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Kendal, 26th October 2016: The Lakes International Comic Art Festival is delighted to announce the publication of two books as part of its developing publishing program.
They are Coelifer Atlas, this year's special 24 Hour Marathon Comic project featuring a stellar line up of talent, which aims to raise awareness of the medical condition Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, and has already raised £1000 for the charity OCD Action; and Carrot to the Stars, an English language edition of La carotte aux étoiles by Riff Reb’s.
Coelifer Atlas was written by Alex Paknadel and Dan Watters, and drawn by Dan Berry (editor), Craig Thompson, Charlie Adlard, Emma Vieceli, Petteri Tikannen, Bruce Mutard, Nick Brokenshire, Bryan Talbot, Ken Niimura, Joe Decie, Mike Medaglia and Jacob Phillips, offering an exciting mix of styles of art for this challenging charity project.
Between them, they produced the comic on 13-14th October during the Festival weekend in Kendal, which was then printed and launched in the Comics Clock Tower.
All profits from the sale of this special comic will go to OCD Action, alongside a percentage from other merchandise. The comic is available for online order from Nottingham-based comic shop Page 45.
The Lakes International Comic Art Festival is proud to be supporting the work of OCD Action, the UK’s largest and most comprehensive OCD charity, OCD Action provides accurate and up-to-date information on OCD and related conditions, runs a helpline, advocacy service, support group network and forum to help people with the disorder, and also works to raise awareness in the media and campaigns to improve access to quality treatment for OCD.
"It was a very challenging but fun comic to do," says Ken Niimura, who also created this year's Festival poster and whose work was exhibited over the weekend-long event - and curated a much-priased exhibition of manga art by five "Rising Stars" in the genre from Japan.
"The atmosphere among the creators was great, and having a clear goal in mind has helped us a lot. Personally, I hope this comic will help both people with OCD to see a representation of how they might feel, and I hope it'll help raise more awareness. I love the final sequences."
"It was an honour and a joy to be a part of this great comic," says Bruce Mutard. "The honour was due to being asked to work alongside Charlie Adlard, Emma Vieceli, Petteri Tikkanen, Joe Decie and Craig Thompson when I was in the workroom. I still think I was included by mistake, but heck, I’ll take what I can get.
"I thought the script was excellent (and I’m a hard critic of comics writing), and though I thought some of what was being asked of the two pages was in no way possible to be done in two hours, we were allowed to prepare as much as we needed beforehand. I did everything up to full pencils beforehand, reserving the inks for my two hours, which actually took me six - wet graveyards!!
"Watching the others burn through their pages - layout, pencils, inks and colours in three hours or so was humbling and made me feel like an amateur, but I will pretend I drew more lines in my two pages than the rest put together! The result was fabulous, and in part huge thanks go to Julie Tait for making it possible, but also to single out Dan Berry, the jack of all trades and master of many, who did all the techy, computery stuff that made it possible."
"It takes me up to four days to produce one page of Grandville, other styles take me one to two days," notes Bryan Talbot. "To have to draw and colour two pages in two hours was a terrifying prospect. I managed it (just about!) by coming up with a looser style, which was a revelation. I may well apply it to a graphic novel some day.
"The script was well-structured and very thought-provoking. I hope that it will get attention for the charity and be educational as regards the OCD condition."
"Speed, coffee, company... my memories of the 24 hour comic. The company especially!" laughs Comic Laureate Charlie Adlard. That was special. I loved working with everyone - a great sense of camaraderie - something I never experience on my own at home."
"Leaping in and trying to work with unfamiliar tools to make pages in a short time was, in a way, harder than the full 24 hours where we have time to get into the zone," says Emma Vieceli. "I definitely had to alter my plans as time slipped away from me... but what a wonderful result to be a part of.
"There's something special about seeing the results, as twelve entirely different styles and approaches come together, with accidentally lovely colour transitions and some fantastic rendering choices. I'm so proud to have drawn alongside these amazing artists."
