Tuesday 29 May 2012

A Brief Love Letter to Kate Beaton & Her Work

I have a tendency, like many others, to not only admire a person for his or her work, but also to unabashedly want their life. And if I had to choose one such an artist at this VERY moment (you did ask, right?) it would be Kate Beaton.

Hilarious, modest, talented, and observant, Beaton creates web comics (and printed comics, check out her first collection Hark! A Vagrant here) about history and historical figures for an increasingly fascinated internet audience. And in a Wikipedian age of doubtful information, Beaton's work is remarkably well-researched (she has a BA in History) so we're getting some fine academic rigour along with her grounded sense of humour.

Beaton should also be commended for her work in spreading the word about Canadian history. Long derided for our lack of exciting battles or historical characters, Canada has actually had an intense and bloody history populated with heroes, "new" kinds of heroes, would-be unifiers, determined progressives, inventors and leaders of revolutions. And those are just the famous ones; Beaton digs deeper to find Canadians of whom we should not only know, but also be proud. Haven't heard of Stan Rogers? NO MORE EXCUSES.

The other great thing about Kate? Her affection for her East Coast clan, as regularly shown in quickly drawn comics shared on her Twitter feed. Seeing a Canadian artist describe a distinctly Canadian way of life to a largely international audience is, well...awesome, for lack of a better term.

So thanks, Kate, for sharing your voice, and thanks for helping me get through my own sometimes-frustrating academic times by making me laugh out loud with a weird joke about Robert Peary.

P.S. Check out Kate's interview from CBC's Q below if you fancy, it's good. Ohhhhh Canaadaaaa....





Wednesday 2 May 2012

Long live the doc!

I've been lucky enough to have a pass for this year's HotDocs Film Festival in Toronto, and as usual, the films run the entire gamut of the human experience. Two stand-outs for me thus far, however, are Omar Majeed and Ryan Mullins's The Frog Princes (Canada, 2011), about a troupe of developmentally disabled actors putting on a play, and first-time director Neil Berkeley's (US, 2012) Beauty Is Embarrassing, about prolific artist, Peewee's Playhouse production designer and loveable character Wayne White and his journey from a Tennessee childhood to a Hollywood career. Both are uplifting films about the power of art to transform people. In other words, right up my alley.

Check out the trailer for The Frog Princes here and the trailer for Beauty Is Embarrassing below:



Tuesday 10 April 2012

This.

This is what happens when you Google yourself:



"At Gennelle, Absinthe Drinker", Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1886)

Seems about right.