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Welcome to the (Not So) New 52, a real-time retrospective of DC Comics' New 52 imprint! Discussed this week: 0:00:00 - Intro 0:03:11 - Harley Quinn Holiday Special #1 (Amanda Conner, Jimmy Palmiotti and Alain Mauricet, Brandt Peters, Darwyn Cooke) 0:18:34 - Green Lantern Corps #37 (Van Jensen and Bernard Chang) 0:27:55 - Batgirl #37 (Cameron Stewart, Brendan Fletcher and Babs Tarr) 0:39:31 - Justice League United #7 (Jeff Lemire and Neil Edwards) 0:48:28 - Worlds' Finest #29 (Paul Levitz and Jed Dougherty) 0:58:15 - New Suicide Squad #5 (Sean Ryan and Tom Derenick, Rob Hunter) 1:05:46 - Constantine #20 (Ray Fawkes and Jeremy Haun) 1:14:29 - Klarion #3 (Ann Nocenti and Trevor McCarthy) 1:25:35 - Batman Eternal #36 (Snyder, Tynion, Fawkes, Higgins, Seeley and Fernando Blanco) 1:35:16 - New 52: Futures End #32 (Azzarello, Lemire, Jurgens, Giffen and Scot Eaton) 1:44:07 - Earth 2: World's End #10 (Bennett, Johnson, Wilson and Various) 1:52:09 - Next Week's Books patreon: https://www.patreon.com/mildfuzztv twitter: @DCComicsPodcast (Use #New52) discord: https://discord.gg/8fbyCehMTy Other Links: https://linktr.ee/mildfuzz Find out more at https://the-not-so-new-52.pinecast.co
Met vandaag o.a. We spreken de nieuwe directeur van PLANETART Guido Bertling; Stikstofregels leggen ons land plat. Bestuursrecht advocaat Brandt Peters legt uit hoe dat werkt en waar de regels vandaan komen; Een terugblik op het oefenduel FC Twente- PEC Zwolle met interviews van Joseph Oosting en Mathias Kjølø en een nieuwe editie van het Twents Kwartearken over Twentse taal- en cultuurambassadeurs.
ABOUT EPISODE In Episode 18 we have our second installation of advice from 30 artists, galleries owners, magazine editors, authors, creative business owners, etc answering this question: “If you could give one bit of advice to an artist just starting out what would that be?” This is part 2 of 3. Find the first installation: Episode 8 (1 of 3) SHOW QUOTES 1. Put miles on the brush…or pencil. – Suzy Smith 2. Don’t put your focus on sales. Focus instead on finding yourself, finding your medium, finding your motivation and drive. Once you have a portfolio you are proud of, start showing it off. – Archer May Dougherty 3. Not everything you make is a Grandslam. Sometimes you strike out but see each piece leading to the other and so forth. It is a constant practice and learning experience. – Matthew F. Dougherty 4. Contracts are your friends. – Emily J Moore 5. Read dali’s book. 50 secrets of magic craftsmanship, published 1948. Memorize them all!! – Norm Goodwin 6. Curb the ego and work. – Jeremy Cross 7. Don’t be scared to try something new. – Alecia House 8. Compete with yourself and no one else. Don’t try to be anyone else because you can’t. Do the work you love because often that’s the only reason you’ll be doing it. Be generous with what you learn. Be happy when other artists succeed, more art means more possibilities. Every rejection is a step closer to finding success. Find out what recharges you and remember to do that even when you’re on deadline. Discover what you love about making art and remind yourself regularly. Draw or paint even if you don’t feel like it, inspiration will come. – Steve Cleff 9. As someone who only picked up pencils a year ago – Draw draw draw! Pinterest is a great resource for inspiration. Draw some more. Ask your friends for honest feedback. Draw more and find your own style. Try heaps of different mediums until you find one that suits your style. Don’t give up it takes time to get good at anything. Did I mention draw more? – Jo Jette 10. Know why you make art–even if you don’t understand it intellectually and you can’t explain it to other people (or even yourself) Know it in your soul, feel it, focus on it and follow it. – Heather Watts 11. It has to be the art you love. Don’t second guess ‘what art is selling these days’. Find a way to combine all your passions (non-art too) into your art. The passion is tangible and is at least half the reason people will respond to your artwork. – Derek Gores 12. Get a non-refundable deposit of half upfront on commissions. – Christina M. Anderson 13. Never give up. – Wanda Ragsdale 14. Many artists find joy in creating whenever they get the free spirited notion or an inspiring idea. But when you are commissioned to create for a buyer or required to produce a specific number of pieces for a showcase/project by a certain date, art can be tedious. You cannot reach your highest heights by only being capable of creating “whenever I’m in the mood” art. You must prepare yourself for “on demand” art as well. – Zeus Luby 15. (a) Experimentation will have breakdowns, but can evoke some awesome breakthroughs. It’s ok to borrow techniques from others, but don’t limit yourself from standing out from the rest. Then people can borrow and learn from you. – Adam Layne 16. (b) Don’t limit your exposure to just posting art on social networking sites. There are many people who still get their foot in the door from face-to-face meetings, emails, snail mails, submitting to art shows and publications, and supporting other artists’ exhibitions who in turn will become your fans right back when you have a show. Creation is only part of the equation. Having a diverse action plan to get all sorts of eyes on your work will open the door for many more opportunities. – Adam Layne 17. Don’t do your work with sales in mind, do what feels right to you for you. A gift of art far outweighs bought art. Question yourself as to WHY you are creating. Art is as personal of an experience as religion ought to be. – Jeremy La Belle 18. Work hard, network and get your work out there to be seen. – Leslie Ditto 19. Don’t give up. Be careful of false promises. And learn from other artists. And you can be easily replaced. – Krystopher Sapp 20. Don’t give up! Your ideas are better than you realize. – RussPhoto Art 21. Adapt or perish. – Erich J. Moffitt 22. Follow you heart and trust your inner voice – Simone Young 23. Don’t be a pushover, stay humble, and don’t lose your integrity. – Luciano Martinez 24. Be fearless, be brave, be ready to have your heart and ego stomped on, but never ever EVER give up. – Julie Zarate 25. Don’t be afraid to make mistakes. 