Sundays 5 flip through.
Damien Jay has provided one of my favorite Sundays pieces ever for Sundays 5. Seriously. It is awesome. Here’s a page.
Damien Jay has provided one of my favorite Sundays pieces ever for Sundays 5. Seriously. It is awesome. Here’s a page.
Sundays 5 flip through.
haha, yes, we had a photo copy of this submission kicking around the office back when i worked at DC - i believe bunche had a whole binder of such things. so good.
Two years ago, former Marvel Comics bullpen member Steve Bunche posted a comics try-out page submitted to Marvel in the 1990s by an unknown hopeful. The page, while lacking in polish and technique, nevertheless had very clear storytelling, and, as Bunche notes in his blog post: “While this guy would never have gotten work in a professional comic as a penciller, I have to admire his talent for creating an instant classic of a non sequitor:”
You are not imagining this. Wolverine stalks through the wilderness, searching for we know not what, and finds the late Freddie Mercury, frontman of the band Queen.
The page has since been rattling around on the Internet, occasionally reposted and retweeted, chuckled over and admired by people like my studiomate Jeff Parker, which is how I originally became aware of it. And it just kind of got stuck in my head. For TWO YEARS.
The story as presented raises a number of questions. What is Wolverine looking for? Agents of AIM? Peace and solitude? Or, as my other studiomate Memorial artist Rich Ellis suggested: is he looking to find Somebody To Love?
And how and why does Freddie Mercury appear at the end of his search? Was his tragically fatal illness miraculously cured, perhaps by an alien symbiote? Has he just returned from sailing the Seven Seas of Rhye? Or more simply and perhaps most logically, has Logan found himself in the presence of the worldly manifestation of a literal God of Rock?
And so, I have decided to explore these mysteries by recreating the original story, correcting some of the technical blunders on the way. I invite other artists to do the same, by which exercise we may one day come close to the fictional Truth of the matter.
New Warren Craghead piece for Sundays 5. Really beautiful.
Who’s got the newest Joseph Lambert comic in the world? Sundays 5. That’s who.
Heading up to Vermont to print Sundays 5 with Alex Kim, Charles Forsman and Melissa Mendes. Here’s a page from Alex’s Sundays 5 story.
A page from Mari Ahokoivu’s Sundays 5 strip.
Panel from Malachi Ward’s excellent story in Sundays 5
Announcing Sundays Five. It will debut at MoCCA at the Secret Acres table.
specs:
Sundays Five - 2012
8 x 7 - 150 pages
contributors: Mari Ahokoivu, John Brodowski, Aaron Cockle, Warren Craghead, Max de Radigués, Michael DeForge, Julia Delporte, Alexis Frederick-Frost, Charles Forsman, Sean Ford, Colleen Frakes, James Hindle, Damien Jay, Alex Kim, Joseph Lambert, Brendan Leech, Minty Lewis, Jeff Lok, Dane Martin, Melissa Mendes, Nylso and Marie Saur, Conor Stechschulte, Ariyana Suvarnasuddhi, Malachi Ward, Matt Wiegle
buy this
The legendary horror webcomic from Aaron Shunga is finally printed on paper, thanks to the portuguese Comix Publisher, MMMNNNRRRG!
Full Color Cover. Pages in glorious Black and White.
English plus Portuguese Subtitles.I got some copies of Vacuum Horror for sale. Get it here. Or in a limited pack with Lodaçal Comix and other comix here.
RELEASED TODAY: King City collection, y’all
Brandon Graham is a good friend of this tumblr, and I couldn’t be happier that his amazing series has finally been collected in trade paperback by Image Comics. I can’t recommend it enough, and being priced at $19.99 for 424 pages puts it well into the “how can you not buy this” category.
My War On Cool part 3