Zombiehamster.com

because the hamster knows.

Archive for the ‘Comics’ Category

Creator of the sublime Acme Novelty Library, Chris Ware was recently commissioned to submit a cover for Fortune Magazine’s 500 issue. This is an economic magazine which annualy publishes it’s listings of the 500 wealthiest and most influential businesses and individuals.

Chris Ware may not have been the most sensible person to ask for this. Not only is he an insanely talented artist, but has a wry and cutting sense of humour that plays things very close to the bone. Needless to say his eventual submission is everything that someone who is even remotely familiar with his work would have expected. Unfortunately, this didn’t include the editors at Fortune magazine, who sought out something a little less topical.

In a perfect world, this would have been used.

It should really be studied up close!

Click HERE For the FULL SIZE Version.

(You Can Open It In A New Window To See The MAGNIFICENT Detail Involved)

Scroobius Pip ‘Poetry In (e)motion’

Posted by zombiehamster On March - 4 - 2010

Above is the cover of Scroobius Pip’s new collection of illustrated poems, entitled ‘Poetry In (e)motion’. It is released in a week or so by Titan books and you should most definitely all buy yourselves a copy.

It features work by yours truly.

Yes, I can finally announce that I was selected alongside several other artists to have my work represent the words of Mr Pip.

This is a massive honour and I am greatly excited about it all (I haven’t seen the finished product yet!). Many, many thanks to Scroob for deeming my doodles appropriate and worthy enough to include in this collection.

You can pre order the book HERE.

I can’t wait to read the  introduction by Nick Frost as well. ^_^

Zombiehamster Vs ‘Bear’ (Guest Strip)

Posted by zombiehamster On February - 22 - 2010

So, I did this little tribute to Jamie Smart’s ‘Bear’ comic recently and lo and behold, it got posted the other day on none other than BEARFOO.COM !

It was an idea that Mr Simon Stone and I had been working on for a while and it’s really cool to see it up alongside all the proper ‘Bear‘ art.

Many thanks to Jamie Smart for being kind enough to post these demented scribblings and significantly diminishing his stock value in the process. This was a pretty big deal for me. I will always remember sitting on the long cross country bus trip that I took the first time I picked up a copy of ‘Bear’ I re-read that little bugger many times and thus a love affair was born. Ok, so maybe that’s not the most interesting of stories, but what do you want from me, eh? I suppose you don’t ‘read’ a comic for the first time, you ‘ingest’ it or ‘absorb’ it or some such nonsense.

Do you know what? I’m sorry I said anything now. That’ll show me for trying to share a seemingly significant moment of my life with the internet…..

Sod off, go on, just sod off with you. >_<

A Rabbit Walks Into A Bar….

Posted by zombiehamster On February - 5 - 2010

I saw a rabbit yesterday morning and thought of this. ^_^

I am not going to begin this by stating how much I love Calvin & Hobbes. We all love Calvin & Hobbes. If you don’t love Calvin & Hobbes, there is something fundamentally wrong with your brain, possibly a massive tumour, which, in all probability is caused from having no soul.

Spotted on Cleveland.com, this delightful little insight is a rare and splendid stroll into the mind which created one of the most iconic and beautiful comic strips of al time.

With almost 15 years of separation and reflection, what do you think it was about “Calvin and Hobbes” that went beyond just capturing readers’ attention, but their hearts as well?

The only part I understand is what went into the creation of the strip. What readers take away from it is up to them. Once the strip is published, readers bring their own experiences to it, and the work takes on a life of its own. Everyone responds differently to different parts.

I just tried to write honestly, and I tried to make this little world fun to look at, so people would take the time to read it. That was the full extent of my concern. You mix a bunch of ingredients, and once in a great while, chemistry happens. I can’t explain why the strip caught on the way it did, and I don’t think I could ever duplicate it. A lot of things have to go right all at once.

What are your thoughts about the legacy of your strip?

Well, it’s not a subject that keeps me up at night. Readers will always decide if the work is meaningful and relevant to them, and I can live with whatever conclusion they come to. Again, my part in all this largely ended as the ink dried.

Readers became friends with your characters, so understandably, they grieved — and are still grieving — when the strip ended. What would you like to tell them?

This isn’t as hard to understand as people try to make it. By the end of 10 years, I’d said pretty much everything I had come there to say.

