Comic Cons are Doomed To Suck? Not Hardly!

“As Josh notes, there are smaller cons that cater to indie comics – SPX, APE, MoCCa, etc. — cons largely by and for activists, who’ve decided to make that niche their bread and butter. But any con that hits a certain size has to start looking at their bottom line at all times, and, as in most arenas, what brings in the most money gets the most attention. That’s just how it is, and expecting the New York con to change it is looking in the wrong direction.” Steven Grant

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I’m just gonna flat-out disagree with this. It’s certainly much harder to have a creative and curatorial vision for a comics show, to believe in what you’re doing and keep it running when there are external monetary pressures, etc., but it’s nowhere near impossible, and while the bottom line is important, it’s by no means where the eye needs to be kept “at all times”. Far from it. Look east for inspiration, my good fellows, to the mighty shows of Europe. America may “not have culture” but there are art galleries and museums in areas other than New York and California, and all it takes is some smart event planners that know how to make a spectacle and get folks out.

I understand that Mr. Grant has a long-accumulated wealth of knowledge acquired over many years of con-going, but if I sincerely thought that “indie comics” (a phrase that means absolutely nothing, btw.) had an inherently limited audience of converts, I’d probably drop everything tomorrow and just go work in banking or something. Instead, “indie comics” actually encompasses everything that’s not WFH corporate comics, a huge field that now includes everyone from D&Q, Oni, Fanta, Top Shelf, and even Image, all the way to Random House, Simon & Shuster, and First Second.

Comics are literature, comics are entertainment, comics are excellent. The limit to the audience for comics is people who respond to art or the written word. Believing otherwise is narrow-thinking and self-defeating. We should be bigger, brighter, and bolder from now on, but in celebration of the medium, not the “culture”.

– Christopher
Quick edit for spelling.

Unseen Jim Mahfood Art – TCAF 2005 Flyer

kidkoalafoodoneflyer2.jpg

Was working through my computer today and tripped over this… An awesome illustration by Jim Mahfood to promote the 2005 TCAF kick-off event featuring musician/turntablist/graphic novelist Kid Koala and featuring live art by Mr. Mahfood. Unfortunately due to the tight deadlines we were under (and the extreme stress I was under…) this postcard never got printed up, which is a real shame as it’s pretty kick-ass. The least I can do is share it with all of you wonderful people.

Visit Jim Mahfood’s site at http://www.40ozcomics.com/.

Visit the gateway to Kid Koala’s two sites at http://www.kidkoala.com/.

– Christopher

PRADA IS JAMES JEAN: Comic artist covers spring collection.

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What’s comics about this picture? Give up? It’s James Jean, his illustrations bedecking the fabulous organza silk tunic and pant combo, inspiring the colours of all of the outfits, and acting as the canvas upon which these models are laid.

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James Jean, cover artist for various popular comic series including Fables and The Umbrella Academy, and a comics creator himself whose work can be found in anthologies including the forthcoming Meathaus: SOS, has his art splashed across the spring collection from Prada.

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Jean’s first announcement of a collaboration with the internationally renowned fashion house came last summer, when he mentioned on-panel at the Toronto Comic Arts Festival (which I co-founded) that he would be designing a massive mural installation in the New York Prada boutique. The New York gig became New York and Beverly Hills, and the mural became the inspiration for an animated film/commercial for Prada, Trembled Blossoms, a unique animated affair that features the dark faerie designs and illustrations of Jean, set to a creepy ambient trip-hop soundtrack and featuring gorgeous creatures turning into shoes, frocks, and handbags.

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The collection is huge, more than a hundred pieces including this organza silk fairy-print top modeled by the lovely Kate Moss and checking in at around $2200. While industry sites had made notice of Jean’s mural and film, no one (myself included) seemed to have noticed that James Jean’s palette, visual style, and even his actual illustration, is present across almost the entire line, and to be found in the pages of virtually every fashion magazine around the world. No one of course, except The National Post’s Nathalie Atkinson, who profiled Jean last month in a huge double-page spread that incorporated his commercial and fine art, as well as the new fashions that bear his art. Unfortunately, the spread that featured the art is no longer online, but do check-out the profile text which is still available.