"Coelifer Atlas was fun to make," says Petteri Tikkanen. "I could have done better (art wise) but I was too busy talking with other professionals working in the same room (I usually work alone). And I also wanted see how others do their magic.
"Still, I think that the story flows quite well through my clumsy panels. I loved Craig Thompsons last page of the book so much I had to buy it. Supporting good cause and getting your favourite artists original art to hang at your wall at the same prize, what a bargain."
The final book is beautiful and moving and I am so happy to have been part of it," says Mike Medaglia. "But it is no surprise that it came together so nicely as the process of making Coelifer Atlas was as fun as it was enlightening. There was a real sense that we were making something that would help give a voice to a condition that so many people suffer through it silence. Grab a copy while they last, you won't regret it!
The fifth Lakes International Comic Art Festival will run from 13th-15th October 2017, celebrating great comic art from across the world. The first announced guest for 2017 is MAD cartoonist Sergio Aragonés, who will be presenting the first ever NCS Sergio Aragonés International Award for Excellence in Comic Art.
The Festival’s plans for next year also include special tributes to Will Eisner, creator of “The Spirit” and Tove Jansson, creator of “The Moomins”.
• Coelifer Atlas is available now from Page 45, and will be available through other outlets in the near future
• For more information about OCD Action visit www.ocdaction.org.uk
Web Links
• The 2016 Lakes International Comic Art Festival Programme is available to view and download here
• Festival-related imagery for publicity purposes is available from the Festival Flickr page
• For more about the Lakes International Comic Art Festival visit: www.comicartfestival.com | Find the Lakes International Comic Art Festival on Facebook | Follow the Festival on Twitter @comicartfest
• For more information on the Lakes International Comic Art Festival, contact: Julie Tait: julie@kendalartsinternational.com
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The opening spread of "Coelifer Atlas" written by Alex Paknadel and Dan Watters. Art by and © Bryan Talbot
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Art from "Coelifer Atlas" by and © Ken Niimura
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Here are some images from the Marathon. All photos by Katie White.
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Riff Reb's at the Lakes International Comic Art Festival 2016. Photo: John Freeman
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This year's Lakes International Comic Art Festival hosted the official global English language launch of Carrot to the Stars (La carotte aux étoiles), a very special book that’s created a storm in France, which the Lakes Festival team worked hard on to translate and produce in English in time for this year’s event.
“Not only did we managed to pull it off, but we were delighted that its artist, Riff Reb’s joined us especially to launch the new edition with its publishing Director, Pascal Meriaux, who also organises the Amiens Comics Festival,” says festival Director Julie Tait.
“It’s a funny, moral tale for eight to 14 year-olds, with a unique graphic style.”
The book is available for online order now from Nottingham's Page 45, a long time supporter of the Festival.
"Some dream of love
"While dancing in the moonlight."
"Carrot to the Stars is a cautionary, all-ages fable, it has an elegant and eloquent simplicity, and a fearful symmetry whose missing element will haunt me for decades," enthuses Festival patron and Page 45 owner Stephen L. Holland. "Except that, as drawn by Riff, it isn't entirely missing, and therein lies the power of its punch.
"I cannot be more specific than that, but you will know what I mean when you see it.
"The cautionary aspect is emphatically not about dreaming - how tragic would that be? - nor about invention or industriousness. This isn't some sort of awful, prohibitive, Daedalus and Icarus yarn."
Instead, says Stephen, it says positively that "Aspiration should be encouraged. Not even the sky is your limit.
"Instead, the cautionary note lies in entrusting your dreams to those with less beneficent interests than your own. It is about the perversion of dreams, and it boasts a specific, all too awful pertinence to our wider world today, and indeed throughout the ages with one particular instance in mind."
