My latest submission to The Other Side Magazine, a London monthly that’s distributed all over the Northern Line, this is the first half of a piece depicting how the words subtlety and tact should never find themselves in the same sentence as an american police officer. Oh. Based on a true story, as witnessed last Friday.
Here’s my latest piece for the soon-to-be-launched Bash magazine, based in the Washington area. It’s about my travels to Cuba a few years ago and touches on tourism, communism and life under Fidel.
Here’s a page from my latest comic on Burger King’s questionable treatment of their central american workforce. A longer preview is yours for the browsing right here. I’m also proud to say it features in the awesome Secrets & Lies Anthology comprised of CCS students and WRJ cartoonists that debuted at Mocca last weekend. Click here for a preview and here for the official S & L site, where you can order a copy.
Here’s my latest addition to my portraits of Historical Greats – so far featuring Wilde and Joyce (who you can see in the Gallery section). It’s from a photo, not a scan, so pardon the poor image quality.
This was as far as I got with my Plague project, hamstrung by early modern english syntax and an obsession with hatching bordering on the maniacal. I’ll be picking this back up at some point in the near future, but for the most part will stick to narratives in the last 100 years…
And so the Puritan’s plight continues…click on the right hand side menu to go back to the start
Our story continues, as the desperate puritan hatches an escape plan from the Tower of London.
Here’s the start of a project I started at CCS earlier this year on the Great Plague of London (1665-6). It’s in Early Modern English, so persevere with the vocab – here are a few hints:
To Dance the Tyburn Jig – to be publicly hanged at Tyburn, now known as Marble Arch in London
coystril – scallion, rascal
Based on a recent trip to a local gun show in New Hampshire, all the events and quotes from bystanders are reported verbatim.