Archive for the ‘Events & Happenings’ Category

Studio 700 3rd Saturday Roseville Show

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

This Saturday, April 17th, the art center for intellectually challenged adults, and my current employer, Studio 700, is having an art show! There will be lots of truly beautiful art for sale at very reasonable prices. Some examples of student work can be seen below.

Painting by Johna Z

The show will be from 4-9pm at 700 Douglas Boulevard, Roseville, CA 95678. It’s also part of Roseville’s 3rd Saturday Art and Antiques Event, so after checking out Studio 700 you can check out some of the other great galleries in Roseville. 75% of Studio 700’s art sales go directly to the artists. Cash and credit only!

Sac Con, CosPlay, Furries and Clave’s Doppelganger

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

I went to the Sacramento Comic, Toy and Anime show (Sac Con) with Kevin Trivedi two weekends back. The show was fun and there was a lot of great stuff for sale, but I wouldn’t have blogged about the show if it weren’t for the presence of three strange phenomenon: CosPlay, Furries and Clave’s Doppelganger!

For the uninitiated, “CosPlay” is simply an abbreviation of the words “Costume Play,” and refers to the act of dressing up as characters from Science Fiction, Fantasy, Comic Books, Anime and video games. This phenomenon isn’t new—people have been dressing up as superheroes and characters from Star Trek and Star Wars for decades—but those who associate themselves with the CosPlay scene tend to skew younger and have a greater affinity for Japanese pop culture. I found this to be true at Sac Con: while there were a few exceptions, most of those in costume were teenagers. They were so young there was even a game of Red Rover going on out front when I got there:

CosPlay enthusiasts playing Red Rover at Sac Con

Of course, just because you’re a teenager into CosPlay, that doesn’t mean you’ll necessarily limit yourself to characters from Japan. Here’s a kid dressed up as the Mad Hatter from Tim Burton’s Alice in Wonderland, which wasn’t even out at the time of the show:

CosPlay enthusiast dressed as the Mad Hatter from Tim Burton's 'Alice in Wonderland'

The nice thing about people who dress up for comic book conventions is that they’re always quite happy to take have their picture taken, so I was able to get a photo of a group of kids who didn’t even know each other. I told them we old people are fascinated by their strange customs:

Group of CosPlay enthusiasts at Sac Con

CosPlay outfits can be quite intricate, as seen in this Link / Epona duo (Link is the hero of the Legend of Zelda video games from Nintendo; in the popular installment Ocarina of Time, Epona is Link’s horse). The kid dressed up as Link wasn’t content to let his own face substitute for Link’s, he actually wore a Link mask that more closely resembled the character’s blocky, Anime-style features. The Epona costume was even crazier, worn and operated by only one person using hand-stilts for the front legs!

Epona and Link at Sac Con

Epona at Sac Con

Epona FAQ

As weird as CosPlay may seem to us old people, the Furry phenomenon is even weirder. Furries are fans of fictionalized anthropomorphic characters that also create their own costumes, either of existing Furry characters or characters of their own design. Some Furries enjoy pornography featuring anthropomorphic characters and even have sex in costume, although the Wikipedia article I linked above downplays this aspect of the subculture. Still, being aware of Furry sex makes seeing Furries a bit awkward:

A Furry at Sac Con

The last weird thing I saw at Sac Con was a doppelganger of my young protégé Clave! Although he cut his hair last year, Clave used to have long, wavy red hair, not unlike local cartoonist Griffon Lyles, seen here with fellow cartoonist Devon McMindes:

Devon McMindes and Griffon Lyles at Sac Con

Griffon even has a similar drawing style to Clave’s, as seen in this self-portrait:

Griffon Lyles self-portrait

Like I said, Sac Con was a lot of fun, and there are several such events in Sacramento every year, so check out their web site and go to the next con, if only to be a voyeuristic creep like me! I can’t be the only cultural tourist at these things!

“One Piece” Show a Real Treat

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

The opening for the “One Piece” show was last night at Sol Collective, and it was a lot of fun. There was a lot of great work on display, plus great music and food. Beside myself, I invited seven other artists to participate in the show, five of which showed up for the opening. Here they are:

Photo of Jen Christ at the One Piece Show

High-school classmate Jen Christ with her piece. She left early to go to another show she was in at the Jazzyblues café. Lucky!

Photo of Phil Alstatt at the One Piece Show

Another high-school classmate, fellow cool smart guy and best friend Phil Alstatt with his piece, “Attempt to Escape.”