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Curiously, Jean’s involvement feels like it is being kept from the limelight, with most of the praise resting squarely on the shoulders of Prada head Miuccia Prada. One of the few mentions I’ve seen of Jean’s involvement came from the New York Times Magazine, both in print and on their website (they loved the collection, by the by). But for anyone familiar with Jean’s illustration and comics work, it’s hard not to see the inspiration. Jean’s work even adorns the “IT” handbag of the spring, much as Japanese illustrator and artist Takeshi Murakami’s collaboration with Louis Vuitton defined couture fashion handbags several years ago:

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The Prada Fairy Bag comes in square and round versions, and is apparently the must-have item right now. Completely sold out from the New York Prada boutique (the only place you can find it when you can find it), this site estimates that less than 15 people are “walking around the city with Prada fairies dangling off their shoulders.” If you can actually find one, it’ll run you $2,300.

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Finally, a piece of James Jean art that will get female collectors with a taste for the finer things as excited as the men. Is that sexist of me? Apologies.

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So who’s wearing James Jean’s prints on Prada this spring? Everybody. Shown above is Marion Cotillard, the actress who tackled the role of Edith Piaf in the film La Vie En Rose, an Academy Award-winning performance. Marion is showing off the printed silk organza skirt, $2,195, in this photo shoot for ELLE magazine.

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This chunky-heeled Runway Collection Mary Jane is pretty fierce, incorporating a floral design found in the original mural. A pair of these will set you back $790 from Neiman Marcus.

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Now, I’ve got something of a vested interest in this post. As I mentioned at the beginning, Mr. Jean has been an Honoured Guest at the last two Toronto Comic Arts Festivals, and I hold his work in high esteem. James was even kind enough to accept our commission for a TCAF poster in 2005, and another in 2007 for The Beguiling’s 20th Anniversary Ltd. Print. I’m thrilled to see his work being so widely acclaimed. While this post is about his contributions to the world of high fashion, I’m also thrilled to see him moving more and more towards fine arts and traditional media. While I fear it might mean the end of his contributions to illustration (and comics…), it’s been fantastic watching him grow as an artist, from all the way back to when I first discovered his work in one of the early Meathaus publications. James’ blog is essential reading, and I highly recommend it.

canvas-bag.jpgPrada is a big name–and big business! Their Spring line has been covered by everyone in the fashion world, which makes it very easy for you to track down the entire collection (at least online… you’ll need a swiss bank account and some very good connections to track it all down in the real world). The folks at Style.com have a fantastic slideshow feature on the collection, with the pictures (including some nice detail shots) and even a review, for those of you that need hand-holding into the world of haute couture.

I did.

Congrats to James Jean on this career milestone; not every comics creator can say they’ve had such a wide and prestigious distribution of their work (just him, Paul Pope, and Range Murata I believe). And for you die-hard collectors? You’ve got a whole new avenue of rare art to obsess over…!

– Christopher Butcher

Photo Credits from top: Prada Advertisement, Prada Advertisement (detail), Prada Advertisement, all ©2008 Prada. Kate Moss in Prada, photographed by Craig McDean from UK Vogue. Prada Advertisement, Prada Advertisement, all ©2008 Prada. Prada Fairy-print Bag image from nymag.com, ©2008 New York Media Holdings LLC. Photo of Marion Cotillard by Tom Munroe from Elle Magazine. Photo of Runway Collection Mary Jane by Svend Lindbaek, from Elle Magazine. Beguiling 20th Anniversary Image by James Jean, ©2008 The Beguiling and James Jean. Fairy Canvas Bag product shot. When not explicitly stated, copyright is unknown but is generally assumed to rest with the photographer mentioned.

Selling Comics At Conventions

greatspinnerrack.jpgHey there. I started typing this a couple of times, but despite how wretched the behaviour has been by a couple of retailers (and the CBIA forum in general, as of late) I’m not quite ready to burn all of my retailer bridges just yet… but I did want to comment on this. So here my nice response:

The Beguiling is the premiere sponsor of The Toronto Comic Arts Festival, and the fest actively encouraged participating exhibitors to debut new works at the show. We did that because we wanted the exhibitors to have a good show, first and foremost. The benefit to us? As a local retailer, we knew there would be too much stuff for any one person to buy, and because every new book that comes out needs all of the promotion it can get, the excitement generated at the show that will last for the next couple of years and we’ll reap the rewards of all of that. So, you know, it’s actually more advantageous for us–as a local retailer–for these publishers to do big launches of these books, even if we don’t get all the sales, because more often than not, it’s these big launches/pushes that help put the books on the radar of our customers on the first place.

