Category: Blotting Paper

MY COMICS ART TRAVELS: U.S.A. Part 1.

animation, Blotting Paper, Comics, comics art, Travels August 20, 2024

As the topic of this post is lengthier than normal I shall be spreading the content over two posts. The second part is scheduled for November this year. The content refers to my research and conference attendance on comics art, cartoon and animation related trips to America. I first visited the Walt Disney Studio in Los Angeles when researching animation. Later I began my research and study of comics art. I had been an avid reader of comics from childhood. I also loved watching cartoons. I found a crossover current linking these two forms of comics and cartoons which deepened my interest. The Disney Studio straddled these fields producing both comics and animation. My fascination grew and led to my resolution to become involved professionally. That took some time but I eventually succeeded, first through my studies and later my research. I became an academic with practical and theoretical expertise in both media. I designed and developed new tertiary level subjects and courses in both fields. I began researching, presenting papers at conferences and publishing scholarly articles based on that research in scholarly journals.

Approaching the Disney Studio in Burbank, California. (Photo by Louise Graber).

When I visited the Disney Studio in Burbank on a study trip it was a joyful experience. I went to America as an academic at the new Sydney College of the Arts. I had applied to visit the Disney Studios for a research project examining historic storyboards for their Silly Symphonies cartoons. I also planned to visit the film and animation program at U.C.L.A. that was located nearby. I was researching animated music videos at the time. Those Disney cartoons offered an artistic base for animation set to musical soundtracks. Happily, I got to visit both places. The Disney staff were most welcoming and helpful. Just sitting in the commissary at lunch time with Disney animators, actors and directors was a joyful experience. I also spotted the odd actor at the studio to do voice-overs for cartoons. U.C.L.A. academics were excellent and used to original research. This study tour led to my development of new subjects back in Sydney.

The animated music video medium was breaking out at the time in the popular music industry. It was the age of MTV with many musicians in need of video promotion of their image and music. I wrote and designed a Music Video subject for the General Studies curriculum of the Design School. I was warned that it would not run unless it received a minimum of 20 enrolments. No worries! It had to be staged in the main lecture room as it attracted over 100 students! They came from right across the Faculty. In addition to enrolments from the Visual Communication course it attracted to students from across the Faculty. Students of Fashion, Interior Design, Industrial Design, even the Art School enrolled. It was the age of music videos. Some of these students eventually became professional music video directors for class-mates who were musicians in local bands. And the noise! Complaints from teaching staff affected by the loud music led to my subject being rescheduled to the evening timetable. That turned out to be better. We could run longer than the required 90 minutes and pump up the volume. What was that Alice Cooper song?..No More Mr Nice Guy…that was the feeling I had at the time and I tried to play it every week. Despite the huge amount of assessment due to the high enrollment numbers it remains for me a joyous educational memory.

First issue of the International Journal Of Comic Art, 1999.

On a subsequent U.S.A. trip, I excitedly entered the elevator on the ground floor to attend my first conference on comics. Located in Bethesda, Maryland it was ICAF 99 (Fifth Annual International Comic Arts Festival: “Culture, Industry, Discourse”). It was nearly filled with businessmen coming up from the basement car park. I was surprised when we all started to alight on the same floor…the one where the comics conference was being held! Was there another conference on? No, just the one venue…? The penny soon dropped! These guys were not business men. These were American academics. They followed a more formal dress code! Suit, shirt, tie and brief case compared to what I was used to back home. These academics seemed serious about their research into comics. Their conference attendance, dress code and presentation of their scholarly papers reflected this. By comparison I felt a little casual in a T-shirt and jeans. I had come up from the “…Land Down Under” with a shoulder bag containing a note book, sketch pad and pencils. I presented my research paper titled “Overseas Influence/Local Colour: The Australian Small Press”. And I met my first American academics researching comics art! They included Gene Kannenberg, Jr., Charles Hatfield, Jeff Miller, Ana Merino, Mark Nevins, Michael Rhode, Marc Singer, Guy Spielmann, Jeff Williams, and Joseph “Rusty” Witek, plus Pascal Lefevre from Belgium. These became my new comics art colleagues at that research gathering in Maryland. Meeting other comics academics was both wonderful and reassuring. Then Professor John A. Lent arrived with copies of his brand new 1999 publication, the International Journal of Comic Art. This was an academic journal about research of comics art. “Fan-bloody-tastic!” This was getting both serious and satisfying. It was also a reassuring kick-start of my resolve to research comics art formally as an academic.

