Tyson Cole: The Deep End

Tyson Cole is the humorous cartoonist of “The Deep End”. Tyson has been cartooning all of his life but in 2011 he became serious about his craft. In college he switched from being a biology major to graphic design. Soon he was contacted by Bill Kellogg and is now featured in “Funnies Extra”. And I just summed that up in a whirlwind…but you get the idea, Tyson is a cartooning machine. This week it is with great pleasure to feature Tyson Cole and his fantastic comic “The Deep End” at “Don’t Pick the Flowers”.

David: Hey Tyson, thank you so much for featuring your comic “The Deep End”. When did you become interested in becoming a cartoonist?

Tyson: Thanks for having me Dave! I love reading the interviews on your blog. I’ve been a fan of cartooning for my whole life. I remember reading the comics page in the newspaper just about every day and being in awe of the variety of art styles and the way these guys could consistently come up with funny ideas. It always seemed to be an impossibly difficult task that could only be accomplished by a few rare geniuses. That turned out to be absolutely true, but with the internet, I figured out that I could give it a shot anyway and not even worry about syndication or deadlines or anything. I could do it just for the love of the art and improve at my own pace. How I actually started though was in January 2011, I had just gotten married and I showed my wife some doodles I had done at work, and she convinced me to take them to the editor of the school newspaper. He liked them, so they started running my cartoon three times a week. I’ve loved it so much that I decided to change my major from biology (which I had already taken three years of) to graphic design. The cartooning world is extremely addictive, and I’ve been sucked in and loved every minute of it.

David: How do you go about coming up with the ideas for your comic, do you have a routine?

Tyson: Like most cartoonists, I don’t really know where my ideas come from. You just have to train your brain into noticing funny things about everything and get into the habit of letting your mind wander and look for funny possibilities in various situations. Finding connections between things is key. I like to read and watch documentaries and tv, etc. I used to just do cartoons as the ideas would naturally come, which turned out to be about three or four times a week. Recently I’ve been trying to keep a more consistent schedule of four a week (M-W-F-Sat) and it’s been good. I like to keep myself challenged, but not frantic. I also like to participate in a weekly competition held by the Cartoonists’ Club of Great Britain (even though I’m not British) where everyone comes up with their own cartoon for a set caption. It’s great practice and a lot of fun.

David: What are the tools you use to create your comic?

Tyson: I like to sketch them out on normal computer paper, then ink them with Pigma Micron pens and scan them in to Photoshop. Then I darken the lines and color them, etc. Pretty simple process.

David: What are the cartoonists you consider to be your greatest influence and where do most of your ideas come from?

Tyson: I grew up reading a lot of Far Side and Calvin and Hobbes (of course). In High School I loved Brevity and F Minus. I’ve always preferred the beauty and simplicity of single panel comics. Now, my list of heroes is a lot longer. To name a few, I’d say Dave Blazek, Mark Parisi, Sergio Aragones, Dave Coverly, Mark Tatulli, the McCoy bros, Brian Crane, Jim Unger, Chad Carpenter, etc etc etc. I think some of the guys out there that consistently give me the biggest laughs are Dave Blazek, Tony Carrillo, and Tom Gammill. Also, I’m a big fan of Jim Hunt who’s been one of my biggest supporters.

David: What is the ultimate goal with your comic?

Tyson: The goal has always been to have an enjoyable hobby where I get to be creative and make people happy. Now that that’s going well, I’d like to be able to make a living from it someday, or at least get a good supplemental income as a freelancer or something. I’m lucky enough to be a part of the humor publication Funnies Extra, which I think is a fabulous idea that’s going to take off and make millions. And of course, if I ever got an offer from a syndicate, I don’t think I’d turn it down.

David: Thank you Tyson for sharing a little about your life and your wonderful comic “The Deep End”. I wish you continued success and look forward to all you have in store for the rest of us.

Check out more of Tyson and his fantastic comic at the links below, you won’t regret it!

The Deep End: thedeepend-comic.blogspot.com

Facebook: www.facebook.com/deependcomic

Twitter: twitter.com/#!/thedeependcomic

 

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Illustration, webcomic and Team Cul de Sac

I usually like to showcase other people and their work on “Don’t Pick the Flowers” blog, and next week there will be another amazing cartoonist to avail your eyes to. But until then I wanted to post a few things going on.