Part two of all of this is the fact that I’ve worked on the publisher side of the table as well. I’ve been behind a publisher booth, at The San Diego Comicon, selling books that had not yet been released to direct market comic book stores. And you know what? I don’t really think that enough credit is being given to the customers in the direct market. I would say that the number one question I was asked was “will this be available in comic book stores?” when confronted with a debut book. It’s a different story when there’s an author signing accompanying the debut or something, but yeah, customers want to honour their preorders and don’t want to lug around books at a show that they can get at their local store in the next month. And the reality of the situation is, if the book is so popular and so desirable that customer absolutely must have it as soon as it’s released, then I think that this is indicative of the kind of excitement and buzz really affecting customers in a large way… and that they weren’t really “our” customer in the first place, so much as someone who just likes to buy comics where they find them.

Much to the detriment of my making friends at retailer get-togethers, I think this is more of a non-issue than anyone would care to admit, a matter of principle that doesn’t even come close to playing out in the real world. I’m actually a lot more concerned, on the release-date front, about Diamond’s continuing inability to process books that they receive as a distributor as fast as the bookstore chains. Most bookstores are receiving manga, “mainstream” book publishers graphic novel releases, and magazines like Giant Robot, between a day and a month before Diamond gets them into my store. This week Diamond shipped Negima Volume 16, and I’ve had that direct from Del Rey since before Christmas! Maybe it’s easier to issue veiled threats against independent publishers than it is against Diamond? There are serious distribution inequities within the direct market, but I don’t think this position paper begins to addresses them… they certainly aren’t coming from 100 copies of Kramers Ergot at the San Diego Comic-Con.

– Christopher

Comics & Graphic Novels @ The Word On The Street

The Word On The Street is a FREE literary festival held on September 30th from 11am-6pm in five cities across Canada*. I’m really happy to announce that Toronto’s Word On The Street event (held on Queen’s Park Circle) will feature an extensive comics and graphic novels presence in The Comics and Graphic Novels Tent, presented in partnership with The Toronto Comic Arts Festival. Featuring a full day of author readings, book presentations, and panels on comics creation and publishing, this is going to be a pretty outstanding part of an already massive event. I’m also very proud to say that I’ll be co-hosting in the tent alongside my good friend Mark Askwith, the producer of SPACE television and an excellent comics writer in his own right.

The line-up of panels and participating creators has been announced, and you can find an overview of the programming at the website. Participating creators include Chester Brown, Scott Chantler, Willow Dawson, Ray Fawkes, Stuart Immonen, Karl Kerschl, Jeff Lemire, Nadine Lessio, Brad Mackay, John Martz, Kagan McLeod, Jim Munroe, Ryan North, Ty Templeton, Noel Tuazon, Zack Worton, Chip Zdarsky, Jim Zubkavich, and many more in a host of panels. The Beguiling will also be selling books from all of the attending authors at the venue.

Also! The IdeaSpace Young Adult Marquee will feature graphic novel programming as well! Make sure to check out Eric Kim, and Svetlana Chmakova on the panel MANGA! MANGA! MANGA! THE HOWS AND WHYS OF THESE HOT NEW COMICS! at 12:30pm, and COMICS: DOIN’ IT YOUR WAY with Tyrone McCarthy and Arthur Dela Cruz at 4:30pm.

The Word On The Street is a huge literary event in Toronto which draws more people in than the San Diego Comic Con. It was a huge, huge thrill to be a part of putting together the comics and graphic novel programming for this year’s event, as I think it will continue the trend of putting comics and graphic novels out into the public eye in a way that can’t be ignored. Getting our own major venue to do so–alongside the integration of comics and graphic novels into other venues–is spectacular, and the fulfillment of a personal dream of mine. I remember going to WOTS for the first time nearly a decade ago, and coming home energized about the potential for comics in that sort of environment. I even wrote a column about it at the time that might be around online somewhere… I’m glad to see that potential becoming a reality, seeing that all of the crazy ideas I had as a 20 year old weren’t so crazy, and in fact, would be hotly in demand as I turned 30.

I sincerely hope that any of you reading this will come out for this (completely free!) event, and bring friends… The better it does, the better the next event will be, and so on.