Photo of Kevin Trivedi at the One Piece Show

Friend and fellow comics-enthusiast Kevin Trivedi with his piece, “Serenity.”

Photo of Marti Homer at the One Piece Show

Studio 700 co-worker and friend Marti Homer with her mixed media piece, “One Tree.”

Photo of Star Sanchez and Clave Fourie at the One Piece Show

My young protégé Clave Fourie giving art tips to gallery owner Estella Sanchez’s daughter Star, who was drawing portraits for donations. She had already made over thirty dollars by the time I sat for a portrait! A great idea, which she apparently got from Clave (Estella also teaches at Clave’s high school).

Drawing of Jesse Baggs by Star Sanchez from the One Piece Show

Unfortunately, I forgot to get photos of Clave and I in front of our pieces, but here’s the portrait Star drew of me. Love it! I look like a Beatle!

Thanks to Sol Collective for putting on such a great show and including me and all my friends, and thanks to everyone who came out!

One Piece Show this Weekend at Sol Collective

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Flier for 3-20 art show at Sol Collective, 'One Piece,' featuring Jesse Baggs

After burning down two years ago, Sol Collective is back in a new location with a new show entitled, “One Piece,” featuring a single piece of art from a wide variety of artists. The opening is Saturday, March 20, from 7-11pm, with a $5 suggested donation. Beside the art there will be food, wine and entertainment.

I’ll be there with a new piece along with old friends like show organizer Adam Saake, Clave Fourie, John Stuart Berger, Aaron Winters and Phil Alstatt, plus new friends like most of the teaching staff at Studio 700. There should be something to satisfy every taste, so come check it out!

Roseville’s Blue Line Gallery

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Speaking of other people’s art, I was lucky enough to visit Roseville’s Blue Line Gallery the other day and saw a great collection of art by Gerald Heffernon entitled, “Inside-Out Evolution.” His work features surreal combinations of humans and animals, such as this painting, “The Cocktail Party”:

'Cocktail Party' by Gerald Heffernon

My favorite work by Heffernon is the statue “Farm Poet.” Here’s a picture of the sculpture from the artist’s web site, and a picture I took at the gallery using my camera phone:

'Farm Poet' by Gerald Heffernon

'Farm Poet' by Gerald Heffernon

I didn’t realize it until I visited his web site, but I’ve seen Heffernon’s work before. His a picture of my fiancé Audrey standing in front of Heffernon’s statue, “Rabbinoid, male”:

'Rabbinoid, male' by Gerald Heffernon

The gallery also featured two other statues by T.S. Linzey from their “Emerging Artists” show that would be of interest to fans of comics: “Load” and “. . . transition . . .”

'Load' by T.S. Linzey

'...transition...' by T.S. Linzey

Posehn Encounters of the Skinner Kind

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

Sacramento-based artist Skinner has been hired by Relapse Records to create imagery for comedian Brian Posehn’s upcoming double-album. Skinner was nice enough to send me a photo of the t-shirt design he also created for Posehn, which looks fucking awesome!

Skinner's t-shirt design for comedian Brian Posehn

Given that both Skinner and Posehn are from the Sacramento area and love metal, I’d say this is a match made in hell!

Speaking of comedy in Sacramento, the Punch Line has been bringing in some great comedians lately, and Dave Attell will be here on March 16th and 17th!

Update: Check out the awesome He-Man show Skinner was in!

Dollar Drawing Found!

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

I Googled my name yesterday and found dollar drawings from APE created by Scott and myself. To give you an idea of how people try to stump us, someone requested “glass-penetrating ass-butterflies.” Oh, they try to stump us. And they fail. Here’s Scott’s drawing:

Scott's Dollar Drawing

Someone from the same group asked me to draw “zombie moth teeth.” The image they posted online is pretty small, so I’ve enlarged it for your pleasure:

My Dollar Drawing

I found my drawing and a link to Scott’s drawing on the blog, “Not Funny Comics.” The links no longer work so the blog may be abandoned.

Indy Euphoria Wrap-Up

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

Indy Euphoria is over, and while attendee turnout was disappointing, there was an abundance of good people, books, art and merchandise. As illustrator, painter and toy maker Jesse Hernandez put it, “I came with no expectations other than to draw and meet cool people.”

