Comics in Ceramic, Wire and String

A few weeks back I got into a conversation with Paul Gravett and Karrie Fransman about 3D comics, and the ways they can take on different forms.  Karrie is in fact having an exhibition on the subject called Experimenting with Comics at the great Orbital Comics shop in London, starting Thursday 21 June.

It got me thinking that while I’ve experimented with different forms of paper comics, particularly with my Mini Comics box set, I hadn’t tried to make any others in 3D.  Then it hit me… way back when I was studying Ceramics at Camberwell College of Arts, (back while they still had a Ceramics degree) I did make something along those lines.  A fair few actually…

This piece with 4 ceramic shapes linked by string and wire, tells the story of a boy’s journey where he meets a Messianic cat.

4 Piece Comic Story, Ceramic, Wire and String

At my graduate show I placed all my work in a space extending the imagery of the ceramics themselves.  The relationship of an object and it’s environment is really interesting.

Exhibition, Camberwell College of Arts

Two sides of the same object.  Fun mixing ceramics with contrasting materials like yellow fluff…

Fluffy Yellow Thing, Ceramic, Fluff and Wire

This is my fave.  It’s a poem, ceramic sculpture and story all in one.  There’s me playing a keytar while my parents ride in a spaceship near the mountain top.

Mountain Piece

This one was called Mouse Between Heaven & Earth. ‘Nuff said.

Mouse Between Heaven & Earth, Ceramic and String

This little guy was kind of like a puppet.  I liked making toy type things from a completely inappropriate material.

Pode Me Ajudar, Ceramics and String

Sometimes the comic imagery would exist in flat pictures, giving new purpose to my 3D shapes…

Phoenix, Monkey and Baby with powers, Ceramics and String

Ceramic is great for making very naturalistic shapes as well as clearly man made forms.  I like the contrast of this organic looking shell with the cartoony looking god on the inside.

Shell god, Ceramic

This was stupidly huge and heavy.  Having this flat image on a big ceramic wall does affect the way you look at it though…

The Eye of the Needle, Ceramic

Ceramic Tiles. Spot the Buffy one.

Tiles, Ceramic, Fluff

The cool thing about making each tile a panel is you can rearrange their order to make different stories.

Freeing the Magic Goose, Ceramic

For more ceramic comic ideas see my post on City of Mouse.

I’ve also added a Ceramics section to my online portfolio here!

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.

The bustling Comiket floor. Where's Timothy Winchester?

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…

Suki Kabuki displays small-press comic goodness

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

Alex "Smurf" Murphy holds Fecal Depot 3

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.

Marina Williams and Sevillana featuring the Alien Battle Monkey of Doom, plus cup cakes

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.

Jade Sarson hides behind Cafe Suada

Next up I spotted future comics megastar Jade Sarson.  I’m loving Cafe Suada!

Douglas Noble holding Places I Left You

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.

Andrew Godfrey holdsThe CF Diaries 1 while Emma Mould holds Secret Language 1

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!

Hooligans, Sally-Anne Hickman and Francesca Cassavetti

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.

Alex Fitch interviewing James Turner

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.