Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Wrecking Ball

Monday, August 9th, 2010

As I was digging through my filing cabinet looking for stuff for my retrospective of DUCKWORK, I found this page from an old school catalog showing what once was the Philadelphia College of Art. The blue border shows the boundaries of the old campus. The shot was taken from the Southwest aiming towards the Northeast.

In this picture which I have doctored the red area indicates a large section of the city that is no more. Anderson Hall at Broad and Spruce that held the classrooms has reverted to an office building. The school still owns the building at Broad and Pine, but the spot next to it, Arco Park, the stores, apartment building, The Swamp, The Bellrich Hotel, Corson’s Pharmacy – all gone!

This shot is almost the opposite angle of the catalog photo. This is from the East pointing West. In the background, you can see the fabulous Drake Hotel. The thing that looks like a 45 record changer or part of the spaceship from Silent Running is the Kimmel Center. It’s a massive music hall and performance center that has eaten up the red area in my doctored photograph.

Here’s another view looking South on Broad Street. The building on the right is where PCA held the majority of its classes. It is once again an office building with dueling steak houses on the ground floor, strangely enough. The windows with the green awnings is one steakhouse and the other has the red awnings. Weird.

Girl Talk

Friday, July 30th, 2010

Girl Talk

Monkey & Bird by Joe Williams and Tina Garceau continues at CO2 Comics! Read the strip here!

Happy Birthday, Captain Visual!

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

Last night we had the pleasure of celebrating author, artist, publisher and balloon sculptor extraordinaire Gerry Giovinco’s birthday! This was the big one5-Ooooh!

It was also a reunion of sorts in that I got to see people I haven’t seen in the flesh for a couple of decades. Oh, I’ve written, emailed and phoned folks, but there has never been an opportunity to gather PCA alumni, Duckwork contributors, CO2 Comics contributors, old friends and allies all in one place. It was a great time!

50th Birthday Crown

Tina took the opportunity to create a crown for Gerry’s half century which he proudly wore during the festivities.

After presents and cake, Gerry dazzled us with a display of dexterity as he created wonders out of thin latex and thinner air. His nimble fingers formed fantastic hats, creatures and characters in a flash. I knew that Gerry did this as Captain Visual, but this was the first time I’ve witnessed his mad balloon sculpting skills, and I was floored! I particularly like the mermaid he crafted out of three balloons and some deft gestures. Incredible! I guess there is a reason that the guy has written books on the subject!

Gerry crafted this incredible hat for our son Lloyd. Sadly, it did not survive the trip home, but that’s the nature of balloon beasts.

Having looked through Gerry’s books, hats and mermaids are only the tip of the iceberg! There’s a lot more where that came from!

This also marks another anniversary.

CO2 Comics, brain child of the Birthday Boy and Bill Cucinotta, is a year old. Traffic to the site continues to grow and grow. With new additions almost every day and a library of colossal content, CO2 Comics is the hottest place for comics on the internet!


Happy Fathers Day

Sunday, June 20th, 2010

Dad in 1996

The late, great Charles “Chick” Williams fixing something as usual in 1996. Superman had blue tights and red cape, but Dad always wore khaki chinos. He purchased several pairs used from an industrial uniform rental company that had an outlet store where they would sell shirts and pants for as little as 50¢. Dad could never resist a bargain.

Although he was one of the most sentimental guys I’ve ever known – he always would get choked up at Christenings, weddings and the occasional Kodak commercial – he was also one of the most logical and had a steel-trap memory for all things tool related and or mechanical. Part of that was due to his over three decades working at the Frankford Arsenal. I thought he could fix anything, and if he didn’t know how to at first, he would work it out with his remarkably logical mind. He was our Google long before there was a google. An all knowing oracle who always had an answer from how to tear apart a transmission to how to remove a splinter from a screaming child’s foot.

He was warm, loving, ridiculously charming and hysterically funny. I only miss him every day!

Dad on Deck

Dad during WWII

Happy Fathers Day, Dad!

The Handy Men

Sincerest Form of Flattery?

Friday, June 4th, 2010

My wife, Tina Garceau, shot this self portrait of herself back when she was attending the Philadelphia College of Art (Now the University of the Arts) back in the early 1980s.

Hanged

She used to have outrageously long hair which she tacked to the wall for the sake of the photograph. Arty, ain’t it?

I rediscovered the photo as part of a contact sheet and thought it was a fun picture so I blew it up on the scanner and posted it to my Flickr account a couple of years ago.

The fun thing about Flickr is that its a searchable database of pictures. I’ve found great photos and have made friends in the exchange of comments on Flickr’s pages. People can bookmark photos as favorites. It’s really flattering when somebody does, and I was flattered when somebody going by the name nasha lina marked it as a favorite. Today I noticed that this photographer shot a photo similar to Tina’s Hanged. Take a look.

So what did you think?

I thought it was neat that the photo was imitated so I posted a comment with a link back to Tina’s photo. My comment with the link was deleted. At first, as I said, I was flattered, but I got miffed when the comment was deleted. It was no big deal. The only similarities were black and white photography and a tacked up ponytail (although Tina’s photo is a better composition.) So why delete the comment with the link?

Here’s Tina’s photo with some photoshop meddling:

Variation or Ms Caligari's New Doo

SYLG – Over 1,000,000 Served!

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Our friend and link pimping daddy, Wyatt Earp,  is celebrating a milestone -  ONE MILLION HITS on his website, Support Your Local Gunfighter.  His compulsive blogging and diligent responses to his commenters are pretty darn funny and have rightfully built a faithful band of followers. He’s been good to us, our site, and our comic. Our hats off to him on this auspicious occasion!

Of course, we hope he doesn’t fall into postpartum-like depression after his odometer flips over. Where do you go after a million hits? Now I’m starting to get sad thinking about it. Maybe I should call him to see if he’s all right.

In honor of this momentous occasion, Tina created the above collage illustration using a combination of Photoshop and Illustrator.

Congratulations Wyatt!

Bella Notte

Friday, February 19th, 2010

MB-014-promo

After tripping the light fantastic, Mickey & Sylvia have worked up an appetite and find a place to tie on a feed-bag…or do they? CO2 Comics presents the latest adventure of Monkey & Bird!
Check it out HERE!

Hardware Lady

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

hardware-art2-jw

Digital collage illustration by Tina Garceau.

Boogie Wonderland!

Friday, February 5th, 2010

M&B-dance

Monkey & Bird shake a tail feather in a new installment of Monkey & Bird today at CO2 Comics!

In order to enhance your enjoyment of the strip, may I suggest that you head on over to Amazon and download the MP3 of Boogie Wonderland by Earth, Wind and Fire (featuring the Emotions.) It’s the song I listened to as I was working on the strip. Yes, the obvious thing would have been to go with a selection from the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack, but nothing did it for me like Boogie Wonderland.

As a special bonus, here’s one of the sketches from today’s installment:

dance-sketch

Christmas 2002

Tuesday, December 22nd, 2009

Xmas-2002