A Rare Interview with Bill Watterson of “Calvin and Hobbes”

Posted on March 20, 2015 at 3:27 pm

I am a huge fan of Bill Watterson’s Calvin and Hobbes comic strip and it was a thrill to see so many of the original drawings in the superbly curated show at the Billy Ireland Museum last year.  Now that show’s catalogue, Exploring Calvin and Hobbes: An Exhibition Catalogue, has been published and it is a treasure. Watterson does not do interviews, preferring to let the work speak for itself. But he did agree to an interview with the curator who organized the show, and it is, as expected, wise, witty, and insightful. A portion of the interview ran in Michael Cavna’s Washington Post column. Here’s an excerpt of the excerpt.

As Calvin and Hobbes went on, the writing pushed the drawings into greater complexity. One of the jokes I really like is that the fantasies are drawn more realistically than reality, since that says a lot about what’s going on in Calvin’s head. So that, and my interest in creating a lively sense of animation, forced me to push the flatter, more cartoony and loose designs I started with into a more three-dimensional conception of form and space. If I wanted to draw Calvin from some odd camera angle, I had to visualize him sort of sculpturally, so I could draw it. That’s when you discover that the zigzag shorthand for his hair doesn’t work in perspective very well. Or you find that his tiny little legs are hard to make run, because he hardly has knees. You invent solutions to these sorts of problems, and that gradually changes the appearance of the strip.

Another factor was simply that I got better at drawing as I went along, so I wanted to throw in whatever I was capable of doing. I kept trying to push the art as far as I could, because drawing was the fun part. I was eager to keep raising the bar and discover what else I might be able to do with the strip. By the end, I had a sort of calligraphic brush line I liked and I was very happy with the look of the strip. It looked like what I had in my head.

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Stripped: Amazing New Documentary on Comics Now Available on iTunes

Posted on April 1, 2014 at 7:00 am

I’m a big fan of comic strips and a proud Kickstarter contributor to the new documentary “Stripped,” out today on iTunes.

There is no better way to celebrate April 1st, spring, or just the joy of laughter than this look at luminaries like:

Bill Griffith (Zippy the Pinhead)
Brendan Burford (King Features Syndicate)
Chris Hastings (Dr. McNinja)
Anthony Clark (Nedroid)
Dan Piraro (Bizarro)
Danielle Corsetto (Girls With Slingshots)
Darrin Bell (Candorville, Rudy Park)
David Duncan (Savannah College of Art & Design: SeqArt Department)
Brian Ralph (Savannah College of Art & Design: SeqArt Department)
David Malki (Wondermark)
David Reddick (Legend of Bill)
Dylan Meconis (Family Man)
Emily Horne (A Softer World)
Kate Beaton (Hark, A Vagrant!)
Gary Tyrrell (Fleen)
Jon Rosenberg (Scenes from a Multiverse)
Gene Ambaum and Bill Barnes (Unshelved)
Greg Evans (Luann)
Rodd Perry and Guy Endore-Kaiser (Brevity)
Hilary Price (Rhymes with Orange)
Holly Post (Topatoco)
Howard Tayler (Schlock Mercenary)
James Strum (Center for Cartoon Studies)
Jeff Keane (The Family Circus)
Jeff Smith (Bone, RASL)
Jenny Robb (Ohio State Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum)
John Lowe (Savannah College of Art & Design: SeqArt Department)
Jim Davis (Garfield)
Karl Kerschl (The Abominable Charles Christopher)
Kazu Kibuishi (Amulet, Flight)
Scott Kurtz (PvP, Table Titans)
Kris Straub (Chainsawsuit, Broodhollow)
Brad Guigar (Evil, Inc.)
Meredith Gran (Octopus Pie)
Michael Jantze (The Norm)
Phil & Kaja Foglio (Girl Genius)
R.C. Harvey (Meanwhile… A Biography of Milton Caniff)
Ray Goto (Savannah College of Art & Design: SeqArt Department)
Dove McHargue (Savannah College of Art & Design: SeqArt Department)
Richard Thompson (Cul de Sac)
Roz Chast (The New Yorker)
Ryan North (Dinosaur Comics)
Scott McCloud (Understanding Comics)
Sherry Stern (LA Times)
Stephan Pastis (Pearls Before Swine)
Steve Hamaker (Fish N Chips, Bone)
Tom Gammil (The Doozies, The Simpsons)
Zach Weiner (SMBC)
Jeannie Schulz (Peanuts, Schulz Museum)
Andrew Farago (Cartoon Art Museum)
Shaenon K. Garrity (Skin Horse)
Jessica Ruskin (Schulz Museum)
Lalo Alcaraz (La Cucaracha)
Keith Knight (K Chronicles)
Mell Lazarus (Momma)
Bill Amend (Foxtrot)
John Glynn (Universal Press Syndicate)
Lee Salem (Universal Press Syndicate)
Robert Khoo (Penny Arcade)
Matt Inman (The Oatmeal)
Mike Krahulik and Jerry Holkins (Penny Arcade)
Lynn Johnston (FBoFW)
Cathy Guisewite (Cathy)
Patrick McDonnell (Mutts)
Mort Walker (Beetle Bailey, Hi & Lois)
Jeph Jacques (Questionable Content)
John Geddes (USA Today)
Brian Walker (Hi & Lois)

And…..
Bill Watterson (Calvin & Hobbes)

Worth it just for him alone.

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