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Hoppers – launched in Hobart

12 Dec

So – issue#2 of the SanKessto’s DOWN THERE series of Tascomix is now available!
Tricky Walsh’s beautiful comic – Hoppers 1: the ‘manias

Pic 1 – Andrew Harper book-launching
Pic 2 – Tricky Walsh book-pointing
Andrew Harper yackingImage of Tricky with books

Kieran Finnane – 2013 Lofty Award Winner

9 Dec

I’m super pleased that Kieran has been awarded the 2013 Lofty Award in Alice Springs at Watch This Space artist run initiative. She has been an important arts writer in Central Australia, giving the whole scene such a considered and careful focus. Below is the article she wrote about The Long Weekend in Alice Springs in May of 2013 – the original can be read here. You can see here an example of her poetic criticism which is constructive and positive in a manner which is rare in arts writing.

Haunting excursion into Alice’s psyche

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Review by KIERAN FINNANE

The cover of The Long Weekend in Alice Springs suggests that the story between its covers will be road trip. And it is one, of sorts. You won’t find these roads on any map but they will lead you into the byways of this desert place, reaching back through history into stories of origin, reaching out through darkness, real and metaphoric, into stories of now.

The starting points are several, all at once. There’s the meeting of Joshua Santospirito and Craig San Roque, a young man and an older man, one a psychiatric nurse with a drawing gift, the other a psychologist with a lyric gift. There’s a campfire and in its flickering light, a woman in mourning. Her husband has died but her grief goes deeper than this. There’s a book of quite a different order, Jungian explorations of the contemporary world, and a request for San Roque to make a contribution.

So, setting out from the meeting of the two men, for the sake of simplicity in this text, with its limited means of typed words on a screen, destined for a journalism site. These are limits that The Long Weekend is marvellously liberated from, due to its form as a ‘graphic novel’ or ‘comic’ (words that don’t quite rightly describe it); due to Santospirito’s artistry; due to the soaring and delving of San Roque’s mind and pen. 

Santospirito, frustrated and raw from his experience of working in remote mental health, met San Roque, seasoned by long years of the same, but also resilient from a deep nourishment – as we learn from his essay at the end of the book – by Jungian psychoanalysis, thought and practice. San Roque gave Santospirito some of his writings, including an essay, ‘A Long Weekend in Alice Springs’, his contribution to The Cultural Complex: Contemporary Jungian Perspectives on Psyche and Society, edited by Thomas Singer and Samuel L. Kimbles (Brunner-Routledge, 2004).

There was no sudden illumination that explained everything or showed a way forward but Santospirito found the writings “somehow useful” and began to draw his way into San Roque’s ‘Long Weekend’.

He takes us to the campfire in San Roque’s backyard and in just a few deft black and white images envelopes us in the thickness of this night, the deep well of loss that has brought Manka Maru to this point, by this fire.

He draws ‘Craig’ at his desk, wrestling with the task of writing an Australian perspective for The Cultural Complex, wrestling with the very concept of how a cultural complex operates – easier to detect looking at another culture, harder to detect in your own culture.

Craig’s door opens into the backyard. It’s Friday and Warlpiri family from the bush join Manka Maru. They’ve come in for the footy match; among them, a young man damaged by petrol sniffing, one of many in Craig’s professional care. The visitors interrupt Craig’s concentration but it’s a fruitful interruption: he will find his way into thinking about cultural complexes by describing what happens on this long weekend.

Some of what happens is eventful in a road trip kind of way – like going hunting with the Warlpiri visitors who arrive in increasing number. Some of it is eventful but bleak as Craig, the ‘shrink’, goes about his work, in the court, at the hospital, by the roadside where a man, who believes he is the King of Iraq, is sitting in his car with his three-day dead dog on the back seat. This episode kick starts the deeper journey, a haunting, at times thrilling excursion into our psychological inheritances.

Is the ‘King of Iraq’ a refugee from another time, Craig asks himself. And his mind wanders to the mythical Middle East and the story of Inanna’s grasping, ruthless attempt to bargain with death. (Santospirito’s drawing and mise en scene make the story wonderfully vivid.) The cure for some our ills would be an “assurance of immortality”. It’s part of what Craig knows the King needs. But short of that, what?

