Tumgik
#phoebe gloeckner
hungryfictions · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Phoebe Gloeckner, The Diary of a Teenage Girl
360 notes · View notes
qalaphyll · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Scenes from “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” (2015) based on the hybrid novel with the same name by Phoebe Gloeckner. directed by Marielle Heller.
34 notes · View notes
graphicpolicy · 9 months
Text
SPX announces the World Premiere of Married to Comics at the AFI Silver Theatre
SPX announces the World Premiere of Married to Comics at the AFI Silver Theatre #SPX #SPX2023
Small Press Expo has announced the sponsorship of the World Premiere of Married To Comics, which will be held at the AFI Silver Theatre and Cultural Center on Friday, September 8, at 7PM. Married to Comics, by veteran documentarian John Kinhart, is the story of graphic novelist Carol Tyler and her husband, the ground-breaking and influential cartoonist Justin Green, who passed away last…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
3 notes · View notes
grandhotelabyss · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
—Len Gutkin, “Discipline and Punish”
We will train the trainers! We will administrate the administrators! But who will train and administrate the trainers and administrators of the trainers and administrators? Or is a more organic solution—dissolution of the bureaucracy; faculty governance; and students, like other consumers, may vote with their feet—completely unthinkable?
3 notes · View notes
mega-wad · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
PHOEBE GLOECKNER - THE ATROCITY EXHIBITION: NEW REVISED EDITION
395 notes · View notes
shookupshookup · 1 year
Text
Phoebe Gloeckner wrote an article for the Chronicle of Higher Ed about how she’s getting canceled by her students and while I think her students are largely off-base in their critiques it’s also objectively hilarious that they named their anti-Phoebe groupchat “R. Crumb Hate Corner.”
10 notes · View notes
Assessment 1
2. conduct research into their life stories
Lisa Hanawalt - life and work
Went to UCLA - graduated with a BA in arts in 2006
Born in California, USA
Her parents were Stanford biologists Philip Hanawalt and Graciela Spivak. Her mother was born and raised in Argentina by a family of Jewish refugees originally from Odessa.
Hanawalt discovered indie comics in high school.
“I read work by Renée French and Phoebe Gloeckner, and both of them really blew my mind, ’cause I was, like, here are these two women who are being so candid about their lives and their feelings and, like, how disgusting life is. Their comics are really grotesque in different ways, so that was a huge influence on me.” - Hanawalt 
After college, Hanawalt took a job as a secretary in Glendale, coming home at night to draw. The gallery-painter path that she’d envisioned didn’t pan out. “I was, like, ‘I’ll get solo shows in Chelsea, that’s what I’ll do!’ That didn’t happen, so I went back to comics,” she says. 
She is a former member of Pizza Island, a cartoonist's studio made up of only women in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
Her illustrations and writings have been published in print and online periodicals including The New York Times, McSweeney's, Vanity Fair, and Lucky Peach magazine.
From 2011 through 2013, she was a regular contributor to The Hairpin and produced a series of illustrated film reviews. 
Her first comic series, I Want You, was published in 2009 by Buenaventura Press. In 2010, Hanawalt was the first woman to win an Ignatz Award for Outstanding Comic. 
In 2012, she illustrated her first children's book, Benny's Brigade, published by McSweeney's and authored by Arthur Bradford. The book stars a tiny talking walrus, rescued by two sisters with a range of magical animals at the end of the quest. The book was named a "Wildest Book of the Year" by children's lit blog 100 Scope Notes and called "exuberant and imaginative" by Foreword Reviews.
In 2013, Drawn & Quarterly published My Dirty Dumb Eyes, Hanawalt's "one-woman anthology" of comics and illustrations, including previously-commissioned works. The collected stories and shorts range from autobiographical narratives to cultural observations, frequently featuring anthropomorphic animal-people and scenes of nature rendered in bright, detailed watercolors, and likened by one reviewer to "a grown-up Richard Scarry turned absurdist social commentator.”
Made Bojack Horseman in 2014. 
BoJack Horseman won the 2016 Critics' Choice Award for Best Animated Series.
August 2016 - Tegan and Sara “HANG ON TO THE NIGHT” animated music video 
In 2016, Drawn & Quarterly published Hot Dog Taste Test. This book is a collection of comics and illustrations often featuring animal-people in vibrant watercolors. Publishers Weekly said about her book, "Hanawalt takes a kebab skewer to the pomposity that's grown up around food and dining. The cartoons evoke an idiosyncratic absurdity akin to Roz Chast's work.”
On August 21, 2018, Hanawalt released a graphic novel with Drawn & Quarterly entitled Coyote Doggirl. Unlike her previous two, Coyote Doggirl features a singular narrative and follows its titular character and her trusty steed, Red, on their escape from a vengeful bulldog and his cronies. the book is about the tug between self-reliance and community.
