Monthly Archives: April 2011

Jenny Drumgoole Cheese

Jenny Drumgoole Cream Cheese Video

Jenny’s entire cream cheese escapade is now online for your viewing, including the Q&A video which ties the whole project together and which was featured at her recent Moore Gallery show here in Philly.

Matias Santa Maria Art

Matias Santa Maria Art

Matias Santa Maria‘s paintings are beautiful and funny to me. The colors are pleasurable and I want to explore the structures and observe the tiny figures further to see what happens next.

Magic Sweater Art

Magic Sweater Art

A load of funny Mark “Magic Sweater” Silipo art is on his website. Via African Apparel and Ham Jam.

New Nick Cross Feature Production

So far Nick has been an ambitious, prolific director of animated shorts. He pretty much nailed that, so he’s moving on to directing and animating his first feature film in his spare time. The trailer is above and more information is on his blog, where you can see a fundraising effort is also underway. See previous posts about Nick here. It is exciting that more independent directors are tackling animated features, such as Dash, previously mentioned here.

Weekly Review: Downton Abbey

Ah, good old English period drama. What is it about the follies and foibles of the upper-class Edwardians that we Americans enjoy so much? I just finished watching the first series of the BBC drama Downton Abbey, and now I await a second season to provide some denouement to the various romantic entanglements and class intrigue a’brewing for the fictional Crawley clan and their various servants and hangers-on.

I’m extremely comforted by these BBC productions, be it Foyle’s War or a Dickens adaptation or this little soap operatic confection. And it is a soap opera, with all of the genre’s ups and downs and inexplicable coincidences and scheming villains and breathless maidens. Downton Abbey is astoundingly not-groundbreaking, its characters fitting into their roles with the same rigid convention as certain brands of horror movies or a locked-room mystery: we’ve got the spoiled princess with a heart-of-gold-if-only-she’d-let-herself-fall-in-love, the terrified kitchen girl, the dandy evil valet and the scheming maid, and the Maggie Smith-type dowager, (happily played by Maggie Smith).

Plus the brooding valet with a heart of gold and a secret, the mean-spirited sister with the big nose, the sweet-hearted but sheltered younger sister who practically screams “I’m the new generation full of innocence and hope, about to be disappointed by the horrors of The Great War, which should reach us sometime at the beginning of the next series.” The stiff upper-lip butler who’s more or less a nice old guy, the head maid who gave up on love long ago and is now married to the house, and so on.

The conventions don’t bother me. This Julian Fellowes fellow, the creator and head writer for the program, ably plays with the form, hitting all the proper historical notes and drawing room twists and turns, and only once, near the end of the series did I sniff a little bit of forced “relevance.” The suffragette storyline, with Lady Sybil and her socialist Irishman chauffeur, got a bit clunky. Whenever characters in a period piece remind the audience what an exciting time they live in or change is in the air or whatever, I cringe a little (this plot device was handily skewered in Walk Hard; The Dewey Cox Story).

Downton, like the characters it showcases, is just so darned civilized it’s hard not to find it appealing. And as a man who has always had an aversion to WASPs in real life, I’m continually surprised how often I find myself deeply infatuated with fictional WASPy English maidens, from Lucy Honeychurch and her view of the Arno, to poor little Dorrit, to Foyle’s girl Friday, onward to the non-evil, non-big-nosed Crawley Sisters. There’s some sort of knee-jerk class-consciousness at work here–a love-what-you-hate something or other, like Gatsby or Martin Eden. Hopefully my tale will end happier than theirs.

Becky Cloonan Doodle

Becky Cloonan Doodle

Becky posts on her blog that she had the weekend off so she whipped up this doodle in preparation for her next book, Orcs. INK AND THUNDAAAAAAAAAAAARRRR!

Superjail is Back

Superjail

Little note: Christy’s show is back in biz this weekend. Yes! Check out this interview and clips on Vice.

Letter to Meathaus: Penelope Gazin

Letter to Meathaus: Penelope Gazin

Penelope Gazin sent over her mini comic in full color in a fully illuminated envelope that may have made several US Postal workers think impure thoughts. Sweet painted ladies on an envelope with a Marge Simpson stamp looking shocked. The comic is called Little Willy Gets a Lickin’, and you can get a copy for yourself here, and see more Penelope art and animation.

Letter to Meathaus: Athena Currier

Letter to Meathaus: Athena Currier

Action Athena herself sent over a swell and swelling package and a letter that reads:

“Dear Meathaus, Thanks for posting so much awesome shit on yer site. Thanks also for making so much great art yerselves, Meathaus dudes. It’s something to help keep me going during these fucking Minnesota winters. Sincerely, Athena in Minneapolis”

Yow, what a spread. And the illustrated letter indicating both the general shape of the state of Minnesota as well as the approximate location of Minneapolis is helpful since I have a sister at school out there nearby and now I can use this sweet map to find her. See more Athena Currier comics at Action Athena.

Domestic Etch Magazine

Domestic Etch Magazine

Self-described “precocious student and wannabe illustrator” Elizabeth Goodspeed has been putting out these snazzy, glossy, one-woman produced art magazines, because, well, why not? We received the latest issue of Domestic Etch (#4), and took a few snaps of the thing, but it’s so damned glossy and snazzy that it is hard to capture in a photograph. Check out Elizabeth’s work over here and the Domestic Etch website where you can get a copy. Elizabeth is looking for submissions for her next issue there too. Above art by Daniel Abensour, Elena Kostyrina & Julia Lukyanchenko, Lauren Kolesinskas, and Liam Byrne.