Cropped Will Cardini artwork

September 4th, 2018

KC Zine Con #4, Riso Print Grab Fundraiser, and Rise for Climate in Johnson County

Filed under: Comic Fests,Events,Online — Tags: , , — William Cardini @ 10:50 pm

This Saturday, September 8th, is going to be busy in the Kansas City metro area!

From 9 to 11am, climate activists will march in downtown Overland Park, in conjunction with sister marches nationwide, to demand that local governments will commit to a clean energy future and oppose all new fossil fuel infrastructure. You can see more info and the march route on this Facebook event page.

KC Rise for Climate poster

I won’t be at the march (except in spirit) because I’ll be slinging comics at KC Zine Con #4, from 10am to 6pm at Pierson Auditorium on the UMKC campus. Come find me at Table #88!

KC Zine Con 4 poster

I’ll have Tales from the Hyperverse, Vortex, my latest riso prints, a selection of Retrofit comics, and more.

Oddities Prints, my KC-area print shop, will also be at KC Zine Con, selling (among many other things) riso print grab bags to benefit RAICES, the ACLU, and Planned Parenthood! Here’s a mockup of the print I designed for this fundraiser:

Earth First riso print

If you can’t make it to KCZC#4, you can also order these grab bags online.

June 13th, 2018

CAKE 2018 Recap

Filed under: Recaps — Tags: , — William Cardini @ 10:15 pm

I had a blast at CAKE, thanks to everyone who came by my table!!

I stayed with my friend Jon Mastantuono (AKA Jon Drawdoer). He draws great psychedelic comics that grow from slices of reality, check out his stuff here. He also helps organize CAKE so I got to see some of all the hard work the organizers put into making a show happen.

Jon Mastantuono AKA Drawdoer drawing
A drawing from Jon’s Tumblr.

Chicago is such a cool city, I’d never been before. KC is only a ten-hour drive away so hopefully I’ll be back soon. As a Texan, that was the coldest June weekend I’ve ever experienced, and I loved it!

The Friday before CAKE I went to Quimby’s for the first time. That’s an amazing comic book store! I felt so honored to see my Vortex promo print up on one of their bookshelves.

Vortex promo print inside Quimbys
Do you want a promo riso print of Vortex for your comic book store? Let me know…

CAKE is in a gymnasium. I went to BCGF in Brooklyn in November 2012 and I was in the gym part of the show. It was so hot and humid in there. Everyone was sweating and the books were curling from the humidity. So when I saw that CAKE was in a gym I got worried. But the gym was freezing which I prefer to heat. It’s kind of ironic that BCGF was in November and sweltering and CAKE was in June and frigid.

View from the balcony of the third floor of the Center on Halstead
View from the balcony of the third floor of the Center on Halstead, where CAKE happens.

One bummer for me was that I ordered a PayPal chip card reader for CAKE but it could not connect to my phone via Bluetooth (the only connection option) when the show was bumping, probably from all the interfering signals. Fortunately I brought my Square card reader that just plugs into the headphone jack of my phone as a backup. But I would advise against buying the PayPal chip card reader. I’ve heard the Square chip card reader is better but it’s much more expensive.

Will Cardini table at CAKE 2018
My table.

Sales were brisk. Selling some books from Retrofit Comics helped me out. Tyler Landry’s Shit and Piss really draws the eye. I was also in a good spot in the gym, in between Paradise Systems, a micropress who translates and publishes Chinese indie comics and other quality comics, and Secret Acres, who had a new, wonderfully out-there collection of short comics by Edie Fake, Little Stranger.

I haven’t had a chance to read everything I bought, but some highlights for me so far have been:

Behind is Late by Cynthia Alfonso, Grip by Lale Westvind, and But is it... Comic Aht?

May 29th, 2018

CAKE 2018

Filed under: Comic Fests — Tags: , — William Cardini @ 7:38 am

This weekend I’ll be tabling for the first time at the Chicago Alternative Comics Expo AKA CAKE. CAKE is Saturday June 2nd and Sunday June 3rd from 11am to 6pm at the Center on Halsted. I hope to see some of y’all there!

CAKE poster by Johnny Sampson

I’ll have my comics Tales from the Hyperverse, Sphere Fear, Drumstick Pit, and Vortex; the climate change poetry comics anthology Warmer, which has one of my comics in it; some Retrofit comics; and these two new risograph prints:

Will Cardini risograph prints
The prints are Rainbow Robot on the left and Diana in Ghost Arrow on the right. I got them printed by a local shop, Oddities Prints.

I’ll be at Table 410A.