Tuca and Bertie (2019) - immediately received critical acclaim and is one of her best works. More relatable that Bojack especially if you’re a woman. Dropped by Netflix after the first seasons and was picked up  by adult swim. 
Hanawalt is fascinated in particular by the ways that sex manifests in the animal kingdom. This is most present in Tuca and Bertie.
She currently co-hosts a podcast and is working on another season of Tuca and Bertie
2 notes · View notes
jellyjimjam · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
cat comixs for phoebe gloeckners advanced comics class
3 notes · View notes
maacwanowrie · 1 year
Text
In What Ways Does a Graphic Novel Differ from Other Media?
Building a career in 3D animation entails having many opportunities to work with major studios, such as Disney, Pixar, DreamWorks, and Sony Animation, to mention a few, in addition to enjoying a fulfilling and successful career in animation. Grab an opportunity to learn from the best Animation courses in Pune.
 To put it simply, a graphic novel is an illustrated book that tells an entire tale. There is a beginning, middle, and end to a graphic novel. Even if it is part of a series, a graphic book will provide the satisfying conclusion one would expect from a novel. As a comic book is essentially just a serialized portion of a greater story, this effectively makes graphic novels longer and more substantial.
 The fundamental features of both regular books and graphic novels are the same. Some of these are:
Separate sections that build to a climax
There is a main story (or A-story) and then there are supplementary tales (or B-tales) that are not required.
Transformation of personality and growth of plot
Messages with a central theme
Dialogue and narration that are both precise and well-thought-out
Graphic novels, in contrast to traditional novels, rely mostly on visuals to convey the plot, with text added in the form of speech balloons and boxes to provide background.
 Seven Iconic Comic Books
The popularity of graphic novels as a literary form skyrocketed in the late 20th century and has yet to slow down in the 21st. In honour of the genre, here are some must-read books:
 1. Maus, by Art Spiegelman
2.  Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' Watchmen
3. Daniel Clowes' Ghost World and Ice Haven
4. Debbie Drechsler's Daddy's Daughter
5. Phoebe Gloeckner's The Diary of a Teenage Girl
6 In the sixth spot, we have 100 Bullets by Brian Azzarello and Eduardo Risso.
7 Locke & Key, by Joe Hill and Gabriel Rodriguez, is the seventh in the series.
2 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Did you ever go back to your preschool once you had gotten big and everything looked miniature, like the chairs and the monkey bars, just such smaller than you remembered? I know nothing’s changed, but everything looks totally different to me now.  
Phoebe Gloeckner, The Diary of a Teenage Girl
#minniegoetze #thediaryofateenagegirl #PhoebeGloeckner 
5 notes · View notes
altcomics · 3 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Phoebe Gloeckner
326 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
The Diary of a Teenage Girl is an unflinching and disturbing book based on the real-life diaries of author Phoebe Gloeckner. The diary entries are accompanied by Gloeckner’s uniquely stylized illustrations.
This book is about a teenage girl seduced by her mother’s boyfriend, a girl who is obsessed with her own sexuality and her desire to get more from her physicality, who becomes lost in a cluster of abusive relationships and drugs. It is in many ways about the people who fail her, because everyone in her life seems to do so, to misunderstand, ignore, or hurt her. It is hard to read and contains heavy content warnings for sexual abuse and violence, gaslighting, and drug addiction.
It is a raw book that takes on the seriousness, the pain, the desires, the sexuality, and the depth of teenage girls. We see Minnie at her most angry and her most lost; as she casts out with love and desire to men and women alike, they lash back with manipulation and hurt. And at its center is a story of resilience, anger, and survival, and the book ends on a note of hope.
56 notes · View notes
scandireader · 4 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Gabrielle d'Estrées et une de ses soeurs (Gabrielle d'Estrées and one of her sisters), unknown artist, circa 1594
The Diary of a Teenage Girl: An Account in Words and Pictures, Phoebe Gloeckner, 2002
31 notes · View notes
rocket-prose · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Original Phoebe Gloeckner art: splash page to A Child's Life and Other Stories (North Atlantic Books, 1998).
32 notes · View notes
filmbook21 · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
71 notes · View notes
i-m-m-o-r-t-a-l · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Phoebe Gloekner (1960-) American comic artist, teacher, medical illustrator, 3d storyteller. The author / illustrator of several autobiographical comics, which process adolescence through trauma in the 70s, resonates with my own deniable feelings. Before advancing to her current teacher position and working on film adaptations, Phoebe took on a long term project in Juarez, Mexico. There she learned the stories of several abused women in one of the country’s most violent cities. Using handmade dolls to recreate the scenes and tell their stories, Phoebe once said that the process was more healing than illustration: she had to clean the dolls up each time instead of their illustrated bodies static in time. 
Credits / Captions:
On set for book photography in I Live Here, 2008. 
Panels from Diary of a Teenage Girl, 2002. 
Phoebe’s teenage diary 
10 notes · View notes