The publication of the International Journal Of Comic Art provided the perfect platform to record and promote comics art research. Above is a photo of the first issue of the journal from 1999. It has since reached the milestone of 50 published issues, chalking up 25 years of continuous publication. I purchased the first issue of IJOCA, (pictured above) at that conference and took out a subscription. And along the way I became the Australian representative of the journal’s International Editorial Board. Later, Professor John A. Lent was one of the examiners of my PhD thesis on Australian alternative small-press comics. The journal seemed to progressively grow in size into a solid block of pages that I affectionately nick-named the “BRICK”. I even created a couple of cartoons about its postal delivery problems due to its bulky size. It had started out as a rather slim volume before blossoming into its bulging “brick” shape and weight. A thousand cheers to you, John!

Original cartoons by Jis and Trino, in my copy of their comic book.

At that comics art conference I also met Mexican cartoonists Yis and Trino who were guest artists. We had an hilarious and somewhat chaotic conversation. In the end I bought a copy of their comic and asked them to sign it…not expecting their amusing graphic response. They drew a cartoon of me with them playfully trying to embarrass me…but now I have their original sketches which I treasure. What a hoot!

FIREBALL minicomic, Issue Seven, 1999 by Brain Ralph. I purchased it from the creator at the SMALL PRESS EXPO that followed the comics conference in Maryland, WASHINGTON DC.

Next morning Neil Gaiman entered the elevator, and commenced chatting to a contact in his dulcet English tones! He was making a presentation at the conference…which turned out to be most impressive. When the conference concluded we all went down to the ground floor to THE EXPO(Small Press Expo). It followed on from the conference and ran over the weekend. It was Small Press heaven!…stalls manned by comics creators selling their comics. This conference and expo set the bar high for me on my return to Sydney. It had given me more confidence about researching comics. To have participated in such events that brought me new academic and artistic colleagues with whom to communicate, was joyous! Now I was determined. I would do my PhD research in the field of comics! Five years later, in 2004, I completed my doctoral thesis and was awarded my PhD.

A year later I went to the “big one!” I was a professional attendee at the San Diego Comic Con. That’s the Gahan Wilson designed pass(above). The convention was H-U-G-E!!! …in both size and events and number of attendees. Even just to walk around all the aisles with its exhausting range of comics art exhibits was an awesome experience. It also incorporated an academic comic arts themed conference at which I presented a paper on Australian comics…“Australian Gothic” conference paper, 8th Annual Comic Arts Conference, Comic Con, San Diego, USA, July 2000

Getting up close to photograph and chat to Gahan Wilson and MAD magazine’s Sergio Aragones (on the left). (Photo by Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Meeting James Kochalka there and buying his comic.
James Kochalka did this drawing of one of his characters for me in my copy of the catalogue.
I also met Will Eisner there and had a brief chat with him. I got him to sign my copy of his book GRAPHIC STORYTELLING. It is about making comics which he did with a flourish! See above. What an honour it was to meet this comics art legend and to shake his hand! I used his textbooks in my visual communication design subjects at the art school and university.

Part 2 of this post on my comics related travels will follow in approximately three months time.

(All text, photos and artwork-©2024 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

IN THE STUDIO-Session 2

Archive of Australian Alternative Comics, Art, Blotting Paper, Comics, printmaking May 21, 2021

These production posts document the “making” stage, whether animation, comics, postcards, prints or paintings, in a small studio. I always work to music and some photos in my blog posts show the equipment and the CD…not these, unfortunately.