If you’re not going to be at CAKE, you can buy my new prints here.

May 10th, 2018

For the Love of Indie Interview

Filed under: Press — Tags: , , — William Cardini @ 10:25 pm

In Episode #58 of the For the Love of Indie podcast, Drew Van Genderen reviewed Tales from the Hyperverse, and then in Episode #61, he interviewed me about the comic and other relevant topics.

Crop from Tales from the Hyperverse
A panel from the last story in Tales from the Hyperverse, showing the Miizzzard’s floating head and the Floating Crystal Witch.

We discuss my history with comics, my influences, the themes of Tales from the Hyperverse, my favorite character, my character development process, the potential of Tales from the Hyperverse #2, and more!

Rainbow robot
A drawing of the rainbow robot (name TBD) for Tales from the Hyperverse #2.

Give the episode a listen here!

May 1st, 2018

For the Love of Indie Reviews Hyperverse

Filed under: Press — Tags: , — William Cardini @ 8:47 pm

The indie comics podcast For the Love of Indie has reviewed Tales from the Hyperverse in a recent episode, click here to listen via Apple Podcasts!

March 16th, 2018

Recent Reviews

Filed under: Press — Tags: , , , , — William Cardini @ 10:33 am

Two of my comics were reviewed in January!

First, my latest comic Tales from the Hyperverse entered the Reviewniverse in episode #244 of the SILENCE! podcast by the Mindless Ones out of the UK, Gary Lactus and The Beast Must Die.

SILENCE! podcast header by James Stokoe
SILENCE! podcast header by the inimitable James Stokoe.

A quote I jotted down from the Ones about TftHV is, “The color is amazing in this comic.” Also they mistakenly attribute Prism Stalker to me for a sec before realizing their error – Prism Stalker is by Sloane Leong. The first issue of that comic came out last week and it’s a psychedelic, intriguing beginning to a mind-bending SF epic! I’m looking forward to seeing where Leong takes us. Lots of other meaty stuff in that episode, you can give it a listen here.

Second, Sphere Fear AKA Sphere Hear due to my illegible fonts was reviewed on the venerable minicomics review site Optical Sloth. Here’s a quote:

I love the fact that William has been living in this Hypercastle world for roughly a decade now, and he shows no signs of slowing down. Or of making his work more “commercial,” although I have no idea what that would look like in this universe.

Read the whole review here.

One great thing about Optical Sloth is its deep archive. Bramer has been reviewing comics for years and years – he reviewed one of my first minicomics in 2009. Another great thing is that he scans each comic for his review. I hope he doesn’t mind that I’m posting his scans of Sphere Fear so y’all can see the great risograph printing by Issue Press:

Sphere Fear cover scan
Scanned by Kevin Bramer.

Sphere Fear interior scan
Scanned by Kevin Bramer.

Finally, if you’ve read my comics, please consider giving them a review at my author page on Goodreads.

January 9th, 2018

Tales from the Hyperverse in Comic Shops Tomorrow

If your local comic book shop ordered Tales from the Hyperverse through Diamond, it’ll arrive tomorrow!

In other news:

Ryan C. reviewed Hyperverse for his blog, Four Color Apocalypse.

Here’s a quote:

My only previous exposure to Cardini’s singular psychedelic abstractions was in the pages of his B&W comics ‘zine Vortex, as well as a in a couple of anthologies, but he’s claimed a territory all his own in a fairly short period of time, and he plants his flag in it more firmly than ever in the pages of his new Retrofit/Big Planet solo anthology comic, Tales From The Hyperverse, a cosmos-shredding series of interlocked (at least thematically) stories that reduces Kirby-esque interplanetary/interdimensional clashes of absolutes to its barest elements, shakes them up kaleidoscopically, and dares you to figure out exactly what comes out the other end.

San Antonio comic book shop Gotham Newsstand already has Hyperverse and my other in-print comics (because it’s run by my brother, Peter Hensel, so I make sure he keeps everything in stock) and he put Hyperverse as #3 on his list of the best stapled comics of 2017!

Here’s a quote from the write-up:

In beautiful full color (but still filled with psychedelic patterns when they can be effective!), we see a cast of warriors, rival wizards, creatures, and more of the odd universe to which his graphic novel introduced us. I can’t wait to find out more of it!

Finally there are more pages of Skew Part 4 over on Study Group!

Skew page 177
Skew Page 177.

