Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Library Week 2009: Please continue my comic…

Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009


As part of this year’s Library Week celebrations, I was asked to come up with the first four panels of a brand new comic. Now we’re inviting YOU to continue the story. There are prizes to be won…

* The competition runs for 4 weeks, from Monday 20th July and will close on Friday 14th August.
* Each week you can read the frames already published on the site, decide what you think should happen next and illustrate the next 4 frames
* Upload your images to the Library Week website.
* A winner will be chosen weekly and their strip will be made a permanent part of the story.
* There are two age categories for this competition, 13 – 18 yrs and 19 yrs +.

Find out more here.

‘The Journey’ – a new comic by me for Waitakere City

Monday, July 13th, 2009

The JourneyHere’s one of the reasons I’ve been busy lately – a 16-page comic by me, commissioned by Waitakere City Council. ‘The Journey‘ gives a little history of the city, including how it became New Zealand’s first eco city. Waitakere have made the comic available for download from here.

I spent much of my childhood in Waitakere and have been impressed by its evolution into a genuinely environmentally-concerned eco city. It’s a damn shame that the government seems hell-bent on making Waitakere disappear into its planned ‘super city‘ – and I can only hope all the hard work on eco-friendly development doesn’t disappear along with the city’s name and identity.

Update: I’ve just noticed the pdf is in printing order, rather than reading order. It’s possible we’ll get that fixed; in the meantime, you’ll just have to look for the page numbers… 🙂
Update 2: Actually, it’s only the larger pdf (of the whole comic) that’s in printing order. If you download it in sections (using the smaller files), those are in the correct reading order.

Hicksville new edition: cover

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Hicksville new cover
Here’s the cover for the new edition of Hicksville, which is due in 2010 from Drawn & Quarterly.

The new edition has been redesigned (I’ve rescanned the artwork, given the pages a wider margin, and am redoing the ‘look’ of the whole package) and will also include a 12-page introduction (in comics form) by me.

Of course, I’ll keep you all informed as it gets closer to the publication date.

I’m in Hastings for Youth Week: ‘What’s the Story?’

Monday, May 18th, 2009

whatsthestoryposter

I’m going to be giving some talks and workshops in Hastings next week, as part of their Youth Week storytelling festival:

What’s the Story?
Oral, visual and written story-telling

Youth Week 25 – 29 May 2009

“Storytelling is a common form of communication that people engage in, using different channels, nearly every day. It is sharing a tale of experiences, either real or imaginary” – Marsh Cassidy

I’m doing three public sessions:

Writers Q & A
– An interactive writers and illustrators Talk with Anna Mackenzie and Dylan Horrocks

Wednesday 27 May
Flaxmere Library – 10.00am
Havelock North Library – 1.30pm

Thursday 28 May
Hastings Central Library – 10.00am

Award winning Young Adult novelist Anna Mackenzie talks about what led her to writing fiction. Currently writing for a young adult audience, Mackenzie says she remains fascinated by the intensity and challenges of the teenage years.

Comics, graphic novels and manga are increasingly popular all over the world. Cartoonist Dylan Horrocks, whose work has been published in books and magazines around the world, introduces this incredibly diverse and expanding medium, and invites you to give comics a try.

Contact: Carla Crosbie 8715180 carlac@hdc.govt.nz (Hastings Library)

Sue Pike suep@hdc.govt.nz (Flaxmere and Havelock North Libraries)

Other events include an interactive story blog, sessions on Ta Moko (tattooing) and oral storytelling, and a workshop and discussion about the rise and rise of TXT language. So if you’re in the area, come along!

Sorry for the pause…

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

A quick apology for not posting any new pages for a little while; I’ve been horribly busy, between kids’ school holidays, some freelance stuff, and working on the Hicksville new edition – among other things. I’ll try real hard to get some new stuff up soon!

Exhibition in Auckland

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Comic Art at Bath Street GalleryThe Bath Street Gallery in Parnell, Auckland, is holding an exhibition of comics art from 8-25 April. I’ve got a few pages in there, as have Tim Bollinger, Darren and Kelly Sheehan and the great Barry Linton. There is also work by comics-influenced artists Mark Braunias, Dick Frizzell, Robert McLeod and Denys Watkins.

I’ll be at the opening on Wednesday 8 April, 5.30-7.30pm, so come along and say hello.