Miro, our studio cat, in the foreground bottom, right, is keeping watch whilst a batch of background coloured postcards dry. Our cat offered a similar service for the printing of comics labels (see below). (Photo and artwork-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Exposure to sunlight for a batch of freshly printed postcards. This proved to be a quick method of drying the ink and paint. (Photo and artwork-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Printed sheets hanging out to dry. These long strips were sometimes cut into smaller pieces, depending upon their graphic application. (Photo and artwork-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill  a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
First stage in the printing of labels for an issue of my comic BLOTTING PAPER…labels would then be overprinted with the title (see below). (Photo and artwork-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Second stage…labels drying in the sun…different studio…a little windswept. These are some of the overprinted covers for my comic BLOTTING PAPER, following addition of second layer (see above). (Photo and artwork-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Second stage at the other studio…some of the comics covers have been blown into the grass. These are left to dry…usually pegged on a clothesline…but not these, left lying before being blown away…then being returned to the studio for overprinting with the title of the comic. (Photo and artwork-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Third stage, title block for the comics cover…with loosely assembled rubber type…becomes the third print layer. (Photo and printmaking block-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Third stage of printing…complete with labels following overprinting of title of the comic. (Photo-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Finally, the finished labels are glued to the covers containing the printed copies of the comic. (Photo and artwork-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

This post and all photos, postcards, postcard art and printmaking-© 2015 Dr. Michael Hill aka Doctor Comics.

     

MY COMICS ART TRAVELS: France.

Blotting Paper, Comics August 19, 2020

On my travels, remaining in Europe and moving from Germany to France for this post.

This one was not in France. It was a prior stopover on the way from the U.K….and a visit to the National Gallery in London to see a painting by William Hogarth…who looms large in the history of comics art…that’s my Wedding ringed hand gesturing to, and acknowledging a work by this master. Hogarth’s Marriage A-la-Mode, Stage 3, The Inspection, circa 1745…one of a set of 6 sequential paintings, later engraved and printed as an early form of graphic storytelling. Next stop, Paris! (Photo by Louise Graber)
At the grave of Georges Méliès. June 2019 (Photo by Louise Graber)

On arrival in Paris, the first priority is the paying of respects. First, at the Pere Lachaise cemetery…where I make an historical link between film and comics art…of a playful nature, visiting the grave of the film pioneer, fantasy director Georges Méliès.

I had brought some strips of an experimental film that I made that was inspired by him. I unreeled it and spread it across his grave. (Photo-©2019 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

Acknowledging and paying my respects to the French artist who inspired me in the fields of comics art and animation…Emile Cohl. (Photo-©2019 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

A study of Cohl and the context in which he created…this excellent book by Donald Crafton provided lecture material on comics art and animation history for me…both when I was teaching in the Visual Communication course at Sydney College of the Arts…and later in the Master of Animation course in the Faculty of Design at the University of Technology, Sydney. (Photo-©2020 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Then Doctor Comics makes his obligatory visits to the comics shops of Paris. (Photo by Louise Graber)
There’s an area in Saint Germain des Prés populated with bookshops including comics shops. (Photo by Louise Graber)

This shop in Paris was a good source of second-hand books. (Photo by Louise Graber)
Waiting in the Metro for the next train and finding Tintin on a billboard…a moment of surprise and delight…quite wonderful! (Photo by Louise Graber)

On the outskirts of Paris the cartoonist and animator Emile Cohl has a park named after him. It is also named for Georges Méliès. The park includes a playground for children. The French are proud of their comics artists, animators and filmmakers. June 2019. (Photo by Louise Graber)
Adjacent to the park for Emile Cohl is the one for Georges Méliès…a nice connection for these two pioneers of cinema. (Photo by Louise Graber)

  (All text, photos and artwork-©2020 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

MY COMICS ART TRAVELS: Germany.