Craig remembers his meeting with an old Warlpiri man who told him to mind his own stories. That counsel fell on fertile ground, for Craig / San Roque is deeply in love with story, alive to the unfolding stories around him, to the ancient stories, the ones carried forward in our classical Western culture, the ones from the Aboriginal “dreaming system” (in so far as they have been shared with him). “The human psyche loves processing its own thoughts,” Craig thinks. If we lose the ability to do this, we “fall helplessly out of being.”

This has happened to Teresa to an extreme degree. Craig visits her in the psych ward. She’s trapped in a “cannabis-induced psychosis” but it’s more than the cannabis, more than the petrol that preceded it, and her scarifying life experiences. “Something in the cultural lobe of her brain allows her psychic demise.”

Cultural memory offers resilience in face of the tides of history. Craig picks up a male friend, Amos, to join him on the hunting trip with the Warlpiri women and children. Amos is of middle European and Jewish lineage – a strong bloodline in dispossession. Around the campfire, cooking lizards, Napaltjarri tells the children, black and white, about the travels of Malu (kangaroo) from up North.  Amos and Craig sit to the side – Craig’s still wrestling with his writing task and enlists Amos’ help. They try tracing some travels of their own, the big shifts of people from their lands in Europe. Amos suggests that the Gypsies and the Jews were less vulnerable to the cultural breakdown this caused because they’d “learned to use cultural memory in a special nomadic manner”.

We are introduced to the ancient Arrernte stories of Alice Springs, particularly the wild dog story, inscribed in the local landscape. The dog came through Ntaripe (Heavitree Gap), attacked the incumbent male, ravaged the mother and puppies. The Mount Gillen ridge and much of the land on the western side of the river were formed by the activities of the dog. Alice Springs is built on this mythic event, a dogfight and a rape. “Serious dark men might whisper the details.” This is part of the psychological inheritance of those to whom this cultural memory belongs – as well as those in the “overlap”, as Craig describes it, between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal cultures: “Sites do things to people.”

When memory is encoded in sites and song-cycles, as it is in classical Aboriginal culture, and the links to these are broken, depression and malaise follows. This is affecting (to greater or lesser degrees) all who live in contemporary Alice Springs – not just in the shadow of broken Aboriginal songs, but in the shadow of non-Aboriginal people’s own cultural disconnections as well as the contradictions between the Christian and colonising projects that are the foundation of our nation. If I’ve understood it rightly, cultural complexes get people stuck in this brokenness and this contradictory space.

“We can save ourselves with imagination.” It’s the closest thing to a ‘solution’ that can be put between inverted commas. And the book enlists us at every page into acts of imagination through the alchemy of Santospirito’s and San Roque’s gifts. Some of Santospirito’s drawings are exceptional in their emotional power, and the multi-layering through space and time that the comic book form allows makes for rich story-telling. Combine this with San Roque’s poetics, the depth of his thought, and the heart of both men, and you have a book, a travel guide for our place and time. Read it and you’ll never think about the town’s ‘social problems’ in the same away again. Read it and you’ll never look at Alhekulyele (Mount Gillen, the nose of the ancestral dog) in the same way again.

At present, The Long Weekend in Alice Springs is also an exhibition at Watch This Space in George Crescent. It shows the comic book in the making, the drawings that appear in its pages and more, as Santospirito worked on his adaptation. Until June 7.

Adelaide Launch Sat 30, 3pm

20 Nov

Adelaide – Diarise it!
SAT 30/11/2013, 3pm at the SA Writers Centre in the city.
To be launched by Jennifer Mills who is an awesome novelist who resides in the Clare Valley.
Joshua Santospirito will be at the launch to sign any copies you might like.
The book will be available at Imprints Booksellers afterwards for anyone who can’t make it to the launch and who wants a copy of the book before Christmas – or you can go to the Sankessto website and nab a copy from there.
web 2013 Nov-Oct Book tour

