Cropped Will Cardini artwork

June 16th, 2009

Stud Nite

Filed under: Sketchbook Pages — Tags: , , — William Cardini @ 10:13 pm

I just got back from my weekly studio nite. I finished a storyboard for the motion comic that I’m gonna make with Will Sellari (tentatively titled Hyperbox #3.7) and I did some sketches.

Stud Nite

I was really struggling to come up with some ideas for my Taffy Hips submission. Maybe the freedom of digital printing (no size limits, full color) is too much for my feeble imagination?

Stud Nite

I dig the sense of a world that I managed to create in the drawing at the top of this page, maybe it’d be good for a videogame? Otherwise I’m just filling the page. Giants. Yawn. Tarp things and crystals. Yawn.

Austin Creative Code Meetup Tomorrow

Filed under: Events — Tags: , , , , — William Cardini @ 10:33 am

Austin Creative Code, “an informal group in Austin Texas that helps artists learn to program, and empowers them to build interactivity into their artwork,” is having our second meetup this Wednesday, June 16th (tomorrow!) at 8pm at Spiderhouse. Go download processing, the free, open source programming language for visual artists, to your laptop and bring it with you! We’ll be discussing and playing with a processing version of “the game of world domination.”

Froghead Hangover Review

Filed under: Press,Print Comics — Tags: , , , — William Cardini @ 10:05 am

Froghead Hangover got reviewed as part of a mini-comics round-up over at High-Low, the temporary home of Rob Clough’s sequart.com comic column.

Despite this comic’s absurd title, it is absolutely an accurate description of its contents. Reminiscent of somewhere between Mat Brinkman and Sam Gaskin, Cardini tells a story of a video-game playing humanoid who wakes up from a bad hangover to find that a large froghead has somehow wound up in his house.

Review.

MoCCA Part Two: Cartooning, FS, and GP

At MoCCA Fest 2009 I started thinking about cartooning as a craft distinct from comics that I don’t practice that much. I’ve only developed a couple of ways of drawing cartoon faces that I slightly modify and draw over and over again. Scratch that, actually I just have one:

Mark’s face.

It’s pretty simple, really. Rudimentary, actually: one straight line, one Z, and then some wiggly lines for hair, beard, and so on.

I think that it was flipping through the Sam’s Strip book and looking at all of Jerry Dumas’ really elegant cartoons, but for whatever reason, I came to the conclusion that, perhaps, one straight line, one Z, and at least nine wiggly lines just wasn’t a true expression of cartooning expertise.

So, I began drawing cartoons of Frank Santoro and Gary Panter while I was waiting for their panel at MoCCA to start (for a great overview of that panel, be sure to check out this squally showers post).

Here are my two favorite likenesses:

(Paraphrased quotation from Gary Panter added later, after the panel had started. Another awesome thing that he said: “The future will be like terminator except the robots will look slick like tennis shoes.”

via hypebeast.)

Anyways I think that I’m gonna spend some time developing my cartooning chops. Looking at Sam’s Strip also got me thinking about doing a weekly comic harking back to the pure idea behind the daily newspaper strip:

Six panels where the same thing happens over and over again in different ways. I’ve always wanted to do a strip like this but I’ve always been stalled by what is, for me, the core of it all: the repeated action.

I tried it out with my Daily Texan strip, “Fists.” The idea was that someone would get hit by a gloved fist on a stick every comic, an idea that owes its existence to Ignatz’s brick.

Of course, nothing about that comic ended up being standardized except for its iconography, which I still like and want to bring back some day:

Like the materials-based sculptures and performances that I used to do, this iconography is something that I came up with back before I got so heavily influenced by Fort Thunder. So many ideas, so little time. We’ll see how much of this comes to fruition, I’ve got a looooong to-do list.

June 12th, 2009

SHAMANMAN in SMOKE SIGNAL

Filed under: Print Comics — Tags: , , , — William Cardini @ 12:54 pm

Hey y’all, my comic SHAMANMAN

SHAMANMANpanel6

has been included in SMOKE SIGNAL,

the newspaper-sized comics anthology published by Desert Island Comics in Brooklyn. You can pick up a copy there, at other select locations in the borough, or order it online for the price of postage.

MoCCA Part One: Inzpiration

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , — William Cardini @ 1:01 am

This was only my second trip to MoCCA Fest, but each time my head has come back overflowing with planzzz. Here are the BIG STUD PLANS I came up with on the plane ride home:

Turn hypercastle.com into a merged superblog
Put together HYPERBOX motion comic images for Will Sellari
Buy screenprinting hinges and more screens
Screenprint the cover for FROGHEAD HANGOVER
Screenprint t-shirts
Draw HYPERBOX #4
Draw SLUMLORD 2112 #1

Whew is that it!

June 3rd, 2009

FROGHEAD HANGOVER

Filed under: Print Comics — Tags: — William Cardini @ 8:38 pm

Here’s the cover and a couple of pages from my new comic FROGHEAD HANGOVER that I’ll have (pending pickup from the printer tomorrow) to trade at MoCCA 2009! The comic is a true story from when I was living by myself in a small apartment in Austin back in 2006 … When I get back to the ATX I plan on screenprinting a different cover for the for-sale version!


Cover for the trade edition.


Page 5 – Dr. Chuch do you remember when you lived in Austin? Those were the days …


Page 10.

If you’ll be at MoCCA and you’re exhibiting, be prepared to be handed a copy! Here’s what I look like:

Folk #2

Filed under: Comics Criticism — Tags: — William Cardini @ 7:48 pm

I just received Folk #2 by Tyler Stafford in the mail on Monday. I ordered it after I read the review on Optical Sloth, who, by the way, is well on their way to doing one minicomic review a day in 2009!

I was waiting to do a scan on one of the pages before I posted about Folk #2, but the venerable Shawn Hoke already took care of it for me:

Folk 2 interior by Tyler Stafford

Just check out the backgrounds in this page, especially the lower-right panel! I love how much detail Stafford puts into his environments, I usually just put in some generic mountains or fill it in with black … something for me to think about … Anyway all of y’all should order Stafford’s comics, available through his etsy.

June 2nd, 2009

Kirbytecture

Filed under: Inspiration — Tags: — William Cardini @ 4:38 pm

Jack Kirby panel from Captain Victory and the Galactic Rangers

From Captain Victory and the Galactic Rangers #1.