The con was held in the Scottish Rites Center on J Street. I recently read The Lost Symbol by Dan Brown, which taught me that the Scottish Rites people are Masonic, so I was on the lookout for secret symbols. Sure enough, as I crossed the American River on Sunday I saw what appeared to be a pyramid on the back of the Scottish Rites building! Aha! Dan Brown put me in the know! Turns out though I’m more of a know-nothing: the pyramid structure is actually part of a Seventh Day Adventists church East of the Scottish Rites Center. Robert Langdon I’m not.

Anyway, Indy Euphoria’s special guests included Jeffrey Brown and Nate Powell; Jim Woodring cancelled, apparently. Like many female fans of alternative comics, the girlfriend of local painter and metal God Skinner has an inexplicable and unhealthy crush on Brown, and used the cartoonist’s appearance in Sacramento to further stalk the poor man. “He better not have brought his fucking family!” she told me. I bought Powell’s gorgeous Swallow Me Whole, and upon learning that Powell has worked for some time providing support to adults with developmental disabilities, I also purchased his autobiographical book on the subject, Please Please, for insights on a field I recently entered as well.

Speaking of Skinner, he purchased my last copy of The Bridge Project, an anthology containing a story by Carolyn Main and myself. Skinner also bought a copy of The Time Tripper, a comic by Max Challender, one of the artists I work with at Studio 700. The comic tells the tale of Max travelling through time to meet beautiful women, his deceased father and even a version of himself in the far-flung future. Besides selling Challender’s book, my mini-comics and my flip-comic with Clave, How Hipsters are Like Superheroes / Baggs & Me, I was also selling, as always, drawings for a dollar. If anyone out there who purchased a dollar drawing finds their way to this blog, email me a scanned copy of your drawing and I’ll put it up on the Internet for all to see! In the meantime, here’s a scan of my dollar drawing ad:

(Scratch Papers, Page 77)

Also attending Indy Euphoria was a large contingent of Bay Area cartoonists and artists, including Jed Alexander, Kane Lynch, Josh Frankel, Andrice Arp and Jesse Reklaw (formerly of the Bay Area), Susie Cagle and Francois Vigneault. I got to better know a few of those fine folk, and get some of their comics, including Relic #2 and Laikia-23 from Kane Lynch, and the hilarious Pancakes Solve Nothing by Josh Frankel, plus the equally hilarious Desert Island Paradise and Only the Lonely, two Frankel-edited anthologies.

Having so many Bay Area cartoonists exhibit at the sparsely attended Indy Euphoria was a little embarrassing, especially with the great attendance at Francois Vigneault’s own SF Zine Fest. Still, it was organizer Anthony Leano’s, and possibly Sacramento’s, very first expo or convention for independent, underground and alternative comics. Which is weird considering Sacramento’s connection to many famous cartoonists. Robert Crumb and Aline Kominsky lived outside of Sacramento in Winters before moving to France. Charles Burns went to UC Davis. Justin Green, who is now considered one of the first graphic novelists, and Carol Tyler lived in Sacramento for a time. Some of Green’s comics were published in now-defunct Tower Record’s music magazine Pulse! by fellow Sacramento resident Marc Weidenbaum and later collected as the anthology Musical Legends. Weidenbaum also published comics in Pulse! by Sacramento teenager Adrian Tomine, who went on to become one of the great talents of alternative comics. The aforementioned Josh Frankel went to high school with Tomine, and the aforementioned Jesse Reklaw also lived in Sacramento while growing up. There are, in fact, several similarities between Reklaw and myself: we both share the same first name, love comics, grew up in Sacramento and, as I learned in his Expo 2000 anthology story “How I Ruined My Bladder,” both have bladder problems.

Despite its comic connections, Sacramento may never have an alternative comics convention as well attended as Stumptown, SPX or SF Zine Fest. There were, however, some Sacramento-specific things about Indy Euphoria that I really enjoyed. Local DJ Roger Carpio was spinning the choicest dance-rock cuts in the lobby, just as he does at Lipstick, Tuesday nights at Old Ironsides, and Fuck Fridays, Friday nights at the Townhouse. When I was newly single after my divorce, Carpio helped me angry-dance away my troubles. There was also a live drawing session Saturday night with Mike Hampton, zombie girls, and Dan Brereton of Nocturnals fame, who was really fun and approachable. Here’s one of my better drawings from the session:

(Scratch Papers, Page 76)

The zombie girls were clients of tattoo and comic book artist Brandon Bracamonte, a guy I knew in high school and hadn’t seen again until the show. When I met Anthony Leano at a Drink and Draw last year I heard Brandon was still in the local comics scene, and then at APE his badge was accidentally included with the set of badges for my table, so apparently this meeting was pre-ordained. I also got to meet, for the second time in a long time, the Sacramento News & Review’s editorial cartoonist John Kloss, who shared tales of knowing Crumb, Justin Green and Carol Tyler back in the day, and revealed the number one cause of divorce: marriage. I also got to know local cartoonist and WoW enthusiast M. Neils, aka “Pocket,” who sat at the table next to mine.