To start with, I’ve been commissioned to illustrate a children’s book. This is a major undertaking for me since I try and update “Don’t Pick the Flowers” about 4 times a week, and of course as most webcartoonists I do have a paying job to take care of the bills. Since “Don’t Pick the Flowers” is a labor of love I may only be updating the site 2-3 times a week…we’ll see how this goes. I’d love to keep posting 4 times a week even more if that was possible. But all of my time is totally spent and this isn’t a complaint, just a reality. So please keep your eyes open for updates on the comic because nothing is “set in stone”.

With that being said, I may be taking a small turn with my web comic. Not totally sure how this will pan out, but while writing “gags” is fun (and I’ll probably half way stay in this mode) I may do more of a continuing story and delve a little deeper into the characters story lines. Don’t quote me on this as I do the comic week to week. I just feel there is more wanting to come out in the comic. And with time restrictions it’s hard to dive into these areas. I know some cartoonists would argue with me on that but having a day job and where I once had a plethora of comics (and employers not realizing your dreams) it becomes hard to really bring the story to life and have extra comics. I don’t want to run off my small readership but hopefully this will make for a better comic. Again, we’ll see how this works out.

Last on the list but very, very important plus time sensitive. There is an auction going on featuring top notch original comic art. Back in April I featured Chris Sparks on the blog www.dontpicktheflowers.com/blog/?p=2824 and he helped compile the book “Team Cul de Sac”. I messaged Chris again and thought it would be good to go ahead and mention this again. Richard Thompson creator of one of the greatest comic strips “cul de sac” was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease and cartoonists rallied around him and created original art honoring him and his comic. All of the art was put into “Team Cul de Sac” book, which you can buy, and now you can buy the original art. All proceeds go to Parkinson’s research. Michael J Fox had this to say: “Richard Thompson is lucky to have a friend like Chris Sparks. With this amazing collection, Chris is raising significant dollars and awareness for Parkinson’s —while proving comedy can help speed a cure. We’re grateful to have both Chris and Richard on our team.” – Michael J. Fox. The auction ends June 10th at 10 pm cst and here are the links to find out more:

Booksparkingdesign.com/order-team-cul-de-sac-book/

Auction: comics.ha.com/common/search_results.php?N=52+793+794+791+1893+792+2088+4294953918

Richard Thompson blog: richardspooralmanac.blogspot.com/

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Dave Blazek: Loose Parts

From Attack of the Chortling Stomach

Dave Blazek is the creator, writer and artist of the comic “Loose Parts” and what an extremely humorous and talented man he is. Dave has worked as a standup comic, writer, graphic artist, and produced and directed for radio and television commercials, and written for Dr. Katz Professional Therapist. Plus he has won over 130 regional, national and international creative awards in advertising. Dave has a new book called Attack of the Chortling Stomach, which will have you rolling with laughter, and you can find the book at his website loosepartscomic.com/LoosePartComic.com.html . So if you aren’t already familiar with Dave and “Loose Parts” you are in for a treat. What a thrill it is to have Dave Blazek featured here at “Don’t Pick the Flowers”. 

David: Hello Dave! Thank you for being featured at “Don’t Pick the Flowers”. You have a great sense of humor and a great comic called “Loose Parts”.  You’ve been involved with many “entertaining” jobs like writing for “Dr. Katz Professional Therapist”. How did Loose Parts and your involvement in cartooning begin?

From Attack of the Chortling Stomach

Dave: I was taught by wolves. All right, all right, the story is much weirder. I’m an unusual cartoonist in that I never drew a picture in my life until I was 43. That’s right. I never grew up wanting to be a cartoonist; never knew I had it in me. Instead, I graduated from Penn State with a Journalism degree hoping to be the next Woodstein. Well, that didn’t pan out so I went to work in a factory making cardboard boxes in my hometown of Erie, PA. After getting laid off from that glamorous position I begged my way into a job at the Centre Daily Times in State College, PA, the town where Penn State is located. They gave me a job selling advertising to used car dealers and anybody else in the phonebook. Thing was, I wasn’t such a good salesman. But it turns out, I could make really clever ads and those seemed to sell pretty well. That sent me down the road of Advertising. A few years later, I got a job at the in-house agency at The Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News. I’m still there to this day some 30 years later. I know what you’re thinking and you’re right. I have a full-time career other than cartooning. I do all my cartooning nights and weekends. In the meantime, I’ve created scores of ads; I’ve written and produced over 500 radio commercials; and I’ve written and directed over 100 TV commercials. Somehow I have this basket of 130 creative awards including a Clio. They make tremendous weapons and doorstops. There are many people who only know me from that career and have no idea I cartoon.

