Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Monday, November 27, 2006

A Pig City Christmas Countdown

In preparation for Christmas, I've added the first of my Pig City greeting cards. Feel free to download and mail to your loved ones! Note: as a Christmas gift to you, I've left Adam's hair and watch uncoloured. Let the kids give Mr. Thompson a "Christmas hairdo".

Saturday, November 25, 2006

Sunday, November 19, 2006

Saturday, November 18, 2006

Pig City Teaser

I have another project in the works with Uyugomiak and Trevor O. This was drawn by me and coloured by Uyu.


G&G: comic noir detectives

This isn't actually a new image but it was one of my favourites from Chapter 1. I've added "Geddy & Gould" in Impact Font and now, for some reason, it reminds of some 80's LP cover - maybe a cross between Billy Idol and Hall & Oats?

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Gould Films in NYC

Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts is showing "Glenn Gould on Film".

Films 1 through 5 were shown over the past few weeks but there's still a chance to see 4 more:

Skipping the Romantic Era
The Last Gould
Conversations with Glenn Gould: Bach
Gould and the Philosophy of Recording


The series ends on Saturday, November 18 with:
A Panel Discussion: Gould’s Ghosts: Music in the Digital Age

A Strange Animal



First sketch of Gowan, from A Criminal Mind video.


In 2005, Maestro offered his own interpretation of this song and video which I happen to really enjoy.

Glenn in Graffiti

Glenn Gould in the news. (Thanks to Brendan for drawing it to my attention).

"Barbara Moore, the 62-year Texan woman charged with illegally possessing Glenn Gould memorabilia, was found guilty of two misdemeanor counts of criminal possession of stolen property on October 24, reports the Associated Press. The New York jury acquitted her of two felony counts of grand larceny."

Read on and you'll get a sense of why, in this case, a trial by jury is so tricky. To quote "The New York Times writes that other jurors said they were 'reluctant to send a gray-haired woman with a cat and not much money to jail over what appeared to be scribbles that most people would have crumpled up and thrown in the trash.'".