Some quick drawings of a potential cat character. Was going for cute, smart and sassy.
Author: Tempo Lush
Lucy, ?uestlove and Nuno…
Okay – I’ll be frank. I’m posting this old Lucy the Octopus comic strip, because one of my musical heroes ?uestlove, drummer for the Roots mentioned another of my musical heroes Nuno Bettencourt, guitarist for Extreme in a recent tweet and I remembered I’d done a strip where the two of them jam with Lucy! So this post is basically made to tweet back to ?uestlove!
Personal ?uestlove related story!
5 years back, my pregnant wife and I were chatting over baby names. She wanted an Arabic name (what with her being from Iraq and all), and we’d narrowed it down to about five. I didn’t really feel a connection with most of them so it was going to be hard to call the fruit of my loins something that didn’t spark. I was talking this through with a couple of friends before the show at a Roots gig (who are battling with Tori Amos over the act I’ve seen live the most – around 8 times a piece I reckon) at Somerset House and it clicked that my musical inspiration ?uestlove’s full name is Ahmir Khalib Thompson. One of the names on our short list was Emir. Different spelling but close enough for it to suddenly gel. After the Roots rocked the house I went home and let my wife know we had a baby name we could both get behind!
Anyway, the strip was made as part of the program of the Oxford based 2009 Caption Comics Convention. It’s a bit hard to look at three year old artwork when you hope you’ve improved but what the hell!
Free Comic Book Day 2012
Had a great time heading into Gosh Comics today. Other than picking up my usual standing orders of monthly comic goodness (Marvel and Dark Horse stuff), I got hold of a lovely lot of free stuff, what with this being Free Comic Book Day and all!
Check out my freebies: the Top Shelf Kids Club, Bongo Comics inc’ SpongeBob Comics, Dark Horse‘s Buffy / The Guild and Serenity / Star Wars, Papercutz‘ The Smurfs / Disney Fairies, Marvel‘s Amazing Spider-Man and Claude TC‘s mini comic, Immortal Ewan and the rod of Rasputin. Claude is a good man and makes hilarious, brilliantly drawn comics.
Aside from getting to catch up with comic scene buds Karrie Fransman, Mike Medaglia and Josceline Fenton, I got to sit and watch my 4 year old boy Emir draw comics alongside the supreme talents of Sarah McIntyre and Ray Friesen. It was great being introduced to Ray and his wonderful kids comic Pirate Penguin vs Ninja Chicken which me and Emir enjoyed on the tube on the way home. Ray also impressed us with this sketch of Emir’s favourite animal (for today anyway), the anteater…
Sarah did a brilliant bit of comic work featuring Emir. Click here to see it plus Sarah’s other thoughts on the day!
All this fun inspired Emir to draw his first ever comic strips…
When you’re into comics, it’s not hard to get your kid to share your passions!
Portrait & Life Part 3: Watercolours
A nice thing about taking an art class is you can try out all sorts of techniques and mediums that might not suit the commissions you’re working on in your professional life. I hadn’t touched watercolours for ages, but inspired by various children’s book illustrations and the excellent backgrounds in the Disney movie Lilo and Stitch, I really wanted to try them again.
I love the paint’s translucency, especially against nice grainy paper. The tricky thing is timing when to add another layer on top. It’s great working over wet paint and getting a soft edges to each area of colour. It gets frustrating though when you need to do fine sharp detail and the paint below isn’t dry yet.
The room itself makes a really difference to the drying speed. On a wet day it can feel like forever, on a sunny day or a cold day with heaters in the room the paint can dry too fast if you’re not careful. Back in my studio I can use a hairdryer to help control the process.
These were all painted over a rough pencil guide. Some artists work without this guide, filling in big areas of space and colour, then getting more and more precise with each layer. I’ve given this a shot too but find that approach counter-intuitive, which is why I’m not displaying my attempts on this blog!
More work from my Portrait and Life class soon…
Spring Comiket 2012
Had a great time at Spring Comiket in the Bishopsgate Institute, East London on Saturday. The Comica organisers Paul Gravett, Peter Stanbury and Megan Donnolley did an amazing job, as always, pulling such a big shindig together, and bringing in the crowds.
I’ve been to Comiket for the last four years, starting back when all I had to sell was Delicate Axiom and the Lucy the Octopus Mini Comic, when Comiket consisted of around twelve tables of creators selling their wares in a relatively small room in the Institute of Contemporary Arts. Good to see how its snowballed!
This time around I wasn’t selling, but catching up with old comic scene friends and meeting creators. I also managed to pick up a lovely bounty of small press comics…
Top row:
Sevillana featuring the Alien Battle Monkey of Doom by Marina Williams
Jumping the Shark by Sammy Borras
Middle Row:
Panic Attacks 1: In the Beginning by Francesca Cassavetti
Places I Left You by Douglas Noble
Cafe Suada Vol 1. by Jade Sarson
Wu Wei by Mike Medaglia
Bottom row:
The Human Beings and Social Notworking by Sofia Niazi
Fecal Depot 3 by Aaron ‘Smurf’ Murphy
The Life of Noise by Emma Mould and Andrew Godfrey
The Phoenix Issues 14 & 15
Very nice running into Aaron ‘Smurf’ Murphy and picking up the latest volume of his compendium of work, Fecal Depot. The issue contains Zardok Infiltration, a story that I’d written for the hugely talented Aaron to illustrate. It was great to see how good his art for the story looks in print.
