First, hello to everyone on Dreamwidth and Livejournal. I should warn the people still following along on this blog that I’m going to be posting daily from now on, and when you consider how completely destitute DW and LJ have been lately, that’s a whole lot. So if you have a small friends page I’m going to take it over, and I’m sorry but I’m also not sure what I can do about it. I’ll be posting original content every Monday and at other times during the week when I feel like it, and the rest of the time I’m going to be rerunning Cloudhopper one panel at a time. If you’ve already read Cloudhopper I hope you can enjoy looking at the art all up close and pretty.
Honestly, if you really really really have a problem with me going daily, post in the comments and I’ll try to figure it out, but I’m pretty sure there are not too many using LJ and DW to keep up with my work these days.
Now, on to today’s pictures!
These pictures were taken a little over a year ago, I’ve been trying to get around to uploading them for approximately forever, here they are. These are the work of Tom Otterness, one of my absolute favorite sculptors, and these are scattered around the NYC subway station, I believe at Union Park.
If you look closely they tell a story.
Based on this and other sculptures, I strongly suspect that Mr. Otterness is a communist.
Cowboy-Free; a 24-hour comic by Geoff Sebesta
by Geoff on November 3, 2011 at 0112drawn between October 1st and October 2nd, 2011
Thanks to Zach Taylor for putting it all together, and to Conjunctured for giving him a place to put it all together. This was the most fun 24hrCD for years and years, and yielded major insights and hilarity. I had a really, really good time.
We have three thousand copies of our new newspaper, Rocksalt. It’s a monthly paper I’m doing here in Austin with Jeanne Thornton and the Austin Sketchgroup and random people around this world and internet. It’s basically the newspaper comics section without the newspaper.
We made the first issue, ran some ads, and printed three thousand, three hundred copies. All this weekend we were giving them away/selling them/shilling for donations with them at Wizard World Austin. We got rid of three hundred. Three thousand to go!
One amazing benefit of this is that, from now on, once a month, Jeanne and I will have to visit all of Austin. Quite a view of this city of ours.
Today I distributed another three hundred or so, starting at the Convention Center (because I’d accidentally left my bike there the night before) and moving up to Congress in a big loop to the Capitol and back, then over past Occupy to Barton Springs. As you can probably tell I designed this route to bring me to Barton Springs at the end.
Here are all the businesses that agreed to take copies of our paper:
Not technically a business, but I dropped off a stack of comics at Occupy. I figure they’ve got time to read.
And then it was dark so I went swimming. All in all it was an extremely rewarding day, and I think I may have sold an ad or two so it might even have been a bit profitable. It was definitely fun. It turns out that it is extremely easy to get businesses to take free comic books to give away. In the eyes of the average consumer, the right price for comic books is “free.”
In other news, if you are an artist and you are reading this and you want to submit work to our nifty little black-and-white periodical, you are positively encouraged to do so. You will get paid eventually, probably.
We’re going to start with Austin distribution at first and then see how it goes. Looking at the numbers, I think we can get this to pay for itself and a bit of our rent fairly quickly, and then we’ll just decide what we feel like doing. Since there are no news items in the comic, or movie reviews or horoscopes or whatnot, it can sit on the stand as long as it likes with no loss of value.
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