Category Archives: News

This Sat. 4/26 – Illustration Faculty Robert Sikoryak hosts CAROUSEL: Cartoon slide shows and other projected pictures

Saturday, April 26, 2014    12:00 – 12:45 PM
The New School, Theresa Lang Center
55 West 13th Street, 2nd floor

RE/Mixed Media Festival presents: CAROUSEL Cartoon slide shows and other projected pictures 

Drawn and performed by:
Jason Little
(Shutterbug Follies, Motel Art Improvement Service)
Lauren R. Weinstein
 (Girl Stories, The Goddess of War)
Kriota Willberg 
(Pictorial Anatomy of the Cute, (NO) PAIN!)
and host R. Sikoryak
(Masterpiece Comics)

DISCOUNT CODE for HALF PRICE passes to all RE/Mix events:
http://remixnyc.eventbee.com/event?eventid=186011033&code=ARTFAN
The code is: ARTFAN. Apply the discount by registering at:  www.remixnyc.com/2014/register and then typing in the code into the promo code box.
The code gives you a 50% discount off any festival pass except for student tickets and VIP w/ Hotel pass.
The RE/Mixed Media Festival is a celebration of collaborative art-making and creative appropriation. It’s the artists’ contribution to the ongoing conversation about remixing, mashups, copyright law, fair use, and the freedom of artists to access their culture in order to add to and build upon it. RE/Mixed Media Festival IV will be held on April 26-27, 2014 at The New School, in cooperation with the School of Media Studies, and Parsons The New School for Design; and at CultureHub, in NYC’s East Village.

Other RE/Mixed events all day, Saturday & Sunday.  The Festival schedule is posted on line at http://remixnyc.com/2014/schedule/

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R. Sikoryak‘s cartoons and illustrations have appeared in The New Yorker, Nickelodeon Magazine, Drawn and Quarterly, Raw, Fortune, Esquire, GQ, among many other publications, and on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. He is the author of the graphic novel Masterpiece Comics (Drawn and Quarterly), and the co-author, with Michael Smith, of The Seduction of Mike (Fantagraphics), a comic book funded by the NEA. He was awarded an Artist’s Fellowship from The New York Foundation for the Arts for his comics adaptations of classic literature. He is in the Speakers Program of the New York Council of the Humanities. In his spare time, he creates performances, slide shows, and animation for downtown theater and independent films. Since 1997, he has presented his cartoon slide show series, “Carousel,” around the U.S. and Canada. He teaches in the Illustration program at Parsons The New School For Design.

Faculty Nora Krug selected for a Sendak Fellowship

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Parsons Faculty Nora Krug was selected for a Sendak Fellowship, a 5-week residency that Maurice Sendak (author of ‘Where the Wild Things Are’) initiated when he was still alive a few years ago, and that continues to be awarded to a small group of visual narrative artists through anonymous nomination annually. The residency will take place on his estate in upstate NY during the summer.

 

SENDAK FELLOWSHIP ANNOUNCES 2014 SENDAK FELLOWS

PRESS RELEASE

 MARCH 20 2014

The Sendak Fellowship nominating and judging committee is happy to announce the 2014 Sendak Fellows: Nora Krug and Harry Bliss. You’ll find their full bios below.

The Sendak Fellowship was established in 2010 as a residency program for artists who tell stories with illustration. The Fellowship offers the time for artist to explore their craft outside the limitations of everyday life and in the relative isolation of a rural setting.

Between 2010 and 2013, the Sendak Fellowship was run at a house on Maurice Sendak’s property in Ridgefield, Connecticut. There, four resident artists received instruction and support from Mr. Sendak as well as from visiting artists of note.

This summer the fellowship is moving to Scotch Hill Farm, formerly owned by Mr. Sendak, in upstate Cambridge, New York. Two fellows will be provided their own fully equipped cottage with kitchen and studio space and receive a fellow’s stipend. At the same time, the two resident fellows will receive occasional inspiration from visiting artists in the field.

Maurice Sendak bought the 150-acre Scotch Hill Farm in the 1990’s, where he planned to run workshops for the Night Kitchen National Children’s Theatre. He was drawn to the area because of its beauty and proximity to the nearby Monks of New Skete (from whom he bought his German Shepherd, Runge). Long-time Sendak companion and assistant, Lynn Caponera, now owns the farm where she grows food for donation to local food banks and pantries. The farm is located in Washington County, New York, thirty minutes from both Saratoga Springs, New York, and Manchester, Vermont.

For many years Sendak wanted to create a formal program for what he’d been doing informally his whole career: helping promising illustrators As a young beginning illustrator himself, Sendak was nurtured in the Connecticut home of the artists Ruth Krauss and Crockett Johnson. He saw the Sendak Fellowship as his “school”—a way to help others, and in 2009 enlisted the help of Caponera, as well as photographer and community activist, Dona Ann McAdams (now the fellowship’s director) to help realize his vision.