A few final Indy Euphoria highlights: watching Chris Perguidi pretend to get beat up for his local access show in Gilroy, seeing a guy I don’t know wearing one of my t-shirts who gave me two funny mini-comics (send me an email guy and I’ll send you some credit!), meeting a girl who owns another one of my t-shirts, meeting Ann Masushima of Eyeball Burp and her fiancé Alex Chiu and reading their inspiring zines and comics, and of course everyone who stopped by the table to buy a comic or chat!

Oh, and one last thing: this super-cute doll by Chartruz Lovelace, which I got for my super-cute doll, Audrey.

Not Too Late for Indy Euphoria!

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

Sacramento is having it’s very own comics festival this weekend at the Scottish Rites Center (directions here). Called Indy Euphoria, the show features alternative comics, toys, zines and tons of other goodies, plus special guests like Tom Neely, Jeffrey Brown, Nate Powell, Attaboy, Skinner and more! Sunday hours are from 10-6 and the entrance fee is only $6! Be there!

Fight Tonight Over Nestlé Bottled Water Plant!

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

As reported in Sacramento Press yesterday, the City of Sacramento issued a stop-work order on construction of a Nestlé water-bottling plant in Sacramento, and at a 6pm meeting tonight the City Council will consider “amending the city’s zoning code to immediately require special permits for beverage bottling plants.”

The stop-work order is based on questions of whether or not Nestlé filled out the appropriate paperwork to build the plant, and Brendan O’Rourke, who works for Nestlé, says they did. The larger issue being asked by City Councilman Kevin McCarty and the advocacy group Save Our Water Sacramento is whether Nestlé should be allowed to bottle water in Sacramento at all (full disclosure: I am friends with some of the members of Save Our Water Sacramento). While some of the water will be shipped in from nearby springs, the majority of the water Nestlé wants to bottle, an estimated 81 million a year according to an article by McCarty in Sacramento Press, will be taken directly from Sacramento’s municipal water supply, despite California being in its third year of drought. This water will then be resold to Californians (to avoid regulation by the FDA) at a profit of 10,000%!

Certainly, Sacramento has already made money off of the proposed plant; Nestlé says they’ve already paid “‘$3.7 million [. . .] in [the] form of permitting fees, construction costs, due diligence payments and [other associated] costs [. . .],’” and Mayor Kevin Johnson was quoted in another Sacramento Press article as saying the new plant could create “‘40 to 60′” jobs. But do the costs outweigh the benefits? 40 to 60 jobs is certainly not a lot, and any money Sacramento has made so far will pale in comparison to what Nestlé will make reselling tap water. Last week Save Our Water Sacramento hosted a special screening of the as-yet-unreleased documentary Tapped at The Crest. The film is pretty horrifying, detailing the problems with the bottled water industry: besides those already discussed, citizens in a city with a Nestlé water-bottling plant in Maine were cut off from their water supply for two days while the plant’s supply kept going; bottled water faces far less stringent safety requirements than bottled water and has been found by various studies to be contaminated; people who live near plants that create the plastic bottles for bottled water have a higher risk of getting cancer; and of course, water bottles that are not recycled often end up in the ocean, forming islands of plastic trash larger than Texas that are killing wildlife and affecting the food chain.

However, there are already two water-bottling plants in Sacramento, according to yet another Sacramento Press article (boy, they are on this issue!). And the best way to stop bottled water might be to simply stop drinking it. While I’m definitely a bleeding-heart liberal, I’ve drank my fair share of bottled water over the years (Tapped slackened my thirst for the stuff, however). A comment left on one of the Sacramento Press articles called local opponents of the Nestlé plant “NIMBYs,” an acronym that stands for “Not In My BackYard” and refers to people who enjoy the use of certain products or processes, such as nuclear power, but whom nevertheless refuse to let the uglier aspects of the product or processes, such as nuclear waste, come anywhere near their backyard. Those uglier aspects then end up in parts of the country or world where people are too poor to keep them out.

In any case, whether you oppose or support the Nestlé plant, your voice can be heard tonight if you show up at the City Council meeting, and that’s what democracy is all about!