So how did I start cartooning? We’ll get there. I should add that I did a lot of funny ads beforehand. And that while I was in college, I was editor of the Froth – the National Lampoon or Onion of Penn State. And then in the ‘90s, I tried my hand at standup comedy and did that for five years or so in and around Philadelphia. So you see, even though I never cartooned, I was developing the comic sensibility as I bathed in humor in many different forms and media. Of course, dirty humor bath water leaves a horrible ring.

Okay, so here we go. The Comics Editor at The Inquirer, because of my humor background, started showing me the comics submissions to The Inquirer and asking my opinion. I kept saying “I could do better than these.” He got tired of my saying that so much he challenged me to try. I ignored him. He asked again. I ignored him. He finally retired and was doing some talent searching for the then Los Angeles Times Syndicate. He asked again. I ignored him. Finally, around the tenth time, I said okay. But I didn’t draw. Luckily I had a partner who did. So one weekend, I wrote, like, 30 cartoons and my buddy went and drew them up. They got to LA and the next thing I know, their VP flies east, takes us to lunch and signs us to a syndication contract. We originally called it Off The Mark not knowing Mark Parisi had Wide of the Mark. We were stupid. So we sent a list of 10 names to LATS and they picked Loose Parts. Yeah, yeah, I know. It just isn’t supposed to happen like that. But I suspect that our old editor friend vouched for us mightily, and I know that years of working on daily newspaper deadlines made us a safe bet. But still, the legendary editor Ron Patel came to our office and just kep saying, “You have no idea what you’ve done. None. No idea, no idea whatsoever …”

So we start up Loose Parts in 1998 and just a few weeks in, LATS asks me to write for the comic strip for Dr. Katz. Love it. So I’m now writing 60 jokes a month and working full time and life is good. Then in one weekend, my friend and partner tells me he has cancer and wants to stop Loose Parts. (He’s fine now. I see him every day.) Then Comedy Central cancels Dr. Katz. Now I’m looling like I’m out of the cartoon business as fast as I got in. So I do something nuts. I call LATS and ask if I can draw Loose Parts as well as write it. Amazingly, they say, yes. So now I have a daily cartoon and I need to learn to draw. Right after I vomit. I sit down and I crunch like I was cramming for medical school. It took me hours each day just to do one. And truth be told, that first year of Loose Parts looked pretty fugly. But something magical happened. My weird way of drawing matched my humor sensibility and the panels got stronger somehow. When the LA Times Syndicate folded, Tribune Media Services took me on and I’ve been with them every since.

But every day it got easier and easier. And now, over 4,500 in a row later, I can probably call myself a cartoonist.

From Attack of the Chortling Stomach

David: I love your sense of humor and the style of Loose Parts. What are the things that spark your creativity and imagination, any daily routine?

Well, if you waded through that large paragraph above, you can see that I’ve been steeped in humor from high school on. Before I ever wrote a cartoon, I had spent decades trying to make people laugh. So I know the structure and timing of a joke. And from directing, I know how to block out a scene and direct the eye.

But I’ve always loved the obtuse sophisticated humor. Monty Python, for sure. Robert Klein. Robert Benchly. Woody Allen. And more recently, the late Mitch Hedberg and now, Demetri Martin. I like to think that you don’t have to dumb down humor to make it funny. Standup producers used to rag on me as being too cerebral but I found that when people have to work a little to figure a joke out, it has a lot more impact when it hits. In fact, that’s what I consider one of the secrets to comedy: you let the audience complete the joke in their heads. You don’t spell it out for them. It makes the humor more involving, more stickier.

As for a routine, well, I used to walk around thinking of gags all the time. But being ‘on’ all the time was burning my brain out. So now, I usuallly write on Monday nights. I go into the bedroom, put some classical music on, lie on the bed, stare at the ceiling and I don’t come out until I write 10-12 jokes. Of those, seven will get drawn later that week. After all these years of having to come up with ideas, I’m pretty fast. It generally only takes me 60-90 minutes to write the Loose Parts for a week. I then draw the bulk of the cartoons on Saturdays, though I’ll often pump one or two out during the week if I have time. Then Sundays are reserved for doing the color work on the Sunday Loose Parts. Then, once a month, I just reserve chunks of hours to shade and prep the mechanicals. And since Loose Parts runs in both panel and strip format, that means I have to prepare 48 dailies and 4 Sundays every month.

