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Category: personal work

  • When I have to pick a single favorite page of comics I have done so far, this is the only one that ever comes to mind:

    Maybe there are some clues and lessons in there.

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  • One of those “gotta make something, anything, however small” days, so: one more of these.

  • (re-posting this since WP settings turned on hotlinking protection and made pictures not show up in RSS readers)

  • Cartoonist brain, at the end of an unusable day: “must move the pen. maybe I could at least draw some cars”

  • This one could qualify as archival too, since it was drawn in 2021, but it’s personal work, and not out yet, so instead it’s a peek at the ongoing present, as I rework some of it this morning.

  • When I set up this new blog six months ago, I made a very conscious effort not to start with a big statement of intent. No manifesto about Why Blogs or I’m Leaving Social Media For Good or anything like that.

    I just posted a current thing — a photo I took from the window of a moving car — and then posted a few quotes next, and didn’t make it a big deal in any way. No big plan, no attempts at comprehensiveness. I just needed it to exist without needing it to be anything in particular just yet.

    What I was looking for was a better way of being online in some approximation of “real time.”1

    Twitter is no longer an acceptable option, if it ever was. Its alternatives, even the good ones, all have the same problems — while they still serve some of the social functions, I need a better way of sharing work and pictures and thoughts in progress at my own pace, with more continuity, more permanence, and more depth (when needed)2.

    The blog did already survive the threshold of “two posts, then a three year gap, then an apology for not posting, then death” that most blogs don’t, but now it feels like I do need to decide on -some- approach to it before it sort of peters out.

    For artists and creative people, the easiest, go-to model for an “online presence” is to share “process.”

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