Interview with Jesse Reklaw

jesse

Have there been any comics/graphic novels/books that have changed the way you create?
I felt a deep connection to Chester Brown’s I Never Liked You when I first read it serialized in Yummy Fur (I was about 21 at the time). In hindsight, I can see how that was a turning point that inspired me to make more literary comics. But it took me years to develop the skills to write plainly and honestly like that. I enjoyed Maus too, but it wasn’t until I did a parody of it that I realized what a nuanced genius of comics Art Spiegelman is. Also, his (and Françoise Mouly‘s) anthology RAW from the 80′s and 90′s provided a terrific foundation of cultural and historical art comics.

In your interview on Ziggy Nixon, you mentioned that your memoir graphic novel Couch Tag will be published by Fantagraphics in 2011. Can you give us some details on it? Is it a complete memoir from birth to present, or is it more focused on certain events?
Couch Tag is basically a re-mapped Bildungsroman of my formative memories from ages 4 to 17. My parents were weird hippies so I have some unusual parenting experiences. I’ve also tried to analyze events that may have lead to my poor health (both mental and physical)… but not in such clinical terms. I guess I’m trying to talk about trauma and pain and make it funny.

How long was Slow Wave running in the Portland Mercury before it was dropped? Since you live in Portland, did this affect you more than it would have if it had been a different newspaper?
I think it was in there about a year? I’ve been dropped by hometown papers before so I should be used to it. That was a good paycheck though, and there’s fewer of those these days in the print industry.

You have had two collections of Slow Wave published so far (Dreamtoons and The Night of Your Life).  When can we expect the next collection? Has Dark Horse expressed interest in publishing another one, or are you looking for a new publisher?
The material after The Night of Your Life has various stylistic experiments and many strips in color, so it might be awkward to organize all that in one book. I should probably finish Couch Tag first anyway, before I put another collection together. So far I haven’t found the best match in publishers. Maybe if Fantagraphics works out, I’ll pitch the next Slow Wave book to them. Or maybe it can just stay as a web archive. I’ve got lots of other books I want to do!

I really enjoyed the Ten Thousand Things to Do comics. Do you have any plans or interest do you more diary comics in the future? Has anyone been offended by the way your portrayed them in it?
I think I’ve exhausted my interest in diary comics for now. Maybe in another ten years I’ll try again. No one mentioned they were offended, though a friend of my girlfriend did — he got mad about how she was portrayed!

Have you ever regretted publishing something in a comic?
I see horrible flaws in everything I’ve published. But I don’t regret putting embarrassing details in anything – writing like that is purging. Though sometimes I wonder if the urge to embarrass myself in print is some kind of self-destructive masochism.

There are a lot of great zine fests and comic conventions every year. Which do you feel are the two most important ones to attend/table at?
I try to do events on both coasts every year, just to keep my name out there and get noticed by whoever might be my next “industry contact.” I regret skipping some east coast shows and maybe missing out on some book deals during that frenzy of big advances before the 2008 recession. I usually go to APE and the San Francisco Zine Fest, because those are both packed with a supportive community of independent publishers and artists. Plus we have a lot of friends in the SF Bay Area where we used to live. I try to alternate between MoCCA and SPX because I can’t afford two east coast flights in one year.

What’s the last really great zine/comic you read? What was so great about
it?

Cometbus #53 was pretty great — a satisfying mix of self-indulgent prose, gonzo journalism, and the intimate details of other people’s lives. I cried on the bus reading part of that.

Any last comments?
Thanks for the interview! Those were thoughtful questions.

*Be sure to check out Jesse’s website where you can find the latest Slow Wave comics, and all of his books for sale: http://www.slowwave.com

**photo by Steve Rhodes

Preparing for the Portland Zine Symposium

All Things Ordinary table

This weekend is the 10th Annual Portland Zine Symposium and I couldn’t be any more excited!  Not only is this the first year I am an organizer (with 7 other amazing people), this will be my first tabling experience at a zine event.  As you can see in the photo, I have a good start for my table.  So far I have:

There are still a few things I need to do:

  1. I have about 40 more copies of All Things Ordinary #2 I need to fold and staple
  2. I need to print more copies of ATO #1 and 3
  3. I want to print descriptions for each issue
  4. All my zines are the same price so i’m going to make one pricing/trade sign

I also make block print postcards but I don’t think I’m going to bring any to the event because I don’t have a variety of colors yet, and I won’t have time to print anymore this week.  I also thought about getting a table cloth/fabric for my table but i’m not sure if i’ll have time to find one before the event.