It’s always better to leave the party early. If I had rolled along with the strip’s popularity and repeated myself for another five, 10 or 20 years, the people now “grieving” for “Calvin and Hobbes” would be wishing me dead and cursing newspapers for running tedious, ancient strips like mine instead of acquiring fresher, livelier talent. And I’d be agreeing with them.

I think some of the reason “Calvin and Hobbes” still finds an audience today is because I chose not to run the wheels off it.

I’ve never regretted stopping when I did.

Because your work touched so many people, fans feel a connection to you, like they know you. They want more of your work, more Calvin, another strip, anything. It really is a sort of rock star/fan relationship. Because of your aversion to attention, how do you deal with that even today? And how do you deal with knowing that it’s going to follow you for the rest of your days?

Ah, the life of a newspaper cartoonist — how I miss the groupies, drugs and trashed hotel rooms!

But since my “rock star” days, the public attention has faded a lot. In Pop Culture Time, the 1990s were eons ago. There are occasional flare-ups of weirdness, but mostly I just go about my quiet life and do my best to ignore the rest. I’m proud of the strip, enormously grateful for its success, and truly flattered that people still read it, but I wrote “Calvin and Hobbes” in my 30s, and I’m many miles from there.

An artwork can stay frozen in time, but I stumble through the years like everyone else. I think the deeper fans understand that, and are willing to give me some room to go on with my life.

How soon after the U.S. Postal Service issues the Calvin stamp will you send a letter with one on the envelope?

Immediately. I’m going to get in my horse and buggy and snail-mail a check for my newspaper subscription.

How do you want people to remember that 6-year-old and his tiger?

I vote for “Calvin and Hobbes, Eighth Wonder of the World.”

Interview by Plain Dealer reporter John Campanelli

The Fantastic Animation of Jessica Borutski

Posted by zombiehamster On January - 20 - 2010

That absolutely delightful video that you see abouve was created by Jessica Borutski. I first saw her work mentioned on John K‘s excellent blog which you can read/follow HERE

Jessica is currently working on an upcoming Bunny Movie, which judging by the previews on her website, should be amazing!

You can visit Jessica’s site here, or her twitter here.

I for one can’t wait to see the finished product!I love seeing animators and cartoonists who work in a very traditional 40′s / 50′s style but add their own distinctive spin on it.

This post is for Sara ‘Panda Girl’ Lousie, who is still sick in hospital. Get well soon and come home kid. ^_^

Sketchbook Time!

Posted by zombiehamster On December - 17 - 2009

I really enjoy looking at other people’s sketchbooks, it can often allow for a really honest insight into someone’s work. I think I just like looking at unfinished pictures sometimes too. I’m working on Mugwump at the moment and am flying through sketchbooks like there’s no tomorrow, so I thought I would post a few drawings from them now and then, finished or not.

None of this is directly related to the upcoming Mugwump comic. These are just doodles. ^_^

Crowd

Snork

Teach

Ham

New

Welcome Back Bear!

Posted by zombiehamster On December - 1 - 2009

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Zombiehamster favourite and SLG Pin Up of the year Jamie Smart announced the arrival of Bearfoo.com today, a website that will showcase ALL of the Bear comics to date and will feature exclusive new Bear strips. It’s been a long time coming,and I am certain that I am not alone in my excitement at this news.

I got so excited in fact, I spent the afternoon drawing this, instead of doing college work like I was supposed to. This is the magical power of Bear.

Go to Bearfoo.com now and realise what you’ve been missing, or simply catch up on some old favourites.

For a zombiehamster interview with the delightful Jamie Smart, click HERE

My New Beloved Budget Studio.

Posted by zombiehamster On December - 1 - 2009

Things have been slightly quieter around these parts as of late and I feel I may owe somewhat of an explanation. It’s a simple one really, I haven’t been here. ‘Here’ being by the pc. At some point towards the end of the summer, I had become increasingly frustrated with the lack of space in my apartment. It was impractical and nigh on impossible to work in, due to size and logistical restrictions. This was happening at the same time as a mass of ideas and potential projects that I wanted to get underway and so a solution had to be found.

A brainwave came to me when visiting a nearby friend who had a rather spacious garage / annex thing, which in my eyes, suddenly transformed into a thing of great beauty and possibility. The acquisition of the space was an epic battle of wits, with two minds meeting over such weighty conversation as:

You know your garage? Mind if I clear it out and turn it into a studio?’

Nah, work away.’