San Kessto’s new production

10 Nov

One thing that I should let ya’ll know about – I am ridiculously exciteable to announce that San Kessto Publications’ next little baby in the DOWN THERE series will be 100 copies of Tricky Walsh’s Hoppers 1: the ‘manias.
Promo page
I started the Down There series in July 2013 with my own issue of Sleuth. The general theme of the series is Tasmania, but the interpretation of that theme is pretty vague and with that I have gone to artists/comic-artists and asked them to each produce a medium to long-form comic for the series, to be released up to 4 times each year in runs of 100. Basically … I just wanted to read more comics from those who lived in the same place as me … Tasmania. Tricky’s issue will be the first of … possibly a few … Which I think is bloody exciting in itself. Future artists in the series will be Tom OHern (flippin hell!!), Lindsay Arnold (OMG – Linzee RNold) & Gary Chaloner (cripes!).

The launch of Hoppers will be at the Hobart Bookshop on Thursday the 12th of December – you can buy a copy from the San Kessto website from today – it’ll be sent out to you after the 10th of December. More info closer to the time!! Stay tuned! Or … as Tricky herself would say – “Woo!”
Front cover - web

There’s Somethin Rotten on the Apple Isle

8 Nov

Here you can read the entire of the 2013 edition of Sleuth’s adventures!!!!
This was the first issue of the Tasmanian Comix series DOWN THERE!
Coming up in December is Tricky Walsh’s issue!!!
Can’t wait to see what she’s done!!!

 

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Recent stuff

3 Nov

Heya – things have been fun lately … but busy.

I flew to Sydney last week for the NSW booklaunch of The Long Weekend in Alice Springs at the Museum of Contemporary Art. It was launched by both Pat Grant and Dr Anne Noonan. Immediately after that I went upstairs in the MCA and attended the great Blood & Thunder anthology event where the comic artists did great comic-readings and presentations of their work.

AND this week I did a presentation of the same book in Hobart at the infamous Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) as part of the Emerging Writers Festival Roadshow (see image below).

November 30 – I’ll launch the book in Adelaide  – HOW EXCITING! I haven’t been to the city of Churches in yonks! I’m a big fan of their botanical gardens. Jennifer Mills will launch the book for South Australia!

EWF 2013

Emerging Writers Festival!

29 Oct

This Thursday – I’ll be doing a reading of The Long Weekend in Alice Springs at this event – at MONA in Hobart
EWF_Web_Banner_Hobart

Graphic Content: An Evening of Visual Storytelling

6:00 PM, Thursday 31 October 2013
Eros & Thanatos Rooms, MONA (Museum of Old and New Art)
651-655 Main Rd (Gmaps)

Graphic novels are rapidly rising as the new storytelling form. And what better way to spend Halloween than by exploring the weird world of visual storytelling? These writers and comic artists will be projecting their new work and narrating strange stories for a night of horror and fun. Including a ghoulish Halloween-inspired DJ soundtrack.

With Gary Chaloner, Bronte Coates, Andrea Hoff, Briony Kidd, Leigh Rigozzi, Chad Parkhill, Josh Santospirito, Chris Somerville and Rachel Tribout.

Entry is free with a Digital Writers’ Conference Pass or individual tickets are available below.

Booking

Admission is $15 full/ $10 concession.
Book Now via TryBooking » See it all with a Golden Ticket »

 

web 2013 Nov-Oct Book tour

Emerging Writers Festival – Roadshow

14 Oct

Josh Santospirito talks to Kate McKenzie about making comics in Tasmania.

How did you become a comic artist?

I always wanted to become a comic-artist when I was a kid … so, of course, I became a nurse. Then, one day, I suddenly felt the calling of the brush. Which is a bit like when a person hears the call of God and becomes a man of the cloth, except the cloth is more like an ink-brush, and the priesthood is swapped for the siblinghood of comic-makers … and, in fact, there is no siblinghood, because making comics involves sitting in a room by yourself for years on end. Anyway, I rediscovered drawing as an adult as a way of investigating, hunting, diarising, reinterpreting interesting things. I started drawing The Long Weekend in Alice Springs and it just grew and grew so I had to finish it.

What skills should emerging comic artists try and develop?