Anything I’m forgetting? What do you normally bring to a comic/zine fest?

Riot Grrrl Zines at MoMA

Bikini kill zine

I doubt when people like Tobi Vail and Kathleen Hanna were photocopying their zines that helped build the riot grrrl movement, they ever thought their zines would end up in a museum someday.  Unknown to me, the Museum of Modern Art has a Department of Prints and Illustrated Books which includes lots of zines.  I’m not sure if they are on display, but if they are I’d love to go see them.  Below is the curator of said department, Gretchen Wagner, talking about the essay she wrote in the book Modern Women: Women at The Museum of Modern Art on the importance of zines.

Support Reading Frenzy via Kickstarter

Reading Frenzy

When I first got into zines, they were hard to come by.  My local record store (Discovery Records in Tonawanda, NY) had a handful of music and local zines, but not much else.  When I discovered zine distros it definitely helped my zine addiction, but I dreamed of a store filled with zines.  The first time I visited Chicago, I went to Quimby’s and it was awesome.  They had tons of zines, but I still longed for having a zine friendly store where I lived.

It wasn’t until I moved to Portland, OR last year that my dream finally came true.  Reading Frenzy was one of the first places I went to once my train rolled into Union Station.  I was not disappointed when I first walked into 921 SW Oak St.  There were so many zines, it was overwhelming.  Most places I have been that sold zines didn’t bother to display them nicely, but at Reading Frenzy everything was organized and easily accessible.  I definitely fell in love with the little store at first sight.

A few months after arriving in Portland, I released All Things Ordinary #1.  The first place I went after I finished assembling them was Reading Frenzy to drop some off on consignment.  Chloe (the owner of Reading Frenzy) was really nice and  helpful since I was new to the process.  Despite the fact that she has probably dealt with 1000′s of people consigning zines before me, she seemed genuinely happy that I was dropping my zines off.  A few months passed and all 5 copies I consigned were sold, and I was paid in cash right away.  I have sold a total of 12 copies of ATO #1 so far at Reading Frenzy and I couldn’t be happier.

So what I’m trying to get at is Reading Frenzy is an awesome store that supports zines and the Portland community.  Like many small businesses, they are going through hard times right now and are reaching out for help via Kickstarter.  They have set up many different pledge levels, with lots of exclusive incentives.  If you have the means, I urge you to please help Reading Frenzy out!

Nora Robertson also wrote about this fundraiser, as well as posted a video of my friend Christopher Peralta talking about why he thinks Reading Frenzy is important.

*Photo by christinalikesbirds

Interview with Ramsey Beyer

ramsey beyer garden

How did you get into zines?

I’ve always been an over-sharer. I had a public diary (I think people call those blogs now?) on my Angelfire website when I was 12-17. So I guess making zines made sense as a natural outlet as I got older. I got my first zine when I was 14 when I went to a small ska show in Kalamazoo for the band Catch-22. The guy on the road with them was selling his zine for a dollar or two. At the time I didn’t know what a zine was, but he told me if I bought it it would help him buy a Pepsi, so I did. The zine was called Worthless and it was a photo essay about a homeless single mother in the punk scene in New Jersey. A few years later I read the book Hard Love by Ellen Wittlinger which featured an arc about zines. That’s when I made the connection that the photo essay was, in fact, a zine. My freshman year of college, during the first week, I met my best friend who wrote a zine all throughout high school. He showed them to me and showed me other zines he had in his collection and I was hooked. I started making my first zine a few months later.

What zines have inspired you or have you really connected with? and why?

Mostly diary comics. As someone who was formally trained in fine art, I could draw anything from observation without a problem. However, I couldn’t make stuff up for the life of me. I definitely couldn’t draw cartoons. Seeing some early scratchy drawings by Jeffrey Brown, Nicole Georges, and Snakepit showed me that I didn’t have to be a polished illustrator to make cartoons that were still legitimate. My zine was originally a cut and paste, collage-y zine before I started looking at comic zines. I started illustrating my own zine at issue #6, a split zine with the previously mentioned best friend, Daniel. We both drew comics for our halves of the zine and from there there was no turning back. I started looking at more and more illustrators like Clutch, John Porcellino and Allison Cole and they all helped me refine my style and get ideas for how I was trying to draw.

