There it is, two seated people silently staring at each other over a table — and the artists he worked with loved it. I don’t know if every artist is the same way, but Dawn has told me before that even a stick figure layout can communicate to her more about what I want than several paragraphs of instructional text. It’s a visual thing.
Looking at things from the Pekar perspective is a lot less intimidating, isn’t it? I still believe I can’t draw, but I feel like I can at least draw better than Harvey (may he rest in peace), and if he could be the writer of several internationally acclaimed comics, then there’s hope that I, too, can “learn to draw”.
So anyhow, in accordance with that, what started as a bit of a joke has become more. One common feature of conventions is people browsing artist’s alley with their sketchbooks in hand, asking if they can get a drawing from the man (or woman) behind the table. But sometimes Dawn wasn’t at the table, and so they’d be asking me, and I’d wave them off frantically by stating I wasn’t the artist they were looking for. Then at last year’s LBCC a little girl was insistent — “Pleeease?” she begged, not knowing the amateur horror she was calling to be unleashed. So I drew her one of the stick zombies I’d been doodling, signed the page and — well, if she hated it, she was at least polite enough to wait until she was out of sight before tearing it out of her once-pristine journal and jumping up and down on it.
That same stick zombie (with a few variations) is now gracing several sketchbooks, even though I kept warning people they were making a mistake. Finally, when we exhibited for the first time at San Diego Comic-Con this year, I decided to just stop protesting and offer free “Writer Sketches” upon request. The customer could name any commission they wanted, but the results were, naturally, At Their Own Risk.
I ended up having a lot of fun, and people were appreciative of their sketches in the way only someone with completely rock bottom expectations can be. So now if someone at a convention asks me to draw, I give them fair warning, but I’ll do it. The thing is, not only is it fun, it’s actually good practice. I can’t draw photorealistic people, so instead I just try to make them recognizable. What (more or less) are they wearing? What are they doing? Let me play with a really simple representation of a face and see if I can capture a grimace of “worried anger”. I mean, if you’ve ever watched old videos of people like Charles Schulz drawing, you realize how just a few simple lines can come together to create something unquestionably Snoopy.
Forget about making the head and chin look pretty… let’s concentrate on making the face look happy or sad. Forget if the legs don’t come out the right length, let’s see if I can express the essence of someone tip-toeing stealthily. Those are the storytelling bits. Those are the kinds of elements that I feel are really going to matter when I’m trying to show Dawn what I want for the next page. I’ve even started experimenting without someone asking me to sully their sketchbook, during those lulls when no one’s about. Just trying to put some approximation of the image in my head on paper. I figure practice may not make me perfect, but it might at least make me adequate.
Phew, managed to sneak in a new installment amid the craziness. Next couple of weeks are going to see our day jobs getting busy plus our wedding anniversary, so we may not have the next up until 2/25. We've got a neat thing planned for the end of the issue and are getting there slowly but surely.














One thought on “553 – Rip A Dip”
Dr. Norman (not a real doctor)
Rode sign …