Home

Advertisement

Customize
 
 
cartoonart
17 November 2008 @ 12:26 am
A Salute to Gene Colan
Colan: Visions of a Man without Fear Opening Reception:
Thursday, December 4, 2008, 7:00-9:00pm
With special guests Gene and Adrienne Colan

Free and open to the public




The Cartoon Art Museum is honored to celebrate the life and work of cartoonist Gene Colan with a career-spanning retrospective entitled Colan: Visions of a Man without Fear. The opening reception for this exhibition will be held on Thursday, December 4, 2008 from 7:00 to 9:00pm, and will be free and open to the public.

Gene Colan and his wife, Adrienne, will be the Guests of Honor at this reception, as the Cartoon Art Museum pays tribute to one of the most talented and respected artists in the comic book industry with A Salute to Gene Colan. Frequent collaborator Stan Lee calls Colan “one of comicdom’s true immortals,” and Cyrus Voris, screenwriter of the hit animated movie Kung-Fu Panda, describes Colan’s work as possessing “a blazing originality, a uniqueness of vision that owed nothing to anybody.” Testimonials from Colan’s friends, colleagues and fans will be presented throughout the evening.

Gene Colan will also be appearing at Lee’s Comics in Mountain View, California, as part of his visit to the west coast. This in-store appearance will take place on Saturday, December 6, 2008, from 2:00pm until 4:00pm. Colan will be joined by award-winning comic book inker Steve Leialoha, his collaborator on a variety of books including Howard the Duck , Daredevil and Detectives Inc. Please visit http://www.lcomics.com for more information.

About the exhibition:

Colan: Visions of a Man without Fear
includes over 40 examples from Colan’s long creative career, from his one and only story illustrated for legendary publisher EC Comics in 1952, through his career-defining work for Marvel Comics from the 1960s and 1970s on titles as diverse as Iron Man, Tomb of Dracula and Howard The Duck, to his notable run on DC Comics’ Batman in the 1980s, to his more recent efforts, including illustrations commissioned by his fans and his beautiful pencil artwork on titles such as Michael Chabon’s The Escapist, published by Dark Horse Comics. Colan was inducted into the Will Eisner Comic Book Hall of Fame in 2005.

This exhibition has been assembled by Guest Curator Glen David Gold, author of the novel Carter Beats the Devil and many comics-related essays. An exhibition catalog featuring high-quality reproductions of Colan’s artwork and essays from many of his most notable collaborators, including writers Stan Lee, Marv Wolfman, Roy Thomas and Steve Englehart, is expected to be available at the reception.

 
 
cartoonart
17 November 2008 @ 12:35 am

Small Press Spotlight on Ryan Claytor

Cartoon Art Museum Exhibition: December 13, 2008 – March 8, 2009






Beginning on December 13, 2008, the Cartoon Art Museum's ongoing Small Press Spotlight will feature the art of Ryan Claytor.

Ryan Claytor is a comics artist and teacher living in Lansing, Michigan. In 2007, he earned his Master of Fine Arts degree from San Diego State University with an emphasis in multimedia, researching autobiography in comics. Claytor's achievements have included a Cartoonist-in-Residence position at the Cartoon Art Museum in San Francisco, California, visiting lecturerships at the Dallas Museum of Art and Michigan State University and an internship with Marvel Comics in New York City.

Claytor is most widely known for his self-published, autobiographical, comic book series And Then One Day. Although the series has undergone several format changes and incarnations since its inception in 2004, And Then One Day readers are consistently treated with Claytor’s thoughtful and entertaining personal anecdotes immaculately packaged with a designer’s eye for production detail. Most recently, in the summer of 2008, he released a republication of his Master's Thesis on autobiography in comics entitled Concatenations.

Claytor was also an artist and event organizer for the first 24 Hour Comics Day in 2004. Subsequently, his twenty-four hour comic about relationships with passed relatives was chosen from hundreds of worldwide submissions as one of the best stories of the day and included in the nationally distributed anthology, 24 Hour Comics Day Highlights 2004.

During the summer of 2007, Claytor embarked on the most ambitious tour ever organized by a self-publishing comic book artist. This North American In-Store Signing Tour took Claytor to eighteen states and two Canadian Provinces where he signed books, spoke about his work, and held art exhibitions at fifty different museums, bookstores, libraries, and comic book specialty shops.

For more information about Ryan Claytor or any of his work, visit his website, www.ElephantEater.com

About the Small Press Spotlight:

San Francisco has been a hotbed of innovative, groundbreaking comic art since the late 1800s with the advent of the modern comic strip. In the1960s, the Bay Area gained further notoriety when the underground comix movement launched from San Francisco's Haight-Ashbury district. Today, some of the biggest names in alternative and small-press comics hail from the Bay Area, and the Cartoon Art Museum's Small Press Spotlight focuses on the works of these talented individuals.

The Small Press Spotlight is funded in part by The Zellerbach Family Foundation and The Wallace Alexander Gerbode Foundation.
 
 
cartoonart

Character Animation Crash Course!
Author Eric Goldberg visits The Cartoon Art Museum

Cartoon Art Museum Event: Saturday, December 6, 2008, 1:00 to 3:00 pm

Free with Cartoon Art Museum admission;
Half-price for members of ASIFA






The Cartoon Art Museum hosts Eric Goldberg, the pioneering, award-winning animator/director whose cartoon magic has graced such classics as Disney’s Aladdin, Pocahontas, Fantasia/2000 and Hercules, on Saturday, December 6, 2008, from 1:00 to 3:00pm. Goldberg has harnessed the essence of cinema’s most beloved form in a new book, Character Animation Crash Course!, and he will be sharing his animation secrets in a special presentation for Cartoon Art Museum patrons. This event is free with paid admission to the museum, and members of the animators’ group ASIFA will be admitted to the museum for half-price on December 6.