Art, Blotting Paper, Comics, Germania November 18, 2019

On my travels to comics art and animation events around the world…I have studied the creative work of many notable artists. Sometimes I have even managed to meet and converse with them. This post starts with an image from an event in Asia then moves to Europe, in Germany. It’s a catalyst for a series of blogs with a fun photo to begin…the Taiwan International Animation Festival, Taipei, Taiwan, May 2004. In future posts I shall feature some of my travels to events such as this…starting in Europe with Germany and followed by France, Japan and Australia and finally U.S.A. So, off to Germany we go to start my journey!

COMIC SALON, ERLANGEN, GERMANY, 2014

A decade after my visit to Taiwan I travelled to Germany. In the town of Erlangen where there was a comics festival, the 16th Internationaler Comic-Salon Erlangen in June 2014. I attended with comics artist Louise Graber and some German academic colleagues. (Photo-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics). The poster featured the characters Max und Moritz created by German comics creator Wilhelm Busch. I had previously visited his museum in Hanover(see photo below).

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The Wilhelm Busch Museum in Hanover, an entire institution named after this pioneer in comics history. I was fortunate to find and purchase a book about him and his work at the museum shop. I also saw examples of his creative work on the gallery walls. (Photo-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
(Photo-©2019 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

Street poster for the Comic Salon, the comics festival in Erlangen, Germany. The poster carries the anti-war theme of the festival. This was expressed in the work of French comics artist Jacques Tardi (in the poster)…and in the work of American comics artist Joe Sacco (Photo-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Entrance to the comics festival in Erlangen. (Photo-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Inside along a section of the comics festival. There was an accompanying outside section in a large tent, as well. (Photo-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
In Erlangen Joe Sacco, creator of the graphic novel The Great War staged two exhibitions of his work…one in a hall at the exhibition site…another in the main square in front of the Town Hall. Both displayed a continuous single panel spread over 24 pages representing a connected scene from one moment of the war. (Photo-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
A two panel section of Joe Sacco’s installation of his graphic novel The Great War…across the main square of the town of Erlangen, Germany. It was a new experience for me to literally walk through a comic…but that was Sacco’s rule of engagement in this instance. (Photo-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Another major exhibition at the festival was Landscape of Death, the anti-war graphic work of French comics artist Jacques Tardi. (Photo-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Launching an issue of my own comic…BLOTTING PAPER: The Recollected Graphical Impressions of Doctor Comics…at the festival in Erlangen…with support from my German colleagues…L to R: Louise Graber, Professor Michael Mahlstedt, me, Professor Markus Fischmann, and student Krisi.)
There was also a large section in the exhibition featuring the FINN FAMILY MOOMINTROLL graphic work of Tove Jansson. (Photo by Louise Graber)

My TRAVELS posts form part of my graphic based material that includes…painting, printmaking, cartooning and scrapbooking including artwork for my comic and graphic novel BLOTTING PAPER.

(All text, photos and artwork-©2019 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

  

   

BLOTTING PAPER The Comic: Production Report No. 30

Art, Blotting Paper, Comics, printmaking August 10, 2019

NEWS…CONFIRMING THE COMPLETION OF MY COMIC, NOW GRAPHIC NOVEL…BLOTTING PAPER! I have completed the final stage of the writing and editing of my comic…or should I say…graphic novel…as what began as a single origin publication has ended up in half a dozen units! Now all six chapters will be compiled into the graphic novel format. This includes the previous three separate comics that made up The Cat Cooking Comics In Kappabashi No.1 No.2 and No.3 that were not initially intended to form part of the BLOTTING PAPER comic. The title remains Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions Of Doctor Comics. All six chapters will be made available on my Blog. Below are some photos from the original launch back in 2012 at Hondarake Full Of Books bookshop in Sydney. Eight years later the work is essentially complete. Here is a photo from the original launch.