From Attack of the Chortling Stomach

Oh, and I have another comic I do as well. It’s called Biz. It’s a workplace-themed panel. It ran for three years on the business pages of The Philadelphia Inquirer and now is being syndicated through the new Ink Bottle Syndicate.

Yeah, you got that right. Day job. Two cartoons. Freelance business. Still want to be a cartoonist?

David: I’m a bit in awe of your comics, if you hadn’t of gone in the direction of comics, what do you think you’d be doing?

Well, as I detailed above, I said above, I did go in another direction. Half my life is in Advertising so in some sense, cartooning is my other direction. But I’d like to get back to doing standup comedy again one day. It’s the opposite of cartooning in a way. You get immediate feedback. Where with cartooning, sometimes you get no feedback and that makes it hard to gauge whether you’re hitting or not. And sometime, I’d like to give improv a whirl.

David: Who are some of your cartooning hero’s and what makes a good comic?

Well it’s not hard to see that the Far Side was an influence. And B. Kliban opened my mind to what could be done. These days, I like to read Mark Parisi and Dave Coverly and Dan Pirraro and Tony Carrillo. And I always say, nobody but nobody draws funnier than Glenn McCoy.

From Attack of the Chortling Stomach

There are two things that I think make a good comic. One I spoke about above. You build the joke so the reader finishes it in their head. Here’s an example in the form of an old standup joke of mine.. “Did you hear about that guy who wrote a book on how to commit suicide? And it made the NY Times top 100 seller list! …….. Boy, here’s a book that’s overdue at a lot of libraries.”

See? I didn’t provide the punchline. You did. In your head. Dead people don’t return books.

The second secret is to have the style of your drawing match the tenor of your humor. That’s why I’m always amazed when partnerships become successful. It takes a lot of communicating to get the artist to draw it just the way it’s conceived. I make so many tweaks along the way, I could never relinquish control again.

David: What advice do you give to anyone wanting to make comics?

I’m not the only one to say this: focus on the writing. It’s the core of the cartoon. I’ll tell you a story. A year after the LA Timers Syndicate let me take over drawing Loose Parts even though I didn’t know how to draw, I called them and asked them what the hell they were thinking. They told me, “We were thinking it was easier to take a funny person and teach them to draw than to take someone who drew and teach them to be funny.” So there you go.

From Attack of the Chortling Stomach

Second thing: focus on the graphic art of your strip. I see so many funny cartoons that are laden with the crappiest fonts, bad frames, horrible logos and more. Design matters. Almost as much as the drawing.

And third: You have to be disciplined. Being a daily cartoonist is a long distance run and not a sprint. (In fact, I am a runner. I log 400-500 miles a year and have for three decades.) You have to stay out in front or the wave will just swallow you. And that’s where the just plain love of the craft comes in. If you don’t love it, you won’t keep up and the stress and desperation will show in your work.

Also, I’m an idiot.

David: What is the legacy you’d like to leave behind with Loose Parts.

I’d like people to say that I had a small part in preserving the intelligent sophisticated humor made famous by the Far Side. If Larsen is Frank Sinatra, I’d love to be Michael Buble. Not sure I’m anywhere near even that though.

And I’d like to be known as a pro; someone who always tried to deliver a joke, never mailed it in and never missed answering the bell.

And I’d like to smell good, and be able to levitate, and have the nuclear lunch codes. (Not the launch code; the lunch codes, cuz I get hungry.)

David: Thank you so much for the words of wisdom and the humor. You always deliver a great comic! And thanks for being featured here at “Don’t Pick the Flowers” and sharing about your life and how to make a great cartoon!

Check out more of Dave Blazek and his new book Attack of the Chortling Stomach, at “Loose Parts” http://loosepartscomic.com/LoosePartComic.com.html . You can see cartoons, get a behind-the-scenes look, and order any of his books at www.LoosePartsComic.com.

