I made a replica of it out of wood and showed it in a gallery in Melbourne. I guess I’ve enjoyed having some dedicated art making time. Which I probably have every year, but this year has felt a little more comfortable or less stressed or something. I’ve also been doing a lot of gouache works which has made me want to bring the colour on into my comics more. Which I guess will happen at some point. Natural evolution, whatnot.

What are you looking forward to in 2015?

I’m doing some travel next year which I can’t wait for. I got an Australia council residency in London to go do some recording and research which will be fun and not laboursome or back breaking. Woo! Also I've promised Josh Santospirito ( @ San Kessto publications) that I'll speed it up a bit (for my own sake, old age, etc) so next year we're releasing Hoppers 3 & 4 in June and November (I think. Josh will be weeping silently at these dates probably because i always get them wrong. I am my own bureau of misinformation)

I’m also working on a show of drawings with my partner Mish Meijers at Cross-Arts gallery in Sydney  in June 2015 that will probably turn into a publication at some point. It’s called Dear Minister for Women and is basically to educate the current minister for Women about women’s history and issues along with a bunch of smartmouthed and pissy outpourings of outrage. Because still angry.

Tricky Walsh

2014 in Review: Owen Heitmann

 

What have been your personal cartooning/comics highlights of 2014?

Performing a public reading of one of my comics at the Emerging Writers Festival in Adelaide in September really stands out. It was an honour to be one of two comic creators reading alongside prose writers such as Benjamin Law and Clementine Ford. It was also nerve racking – I’d never read one of my comics in public before. In fact, I’d often been perplexed at the urge that drives people to stand on a stage and try to entertain others. But having now done it myself, I can tell you that it feels pretty damn good to hear a roomful of strangers laugh at your jokes. 

What are some of the comics you've enjoyed in 2014?

Awkwood by Jase Harper (Milk Shadow Books) – crisp art and a funny concept with a believably flawed protagonist 

Through The Woods by Emily Carroll (Margaret K. McElderry Books) – beautiful and creepy

The Don Rosa Library by Don Rosa (Fantagraphics) – the archive series I’ve been dreaming of for 15 years 

Lumberjanes by Noelle Stevenson, Grace Ellis, and Brooke Allen (Boom! Box) – pure, manic fun

Seconds by Bryan Lee O’Malley (Random House) – engrossing and moving

What is something non-comics that you have enjoyed in 2014?

I traveled to Newcastle with my partner, fellow cartoonist Georgina Chadderton, in October for the National Young Writers Festival. It was my first time at the festival, and it was an enormous amount of fun. Strictly speaking, this was still comics related, as we were invited there to participate in events as cartoonists, but we attended as many of the other, non-comics sessions as was physically possible, and I immensely enjoyed all the workshops, panels and readings. A great trip, and a great festival – but I nearly needed another holiday afterwards to catch up on sleep and recuperate!

What are you looking forward to in 2015?

After several years of focusing on short comics for anthologies, I’m planning my first proper graphic novel: a screwball romantic comedy for young adults and the young at heart. The idea been gestating for a few months now and I’m really excited about getting it on paper! My aim for 2015 is to complete the script and start drawing – I expect it to be a multi-year project.

24 Hour Cynic

2014 in Review: Jason Chatfield

What have been your personal cartooning/comics highlights of 2014?
Getting an editor from Universal Uclick was a big help. Having a qualified second set of eyes on your work makes you concentrate on every aspect of your audience online and in print. I also started going in to the New Yorker each week to pitch my cartoons to Bob Mankoff which has been a bit of a surreal thrill.

What are some of the comics you've enjoyed in 2014?
I've really enjoyed seeing one of my favourite Web Comics, WuMo by WULFF & MOREGENTHALER successfully go from online to also now be syndicated internationally in print. They also had another comic release on GoComics in June I've been enjoying called Truth Facts.

One of my favourite cartoonist discoveries of 2014 was the work of both Peter Arkle and Edward Steed.

What is something non-comics that you have enjoyed in 2014?  
Moving my life to New York was a big one. I've been doing the best work of my life in comics and stand-up comedy. I'm out nearly every night doing a gig somewhere in the city which helps hone material way faster than trying to get gigs in Melbourne.

What are you looking forward to in 2015?
I've been asked to join the board of the National Cartoonists Society and host the 2015 Reuben Awards in Washington DC. I'm pretty excited to get to work on that... It's going to be a busy year!

Jason Chatfield

2014 in Review: Simon Hanselmann

What have been your personal cartooning/comics highlights of 2014?

"new york times best seller list / joining the international velvet rope club".

What are some of the comics you've enjoyed in 2014?

"arsene schrauwen / everything breakdown press published."

What is something non-comics that you have enjoyed in 2014?  

"getting married to my beautiful wife / yung lean"

What are you looking forward to in 2015?

"angouleme / madrid / new book."

Girl Mountain