Nice to meet Kiwi, Marina Williams and get a copy of Sevillana featuring the Alien Battle Monkey of Doom. Note to the Comics Industry: Free gourmet cupcakes with every comic is an excellent idea.
Next up I spotted future comics megastar Jade Sarson. I’m loving Cafe Suada!
Picked up a cool looking stand alone comic from Douglas Noble. After the show in the pub, we reminisced about growing up playing games on a ZX Spectrum (coincidentally 30 years old today). We both agreed Horace and the Spiders kicked monkeys compared to Horace goes Skiing.
Good to see the lovely Andrew Godfrey and Emma Mould again, who despite hailing from Bristol seem to manage to make it to all the London comic events!
At every comic show there’s always a few bad apples who spoil the tone for everyone else. See Sally-Anne Hickman and Francesca Cassavetti above.
My final pic is of the great comics journalist / interviewer Alex Fitch having a chat with Super Animal Adventure Squad creator James Turner. Alex did a marathon session totaling four hours on interviewing various comic talents. You’ll be able to hear the results on Panel Borders (the UK’s only weekly broadcast radio show about comics), broadcast on Resonance (104.4 FM in London and available online everywhere).
It was a good day – always inspiring! In fact, I’m off to draw a comic right now.
New animations and other website updates complete!
Phewee! After months of nabbing a few hours here and there to update my website it’s pretty well there! I think I’ve tampered with every page trying to bring you a top quality Tempo Lush website that you deserve!
The biggest leap forward is a newly built portfolio section showcasing the cream of my drawings. I’ve also been working on a tonne of new animated pictures. Check out every section of the site to see them all!
A Southbank Chat with Simone Lia
Today I had the pleasure of interviewing one of my biggest comic creator inspirations, the hugely talented and as it turns out, great fun to interview, Simone Lia.
Aside from creating some fantastic work in newspapers and magazines, setting up a small press comic publisher Cabanon Press with Tom Gauld, writing and drawing four children’s books (Billy Bean’s Dream is on a constant loop at my son’s bedtime right now) and churning out weekly strips for children’s comics The DFC and The Phoenix, Simone is probably best known for graphic novel Fluffy about an extremely cute bunny and the build up of crises that his human parent has to deal with.
In Simone’s new graphic novel Please God, Find Me a Husband!, she tackles the theme of looking for a new partner while relying on her spirituality for guidance. She also introduces a new protagonist… herself, sometimes depicted very much like Penelope Cruz for reasons you’ll have to read the comic to find out!
The interview is due to be broadcast at 8pm on Sunday 15 April on Resonance (104.4 FM in London and available online everywhere), as part of Alex Fitch’s Panel Borders (the UK’s only weekly broadcast radio show about comics).
You can also listen to the interview online whenever you like here…
http://archive.org/details/PanelBordersDepictingThePersonal
Despite my rambling questions and less than slick interview technique, Simone gives some great insite into the creative process of the graphic novel and what’s behind the story.
The Book of Dad Jokes
Ever wondered where dads get their bad jokes from?
I’ve been sorting through art for my ongoing website overhaul and came across this 4-page comic that has never seen the light of day. I drew it for the Observer 2010 Graphic Short Story Competition, where it came precisely nowhere! Still, thought it should get a public airing…



If you liked this (or didn’t) and fancied reading another comic about parenting, definitely check out Francesca Casavetti’s small press classic The Most Natural Thing in the World.
Parallel Lives Launch
On Monday I went to the Laydeez Do Comics evening off Brick Lane (that’s in East London for all you non-locals) and got to hear a little about all six of the very talented interns of the London Print Studio Comics Collective: Lily Rose Beardshaw, Abraham Christie, Shamisa Debroey, Merlin Evans, Susan Yan Mach and Jade Sarson.
The amazing Karrie Fransman devised and taught on the comics internship program, and crammed it full of workshops, meetings, exercises and experiences, honing the skills of the young comic creators and preparing them for professional life. It sounds like an intensely rich 6 months in which the interns must have picked up tips and knowledge that would normally take a decade of going to comic events to discover.
This lead to tonight’s launch party and exhibition at the London Print Studio celebrating the end of the internship and the launch of the collective’s anthology Parallel Lives…
Here’s Shamisa Debroey who’ll sadly be heading back to Brussels in a couple of weeks…
Susan Yan Mach with some of her amazing comic pages…
Abraham Christie and Shamisa Debroey putting on a brave face at the end of all their hard work.
Jade Sarson and the main character from her wonderful looking upcoming graphic novel Siddown!
And here’s a drawing Jade did on the studio window…
Finally here’s my efforts on the window. It was fun drawing with interested people walking past outside, and there’s not many parties you can to where you can draw on the windows without being chucked out!
Portrait & Life Part 2: Pencil Life Drawings
Here’s my next batch of efforts from the Portrait & Life class I’ve been attending. At the start of the course I worked with the humble pencil, which seemed the least daunting medium at the time.
I worked on learning the technique of building up form by slight variations in the angle of hatching. It takes ages mind you, which is why many of my attempts remained unfinished. Excellent way of learning about form though.
