The goal of the Sendak Fellowship, in Maurice’s words, was for fellows to “create work that is not vapid, stupid, or sexy, but original. Work that excites and incites. Illustration is like dance; it should move like—and to—music.”

Former Sendak Fellows include: 2010: Antoinette Portis, Aaron Renier, Paul Schmid, Robert Weinstock.  2011: Ali Bahrampour, Frann Preston-Gannon, Sergio Ruzzier, Denise Ann Saldutti Egielski. 2012: Gerardo Blumenkrantz, Tor Freeman, Alice Lickens. 2013: Jessica Ahlberg. Ian Andrew, Marc Rosenthal, Sara Varon.

 

The 2014 Sendak Fellows:

Nora Krug is a writer and artist whose drawings and visual narratives have appeared in publications including The New York Times, The Guardian, le Monde Diplomatique and A Public Space, and in anthologies published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and Chronicle Books. She is the creator of the graphic novel,Red Riding Hood Redux, and of Shadow Atlas, an encyclopedia of ghosts and spirits, and the illustrator of the children’s book, My Cold Went On Vacation, published by Penguin/Putnam. Krug is a recipient of fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, Fulbright, DAAD, and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation. Her work is included in the Library of Congress and has been recognized by American Illustration. It received three gold medals from the Society of Illustrators and was awarded with merits and a silver cube by the Art Directors Club. Krug’s story, Kamikaze, about a surviving Japanese WWII pilot, was included in Houghton Mifflin’s Best American Comics and Best Non-Required Reading. Krug’s work has been exhibited internationally, and her animated guide to Japanese business etiquette, How To Bow, was shown at the Sundance Film Festival. She is an associate professor in the Illustration Program at Parsons The New School for Design in New York City.

Harry Bliss is an internationally syndicated cartoonist and cover artist for The New Yorker magazine. His self-titled single panel gag cartoon, ‘BLISS’ appears in major newspapers across the United States and Japan. Growing up in upstate New York amidst a family of successful painters and illustrators, Bliss went on to study painting at The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Illustration at The University of the Arts (BFA) and Syracuse University (MA). Bliss also illustrates books for children. Bliss’s first children’s book, A Fine, Fine School by Newbery-award-winning author, Sharon Creech, was a New York Times bestseller. Bliss went on to illustrate Which Would You Rather Be? by William Steig, Countdown To Kindergarten and Mrs. Watson Wants Your Teethboth by Alison McGhee. Bliss has also created the pictures for Diary of a WormDiary of a Spider, and Diary of a Fly by Doreen Cronin, all New York Times bestsellers. Other bestsellers include Don’t Forget To Come Back by Robie H. Harris and A Very Brave Witch by Alison McGhee and Louise: The Adventure of a Chicken by Kate DiCamillo.
Bliss’s first cartoon collection, Death By Laughter, with an introduction by Christopher Guest was published by Abrams in the Spring of 2008. Luke On the Loose, Bliss’ debut award-winning comic book for early readers (edited by Francoise Mouly) was published by Toon Books in the Spring 2009. Recentlly published by Harper Collins is Invisible Inkling by Emily Jenkins with pictures by Harry Bliss. Bailey (A Parent’s Magazine award-winner) was published by Scholastic in September 2011 followed by Bailey at the Museum 2012.Bliss’s next picture book, Anna and Solomon by Elaine Dillof will be published by Farrar Straus and Giroux in September 2013. Harry Bliss lives in Vermont.

EVENT: Exploring Comics through Moebius

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Hi Everyone!
Join us this week as we talk about one of the legends in comics, Moebius! Our wery own DT student Ricardo Vega will be giving a talk on this amazing artist. Come and hang out and learn a few things! *Please note the time change for this week
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Friday 3/21 D12 @6pm
6 east 16th St. 12th floor
Check out the Event Link Here!
​Hope to see you there!
​Best,​

Event! – Comic Book Art History with Arlen Schumer

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This Friday!
Join us for more Comic Book History with Arlen Schumer!
Schumer has written the award winning book “The Silver Age of Comic Book Art”  which highlights the careers of various hall of fame artists who drew definitive versions of the industry’s greatest characters. This book is the first to concentrate on the importance of these artists and their work, as well as the literary and sociological aspects of the Silver Age.  In this Visual Lecture, Schumer presents an insider view of his twin careers as both comic book historian, and illustrator.
 
 
Friday 3/14 7PM
Parsons -D12
6 east 16th st. 12th Floor
New York NY
FREE & Open to the public!
See you there!
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EVENT: Adapting Literature in Comics with R. Sikoryak

Hi Everyone!