Oh, and if you wanna spread the word, that’d be great too 😉

– Christopher

Official TCAF 2007 Wrap-Up

Hello everyone!

I’m Christopher Butcher, one of the co-founders and organizers of the Toronto Comic Arts Festival. I and my co-organizers, Peter Birkemoe and Matthew Seiden, decided that a letter might be a nicer way to address the public than a press release after TCAF 2007, our most successful and praised festival to date.

Gina Gagliano and Mark Siegel of First Second BooksIn the days following the TCAF, we’ve been inundated with calls and e-mails congratulating us on a show that was well-run, well-curated, and in such a beautiful, historic setting as the University of Toronto campus. Added to that are numerous Internet message board posts and blog entries proclaiming this the “best comics festival around” (Mark Siegel, Editor In Chief, First Second Books) and we’re very confident in announcing TCAF 2007 a huge success.

TCAF is different than any comics event I’ve ever attended… it was a conscious decision on our park to add something new and innovative to the comics landscape. Perhaps the one thing that surprises people about TCAF—attendees, press, and exhibitors alike—is that the show is completely FREE for the public to attend! The doors are open and people can walk in and out and return at their leisure (with staff and volunteers greeting them at the door with a smile and a program book). Because admission is free, it removes the psychological barriers associated with going to ‘a comic book show.’ Curious, tentative newcomers share in the energy of a crowd of enthusiastic and knowledgeable fans, and get caught up in attending panels, getting sketches and buying books as a result. TCAF is designed to show the interested public the best that the comics medium has to offer: a broad, accessible, varied view of comics instead the stereotypical collectibles and nostalgia image they might have. As an antidote to the frequent “news” items about outrageous prices being paid for rare and mint condition vintage comics, we kick open the doors and invite the public to witness firsthand that comics and graphic novels are a living, breathing, and most importantly, booming medium.

TCAF also has a fairly unique-to-comics approach of selecting exhibitors and creative guests from across different facets of the industry, including art-comix, independents, mainstream publishers, world manga, webcomics, superheroes, comics historians and especially mini-comics and self-published materials. Because the show is free, we try to pick exhibitors and guests who will appeal to the public, who will put on a great display in their exhibit space and who will engage attendees. We were really pleased to see how well all of these diverse talents worked within the TCAF space, with each section of the show’s eight rooms and two floors truly having something for everyone, including attendees who weren’t already comics fans, but were curious about the medium. All the TCAF exhibitors did a fantastic job of enhancing the stately Victoria College building, and we’d like to thank them for their efforts. In particular, we’d like to commend the folks responsible for the new Toronto-based webcomics collective Transmission-X for turning their room into a beautiful, multi-faceted exhibition space of comics art, illustration and video installation. That interactive experience was the perfect articulation of my specific vision for TCAF, and we hope that more exhibitors will follow their lead in future years (though not, perhaps, their 3am finish time!).

Our number one goal in putting on the festival every two years is to draw attention to the great comics being produced in Canada and around the world. Hearing from exhibitors that they had a great show, financially, personally, and promotionally, we know we’re achieving our goals.

Because of the vast amount of media coverage that TCAF received, before, during and even features and profiles afterwards, TCAF has a much larger reach both locally and internationally than we’ve ever had before, and than most typical comics festivals or conventions. That exposes new audiences to great comics, and this year specifically the works of TCAF exhibitors and special guests including Paul Pope, Seth, Hope Larson, Jillian Tamaki, Darwyn Cooke, Ryan North, Joe Ollman, Paul Gravett, and dozens more. Attendance for TCAF hovered at around 6,500 people over the course of the Festival, with demographics fairly evenly split between men and women, and with the primary age demographic solidly in the 18-35 area (though many both much older and much younger attended as well). This builds on our strong attendance of 2005, having our show remain approximately the same size – an intimate size and experience we and the exhibitors enjoy. Our observation though, is that our 2005 show was held adjacent to a main thoroughfare in the city and because of that there were a number of attendees who enjoyed the event as spectacle, whereas the majority of attendees this year were pre-informed about the event (and according to our exhibitors came with money to spend). We’re aware that most traditional cons and festivals like announce higher and higher attendance numbers with each successive show, but we don’t work that way.