Designed to address students, professionals and animation fans, Goldberg’s book and accompanying CD are jammed packed with the insights and methods needed to bring pencil lines to extraordinary life.

Goldberg, currently supervising animator on the character “Louis” in Disney’s upcoming The Princess and the Frog (Holiday 2009 release), opens a treasure chest of animation secrets, illuminating in text and drawings how characters are conceived and – endowed with strong and unforgettable personalities – ultimately brought to life. The CD of animated movie examples demonstrate in real time or frame-by-frame, Goldberg’s principles at play – the first time three dimensions have been used to illustrate the process.

The author’s witty observations combine with his wealth of knowledge gleaned from 30-plus years in the animation industry to cast the book as an immediate classic guide to character animation.

“This is the book I wish I had when I was first learning my craft,” said Goldberg. “The first part stresses the thought and preparation required to animate, and the second part is a no-nonsense manual describing classic animation techniques, all in the service of getting great performances from the characters.”

Character Animation Crash Course is a revealing ride from a blank sheet of paper or empty computer screen to something that anyone age 6-69 can recognize as a living, breathing, emoting creature.
 
 
cartoonart
17 November 2008 @ 12:49 am
Cartoon Story-telling with Joe Wos

Cartoon Art Museum Event: Sunday, November 30, 2008, 1:00pm and 3:00pm



Watch drawings come to life, and learn how to create your own, as Joe Wos presents his original blend of storytelling and live cartoon illustration, an unforgettable and entertaining experience that children and adults of all ages will enjoy. Wos will perform his stories at the Cartoon Art Museum on Sunday, November 30, 2008 at 1:00pm and 3:00pm followed by a signing of copies of his instructional DVD, How to Toon (available in the Cartoon Art Museum bookstore). Performance is included with the cost of admission.

Wos will also be performing at the Charles M. Schulz Museum as part of his travels. Please visit www.schulzmuseum.org for details.

With prods from the audience, children and adults alike, Wos weaves both original tales and re-tells the classics. The stories, a combination of performance, literary and visual art, are renditions of folk tales and fairy tales with a twist.

“I never know what’s going to spawn an idea for a story,” says Wos. Joe Wos is the current Executive Director of Toonseum at the Children’s Museum in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and has been telling stories while drawing them since 1991. Wos has performed across the United States, including New York, St. Louis, Atlanta, New Orleans and now is returning to San Francisco, with further stops including the Charles M. Schulz Museum in Santa Rosa.

How to Toon, Wos’ instructional DVD, was filmed at the Charles M. Schulz Museum and has a special introduction by Jean Schulz. A step-by-step process using imagination exercises, stories and drawing instructions, Wos not only teaches how to draw, but how to create a story.

Joe Wos is a freelance cartoonist and storyteller from Pittsburgh, PA, who has been sharing his talents with audiences across the nation for the past 10 years. He founded and is the current Executive Director of Toonseum at the Children’s Museum in Pittsburgh, PA. For more information on Wos and his performances, check out his website at www.onceuponatoon.com.

The duration of each performance is approximately 20 minutes. Bring your own ideas and imagination to the event and help take part in Wos’s creative storytelling process.
 
 
cartoonart
17 November 2008 @ 12:52 am

Cartoon Boot Camp: Winter Session '08





To register for Cartoon Boot Camp Winter Session 2008 please call 415-227-8666 x303 or email education@cartoonart.org

Class Dates: December 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th, and 30th (Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Tuesday) from 12 noon to 2:00 pm at the Cartoon Art Museum.

The Winter Session of Cartoon Boot Camp 2008 will take place during the Winter Break between the Christmas and New Years holidays. Cartoon Boot Camp is for youth ages 9 to 14 years old. If you are interested in attending, please call to reserve a space as soon as possible as space is limited.

Winter 2008 Cartoon Boot Camp:

December 26, 27, 28, 29 and 30
(Fri, Sat, Sun, Mon, and Tue)
12 noon to 2 pm
Ages 9 to 14
Instructor: Brian Kolm

$100 members
$125 non-members

Artist Quest: Fantasy Characters and Beyond

To register call: 415-227-8666 x303
or email: education@cartoonart.org
Download the registration form at http://www.cartoonart.org


Session 1: Friday, December 26
“3D Shapes, Figures, and Faces”
Using basic shapes we will learn how to construct cartoon and fantasy characters. We will also practice adding facial features and expressions.

Session 2: Saturday, December 27
“Knights in Shinning Armor”
Learn how to add armor to your figures. Explore warriors, weapons, and the art of drawing armor.

Session 3: Sunday, December 28
“Mythological Beasts: The Art of Drawing Dragons”
Every good fantasy story must have a dragon. Learn to draw the dragon of your dreams.

Session 4: Monday, December 29
“Clothed Figures and Costumes”
Creating a character’s personality through clothing and costume. You will learn to draw cloaks, capes and other fantasy-specific costume elements.

Session 5: Tuesday, December 30
“Light, Shade, and Color”
Add light, shadow, dimension, color, and the finishing touches to your fantasy world!


 
 
 
 
 

Advertisement

Customize