Product and packaging of the debut issue at the original launch at Hondarake Books. (Photo-©2012 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

The moment of the launch…on a Saturday afternoon…in a graphic bookshop in Sydney…beneath a canopy of my woodblock fish prints.
That’s comics scholar and colleague Gene Kannenberg, Jr. onscreen in a live cross from the USA launching the comic.
The package deal, my comic with an original print and bookmark in a specially printed bag. (Photo-©2012 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
A display of my postcard art was installed as a decorative corner in the bookshop. (Photo-©2012 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Some of the woodblock prints from my animation TOXIC FISH were used as a decorative canopy at the launch. (Photo-©2012 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

                 

(All text, photos and artwork-©2019 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

BLOTTING PAPER The Comic: Production Report No.29

Art, Blotting Paper, Cats in Comics, Comics, Germania, Japanning, printmaking November 7, 2018

It has taken me some time to finish wrapping up production of this title but things are finally taking shape. The latest development in my comics creation and production scheduling is that two of my titles will now be merged. These two titles are my most recent project working title…The Cat Cooking Comics In Kappabashi and my longer, earlier work Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions of Doctor Comics. The former, that took the form of some of a sequel to the previous title,…now becomes an additional chapter…actually the final chapter of the Blotting Paper graphic novel. My initial thoughts were to make it a stand-alone comic…despite it having some connections to the main title by virtue of sharing some of the same characters…however, I have now opted for closure of the production period…and time to wrap it all up in one bundle. This means that The Cat Cooking Comics In Kappabashi will cease being a proposed stand alone comic title…and instead become a chapter title of Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions of Doctor Comics. Despite this manga merging, their blog posts that were completed with the different title of The Kappabashi Cat Nos. 1, 2 and 3…will remain as existing blog posts, retaining their original title and date and history, and accessibility on this site. Sorry about the changes but I hope that has clarified matters.

The above image shows a rough cover design of the proposed comic The Cat Cooking Comics In Kappabashi…that is now being merged with Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions of Doctor Comics as Chapter 6…the final chapter of the intended 300 page graphic novel. Although the Doctor Comics character does not appear in this chapter one of his cats, Cohl, does. Living in the Kappabashi area of Tokyo…Cohl learns the Japanese form of woodblock printmaking called sosaku hanga. This is the same method that Doc had employed…and demonstrated to his cats at their home in Sydney whilst making a series of creative prints. This edit wraps things up in terms of the story. In this final chapter Cohl becomes, as the title of that chapter infers, The Cat Cooking Comics In Kappabashi. Wherever he was at this time, I am certain that Doc would have been impressed and offered his enthusiastic support.

(Art and Photo-©2018 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

A page from The Cat Cooking Comics In Kappabashi …now Chapter 6 of the graphic novel Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions of Doctor Comics. (Art and Photo-©2018 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

Above, a page from Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions of Doctor Comics showing Doc at work making woodblock prints…an act that Cohl would have observed on several occasions back in Sydney when Doc and the cats lived together…and that would have possibly inspired Cohl to take up printmaking on his arrival in Japan.

(Art and Photo-©2018 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

Above, yet another page from Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions of Doctor Comics…showing Cohl being impressed by examples of the the art of celebrated Japanese printmaker Shiko Munakatta… whose exhibition Cohl’s new Japanese friend Moto takes him to see…and below, another page from the same title…showing Cohl’s visit to an art supply shop in the Asakusa area of Tokyo…where he purchases woodblock printmaking tools, again thanks to his knowledgeable art school friend Moto. (Art and Photo-©2018 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

(Art and Photo-©2018 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

Yet another page from The Cat Cooking Comics In Kappabashi…now Chapter 6 of Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions of Doctor Comics…showing Cohl’s artistic development with his manga mixing…his printmaking and his creative layout of prints…with panels and pages from the randomly found manga during his travels in Tokyo.

(Art and Photo-©2018 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

I hope these edits will bring these separate units together under the one title of…Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions Of Doctor Comics. It seems the best solution at the moment.

(All text, photos and artwork-©2018 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

BLOTTING PAPER The Comic: Production Report No.28

Art, Blotting Paper, Cats in Comics, Comics, Japanning February 27, 2018

I am beginning to feel that I am nearing the final post documenting the production of my graphic novel/artist book/comic…Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions Of Doctor Comics…as I tie the ends of the storyline together and head towards the conclusion. Initially I thought that this would be a sequel with a different title…but after having second thoughts I decided to make it the final chapter of the graphic novel…with the same title…Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions Of Doctor Comics. Owing to the absence of the Doctor Comics character in this new chapter, it contains less of his anecdotes…and fewer human characters as it drifts more in the direction of the funny animal comics genre. This seems to be a good move.