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Anne Morse Hambrock: Kenosha Festival of Cartooning

Anne Morse-Hambrock

Anne Morse-Hambrock is organizing the “Kenosha Festival of Cartooning”. The Festival is a 3 day festival of live presentations,  workshops, a gallery show, panel discussions and community outreach by some of the nation’s top cartoonists. Anne “wears many hats” from being a professional harpist, writing blogs, promoting cartoonist and coloring the comic strip “The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee” for her husband cartoonist John Hambrock, and the list of her activities goes on. I had the privilege of speaking with Anne about the festival and her life as a creative person and am thrilled to have her share with us here at “Don’t Pick the Flowers”.

David: Hello Anne thanks so much for being featured at “Don’t Pick the Flowers”. You have organized a festival called “Kenosha Festival of Cartooning”. Can you talk a little about Kenosha?

Kenosha is a great town located on the south east shore of Lake Michigan. We are nicely situated an hour and fifteen minutes north of downtown Chicago and forty five minutes south of downtown Milwaukee.

Some readers may have heard of “Franks Diner” which has been featured on the food network show “Diners, Drive-ins and Dives”. With a long history of auto manufacturing, Kenosha is a town that never left the 1950’s behind. What I mean by that is that we have a number of drive-in restaurants, complete with car hops, and a drive-in movie theater. It isn’t that these places were created to cash in on interest in the ’50s – they simply opened in the ’50s and have been open ever since!

After Chrysler pulled out in 1989, Kenosha began to redefine itself. The plant buildings along the lakeshore were torn down and the city began developing the lakefront with new parks and Museums. The Kenosha Public Museum- the location for all the public events during the Kenosha Festival of Cartooning – is right on the lakeshore and has a stunning view of the lake through the second story atrium.

We also have several restaurants and shops within walking distance of the Museum and a street car that runs from the Metra commuter rail line that extends up from Chicago. There is an open air market on Saturdays (that will be running just outside the Museum the Saturday of the festival) and a full service marina.

Kenosha is home to Carthage College, Gateway Technical College, and the University of Wisconsin Parkside and has a large artistic community. We have a number of art galleries and a Symphony Orchestra. The Kenosha Public Museum offers several classes to the public, one of the most popular being one on cartooning!

The local paper, the Kenosha News, has been a tremendous sponsor! It carries over 25 comics daily in full color and does a great job of balancing older and newer comics.

David: What are some of the events and who will be speaking at the Festival?

Tom Richmond speaking at 2011 festival. photo Kenny Durkin

Our guest speakers this year are:   Dave Coverly (Speed Bump), Hilary Price (Rhymes With Orange), Michael Jantze (The Norm), Greg Cravens (The Buckets), Norm Feuti(Retail and Gil) and Stephan Pastis (Pearls Before Swine)

We have a jam packed schedule of events planned! I am still in the planning stages for some of the events – I had to make sure I could meet my fundraising goal before I set everything in stone. Once the schedule is finalized, it will be on the official festival website.

All the guest artists will be giving slide presentations or “chalk talks” that will be open to the public and will take place at the Kenosha Public Museum. Those presentations will be on Thursday evening, Friday evening, and most of the day Saturday.

Promotional easel for Tom Richmond's 2011 presentation. photo Kenny Durkin

There will be a children’s cartooning workshop Saturday morning. (This will be the only event to charge a fee and reservations are required.)

All the artists will be interviewed Thursday morning by Greg Berg on the local NPR affiliate WGTD.

The artists will be giving a number of presentations on the Carthage and UW Parkside campuses to art students.

There will be one panel discussion at the museum on Saturday afternoon and another for Carthage students on Thursday. I may be able to allow a limited number of folks to attend the Carthage lectures and panel – I’m still working through that one.

We will be hanging a show of original comic art at the Museum. The National Cartoonist Society Foundation has offered to be one of the principal festival underwriters and will be providing us with a number of original comics by high profile NCS artists to be auctioned for the benefit of children’s charities here in Kenosha.

And I am hoping to have all the artists speak, in a panel format, to an assembly of local high school art students.

As you can see, the artists are going to be quite busy!

David: You have launched a Kickstarter Campaign to help fund the festival. For those who possibly don’t know about Kickstarter, what are the incentives?

First, I’d like to mention how Kickstarter works for folks who might not know about it.

Kickstarter is a site that helps creative people crowd source funding for creative projects. Backers pledge at different amounts – sort of like NPR and PBS – and each pledge amount comes with a reward.

No money changes hands unless the target amount – in our case, $10,000 – is reached by the pledge drive deadline. Our deadline is May 22.