• Carrot the Stars is available now from Page 45 here, along with Stephen's full review, and will be available through other outlets in the near future
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About the Lakes International Comic Art Festival
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A huge line up of both British and globe-spanning international comics talent is being lined up for this year's Lakes International Comic Art Festival, taking place 13th – 15th October 2016.
The Festival is the only one of its kind in the UK, taking place in one of the UK’s most beautiful areas – the English Lake District in the North West of the country, in the market town of Kendal. Modelled on European-style festivals, such as Angoulême in France, it takes over the whole town for a weekend of comic art. Its aim is to celebrate the whole spectrum of comic art, inspiring existing comic art fans and creators and, it hopes, generating new audiences and creators too. It invests in creators through a commissioning programme and has an emphasis on developing international collaborations.
Guests in 2016 included: Charlie Adlard, Edmond Baudoin, Roberto Bartual, Jordi Bernet, Dan Berry, Adam Brockbank, Kate Charlesworth, Dave Crane, Joe Decie, Oliver East, The Etherington Brothers, Duncan Fegredo, Robin Furth, Tom Gauld, Isabel Greenberg, Ben Heggarty, Ilya, Joe Kelly, Sally Kindberg, Paula Knight, Aidan Koch, Olivier Kugler, Bryan Lee O’Malley, John Martz, Luke McGarry and Steve McGarry, Dave McKean. Mick McMahon, Leah Moore and John Reppion. Ken Niimura, Benoît Peeters, Sean Phillips, Paco Roca, Martin Rowson, Frank Santoro, Jade Sarson, Gilbert Shelton, Nicola Streeten, Bryan Talbot, Mary M. Talbot, Paul Thomas, Craig Thompson, Una, Emma Vieceli, the VIZ team, Tillie Walden, Ian Williams and Connor Willumsen.
Joining this growing list of top international and British comics guests, in partnership with The Finnish Institute of London, were artists Hanneriina Moisseinen , Virpi Oinonen , Ville Ranta, Johanna Rojola and Petteri Tikkanen , along with musicians Niko Kumpuvaara and Aleksi Ranta , the latter part of the Comics in Concert project.
The Festival’s dedicated organisers are determined to build on this year’s growing visitor numbers still further in 2017, reflecting their aim to deliver a truly European-style comics festival involving the whole of the local community and visitors in a truly unique comics experience.
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Festival Sponsors and Benefactors
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The Patrons of the Festival are comic creators Boulet, Sean Phillips, Bryan Talbot, Mary Talbot and Emma Vieceli, and Stephen L. Holland, owner of the award-winning independent comic shop Page 45 in Nottingham.
The Festival is supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England. It is supported by South Lakeland District Council, Kendal BID and Kendal Town Council
Our main sponsors are comiXology, Westmorland Shopping Centre, Choose Cumbria and the University of Cumbria. Our founder partners are the Brewery Arts Centre and Kendal College.
We are also supported by The Finnish Institute in London, Wallonie Bruxelles International, Institut Français du Royaume-Uni, Santander, Knockabout Press, Fanfare Press, GB Sasakawa Foundation, National Cartoonists Society, Premier Inn and Wacom.
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Festival Charity: OCD Action
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The Lakes International Comic Art Festival is proud to be supporting the work of OCD Action. As the UK’s largest and most comprehensive OCD charity, OCD Action is able to provide accurate and up-to-date information on OCD and related conditions. The charity runs a helpline, advocacy service, support group network and forum to help people with the disorder, and also works to raise awareness in the media and campaigns to improve access to quality treatment for OCD.
• For more information about OCD Action visit www.ocdaction.org.uk
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Lakes Festival: Some Past Releases
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The fifth Lakes International Comic Art Festival takes place 13th - 15th October 2017. Sign up for the Festival's newsletter here
Web: www.comicartfestival.com
For further information contact: Julie Tait - julie@comicartfestival.com
Images of most announced guests, Festival poster and mascot images can be found here:
Web Resolution: www.flickr.com/photos/116459003@N07
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