The work book with the working title-©2017 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

The chapter begins in Berlin…where Cohl, having heard no word from his friend Busch for almost two years…decides to follow him to Tokyo and try to find him. Cohl has been very comfortable in the German city…and somewhat reluctant to leave but his curiosity and friendship ultimately awakened him from his cultural slumber.

Curiosity stirs the sleeping cat-©2017 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

In addition to the restaurant supplies district some scenes take place in Kanda, the bookshop area of Tokyo. Cohl initially explores the manga shops…then extends his search to sources of traditional woodblock printed books as well as books about yokai spirits.

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Near the end of the Blotting Paper graphic novel (page 286 above and page 287 below of 300 pages), Cohl is ultimately content to remain in Berlin despite his attempts to find his friend Busch who had left Germany for Japan with his new friend Barks.

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Owing to the absence of the Doctor Comics character in this new chapter…it contains hardly any of his anecdotes…and even fewer human characters as it drifts more in the direction of the funny animal comics genre. The principal character, Cohl the cat from the Blotting Paper graphic novel,…has some adventures in the Asakusa area of Tokyo…to which he has travelled in search of his missing friend and flatmate, the other cat and feline friend, Busch.

In the Asakusa area of Tokyo Cohl searches for Busch. (page from the Blotting Paper graphic novel)
©2017 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Doctor Comics researching the bookshop area of Tokyo during an earlier visit.
(Photo by Louise Graber.)

In addition to the restaurant supplies district some scenes take place in Kanda, the bookshop area of Tokyo. Cohl initially explored the manga shops…then extended his search to sources of traditional woodblock printing books…as well as books about yokai and the spirit world…as Doctor Comics had done. All good! I shall now start heading toward the conclusion of my graphic novel.

(All text, photos and artwork-©2018 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

        

BLOTTING PAPER The Comic: Production Report No.27

Art, Blotting Paper, Comics June 24, 2017

It’s been a long time between bowls of milk and plates of fish for my cat characters…in my occasional series of mini-profiles…that I have created in my comics! So, in this overdue post…I am focusing on the two animal characters of my own creation…Busch and Cohl, the pair of cats from my comic Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions Of Doctor Comics.  Cohl is a cat of French origin who absolutely loves reading comics…not to mention draw, especially with pen and ink…on quality art paper. Although he favours bande dessinée, the Euro-Comics, and more Marcinelle than Bruxelle School…he has somewhat reluctantly been prepared to read some manga…and is finally beginning to find it quite appealing. Mon Dieu!

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First appearance of Cohl, the black cat-©2012 Dr. Michael Hill  (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).  
Cohl#3:96
Cohl likes to read comics-©2013 Dr. Michael Hill  (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Cohl#4:96
He also likes to draw-©2013  Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Cohl#5:96
Cohl is capable of concocting a cunning business plan-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Cohl#6:96
After a brush with Modernism in Berlin he begins to organise his own life a little better-©2015  Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Cohl#9:96
He enjoys riding his Ghost bike through Tiergarten…really, really fast…yet trying not to give his syrah too much bottle shock-©2016  Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Cohl#7:96
Now spending many relaxing and uninterrupted days reading comics in his little flat…and occasionally contemplating the creation of his own graphic novel!-©2016  Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Cohl#8:96
And dreaming of how life could be if only it would…!-©2016  Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

And now to the other cat in the comic…Busch, of German origin, who loves to eat…mostly meat and seafood…and to occasionally read comics…and even to draw, with a pencil or crayon on whatever paper is to hand…even if it already has an image on it such as a newspaper or magazine page or shopping receipt. He will generally expect that drawing results in the awarding of a snack. Busch can eat and Busch can dance…and sometimes he goes hungry, gets seasick, goes shopping, dresses up and has tantrums.

