cartoon

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three polar bears make snowballs to bowl at penguins

A wonderful cartoon by Mike Williams, who also has the audacity to mix polar bears with penguins

From the Bloghorn: The annual Illustrators show [has just opened] at the Chris Beetles Gallery in St James’s, London and runs until January 8.

The Illustrators 2010 showcases many of Britain’s best loved and most respected illustrators and cartoonists from the past two centuries.

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Ikea delivery

This was the Arctic Circle cartoon for 20th November

A reader from Yellowknife pointed me towards this article in Toronto’s Star, which appeared on the same day. It said that Ikea quoted a billion dollars to ship a couch to Canada’s northernmost territory.

I guess real inhabitants (ie. NOT penguins) of the Arctic Circle don’t shop online at Ikea…

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As part of the Aussie Cartoonists’ annual shindig, The Stanleys, there is an exhibtion of cartoons in conjunction with Alpha Autism. This is my contribution.

Three penguins and Gordo is playing the part of an autistic one

Gordo is one special penguin

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Here is the series on e-waste. It’s a growing problem – we see so many TVs and computer monitors dumped on the street here because people have upgraded to the latest digital TVs and flat screen monitors. And Apple considers 4 year old computers to be ‘antiques’. I’m keeping my 11 year old laptop and 7 year old desktop machines going as long as I can, but it gets difficult when older hardware isn’t supported by software providers (Google Picassa, I’m talking about YOU).

Processing e-waste has to be done carefully -there are a lot of toxic compounds in there and shipping the stuff off to China is hardly responsible behaviour if we care about the health and safety of their workers.

what does the council do with e-waste

Howard finds out what Snowpeak Council does with e-waste

 e-waste in landfill

What happens to e-waste in landfill

Frank-e-stein

Frank-e-stein the e-waste monster

what frank-e-stein is made of

Coltan is a rare ore, mined from the Congo and used for mobile phones

e-monster programming

Frank-e-stein's programming

ringing in the e-monster's ears

Ed checks out the e-monster

sending the e-waste monster back to the manufacturers

If all e-waste went back to its source we would see better recycling

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Hello everyone!

Recent visitors to Arctic Circle Cartoons

Recent visitors to the Arctic Circle website

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Landfill mining

I really should invest my money in landfill mining

This cartoon was published at the beginning of 2009, but I’ve just read an article in the Guardian saying:

It might sound like a load of old rubbish, but landfill mining could be the next resources idea to sweep Britain and the rest of Europe. UK company Advanced Plasma Power (APP) has formed a joint venture to dig up a giant landfill site in Belgium, and will recycle half the rubbish and convert the rest into renewable electricity. The project, which will become operational by 2014, is thought to be the first of its kind in the world.

Other companies are also examining the viability of similar projects across the Continent to free up much needed landfill space and because the value of recycled metals which can be recovered has risen.

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I’ve been doing some cartoons for an online teaching magazine. The fourth one (actually, it’s the 7th one, but that’s another story…)is up and you can see it by clicking here and going to page 54.

Behind the Lines cartoon clipping

Detail from Behind the Lines cartoon

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Ollie and Quentin Comic Strip

Ollie and Quentin

I read this strip just after I had inked the following. Piers‘ take is a nice approach to the same pun.

Arctic Circle comic strip

Howard counsels Oscar on getting a bust sculpted

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Arctic Circle was launched by King Features Syndicate on 27th August 2007. I had had a very short development period before that since my editors (Jay Kennedy who signed me up and Brendan Burford, who took me to launch and has been my sounding board, advisor and all-round ace editor ever since) felt that the comic strip was almost ready for launch when they signed me in November 2006.

the first arctic circle comic strip launched on 27th august 2007

The first syndicated Arctic Circle strip

I had no idea then that it wasn’t ready.

I picked up a few papers for launch and a few papers more in the following year, but felt like I was bumping along below the radar. Still, I was getting to know the characters and learning how to draw better.

Arctic Circle strip after a year

The Arctic Circle strip published one year after launch - drawn a little better and the environmental theme is coming through

So it was a bit of a shock when RC Harvey reviewed Arctic Circle about a year after launch and wrote

Although the clothes-pin penguins in their black tuxes are easy enough on the eyes, the stark simplicity of Hallatt’s style puts the strip’s visuals in the Dilbert school of non-art. Cartoonists who draw in this way doubtless believe they are producing highly stylized contemporary Art. And, of course, they are — the contemporary design of wallpaper, repeated over and over in an endless pattern. Still, penguins are penguins and forever cute. Hallatt’s comedy, however, is neither cute nor very funny. My way of assessing the comedy in a comic strip is to tally the number of strips over, say, three weeks in which the punchline is telegraphed by the setup panels…too many of the [strips] achieve their humor in this way, and because we are almost never surprised, the comedy is only ordinary.

I felt like I had been punched in the stomach. It wasn’t that I disagreed, it was that I thought he was right. My syndicate had been wrong, the people who had sent me nice emails and letters had been wrong and RC Harvey was completely, 100% right. I talked to Brendan and he dismissed the rant as being just that, but I was devastated and suffered one of my biggest crises of confidence in my ability as a cartoonist.

I continued to write and draw (those deadlines don’t go away) and the angst mellowed into determination. Determination to work on my areas of weakness. The wallpaper patterns of repeating penguins were to be avoided with more interesting panels. My drawing was gradually improving in any case, but now I gave more thought to how I composed the scenes (something I still do, though nasty deadlines tend to cause more Garfield-type bar set ups…). I did more continuing storylines to provide interest and take away the obvious punchlines.

The penguins head out for sushi

I tried to vary some of the viewpoints

the penguins with the chicks in the tree

This was from a series about a tree growing in the warming Arctic

Arctic Circle Sunday cartoon year 2

The Arctic Circle cartoon published on its second year anniversary

The strip developed. I’d say it has been in development for 3 years and I’m only ever happy with my most recent work.

I hope this means I’m getting better – I’d like to be doing this for another three years at least.

Arctic Circle strip for August 27th 2010

The 3rd anniversary comic strip for Arctic Circle

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penguin on a peak oil bump

back of envelope sketch of peak oil

An article in The Guardian suggests that the UK government is becoming alarmed over peak oil.

Particularly of note:

The Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC) is also refusing to hand over policy documents about “peak oil” – the point at which oil production reaches its maximum and then declines – under the Freedom of Information (FoI) Act, despite releasing others in which it admits “secrecy around the topic is probably not good”.

I wouldn’t mind them being secretive about it if I thought that real action was being taken to shift to a less oil-based society (see the transition town movement).

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