Cropped Will Cardini artwork

January 8th, 2020

2019 in Review

Filed under: Recaps — William Cardini @ 12:13 am

A year ago, when I wrote my 2018 in Review post, I said, “In terms of my art and comics, 2018 was mixed. I wasn’t as productive as I had hoped I would be.” I’m happy to report that I’m feeling better about what I got done in 2019 than 2018, and I feel ready to draw a lot in 2020!

The big reason I was feeling down on 2018 was because I intended to self-publish a mini-comic that year, but didn’t get it done; however, in Spring 2019, the long-gestating Urscape #1 finally saw the light of day. It got some positive reviews and is still available for y’all to purchase from my shop. I’ve got some ideas and sketches for a sequel but I’m putting it on the back burner for now while I work on some other projects.

Urscape 1 interior
Urscape #1 interior photo.

Another exciting event in 2019 was when I presented on Constructing Pyschedelic Narratives in Comics to my friend Tim Brown’s college class, Special Topics: Narrative and Comics in Art. We recorded a video but I haven’t gotten around to editing it down yet; sorry Tim, Jason, and anyone else who wanted to see it.

One thing I can share is the jam comic I drew with ideas from the class, based on a Jim Starlin comics layout for depicting a psychedelic mind battle:

Cardini jam comic

And here’s the layout I used for that comic, with some Santoro-style arrows on it, from Captain Marvel #28 by Jim Starlin, Dan Green, and Tom Orzechowski.

Captain Marvel 28 by Jim Starlin, Dan Green, and Tom Orzechowski

I tabled at three shows this year, which was fun, and I sold my last contributor copy of Warmer, a poetry comics anthology about climate change. If you missed snagging a physical copy, you can buy a digital one for $5 from one of the editors, Andrew White. All proceeds from those sales will go to The Climate Mobilization.

Will Cardini table at KC Zine Con 5
Photo of me at my table at KC Zine Con 5. I was selling some Retrofit comics in addition to my own stuff.

In the summer, I finished drawing a short humor comic written by Mark Peters and posted it on this site. It’s called Nothing, you can read all four pages here.

Nothing comic with Mark Peters page 3
Nothing page 3.

In the fall, the first part of the video game I helped Zach Taylor with, Meanderthal #1, came out! We’re already brainstorming more characters and plots for #2. You can still download #1 for free from Zach’s itch.io page.

The Meanderthal 1 screenshot
Screenshot of The Meanderthal #1. You can see how Zach incorporates his comic panels in the gameplay.

And I had two pages in Universal Slime #7, a comics anthology edited by fellow Missourian John Malta which debuted at Comic Arts Brooklyn.

Universal Slime 7 cover
Screenshot of the slime box from John’s instagram.

A big comics project I made some good progress on in 2019 is a continuation of a story in Tales from the Hyperverse #1 that’ll eventually go into a hypothetical Tales from the Hyperverse #2 or come out on its own, depending on how long it ends up being (I don’t do a lot of outlining in advance for my comics). The comic is called A Reluctant Oracle. It’s about a rainbow robot named Mim. Their head was stranded on a rat world in Tales from the Hyperverse #1. In the sequel, Mim is rescued by the Floating Crystal Witch, who builds them a new body. The two pages from Tales from the Hyperverse #1 that introduce Mim will be a prologue to A Reluctant Oracle but I made some edits to that older comic to bulk up Mim’s backstory.

Here’s an edited version of a page from Tales from the Hyperverse #1:

Reluctant Oracle 1-2

Here’s a couple pages from A Reluctant Oracle:

Reluctant Oracle 2-4

Reluctant Oracle 2-5

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