Eating noodles in a container-pen and ink drawing and collage-© 2016 Michael Hill
Eating noodles inside a shipping container on a cargo ship at sea!-pen and ink drawing and collage-©2016 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Drinking milk by the fridge-pen and ink drawing-© 2012 Michael Hill
Drinking milk from the carton by the fridge!-pen and ink drawing and photography-©2012 Dr. Michael Hill  (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Dancing in a Hamburg disco-pen and ink drawing-© 2015 Michael Hill
Dancing in a Hamburg disco!…pen and ink drawing and torn paper collage-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Doing tantrum graffiti on the bedroom wall-pen and ink drawing-© 2012 Michael Hill
Vigorous praying, tantrum inspired, graffiti on the bedroom wall!…pen and ink drawing-©2012 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
A seasick cat at sea, pen and ink drawing-© 2015 Michael Hill
A seasick cat at sea…how horrible! A pen and ink drawing-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Emoting the fear of hunger-pen and ink drawing-© 2011 Michael Hill
Expressing and emoting the fear of hunger!-pen and ink drawing-©2011 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Starving at the fish market in Tokyo-pen and ink drawing and woodblock print-© 2016 Michael Hill
Short of money and consequently starving at the fish market in Tokyo-pen and ink drawing and woodblock print-©2016 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Dressing up as his master-pen and ink drawing, collage and photography-© 2012 Michael Hill
Dressing up as his master-pen and ink drawing, collage and photography-©2012 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Shopping with a canine friend in Germany-pen and ink drawing-© 2015 Michael Hill
Shopping with an unnamed but friendly, canine friend in Germany…pen and ink and colour pencil drawing with photography and collage-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

I wish my pair of feline cartoon characters and I happy adventures in future comics!

(All text, photos and artwork-©2017 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

BLOTTING PAPER The Comic: Production Report No.26

Art, Blotting Paper, Cats in Comics, Comics, Germania, Japanning February 28, 2016

I have completed production and commenced publication of the fifth issue of my artist book/comic…BLOTTING PAPER: The Recollected Graphic Impressions Of Doctor Comics. The pages are being printed, collated, trimmed, bound and covered. Copies will soon be mailed to readers. Each copy will have an original postcard size print on the cover.

Original print on cover of new issue-© 2013 Michael Hill
Example of original print on cover of new issue-©2013
Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

It has now been four years since publication of the first issue. That was launched at Hondarake-Full of Books in Sydney in February 2012 (see earlier post about the launch). A further four issues have been produced and published. I am now considering collecting these issues into graphic novel form. This will allow me the opportunity to make revisions to the story and artwork. The five issues have generated 200 pages of material. This may be altered following editing and development of the existing material. There also remains the possibility of a further new chapter! We’ll see about that!

Woodblock ink print and painting-© 2014 Michael Hill
Woodblock ink print of sea-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Location photograph, Germany-© 2014 Michael Hill
Photograph of road design in Germany-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Rough scan of artwork, Germany-© 2016 Michael Hill
Rough scan of artwork collage-©2016 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Rough scan of artwork, woodblock prints, handwriting, cartooning Tokyo-© 2016 Michael Hill
Rough scan of artwork compilation from woodblock prints, handwriting and cartooning-©2016 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics).
Rough scan of artwork, illustration, sketching, cartooning, Tokyo-© 2016 Michael Hill
Rough scan of artwork, illustration, sketching, cartooning-©2016 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Rough scan of artwork, Photography, character design, Tokyo-© 2016 Michael Hill
Rough scan of artwork compilation from photography, drawing, handwriting and character design-©2016 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics)
Rough scan of artwork of a cat scanning artwork, Germany-© 2015 Michael Hill
Rough scan of artwork compilation from inking, drawing and printmaking-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill (a.k.a. Doctor Comics)

For details of the production of all five issues and a visual history of the project read previous reports.

(All text, photos and artwork-©2016 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics).