100’s and thousands of them. There are hoards of happy accidents just waiting to happen. Just free your mind up to make room for growth always, and keep going. – Elly Ehrnst 26. Don’t let the cost of materials get in the way- learn to use found and recycled materials, garage sale items, Goodwill items, and hand-me-downs- this will make it easier to make mistakes without fear – Bradley Cahill 27. Set a goal of 20-30 pieces to complete within 6 months, exploring style, subject matter, media, and other challenges. You’ll come out of it with a direction to follow! – Kelly McKernan Cavanah 28. Young artists shouldn’t copy established artists just to get social feed validation and get into galleries. They should develop their own unique voice with their own unique library of icons and symbols. Just because it exists and is on the internet doesn’t mean it’s there for the taking. Less entitled, more humbled… Brandt Peters 29. Study: know your art history, a bit of philosophy of art, learn what true art means so you won’t fall into the “fast food” art scheme, and will have better resources to judge your own work. Know yourself, so your chances of doing something that truly belongs to you will increase. Prepare to work hard, but that should not be a problem to the ones who have a powerful drive. Persevere. Never think you are “good” enough, chances are that you are not. at the same time, give yourself chances to make mistakes and evolve. Pay attention to what more experienced and schooled artists have to say and learn from them, stop thinking that knowledge equals elitism and snobbery. Be humble and never stop exploring. – Patricia Ariel
It's a different type of Too Sick episode! It's the same five questions, but this time each one is answered by a different guest: Josh Davisson, Maggie Thornton, Diana Casey, Brandt Peters, and Tuscany Wenger. It's fun! You'll love it.
This week, George, Theresa and Gary make up for past missed Leak and Sneak segments. They also share stories of a Cheeto mishap, hoarding, and play a round of True or False. Leaks and Sneak Peeks - Tokidoki Little Terror - https://www.instagram.com/p/BZLD1UUAxam/ Harley Quinn - Kidrobot x Brandt Peters - http://www.spankystokes.com/2017/09/kidrobot-teases-new-harley-quinn.html Yox - JT Studio - http://www.jtstudio.com.tw/index.php?temp=album&lang=en Custom Toy Titan's Toytem Dunny's by Daniel Fleres - http://www.spankystokes.com/2017/09/toy-titans-custom-dunny-series-by.html Jack-O-Bloom - http://www.spankystokes.com/2017/09/are-you-ready-for-halloween-jack-o.html Rolly Crump: Projects of a Whimsical Earth - https://www.kickstarter.com/…/rolly-crump-projects-of-a-whi… Get Your Own DIY Paper Mask Vol. 2 - https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/102322374/get-your-own-diy-paper-mask-vol2 Cereal Killers Mini Series - http://www.spankystokes.com/2017/09/ron-english-mocks-big-breakfast.html Dark Harbor - https://www.thetoychronicle.com/news/dark-harbor-mini-blind-box-series-by-kathie-olivas-x-brandt-peters/attachment/dark-harbor-mini-series-blind-box-by-kathie-olivas/ My Little Pizza - https://www.thetoychronicle.com/news/my-little-pizza-by-the-tolleson-kids-x-kidrobot/
Such a treat to talk to artists Brand Peters and Kathie Olivas about their kickstarter for their exciting stop motion film based upon the world of their toy, Calliope Jackalope. Shout out to these awesome creators on the Twitter @KathieOlivas and @BrandtPeters and check out their wares on the Circus Posterus website: http://www.circusposterus.com/ And be sure to check out all the fare on the Up Late Network, of which Crowdfinders is a most proud, most recent, member. From the Press Release: Just in time for Halloween comes a Kickstarter campaign for a spooky stop-motion film, Calliope, that brings together all-star creators from the world of designer toys (Circus Posterus’ toy designers Kathie Olivas and Brandt Peters), stop-motion innovator and Annie Awards Special Achievement recipient Martin Meunier (Coraline) and filmmaker Jon Schnepp (The Death of “Superman Lives”: What Happened). Based on Olivas’ classic toy character Calliope Jackalope, Calliope is a post-apocalyptic, fantasy adventure about an other-worldly girl who’s unaware that she’s actually Pestilence, one of the four horseman of the apocalypse. If funded through the now live Kickstarter campaign, Calliope will be written and co-directed by Meunier, Olivas and Peters, executive produced by Schnepp and feature artisans, animators, and fabricators that have worked on stop-motion features including The Nightmare Before Christmas. Calliope is planned as an 8-10 minute stop-motion short film and is the most ambitious project yet from the husband and wife creative team of Kathie Olivas and Brandt Peters; it will be the first production from Circus Posterus Films, the couple’s New Mexico-based arts collective Circus Posterus.
Commercial sensibilities combined with artistic imagination equal workable success! Artists Kathie Olivas and Brandt Peters, founders of Stranger Factory, join us to talk about the art business, running a gallery, the history of Stranger Factory and Circus Posterus, Kathie and Brandt's personal work and career backgrounds, and so much more! Host Peri Pakroo is joined by Pyragraph Contributing-Editor-At-Large Eva Avenue.