 

I’m going to start thanking people now. First and foremost, a special mention of our volunteers. You’ve probably heard it before, that these events couldn’t happen without the help of the people behind the scenes, blah blah blah. Well, one of our volunteers GOT HIT BY A CAR on his bicycle ride home from the show Saturday and still showed up for his all-day shift on Sunday. Seriously. We were set-up for the show in under 3 hours on Saturday morning, and everything was torn down and clean an hour and a half after we closed un Sunday. Our volunteer staff were absolutely amazing: friendly, tireless, and extremely competent in every task. We’ve received tons of compliments, and I want to say for the record that the show would not have happened without them, period. My sincere thanks go to everyone who volunteered to help for TCAF 2007, including Adam, Ahrem, Amanda & Victoria, Anthony, Bryce, Carl, Carlos, Choon-sik, Corey, Dave, Denise, Diana, Diane, Ehab, Erin, Jacob, Jennifer, John, Linda, Myung-Jin, Ba Da, Paul, Rizie, Rob, Solly, Stacey, Steve, Tom, Victor, and everyone else whom I’ve inadvertently forgotten. You were all awesome. And you have the t-shirts to prove it.

Beguiling 20th Anniversary Print, by James JeanThe Festival also looked bloody great out in the world this year, thanks to some phenomenal pieces of art by our talented attending artists. Thanks go to: Darwyn Cooke, who made TCAF look more festive than ever with his gorgeous cover art to Comics Festival 2007 and our official 2007 Poster; to Bryan Lee O’Malley for lending Scott Pilgrim to the cover of Comics Festival 2007 and to our promotional material ensuring a healthy dose of recognition from Torontonians; to Evan Dorkin for having his characters Milk & Cheese destroy Toronto in some lovely promotional art; to Zach Worton for turning around our excellent program book cover and badge art in no time flat; to James Jean for his beautiful and haunting image for TCAF sponsor The Beguiling’s 20th Anniversary Print (which debuted at the show); to Chip Zdarsky, whose talented fingerprints are all over everything we did; and last but not least to Paul Pope for lending his pretty face to the cover of Eye Magazine, one of Toronto’s two alt-weeklies, for our most visible and effective promotion of the year. Funny how that works out.

I’d like to thank the TCAF staff, including Nathalie, Andrew, Jason, Naseem, and Scott for taking excellent care of their respective responsibilities: we love you very much. I’d like to thank The Beguiling staff for giving up their weekend to be conscripted into service, including Parish, Becca, Kayla, James, Derek, Jerry, and Shane. Our panel moderators Ed, Jeet, Jon, Lianne, and Neil did a great job with their respective engagements, and really every one of our guests who held a workshop or created a presentation for the show, especially Darwyn Cooke, Paul Gravett, James Jean, Marc Siegel, Jason Thompson, and George A. Walker, added immeasurably to our success. Speaking of events, I’d also like to take this opportunity to thank all of the wonderful folks who put on ‘satellite’ TCAF events around the city. Our appreciation goes out to: Jim Munroe, Salgood Sam, and Claudia Davila for the Drawn Out Apocalypses launch; The Doug Wright Awards committee and especially Matt Seiden for our Friday-night kick-off event; Brendan Fletcher, Willow Dawson, and Bryan Lee O’Malley for the Songs & Pictures party; Brian McLachlan for the Indiana Jones party and art show; and our venue CENTRAL for our ‘victory’ party Sunday night.

I need to thank our sponsors, too. Not just because we’re contractually obligated to do so (heh), but because they really came through for us on all fronts. OWLkids, Eye Magazine, the Ontario Arts Council, the Toronto Arts Council, Firefly Books, Drawn & Quarterly, and all of our publisher friends: your contributions were very much appreciated. We’ll be hitting you up again in 2009.

I know this is going to seem weird to all of you reading, but I really need to take a second and thank The Beguiling. I know I work for The Beguiling, and one of the other TCAF organizers Peter Birkemoe is the co-owner of The Beguiling, but nonetheless: props. The Beguiling is the main sponsor of the festival, putting a ton of money and an amazing amount of sweat-equity into ensuring that the show goes on. Basically, every hour that I invest into TCAF is one taken away from my job at The Beguiling, and the whole free festival does sort of distract from my employer’s job of selling comics. TCAF wouldn’t happen without the support of this fine store, and as an employee I’m always proud that we bring some of the finest comics creators from around the world to Toronto (and they in turn fall in love with our shop and brag about it elsewhere: I particularly love that).