BLOTTING PAPER The Comic: Production Report No.25

Art, Blotting Paper, Cats in Comics, Comics, Germania, Japanning October 3, 2015

This is the next report documenting production of my artist book/comic…and ultimately graphic novel…Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions Of Doctor Comics. Creation and production of the forthcoming issue 2 Tickets to Tokyo Bay has begun. It deals with the continued adventures of the cats Busch and Cohl and their canine acquaintance Barks. Set mostly in Japan it also has some scenes in Germany. It follows these characters in funny animal cartoon style. It also includes further recollections from the archives of my alias, Doctor Comics. These refer to his visits to Japan and research of manga, his favorite form of comics.

Dirty laundry hung out to dry, ink painting-© 2015 Michael Hill
Dirty laundry hung out to dry, ink painting-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.
A seasick cat at sea, ink sketch-© 2015 Michael Hill
A seasick cat all at sea, ink sketch-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.

The characters Barks and Busch travel from Germany to Japan by sea, arriving in Tokyo Bay. Their passage by sea is cheaper than flight buts not without some difficulty and discomfort in cramped quarters below deck.

Choreographing a cosplay routine, pencil sketch-© 2014 Michael Hill
Choreographing a cosplay routine, pencil sketch-©2014 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.
Cosplay costume design, ink and pencil sketch-© 2013 Michael Hill
Cosplay costume design, ink and pencil sketch-©2013 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.

Disembarkation in Tokyo leads to some fun and frolicking and access to a wider range of food. They visit a manga fair and then go to Kitchen Town where they eat cake.

A Munchianesque Halloween cake design in Kappabashi, Tokyo, photo-© 2009 Michael Hill
A Munchianesque Halloween cake design dramatically displayed in Kappabashi, Tokyo, photo-©2009 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.
Barks and Busch are on their way to Tokyo Bay-© 2015 Michael Hill

Barks and Busch are on their way to Tokyo Bay-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.

The view at sea, print-© 2015 Dr.Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics

The view at sea, print-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.

Printmaking has been employed in the design with techniques including woodblock, linocut, rubber, bakelite and wooden stamps. There is also drawing, collage, calligraphy and handwriting plus more cartooning. The intention is to produce a comic in an artist book type format…and to have it ready for self-publication around the end of this year.

Japan, fish island, collage-© 2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics

Japan, fish island, collage-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.

And home of Otafuku, ink painting-© 2015 Michael Hill

And home of Otafuku, ink painting-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.

UPDATE: 2 November 2015

This is the third report documenting production of the fifth and concluding chapter of my artist book/comic Blotting Paper: The Recollected Graphical Impressions Of Doctor Comics. Production of the new issue 2 Tickets to Tokyo Bay is continuing with images currently being created along with some previously made works recorded during my travels in Japan and Germany. The script has first been developed in word form and accompanied by some conceptual colour coding. This was followed by a second draft consisting of roughly sketched visuals of the script with coloured pencils and associated descriptive comments or dialogue. There are examples of both of these development stages, below.

Developing a first draft script design-© 2015 Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics

Developing a first draft script design-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics

Visual roughing out of the script-© 2015 Michael Hill

Visual roughing out of the script-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics

One scene in the script is a graphical recollection of my Doctor Comics alias. It reveals the design of one of his logo stamps/seals or chops that was roughed out on a paper napkin in a Sydney restaurant with guidance from a member of the Japanese Consulate. Here is a scan of that design development along with attachments including a photo and a Japanese photo booth print sticker.

Developing a seal design, collage-© 2008 Michael Hill

Development of my seal design-©2008 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.

Another sequence involves Japanese sea monsters.

Seeing strange things at sea, ink and pencil sketch-© 2008 Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.

Seeing strange things at sea, ink and pencil sketch-©2008 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.

Possible print for the cover-© 2009 Michael Hill.

Possible print design for the cover-©2009 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics.

(All text, photos and artwork-©2015 Dr. Michael Hill a.k.a. Doctor Comics).