SEE! See the passion, and love that went into the very foundations of this adventure?

As if by some miraculous feat of circumstance, that very day I was returning home when we saw a nice dog in a van. We went over to say hello to the dog who was excitedly hanging out a gap in the window, when a gruff voice summoned our attention from a neighbour’s doorway.

Do y’want a couch lads?’

Thinking it to be some form of dubious sales pitch, we were cautious, but inquisitive enough to show that we weren’t entirely disinterested. It developed through conversation that there were two almost perfect leather couches being given away by our wasteful, affluent neighbours. It would ease the workmen’s load if we took them and we get two salubrious leather sofas into the bargain as well. An all round win. Strange, how even one day earlier, and I would have instantly declined such an offer.

With the couches now stored (for three days in my hallway, completely blocking access to the front door and ensuring that a Krypton Factor style assault course be completed to pass through the tiny hallway) and the agreement made, the clearing began. It took almost a week to get it looking like this:

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It resembled nothing more than the bleak set of a particularly unpleasant grumble flick.

This was closer to what I needed, but still quite far removed from what I had envisioned in my head.

Weeks went by as bits and pieces emerged. Forgotten shelving units were resurrected from attics. Unused carpets donated and unwanted cabinets happily handed over.  An old TV and video were rediscovered.

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I love having movies on in the background while I work at things. Maybe I never bought into the falsity that you have to listen to music every spare minute of the day to qualify as a music ‘lover’, sometimes a series or a good movie will keep you listening just as intently. To satisfy any musical desires I may have, an old record player / cassette deck combo that I bought for a fiver years ago at a car boot sale has been coming in very useful indeed.

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Not being financially stable enough to invest much in the actual allocation of essentials for the studio, the next stage took about 6 weeks. I slowly bought materials with bits of cash I had put by and over those weeks, the work started to materialise as well.

For a very long time, I was using the massive board on my lap as a drawing table, which was leading to all sorts of new and exciting pains. Luckily, my dad had found a home made drawing table frame in an old shed and we attached it to a 20 quid B&Q table (seemingly made out of sugar paper and hope) and secured the back of it so that it would remain steady.

Now there is a professional style drawing table, something I have always wanted but never thought I’d be able to afford. Then when I was given a typewriter, I knew I was finally equipped.

This is where I’ve been. I am there most days for, well, most of the day. There are bits that you can’t see, like the expanding VHS collection (which will explode once I bring my stored boxes from home up soon) and the Street Fighter machine is out of shot because it’s being worked on at the moment and I don’t want to show her incomplete, naked as it were.

The first thing that will be completed is ‘Mugwump’ an upcoming independent comic which I am writing, drawing, lettering, shading and publishing myself. This will appear sometime in early 2010 and is something I am very proud, excited and anxious to share with you all.

I am still writing a great deal but in a very unpressured, natural kind of way (sorry if that sounds a bit pretentious), I was putting myself under too much pressure before and it didn’t result in good things. I am enjoying what I currently write and I think that when the time is appropriate, you will too.

There is half a novel that glares at me from its folder every day; I don’t think it’ll let me get away with not finishing it. The stack of short stories continually grows and soon will also be demanding I do something with them. Until then, I’m happy to work on them until they are of a standard that I would feel comfortable inflicting upon the public.

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So, welcome to my world, this is my studio. She may not be the flashiest in the world, but she was restored and put together with love, time and care. With my Super Ser gas heater and a small fort of videos for company, here I will remain for the duration for the winter.

The website will continue, obviously, and will be used to showcase goings on, rustlings and strange sightings.

Here’s to better things.

Better times.

And better work.

Let’s do this.

x ZH x

Guest Art For The Hopeless Vendetta

Posted by zombiehamster On November - 29 - 2009

‘It is no secret that I have always had great interest in Hopeless. To be asked to contribute an image for the weekly ‘Vendetta’ was obviously very exciting, but I had a lot to live up to. I have previously stated in articles and interviews the extent of my admiration for the work of Tom and Bryn, so to add something to their little world was not a prospect I took lightly.

Still, I think that the final image is inkeeping with the sensibilities of the Hopeless residents, and should I have upset anyone with the portrayal of their homestead, I am certain that the issue will be raised at the next town meeting. Until then, I’ll be looking over my shoulder on the dark walks home.

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Originally A3 Size. Brushes, Inks and Teeny Tiny Pens were all used.