Monthly Archives: November 2009

Sempé Fi: The Fall

Drooker_AutumninCentralPark_11-09-09.JPG
_Pollux writes_:
Fall is here, and perhaps it is inevitable that we should get a _New Yorker_ cover that features the image of leaves turning colors and falling on the grounds of Central Park. “Delicious autumn,” the novelist George Eliot once wrote. “My very soul is wedded to it. And if I were a bird I would fly about the Earth seeking the successive autumns.”
But for the November 9, 2009 cover, called “Autumn in Central Park,” we do not get a peaceful, calm scene of yellow, gold, orange, red, and red-orange leaves. The cover artist, “Eric Drooker”:http://www.drooker.com/, gives us a fiery blaze of paint blots that is more dynamic than calming.
The cover is eye-catching, making the _New Yorker_ magazine stand out on a long rack of competing titles.
The color reminds me of a Californian wildfire, the two figures in its center burn victims rather than peaceful pedestrians in Central Park. They’re not in love; they’re not even touching. They walk right into the epicenter of the autumnal conflagration. They are painted in a black smoky color; their long, afternoon shadows look like plumes of smoke.
Drooker creates an image not of touristic leaf peeping but of leaves dominating, encircling, and enveloping an almost antediluvian man and woman, and a fence and lamppost that seem almost flimsy in the face of a fiery fall.
The autumn of course signals change, and change is often violent, and often explosive. Instead of leaves falling gently on the ground, Drooker gives trees exploding with painful transformation. In life, we see change caused by confrontation rather than contemplation.
In any case, leaves do not fall so much as they are ejected by the trees that bear them. As “reported”:http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=114288700 by NPR not too long ago, trees, triggered by chemical signals, discard the leaves when they become nonfunctional. It’s a “shoving” of the leaves by the tree, not a gentle falling.
And so our souls may be wedded to delicious autumn, but without even knowing it, our souls are wedded to intense change as well.

The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Pollux: Dashes

Dashes3.png
Click on the image for a detailed view! Yes, I’ve made most of these up. Thirteen out of nineteen of these dashes are made up. I love punctuation; there should be more of it. Invented dashes include the spearlette, the lunghezza, the pfeife, the magnus, the minimus, the Flying Betty, the ep dash, the equerre, the ack, the pernix, the hoist, the javelin, and the contatore.

We Are Amused: The Bloghorn Looks at New Yorker Cartoons

_Pollux writes_:
The desire to understand and analyze _New Yorker_ cartoons is not exclusively an American phenomenon: the “Bloghorn”:http://thebloghorn.org/, the digital cartoon blog of the UK Professional Cartoonists’ Organisation, “writes”:http://thebloghorn.org/2009/11/02/dont-get-it-new-yorker-explains-itself/ on _The New Yorker’s_ “Cartoon I.Q. Test.”:http://www.newyorker.com/humor/polls/cartoonidontgetit/091102

Adrian Nicole LeBlanc Speaking at NYU on 11/12

A truly exciting bit of news from New York University about one of the most powerful works of journalism we know. From the press release:

Narrative Journalist Adrian Nicole LeBlanc to Speak at NYU, November 12th

Adrian Nicole LeBlanc, author of the best-selling book Random Family and a Visiting Scholar at NYU’s Arthur L. Carter Institute of Journalism will talk about narrative and immersion journalism, Random Family and her latest projects. LeBlanc will speak as part of Professor Mitch Stephens’ Foundations of Journalism course. The NYU community and media are welcome. The talk will be held on Thursday, November 12, from 11:00 – 12:15 p.m. at the NYU Stern School of Business, Schimmel Auditorium, Tisch Hall, UC-50, 40 West 4th Street (at Greene Street). Please note that no film or recording devices are allowed during the presentation.

A frequent contributor to The New York Times Magazine, LeBlanc has also published her work in The New Yorker, Esquire, and other magazines. She holds a B.A. in Sociology from Smith College, a Master of Philosophy and Modern Literature from Oxford University, and a Master of Studies in Law from Yale Law School.

LeBlanc has received numerous awards, including a Bunting fellowship from Radcliffe, a MacDowell Colony residency, and the Holtzbrinck Fellowship from the American Academy in Berlin. In 2006, she was named as a MacArthur Fellow. Random Family was her first book.

Media contact and RSVP: Joscelyn Jurich, jsj237@nyu.edu , 646.717.4828

Comics Fest: The Brooklyn Comics and Graphics Festival

_Pollux writes_:
While in New York for the New Yorker Festival in October, I had the pleasure of visiting Brooklyn’s “Desert Island Comics”:http://www.desertislandbrooklyn.com, a treasure-house of independent and mainstream comics, and meeting its knowledgeable and friendly owner, Gabriel Fowler.
It now gives me great pleasure to announce on Emdashes a festival sponsored by Desert Island Comics and the local publisher PictureBox:
“The Brooklyn Comics and Graphics Festival!”:http://www.comicsandgraphicsfest.com/
It will take place on Saturday, **December 5, 2009** between 11 AM – 7 PM.
The venue will be:
Our Lady of Consolation Church
184 Metropolitan Ave.
Williamsburg, Brooklyn
Admission is free!
Cartoonists, illustrators, designers, and printmakers will all be gathering at The Brooklyn Comics and Graphics Festival to bring you:
*A bustling marketplace in which over 50 exhibitors will be selling their zines, comics, books, prints and posters
*Book signings
*Panel discussions and lectures by prominent artists
*Exhibition of vintage comic book artwork
*An evening of musical performances