Finally, to Matthew Seiden, this year’s Festival Director. You did a great job this year, especially in putting up with Peter and I—two less than organized people who live in our own heads more than the real world. Everything you contributed made the show better than it’s ever been, and we’re really sorry to see you go. Best of luck. 🙂

And with that, I think we’re done for this year. I’m exceptionally happy with how everything turned out, and despite some bumps in the road, I think we came through it all fantastically well. Thank you to everyone who came out, who spread the word, and who made this the best comics event I’ve ever been to.

Christopher Butcher, Festival Co-Founder On behalf of Peter Birkemoe, Matthew Seiden, and himself.

(Photos by Flickr user “The Doodlers” except where noted. 1st: TCAF Main Floor Exhibition Space, photo by Karen Whaley. 2nd: Gina Gagliano and Mark Siegel of First Second Books. 3rd: Transmission-X installation space, featuring art by J. Bone. 4th: TCAF Second Floor Exhibition Space. 5th: Beguiling 20th Anniversary Print by James Jean. 6th: TCAF kick-off party.)

Post TCAF Write-Ups…

zach-worton-programme.jpg[Edited: Lots Added] Hey there. Thanks to everyone for the kind words in the comments sections and the emails, we’re really happy over here that so many people had a good, profitable time at the fest. We’re working on an official statement and I feel like I probably shouldn’t say too much until we make it… but I did want to specifically thank all of the volunteers (they really, really went above-and-beyond) and the all of the staff who worked really hard to make the event shine. I know I’m kind of ‘on point’ for the praise that the show is getting because I’m really visible, but I’m just a part of the much larger machine that made it work.

Oh! And a special note about the art in this post. It’s the full-colour version of the cover to the 2007 TCAF Program Booklet, by artist Zach Worton. It was officially announced this weekend that Zach’s forthcoming non-fiction graphic novel about the gold rush will be published by Drawn + Quarterly in early 2008. Congrats to Zach, who’s a great artist and a very good friend of mine.

(Zach also did the art for this year’s badges, I’ll probably post them a little later.)

On that note, here’s what people are saying about TCAF right now:

Tom Spurgeon has set up a “collective memory” link-list at:
http://www.comicsreporter.com/index.php/collective_memory_tcaf_2007/

Robert Fulford in the National Post focussed on the Canadian content in his show wrap-up:
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/artslife/story.html?id=752deb4b-4093-4a21-95af-0c8c7d2bbfa9

SPACE covered the show pretty extensively, and the first bit of footage has been released to the net here:
http://www.spacecast.com/videoplayer_4446.aspx

Torontoist.com has a photo gallery up from the show, with a promise of more coverage to come:
http://torontoist.com/2007/08/torontoists_tca.php

BlogTO did some coverage in process of the event, and I hope they come back around for another pass:
http://blogto.com/arts/2007/08/toronto_comic_arts_festival_in_progress/

There’s a TCAF Photo-pool on FLICKR:
http://www.flickr.com/groups/tcaf/

Actually, I’ve come across hundreds of photos on Facebook as well, but they’re mostly hidden from the public I think? Type “TCAF” into the search box at Facebook and some of them should come up…

PW Comics Week gave us a nice plug, via First Second Editor Mark Siegel’s kudos at his blog:
http://www.publishersweekly.com/eNewsletter/CA6470505/2789.html

…and speaking of which, Mark’s full commentary is here:
http://firstsecondbooks.typepad.com/mainblog/2007/08/tcaf-best-comic.html

Speaking of creators and editorial types who wrote about the show, there was GALAXION’s Tara Talan:
http://ttallan.livejournal.com/13547.html

Jason Marcy wrote up the show three times:
http://jaymarcy.livejournal.com/333617.html
http://jaymarcy.livejournal.com/333889.html
http://jaymarcy.livejournal.com/334778.html 

My friend Jim Zubkavich had a successful show:
http://zubkavich.livejournal.com/176207.html

Diana Tamblyn was actually first-to-the-punch with her report, but due to the vagaries of tabbed browsing is a little lower on the list. Make sure to go read her report anyway:
http://tamblyn.blogspot.com/2007/08/tcaf-wrap-up-well-tcaf-is-all-over.html

