The Copacetic Blog

Here is a blog where we will post our latest thoughts, news or other comments.

Saturday 27 February • 7 - 9pm: COSMIC DEATH PUNKS

Posted on 19 February 17:02 (about 8 years ago)

COMIC-PHOTO ZINE RELEASE featuring

ABYSSAL YAWN PART TWO 
BY BILL WEHMANN AND ED STECK

WASTELAND 
BY JAKE REINHART 

PACIFICREVERBSOCIETY FIVE
BY SAMANTHA STOWE and BILL WEHMANN

@ Copacetic HQ - 3138 Dobson Street - FL 3

https://www.facebook.com/events/1669638906639051/

David Robert Jones: 8 January 1947 - 10 January 2016

Posted on 11 January 15:01 (about 8 years ago)

 

David Bowie:  Still going strong.

HOLIDAY HOURS and/or GIFT CERTIFICATES!

Posted on 17 December 15:12 (over 8 years ago)

HOLIDAY HOURS:

MON (12/21):   9:30am - 5:30pm

TUE (12/22):    9:30am - 5:30pm

WED (12/23):  9:30am - 5:30pm

THU(12/24):    9:00am - 1:00pm

FRI (12/25):    CLOSED - MERRY CHRISTMAS!

SAT (12/26):   11:00am - 6:00pm

SUN (12/27):  Noon - 4:00pm

AND/OR YOU CAN WAIT UNTIL THE VERY LAST MINUTE TO PURCHASE A PAYPAL GIFT CERTIFICATE FOR COPACETICCOMICS.COM HERE.  

(good worldwide, wherever PayPal is available)

Announcing the First Round of PIX 2016 Guests!

Posted on 09 November 17:11 (over 8 years ago)

PIX 2016 is coming:  Saturday 2 April 2016

Please visit pixcomix.org for more info

 
 
 
 
 



 
 



Leading off this year’s list are Bill Griffith and Diane Noomin. Bill Griffith is the internationally recognized creator of Zippy the Pinhead. He is also one of the founding fathers of the underground comics movement which pioneered creator rights and is a direct forerunner of today’s independent comics scene of which PIX is a part. Diane Noomin is one of the founding mothers of the underground comics movement. 
 
She was among the original contributors to the first ongoing comics-anthology series devoted to publishing comics by women, Wimmen’s Comix, and went on to co-found another important female-centric comic, Twisted Sisters. Her trademark creation is DiDi Glitz. Both she and Bill Griffith also contributed work to the critically acclaimed and historically significant comics anthologies Arcade, Weirdo and Young Lust, among others. Somewhere along the way Griffith and Noomin met and married, but they never stopped making comics, and continue to do so today. 





Two celebrated local comics makers, Dave Wachter and Sophie Goldstein, are also among this year’s guests. Both are relatively recent transplants; Wachter arrived here from Cincinnati via Chicago, while LA-native Goldstein recently relocated to Pittsburgh after graduating from the Center for Cartoon Studies. Wachter is a long time comics professional noted for his rare combination of dynamic composition and highly detailed rendering, 
he has worked on a wide variety of comics projects, and has been nominated for both an Eisner and a Harvey award. Counted among his works are Night of 1,000 WolvesBreath of Bones and Guns of Shadow Valley, published by IDW and Dark Horse. Goldstein is a three time Ignatz Award winner. Her work is noted for it’s clear line, careful composition and fine design. It has been included in Best American Comics 2013. Her first graphic novel, The Oven – which was originally serialized in the Pittsburgh-based anthology, Maple Key Comics – was recently released by AdHouse Books of Richmond, VA. Among her current projects is the ongoing House of Women



Then we have Noah Van Sciver. Working in the tradition, founded by R. Crumb, of keenly observed, highly personal comics that turn inward as often as outward, Van Sciver is a prolific comics maker who is currently the Resident Fellow at the Center for Cartoon Studies. The last twelve months have seen him release two original graphic novels – Saint Cole and Fante Bukowski, both published by Fantagraphics – a stand-alone autobio comic book, My First Date, a collection of humor comics, Cheer Up, a diary comic, I Don’t Hate Your Guts, and the latest issue of his ongoing one-man anthology comic book series, Blammo; plus numerous contributions to other publications. 



Stay tuned, more guests to come! 

 

How to Put Comics to Work: Learn from the Master

Posted on 10 October 00:10 (over 8 years ago)

Will Eisner helped get comics up and running by partnering with Jerry Iger in the mid-1930s to set up the first shop devoted to producing original comics for the then nascent -- and soon burgeoning -- comic book market.  He moved on to create The Spirit, which ran for the decade through to the early 1950s.  Then he re-emerged in the late 1970s, publishing what was the first "graphic novel" (a term he coined), The Contract with God.  But wait -- what was he doing in between?  He was working for the US Army, is what.  From 1952 through 1972, Will Eisner produced 227 issues of P*S Magazine, which featured thousands  of pages of instructional comics drawn by or under the direction of Eisner, all designed to be as entertaining as could be allowed and still deliver the necessary informational messages.  This work represents the largest unified body of instructional comics / applied cartooning we have.  A couple of years back Abrams ComicArts published an excellent  272 page hardcover collection of this difficult to find (and that's putting it mildly) work.  Copacetic has recently made a special purchase of a decent quantity which we are now offering at a super price, HERE.