Lesson two

April 20th, 2005

Lesson two

we start from the ground up and put pen to paper. I often use marker pens, and haven’t touched a brush or nib pen in years. Séra puts us to the test. Can we draw a simple, straight line or cross-hatch with professional tools? We’re given rulers, erasers, India ink, all the necessities. (The coffee is a nice touch.) We swap pens and brushes and draw lines, cross hatch and stipple. He carefully evaluates the pages afterwards.

Beyond this, there’s more discussion of form and content. (We’ve been joined by some more students, back from Khmer New Year. He asks us to come up with a single image for our next class, leading us to illustrate one day in Phnom Penh.

Tomorrow: Phnom Penh premiere of the new book!

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Workshops in PP

April 19th, 2005

Workshops in PP

If you read this page regularly (and you should) you’d know that Khmer-French comic artist Séra has arrived in Cambodia, to premiere his new book, conduct workshops, and reconnect with his former home.

Piseth and I have been nudging artists from October 2005’s exhibition to come to the Café Litteraire on the 21st, as well as help locate some students who are interested in visual storytelling.
We ‘sat in’ on his first workshop yesterday. It was a good structural underpinning of the basics of comics: where did the modern day form begin? Where does the name come from? What are vernacular comics in France and Cambodia?
After showing some examples of various old and current forms, we had a surprise in the showing of a short film, Chris Marker’s La Jetee. Comprised almost entirely of static images, it’s a good reminder that visual language is all about assembling a succession of images. Each image, each panel is like the blink of an eye and we interpret the flow.

After the workshop I’m a bit tired, like you feel when suddenly leaving a cinema after a good film. I guess I have. It’s also quite a good feeling to be talking about comics, I don’t get to talk about theory much here.

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April Exhibition

April 12th, 2005

Cambodian/French Artist Sera returns to Cambodia for an exhibition of his new book, and some workshops for young artists.

The Exposition is open to the public from April 7th.
Thursday April 21st (6pm) the artist will present the exhibition to the public, followed by a Café Littéraire / Rencontre and a dedication of his new book, ‘Water and Earth’ at Carnets d’Asie. More details at link below.

April Sera Exposition

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Fw: March 31: Selective Service ready to bring back the draft

March 3rd, 2005

Forwarded from a friend:
 
Stop the Draft before it starts:

http://www.NoDraftNoWay.org

On March 31, the Selective Service System will report to President Bush that it is ready to implement a draft within 75 days.  We have to organize now to stop the draft before it starts.

Despite what politicians say, there is a high probability that the Bush Administration will attempt to reinstate the draft.

The U.S. military is in a quagmire in Iraq, facing a national popular uprising against the occupation. Soldiers are dying every day. A report issued in January 2004 by Jeffrey Record, a visiting professor at the Air War College, said the Army is “near the breaking point.” The Pentagon has been forced to issue repeated “stop loss” orders and recall soldiers who had retired or otherwise returned to civilian life.

Out of 10 Army Divisions, part or all of 9 of them are either deployed in Iraq or Afghanistan. Twenty-one out of 33 regular combat brigades are on active duty in Iraq, Afghanistan, South Korea, or the Balkans. That’s 63% of the Army’s combat strength. This means the Army is extremely overextended.  The Bush Administration has been trying to fill the gap with Reserve and National Guard troops, but this is a temporary fix at best.  The head of the Army Reserves has recently written a memo saying that the readiness of his forces has been drastically reduced through over-deployment and is “degenerating into a broken force.

Meanwhile, official U.S. foreign policy is now the doctrine of “pre-emptive war” and “regime change” wherever a leader runs afoul of U.S. corporate interests. An invasion of Iran, Syria, Korea, or Cuba — all of whom are on Washington and Wall Street’s list of targets — would require tens or hundreds of thousands of new soldiers.

Enlistment rates not even able to maintain current force levels, much less provide troops for new invasions and occupations. All four services missed their enlistment quotas last year, and enlistments in the Reserves, National Guard, and regular military are at a 30-year low. Many current members of the armed forces plan to get out as soon as their current enlistment ends. According to a poll conducted by the military newspaper Stars & Stripes, 49% of soldiers stationed in Iraq do not plan to re-enlist.

The President has given the Selective Service System a set of readiness goals to be implemented by March 31, 2005. As part of these performance goals, the System must be ready to be fully operational within 75 days. This means we can look for the Draft to be in operation as early as June 15, 2005.

March 19 is the second anniversary of the war.  On the weekend of March 19-20, activists all over the globe will take to the streets to demand and end to the war and occupation.  No Draft No Way will be mobilizing to take part in these demonstrations, which will take place just a few days before the Selective Service System reports to President Bush that it is ready to go.  We must be in the streets to let them know that we oppose the draft and will not be used as cannon fodder in Iraq or in any new war.

Let’s Organize NOW to Stop the Draft:

1) Come to NYC for the March 19 Troops Out Now demonstration.  Join the No Draft No Way! contingent in
the march. 
http://www.troopsoutnow.org.  Or join the march and rally in Fayetteville, NC, outside Fort
Bragg–for more information, see
http://www.ncpeacejustice.org.

2) Organize an anti-draft meeting at your school, church or mosque, union hall, etc. Contct us at 212-633-6646 for
help and speakers.

3) Organize protests outside the selective service office in your area.

4) Donate to help build a network of educators, activists, and resisters to fight the draft–before it returns.
http://nodraftnoway.org/donate-new.shtml

5) Sign the No Draft Petition. http://nodraftnoway.org/petition.shtml

http://www.NoDraftNoWay.org

March 19
Troops Out Now!
March on Central Park in NYC!
Regional Demonstrations Across the U.S. & Worldwide

also try

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Film Frenzy

February 19th, 2005

Saw ‘Windtalkers’ and ‘The Best Two Years’ last night. Been writing some
meeting minutes and like a dope, I waited more than a few days to type them.
Best to do it when it’s fresh. Have barely had a moment to breathe so I gave
in and spaced out in front of the TV.

Windtalkers is forgettable. If they’d put a Navaho in the front seat instead
of as a supporting character I’d have found it a lot more interesting.

I’d thought ‘The Best Two Years’ was a romance or culture clash comedy. But
nope, it’s a stealth evangelical flick.
http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/best_two_years/
As a producer of propaganda (HIV / AIDS awareness, among others) it’s
interesting from a professional perspective. Yeah, I’d take a Mormon flick
over John Woo any day of the week.

Oh… USA trip journal? Will finish that and back – date the blog to the
dates it happened, November – December. Workin’ it.

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