Rich Stevens of Diesel Sweeties had a great time:
http://www.dieselsweeties.com/blog/?p=128

His studio-mate Jeffrey Rowland is immortalising TCAF in comics at OVERCOMPENSATING, starting with this entry:
http://overcompensating.com/posts/20070815.html

(Both of those last two links don’t look too good in IE. FYI)

Blogger Blake Bell was actually on staff this weekend, helping out with Mr. Pope, and he has some great photos:
http://www.bestofmostof.com/07aug/index070819.htm

Dave Merril of “Mister Kitty” was also on staff Friday and Saturday, and we worked him and his adorable little car to the bone. Thanks Dave:
http://davemerrill.livejournal.com/442276.html

And then people who are just… you know… fans of comic books have been saying so many amazing and nice things that I’m actually blushing, from time to time:
http://joshcheung.livejournal.com/66617.html
http://jtruong.blogspot.com/2007/08/toronto-comic-arts-festival-2007-report.html
http://thatstheheavy.blogspot.com/2007/08/tcaf-report-day-1-august-18-2007.html
http://www.emoware.org/newsarchive31.aspx#18.08.2007
http://comics-and-more.blogspot.com/2007/08/toronto-comic-art-festival-2007.html
http://ndgmtlcd.livejournal.com/47521.html
http://cannedlizard.livejournal.com/94537.html
http://isawthesceneunfold.blogspot.com/2007/08/uhhmetric-is-really-awesome.html
http://kev-the-mev.livejournal.com/67085.html
http://rtmurphy.blogspot.com/2007/08/long-story-short-i-owed-them-80000.html
http://www.myraphan.com/toronto-comic-arts-festival/
http://dayuse.wordpress.com/2007/08/19/im-a-closet-fanboy/
http://reyortega.wordpress.com/2007/08/20/toronto-comics-arts-festival/

And of course, Jamie Coville took an absolute ton of photos of the whole event. AND he lost his MP3 play on Saturday in the Chapel, AND when he went back to look for it Sunday it was still there. CANADA! WHOO!
http://picasaweb.google.co.uk/TCAF07/TCAF2007

Edit: Somehow, I missed a ton of entries. Jeez! Serves me right for not doing a blogsearch.

http://www.needforinformation.com/arts-and-design/joe-bluhm/
http://davemerrill.livejournal.com/442630.html
http://www.flightcomics.com/?p=384
http://www.flickr.com/photos/daveandraina/sets/72157601589813647/
http://www.facebook.com/album.php?aid=45043&l=daeae&id=888685390
http://itallends.livejournal.com/32418.html
http://rufftoon.livejournal.com/15431.html
http://kathrynimmonen.com/?p=48
http://chodrawings.blogspot.com/2007/08/transmission-x.html
http://goraina.livejournal.com/154862.html
http://crushedyetagain.livejournal.com/138701.html
http://torontoanimation.blogspot.com/2007/08/tcaf-comic-goodyness.html
http://drawn.ca/2007/08/21/joe-bluhm/
http://www.possumpress.com/blog/?p=161
http://www.possumpress.com/blog/?p=160
http://ghoizdoz.livejournal.com/14220.html
http://www.horhaus.com/v4/2007/08/21/387/
http://pwbeat.publishersweekly.com/blog/2007/08/21/more-tcaf-stuff/
http://www.immonen.ca/news/archives/665
http://thecjm.blogspot.com/2007/08/tcaf-part-1.html
http://thecalaverakid.blogspot.com/2007/08/kukuburi-and-tcaf.html
http://batsam.blogspot.com/2007/08/hanging-out-with-joe-bluhm.html
http://the-heroesonline-blog.blogspot.com/2007/08/travelogue-toronto-comic-arts-festival.html
http://dailycartoonist.com/index.php/2007/08/21/toronto-comic-arts-festival-reviews-are-pouring-in/
http://theengineer.livejournal.com/197504.html
http://www.myraphan.com/toronto-comic-arts-festival/
http://ndgmtlcd.livejournal.com/47521.html
So that’s it for now, I think. If I missed your round-up, I’m sorry. Please post it in the comments section here and I’ll edit this post. Also, it was STACY K. who made the cookies, and I’m sorry I spelled her name wrong two posts ago.