January 2nd, 2018

2017 in Review

From a geopolitical perspective, 2017 was a horrible year and the chances that our civilization will survive the coming climate catastrophe still seem remote. Our woeful lack of preparation for extreme weather events was unfortunately evident when the homes of my friends and family in Houston were imperiled by the record-shattering inundation of Hurricane Harvey. My parents’ house was inches from being flooded. I feel so grateful that they escaped that nightmare and I feel so much sympathy for the people who are still rebuilding in Texas, Florida, and Puerto Rico.

In response to the climate change denial, racist policies, and class warfare of the current Republican government, I was more politically active in 2017 than I have been in any year since 2003, when I participated in anti-war protests against our invasion of Iraq. It felt good to fight back and I feel like progressive forces in American won some victories.

Despite the national calamity, I continued to make comics. Madeleine Witt and Andrew White, the editors of Warmer: A collection of comics about climate change for the fearful & hopeful, included my submission in their anthology. I experimented with creating abstract comics from a template and Mike Getsiv posted some of the results of my tests on the Abstract Comics blog.

William Cardini abstract comics test
Abstract comics test. Each of the pages has the same circle shape, deformed or modified in different ways.

My biggest comics accomplishment was when Retrofit / Big Planet Comics published Tales from the Hyperverse, a collection of my short comics that I’ve been planning to put out for years. It’s difficult to match the feeling of excitement and anticipation that I got when I picked up the first box of comics from the post office. Tales from the Hyperverse will arrive at local comic shops that stock Retrofit / Big Planet Comics on Wednesday January 10th!

Floating Crystal Witch fan art by Colin Panetta
My friend and fellow cartoonist Colin Panetta drew this fan art of the Floating Crystal Witch, who features prominently in Tales from the Hyperverse.

Both Warmer and Hyperverse were funded by successful Kickstarter campaigns. Thanks to everyone who supported those campaigns with a pledge or a post!

I tabled at two comic fests this year, KC Zine Con for the second time and Cartoon Crossroads Columbus for the first time. I self-published a small print run of my minicomic Drumstick Pit for KC Zine Con. I’ll probably do one regional and one national show again next year.

Drumstick Pit mini-comic assembly process
It was fun to xerox and then fold and staple Drumstick Pit. It’s been too long since I last made my own mini-comics! An essential comics skill.

On this blog, which passed its tenth anniversary this year, I posted four book reviews:

I’ve got a few projects in the works that may see the light of day in 2018, including a collaboration with Zach Taylor on a videogame code named Project Quinoa. You can see updates from Zach, including videos of his great pixel art, on his development log.

Here’s a drawing I made this year that I might use for one of those aforementioned 2018 projects:

William Cardini dome city drawing
Dome city drawing.

And here’s a couple pages of a comic I’ve been tinkering with:

So I Folded Miizzzard grid comic page
“So I Folded” Miizzzard grid comic page.

And Piped Out Miizzzard grid comic page
“And Piped Out” Miizzzard grid comic page.

December 19th, 2017

Alex Hoffman Reviews Tales from the Hyperverse

Filed under: Press — Tags: — William Cardini @ 10:41 am

Alex Hoffman has reviewed Tales from the Hyperverse on his comics criticism blog, Sequential State. Hoffman compares the storytelling styles of TftHV and Vortex, which he reviewed in 2015.

Here’s the summary quote from the end:

These short comics, strung together in this 32-page personal anthology, are likely Cardini’s strongest work yet. Bizarrely impersonal and naturalistic in their warped way, Tales from the Hyperverse is a dog eat dog kind of comic, and a fine cap to the Retrofit 2017 season.

December 5th, 2017

CXC Recap, Hypercastle Store Updates, and Study Group Comics Forum

Filed under: Recaps — Tags: , , , — William Cardini @ 7:40 am

Thanks to everyone who bought or traded for a copy of Tales from the Hyperverse and my other books at CXC.

Will Cardini at CXC 2017
A photo of me at the Retrofit / Big Planet Comics table at CXC 2017.

It’s a newer show so traffic is a bit slow but it has great potential. The downtown Columbus library is a beautiful location. I met and hung out with a bunch of great people!

Will Cardini sketch of Destroyer
I did this sketch of Destroyer for Matt Horak’s The Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe sketchbook.

If you don’t have Tales from the Hyperverse yet you can now order a signed copy of it (and Sphere Fear and Vortex) from the Store page of this site. I’ve seen evidence on Instagram of copies in the wild in people’s mailboxes and on store shelves. If you read Tales from the Hyperverse, please consider leaving a review on Goodreads, it really helps to get the word out.

CXC 2017 Haul
Here’s my CXC haul.

In other news, I’ve helped Zack Soto add a forum to the Study Group Comics site. We’re still tweaking but come join this new comics community!