Once we make our goal, backers, who have used their Amazon accounts to make a pledge, will see a charge applied to their account. If we fail to make our goal, we lose all the money pledged!

We have great incentives at all pledge levels! My husband John (Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee) designed terrific posters of each of the guest artists last year and will do so again this year. Copies of these posters, signed by the featured artist, are available to folks who pledge at almost every level – from $10 on up.

John also designs a great program booklet that has the complete schedule of public events along with artist bios and a list of our sponsors. Copies of this booklet signed by all the guest artists are available to folks who pledge at several levels – starting at $20. ALL Kickstarter backers will be listed as sponsors in the program book – if they wish to be, I won’t put in anyone who wishes to remain anonymous – but only backers of $1000 or more will be listed as principal underwriters.

Sign for the Gallery Show "One Fine Sunday In The Funny Pages'" assembled by John Read, brought to Carthage College by Diane Levesque and the centerpiece of the 2011 festival. Photo Kenny Durkin

Backers at the $50 level can choose either a full set of signed posters (7 in all) or a signed book collection from one of the guest artists.

Other rewards available are personalized spot art drawings, original daily comic strips signed by the creator and a DVD of the panel discussions. (DVD for personal viewing only – the artists and the festival retain all broadcast rights, including the internet.)

For a complete list of rewards at each level, folks should go to the Kickstarter site for the Kenosha Festival of Cartooning.

David: You also do the coloring for the comic “The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee” for your husband Cartoonist John Hambrock and you run the website “Spot the Cartoonist”. Can you share a little about your life and the cartooning world?

The 2011 festival guests drew these for John and Anne.

I have always loved comics! When my husband John first came to me and said he wanted to try to become a syndicated cartoonist, I was completely on board. In fact, the first strip, which was called “Second Nature” was actually a joint venture between the two of us. We both contributed to writing and character development, but John did all the drawing, and we had both our names in the byline. Second Nature came close to syndication but didn’t quite get to the finish line. And, as much as we enjoyed working together, we agreed that it was very, very hard to have two cooks in the kitchen, as it were.

John continued to develop more comic strips on his journey to syndication and I, while I still function as a muse and sometime editor, stepped back and focused on other things. Once The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee became syndicated, we found out that, not only would Sunday strips be in color, each daily strip would have to be in color as well. That was time that John simply did not have. We used a talented college intern (Alyssa Abraham) for the first 3 months and then I took over the coloring duties and have colored almost every strip since. I think that’s over 2000 now!

The 2011 festival guests drew these for John and Anne.

Even syndicated cartoonists have to do a lot of their own marketing and that has been another of my big jobs. I wear a lot of hats marketing the strip – I try to give the strip as much visibility on the internet as I can and I do a blog on the Edison site.

While I was tooling around the internet for Edison and also attending cartooning events, I decided I didn’t like the way facebook and twitter announcements fell so rapidly down the newsfeed. So I started a website called “Spot the Cartoonist” that is devoted exclusively to listing places that the public can meet cartoonists. I list book signings, gallery receptions that will have the artist present, book tours, slideshows and festivals like the Kenosha Festival of Cartooning. Events are listed by place and date and are archived by month and by artist. There is also a search box if you cannot find what you are looking for. I recently added some great links in the sidebar to videos of cartoonists drawing, podcast interviews, and videos of Tom Gammill meeting cartoonists.

Apologies though, I put the site on hiatus this month when I launched the Kickstarter drive for the festival. I hope to be back on track with Spot the Cartoonist in June.

David: And to end, tell about your career as a professional harpist and artist.

Ah, the job I get paid for! I began my college studies as a double major in art and music. After my freshman year, my harp teacher retired and subsequently I changed schools. The new harp teacher was very hardcore and the art major got thrown under the bus! Since graduating with a degree in harp performance, I have been an active performer, teacher and clinician. I play all kinds of music, classical, celtic, pop and jazz and also compose. For anyone truly interested, I have a website that fully details my harp life.

Photo Kenny Durkin

As far as art is concerned, I got all those foundation classes under my belt and then set art aside for 3 years until, in my senior year, running out of music classes to take and maintain full time status, I signed up for a class in glass blowing. I was hooked! I have only gotten to blow glass sporadically since I left college – furnace time is expensive and furnaces are hard to come by – but it is still my favorite medium to work in. I also dabble in printmaking, fiber art, painting, drawing and jewelry making. Harp and comics keep me too busy to be consistently productive.