Calling all Auckland comics people!

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

Public speaking...
On the first Friday of every month, Auckland cartoonists and fellow travellers are invited to a gathering at the Auckland Public Library (upstairs at the Central branch, on Lorne Street), at 6-8pm. It’s mostly pretty informal and sociable, but this month I’m going to give a little talk (probably about my recent work, webcomics, and general interweb-related matters).

All welcome!

Floating Worlds

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

Floating WorldsOut this month from Victoria University Press:

Floating Worlds: Essays on Contemporary NZ Fiction
Anna Jackson & Jane Stafford (eds)

The ground-breaking New Zealand fiction of the last fifteen years has not attracted critical commentary beyond initial reviews, despite its success with readers both local and international, and despite its attracting major awards both local and international. Floating Worlds contains stimulating and insightful essays on eight of the best novels of recent years.

These are novels in which there is no longer one authoritative way to tell a story. In contrast to Allen Curnow’s stricture that New Zealand writers should conform to ‘the disciplines of an uncompromising fidelity to experience, of an unqualified responsibility to the truths of themselves, in this place and that time’, these novels invite us into what Paula Morris calls ‘a floating world’, where identities are negotiable and performative.

Floating Worlds illuminates the distinctive ways in which contemporary New Zealand writing approaches the relationship between the real and the imaginary, and the different kinds of challenging, edgy authenticities that operate in the space between them: the familiar and the foreign; the copy and the original; the fake and the genuine; the intention and the act, including the act of writing.

Nicholas Wright on The Miserables by Damien Wilkins
Kirstine Moffat on In a Fishbone Church by Catherine Chidgey
Jane Stafford on The Vintner’s Luck by Elizabeth Knox
Hamish Clayton & Mark Williams on Hicksville by Dylan Horrocks
Lydia Wevers on Slow Water by Annamarie Jagose
Anna Jackson on The Time of the Giants by Anne Kennedy
Erin Mercer on Hibiscus Coast by Paula Morris
Jennifer Lawn on Mister Pip by Lloyd Jones

Western Park: Timothy Kidd’s comics online!

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

Western ParkBest news I’ve had in ages: Timothy Kidd (one of my all-time favouritest cartoonists ever) has been quietly putting new comics work online. Do yourself a favour and go look. If you’re familiar with Tim’s work, you’ve probably already stopped reading this and are happily over at Western Park devouring the beautiful drawings and quietly brilliant stories. If not, trust me; you’re in for quite a treat.

You can buy some of Tim’s minicomics over at the Comic Book Factory.

I Wish I am Fish

Sunday, March 22nd, 2009

I wish I am fish

Yesterday, I had one of the strangest experiences I’ve had in a while. I was recently asked by a friend at Auckland Art Gallery if I would do an illustration for the invitation to a one day sculpture event they were arranging. The work was called ‘I wish I am fish,’ and I was given just enough information about it to produce the picture above.

As this was part of the One Day Sculpture series, I was also asked if I would produce a “writer’s response” to the work, which will later be collected in a book of responses to the whole series. Curious, I agreed.

So yesterday afternoon, along with about 100 other people, I was allowed into a hangar at Auckland Airport, where a private Whisper jet was waiting, having just arrived from Sydney. On board there were 87 seats, and on each seat was a round glass fishbowl, and in each fishbowl a single comet goldfish was swimming. We were allowed onto the plane in small groups to visit the fish. Inside it was dimly lit, quiet, and peaceful. Walking down the aisle, past rows and rows of individual fish was way more bizarre and surreal than I had expected.

I went on board twice, the second time alone – escaping the noisy art crowd who were sipping their glasses of wine and catching up on gossip – and had the extraordinary feeling I was creeping into someone else’s dreams.

After a little over an hour, the plane was wheeled out to the runway, the crowd was ushered out of the hangar, and the fish took off once more into the bright blue sky.

The artist responsible for all this is Paola Pivi, an Italian now living in Alaska, whose previous work has involved alligators, a donkey, butterflies, a leopard, and dozens of white animals of all sorts. She’s giving a talk at Auckland Art Gallery this Tuesday 24th March at 5pm.

Here’s a few of the sketches I did in the hangar:

And this is a sketch of the screening later that night on a wall in Freyberg Place:

freyberg screening