Thanks for reading,

– Christopher

More TCAF Press Coverage

Hey there guys, I’m ridiculously busy at the moment but I wanted to take a second and recognize all the great media that TCAF got this year. Thanks espescially go to Nathalie for setting a lot of it up. 🙂

There’s a massive, awesome preview of the entire Festival over at Torontoist, http://torontoist.com/2007/08/get_tcaffeinate.php. It features profiles of all kinds of great stuff about the festival, and is remarkably in depth (and long!). More coverage promise to appear over the weekend.

Meanwhile, BlogTo.com printed a really nice little article on TCAF as well. You can click here to read it. (I’ll try and include full-links when I can, but sometimes they’re too long and break the tables.)

Toronto scene-mag MONDO also did a huge overview of the festival, which includes interviews with Joey Comeau, Danielle Corsetto, Jeff Lemire, Jim Zubkavich, and many more. You can find their profile at http://mondomagazine.net/comics-arc-tcaf.html.

They also did a comics-format interview with Bryan Lee O’Malley, which is to say the interview is, itself, a comic. You can see that at http://mondomagazine.net/comics-c-i-mal.html.

Queer freebie magazine XTRA also did a huge feature article on TCAF, and me, and cartoonists Jose Villarrubia and Steve MacIsaac. I say lots of inflamitory things in it, which might even be good for web-fodder. You can check it out at http://www.xtra.ca/public/viewstory.aspx?AFF_TYPE=3&STORY_ID=3451&PUB_TEMPLATE_ID=3.

Speaking of me, Tom Spurgeon interviewed me over at The Comics Reporter this week. I think it turned out pretty well? Although I’ve received litterally no e-mail on it. Maybe I edited out all the good parts after all? Anyway, if you like, you can read it here. (Sorry, it’s a really long link).

Elsewhere in Toronto, Toronto Life magazine included TCAF in it’s city guide for events this weekend at http://www.torontolife.com/guide/arts-and-entertainment/diversions/toronto-comic-arts-festival/, and The Globe and Mail mentioned it in their Toronto “7” feature today, and you can click here to read it. (Another long link.)

In addition there’s been website links, blurbs, and advertisements across countless news websites and personal creator sites. Thanks to everyone there who said nice things or sent people our way.

So…! Coverage in three of the four dailies, all of the free weeklies, across the net and lots of targeted stuff. I think we’ve done everything we can to get people out to the event this weekend short of physically dragging them. I’m not ruling out physically dragging people to the event.

Hope we can see you there!

– Christopher

TCAF: Paul Pope is good lookin’

paul-pope-eye.jpgWhat’s going on today? Paul Pope (vis a vis his appearance at this weekend’s Toronto Comic Arts Festival) is on the cover of Toronto’s Eye Weekly this week, generating some lovely coverage for the event. In a the feature interview by Chris Randle, Pope starts off with “A brush is like a guitar,” so you know what you’re getting.

This week’s Eye also features an interview with Jim Munroe, author of the hot-off-the-presses new graphic novel THEREFORE, REPENT!, a lovely little story about what happens to the rest of us, after “The Rapture.” Jim dropped by the store last night to give me one of the very first copies, and when I finally got home at around 2 I read it cover to cover, really enjoying his and artist Salgood Sam’s venture into the post-apocaylpse. The Book Launch for THEREFORE, REPENT is tonight, sharing the spotlight with Toronto illustrator Claudia Davila’s launch for her new comic spOILed. Despite everything I’m probably gonna be there, and you should too.

Oh, and finally, if you head over to http://www.eyeweekly.com/contests/comicarts/index.php you can still enter to win a TCAF prize pack that includes signed posters by Darwyn Cooke, Marc Bell, and James Jean, and the 10 different comics and graphic novels nominated for Doug Wright Awards for Canadian Cartooning this year. In fact, you can enter until Monday at 9am, even after TCAF is over…!

Meanwhile, over at The Competition (or Now Magazine as it is known around town), Dinosaur Comics creator Ryan North is interviewed about his personal style and the T-Shirts he produces based on his comic. A little mention for TCAF but no link to the website, sadly.

Finally, I’m interviewed over at The Toronto Star in a nice little write-up on TCAF and author Darwyn Cooke. Darwyn Cooke is Darwyn Cooke 24 hours a day, never forget that.

I’m going to talk about some of the great online coverage we’ve been getting in my next post…

– Christopher