A few years ago I also started writing a humor column for my local paper. They asked me to describe myself and I said “I’m overbooked and underpaid!’  Later I decided that would be a great name for a blog for people who can’t say “no” and are always doing too much. So that, in true overbooked fashion, is another site that I work on!

Thank you so much for asking me these questions and for helping to promote the Kenosha Festival of Cartooning! We’re going to have a great time and everyone should come! (And Pledge!)

David: Thank you so much Anne! I appreciate you sharing about the “Kenosha Festival of Cartooning” and about your life. I am wishing you the best (in all aspects) with the Festival and KickStarter.

Now it’s your turn to check out the Kickstarter, Festival, and Anne’s sites. If you are a cartoonist or lover of comics this is a perfect place to help out the cartooning community. Check out these links: 

Kenosha Cartoon Festival Blog: kenoshacartoonfest.blogspot.com/

KickStarter: www.kickstarter.com/projects/732284070/kenosha-festival-of-cartooning

Kenosha Cartooning Festival Facebook: www.facebook.com/kenoshacartoonfest

The Brilliant Mind of Edison Lee Blog: edison-lee-blog.blogspot.com

Spot the Cartoonist: overbookedandunderpaid.typepad.com/spot_the_cartoonist

Writing, Art, Glass blowing: overbookedandunderpaid.typepad.com/overbooked-and-underpaid

Harpist: annemorsehambrock.com/index.html

 


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Mark Anderson: Andertoons

Mark Anderson is the creative mind (and Artist) of “Andertoons”. Mark graduated college with a music degree and he found that a music career was impractical. Cartoons were a creative outlet he toyed with at his living room coffee table in his spare time; and he had once contributed to his high school and college newspapers. Mark had always loved cartoons and began submitting cartoons to magazines. Mark said it was a rough start but after refining his talents, working early mornings and late nights, he quit his day job and launched Andertoons. Mark now has an impressive clients list which includes IBM, Microsoft, Harvard Business Review, to name just a few. So let’s meet Mark Anderson, the man who turned a hobby into a successful career.  

David: Hello Mark and thank you so much for sharing “Andertoons” here at Don’t Pick the Flowers”. Can you share a little history of when you become interested in becoming a cartoonist and making comics your career?

Hi David! Thanks for inviting me! I think I’ve wanted to be a cartoonist since I was a little kids tracing the Sunday comics, but I really went to work at making it a career soon after my wedding.

I’d been a working musician, but when we got married and I got a day job, finding time, energy and motivation to practice was difficult. So I put music down and started drawing up cartoons and sending them out to magazines. It was something I’d always wanted to try, and it was a more forgiving artistic outlet all the way around.

David: Where do you draw your inspiration and what are the things that inspire your comics?

I read a lot. Blogs, newspapers, magazines, books, leaflets, skywriting, bathroom walls…  I also listen a lot to the radio.

I try to keep my ears open for turns of phrase or jargon that pop up. And when that’s not enough, I sit in my office and stare until I can find that sort of writing place in my head.

David: Who are some of your cartooning heroes and what do you consider makes a good comic?

 

Writing is job one. I see all sorts of beautiful art out there, but precious few who are really effective writers. Good art is gravy, good writing is essential.

You know pretty much everyone lists the same names over and over (Schulz, Watterson, etc…), and those people certainly influenced me greatly, but I’d rather spotlight more recent influences: Richard Thompson is the whole package and then some, Amanda Conner oozes joy out of every line, Darwyn Cooke is who I want to be when I grow up, and Mo Willems makes me snort milk out my nose, even when I’m not drinking milk.

David: What is it like in the “A Day in the Life of Cartoonist Mark Anderson”? Do you have a routine?

I like to do my writing and art in the morning, then save scanning, invoices and contracts and stuff for the afternoon. There’s no typical day, it just depends on what work I have.

I’m also a stay-at-home dad, so there’s plenty of dad duty to juggle in there too. It’s exhausting, frustrating, and fun at the same time.

David: What advice do you give to anyone who wants to become a cartoonist?

Don’t wait for inspiration or free time or whatever else to come. Just sit down every day and do the work.

David: Thank you Mark for sharing your work. It’s a true success story to take a hobby and turn it into a rewarding career.

Find out more of Mark Anderson and Andertoons at: 

www.andertoons.com

www.andertoons.com/cartoon-blog

twitter.com/#%21/andertoons

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