When did you start List? Did you make any zines before List?

I started making List in 2004, in the second semester of my freshman year at art school. Almost 7 years ago! It’s my first zine I ever made. I’m sort of baffled that I just chose an idea and have stuck with it for so long. I’ve made a few other one-shot zines on the side, but List is definitely the main thing I work on.

When you went to the Maryland Institute College of Art, were they supportive of zines?

I think so. For my foundation drawing class, Daniel and I collaborated on a zine and turned it in for an assignment. I made a few other zine and book-like things in my first year or two. When I became an animation major, it was really natural to make zines for various projects, especially when story boarding and working on personal narratives that could later be turned into short films. I also had a printmaking class my Junior year called Zine! It was a letter press class but the focus was to make a zine each week. It was so much work! A lot of people ended up making things that were more like artist books but several of us ended up with more ‘zine-y’ kind of results. This is where I made List #10. It was my final for the class, and the reason you can’t find it anymore. It was a hand-silk screened edition of 50 printed on childrens’ flashcards. Artsy fartsy.

Word on the street (or Twitter) is that you recently finished List #14. What is this issue about and how is it different from past issues?

Each issue of my zine is just autobiographical so it reflects on whatever is going on in my life at the time. For the past 4 or 5 issues, my zine has hit right during a big transition period in my life, studying abroad, finishing school, moving, ending a long-term relationship, etc. This one is a little different in that it’s sort of about routine and feeling a little lost as a result of nothing big happening in the last year. It’s slightly melancholic and directionless, but also served as a way to help me reflect on myself and make decisions about what I want to be doing and where I want to be. So I guess it’s slightly less thematic than previous issues. I also don’t have a section for submissions this time. My zine used to come in three sections, my lists, found lists, and guest lists, and since it’s evolved to be more autobiographical and less abstract, having these sections has started to make less and less sense. It was a hard decision not to include a submissions section because I really enjoy seeing what people write and draw.

You have lived in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Baltimore, and Chicago.  How zine friendly is each city you’ve lived in?
I don’t know how zine-friendly Kalamazoo is since I didn’t really get in to zines so much until after I moved away. I did make a zine library at a local coffeeshop there several years ago. I collected donations and set it up. The coffeeshop has since closed and I’m actually not sure what happened to the library!

Baltimore and Chicago are both wonderful cities for independent art and literature. Baltimore has Atomic Books and Chicago has Quimby’s, so finding zines and also selling my own has always been easy for me. Both cities have various other bookstores that also sell zines, as well as zine-related events like diy fairs or readings. Great places to be a zinester!

You recently helped organize the first Chicago Zine Fest.  How was you experiences with that? What did you learn that will change the way you handle next years event?

I will honestly say it was more work than any of us ever expected. it was really rewarding and I learned so much about planning a large event. In the beginning, we actually all thought ‘what’s so hard or takes so long about planning a zine fest? We really just need to find a space and invite people.” pssssh.

As for next year, the main difference is that it’ll be nice to have a few more months this year to get it planned. Hopefully we can get a little more space since table space sold out last year pretty quickly. We’re also trying to raise a little more money beforehand this time. We didn’t plan for much of a budget last year and all sorts of little unexpected costs came up so we were scrambling to do last minute fund-raising up until the week of the fest.

Is there anything you’d like to see? We’d love suggestions.

Do you have any advice for people new to creating comics/zines?

Just dive in. Like most things, hands-on experience is what you’ll learn from most. Don’t get discouraged if you don’t sell a ton of zines. Just make sure your zine has good content that makes it worth reading and try to get it into peoples hands. With each passing issue, more and more people will probably read it and your zine will start to gain it’s own reputation. This is when zine-making starts to get really fun. You just have to put in the time and effort in the beginning to get results in the long-run. Also, submit to other people’s zines if you can/have time. It’s a great way to become part of the zine community and connect with other zinesters.

Any last comments?

Try hard. It’s more interesting.

**Be sure to check out Ramsey’s beautiful website, everydaypants.com, for info on how to order her zines.

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