I’m really excited to announce Comic Book Club’s very first EVENT!
We are kicking off Comic Book History Month with a presentation by Bob Sikoryak on the history of literary adaptation in comics. I have personally seen Bob speak before and he is fantastic! His passion for the medium and endless knowledge are going to be a real treat this week. Join us and bring your friends!

Parsons D12 Friday 3/7 @7pm
FREE PIZZA will be served!

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New York Comics & Picture-story Symposium: Special Event for 3/3 at 7pm

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A special Will Eisner Week event will be held on Monday, March 3, 2014 at 7:00 PM at Parsons The New School, 2 West 13th Street, in the Bark Room (off the lobby). Free and open to the public.

Will Eisner Week event: “Will Eisner: Champion of the Graphic Novel.” Writer Paul Levitz (former president/publisher of DC Comics) will read from Will Eisner: The Dreamer and the Dream, Levitz’s work-in-progress (to be published in 2015 by Abrams ComicArts), about Eisner’s unique role in the evolution of the American Graphic Novel, and a discussion of the factors that came together to create the preconditions that finally made the form successful.

Paul Levitz is a comic fan (The Comic Reader), editor (Batman, among many titles), writer (Legion of Super-Heroes, Worlds’ Finest, and many others including four NY Times Graphic Books Best Sellers), executive (30 years at DC, ending as President & Publisher), historian (75 Years of DC Comics: The Art Of Modern Myth-Making (Taschen, 2010)) and educator (including teaching The American Graphic Novel at Columbia).  He won two consecutive annual Comic Art Fan Awards for Best Fanzine, received Comic-con International’s Inkpot Award, the prestigious Bob Clampett Humanitarian Award, and the Comics Industry Appreciation Award from ComicsPro. His Taschen book won the Eisner Award, the Eagle Award and Munich’s Peng Pris, and is being released in revised form as five volumes in 2013-20144. Levitz also serves on the board of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund.

NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium 3/4 at 7pm

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The seventy-seventh meeting of the NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium will be held on Tuesday, March 4, 2014 at 7:00 PM at The New School, Room A404 at 66 West 12th St., New York City. Free and open to the public. PLEASE NOTE: This event is taking place at Johnson/Kaplan Hall of The New School.

Presentation: Matthew Thurber on “Secrets of INFOMANIACS, or How I learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Cloud.” Matthew Thurber started posting a webcomic about the internet in February 2011, starring Ralph, an online-addicted youth with a hard drive in his forehead, and Amy Shit, an activist rapper whose parents have mysteriously vanished. INFOMANIACS quickly developed into a densely layered spy thriller dealing with issues of privacy and control. Eerily foreshadowing headlines with Snowden and Wikileaks soon to be splattered everywhere, INFOMANIACS was released in October 2013 by PictureBox (soon to cease publishing…coincidence?) Learn the intriguing backstory of this comic strip: the shadowy meetings with librarians, the influence of unlikely muses such as  Dave Berg, the dropboxes that “fell off a truck”, clandestine schemes for embedding real people into the strip, and plotting techniques which nearly caused a nervous breakdown!

Matthew Thurber is an artist and musician living in Brooklyn. He is the author of numerous comics including 1-800-MICE and INFOMANIACS. Thurber is the co-founder of Tomato House gallery and of the Potlatch, I Gather books-on-tape label. He performs as Ambergris, and with Brian Belott as Court Stenographer and Young Sherlock Holmes. http://www.matthewthurber.com

 

Parsons Festival Undergraduate Exhibition Deadline EXTENDED to 3/11

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If you are one of Parsons exceptional artists, designers, illustrators, photographers, filmmakers, technologists, scholars, strategists, design thinkers and makers and are interested in being considered for the Parsons Festival Exhibition, please submit an application. This year’s exhibition has an undergraduate focus and is open to students currently enrolled in Parsons BFA, BBA, BS, and AAS degree programs only.

The exhibition, curated for the first time by a graduate-level curatorial class, will focus on the relationship between making and meaning, and will be presented in the Sheila C. Johnson Design Center for the run of Parsons Festival.

Submission Deadline
March 11, 2014, at 11:00 PM (Note: works in progress are acceptable for entry)

Application Process
To be considered, submit a project that is either finished or in development in a current class (one project per application), providing documentation and a description of the project. All applications must be submitted using the online form. For application guidelines and to submit a project for consideration, visit festival.parsons.edu

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“Gourmandise: the pleasures of life”

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To all those with a passion for illustration,
Parsons is participating in the annual showcase in Bologna at the Alléance Française and we are now accepting entries! This year theme is “Gourmandise: the pleasures of life”. You can find more information in the following flyer. We hope to see great work, the deadline is MARCH 7!  Good luck!