I reckon its important to also master concepts from other mediums – particularly graphic design, advertising, poster-design, film, prose. In comics these skills really help with layouts of comics, which helps convey the information and meanings and emotions of the story, and it’ll make you a better person generally. A better person!

What music do you listen to when you’re working?

I actually canNOT have music with words, especially when lettering a comic. I always ALWAYS accidentally lose focus and write a word from the song, which is excruciatingly annoying. I really love listening to the Necks when writing or drawing – their trance-like music is very effective at focusing the mind on the squillions of little decisions that make up the process of writing comics. But if I’m just inking over the pencils, I don’t need to focus quite so much and I can listen to anything, I’m a big fan of all sorts of things ranging from Holly Throsby to experimental screechy noise. I also make improvisational guitar recordings of my own … sometimes that’s nice to listen to.

Where was your favourite place growing up?

My favourite place? Possibly ummmm … not sure … maybe the Rivoli down at Camberwell Junction. It’s an old art-deco cinema not far from where I grew up. I loved going to movies and that old cinema has an amazing ceiling – its just beautiful.

Do you refresh your work by traveling or do you find staying in one place gives you more stability?

I have travelled a lot in my life, but I think I’m changing, and requiring more and more to stay in one place to get things done. The last few times I’ve gone travelling with Nadine, I’ve made a zine of our travels – sketchbook and daily comics and whatnot – it’s been really fun. We recently went to Far North Queensland, so I made a little zine about that.

What is happening for Tasmanian comic artists at the moment?

– Gary Chaloner is launching some stuff at the EWF Roadshow – which is connected to Gestalt (Perth), which is really exciting. He’s got numerous projects on the go, as always.

– I’ve started to curate a series of zine-comics made by Tassie artists called DOWN THERE. I made the first one in July and Tricky Walsh has one coming out in December (very exciting), next year we’ll have Tom O’Hern, Lindsay Arnold and MORE – mega-great.

– Speaking about Tricky Walsh – a few of her recent major projects have involved comics, they’re pretty friggin’ fantastic! One was in the recent Hobart Art Prize exhibition on the walls: they’re kind of wall-based spreads which cross the boundaries of form – somewhere between strangely emotive diagrams and sequential art. They’re really great!

– There is a bimonthly Comic-Book-Group that meets up to talk about a graphic novel that they chose on the previous occasion. It’s got a facebook group that you can join if anyone’s interested. It’s good fun. It’s mostly about eating chips and talking about the book.

– I must say – Christopher Downes, editorial cartoonist for the Mercury Newspaper (he’s also an amazing comic-maker) is making more and more and more EXTRAORDINARY cartoons & comics for the Mercury – the man is ON FIRE! Look him up if you can. He occasionally makes small comics which are really beautifully crafted – so try and nab one if you ever come across ‘em. Of course, Jon Kudelka lives down here and also works for the Mercury – who’s a National treasure.

– My graphic novel The Long Weekend in Alice Springs is now in its second print-run which is rad.

– That grand institution of Aussie comics “The Comic Spot”, hosted by John Retallick and Gary Chaloner has moved from Melbourne to Tasmania and is still putting out great podcasts on a monthly basis which can be listened tohere.

What will you be getting up to at the EWF Hobart Roadshow?

I’ll be doing a comics-reading from The Long Weekend in Alice Springs at theGraphic Content event and hopefully going to see my old friend Jen Mills talk at the Digital Writers Conference immediately beforehand. I’m also involved in the Twitch Meets Stilts event on the Saturday at the Grand Poobah, which oughta be fun I reckon. Are you coming along?

Joshua Santospirito is a comic artist, writer and musician. He grew up in suburban Melbourne, has lived in Sydney, Alice Springs and Hobart. He has worked in mental health as a nurse for a number of years, working in Central Australian Aboriginal communities and in Hobart, Tasmania. In 2013 he started San Kessto Publications with his wife, Nadine Kessler.

Josh will be appearing at Graphic Content: An Evening of Visual Storytelling on Thursday October 31 from 6pm.

 

web 2013 Nov-Oct Book tour

Yungaburra

9 Oct

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Recent media for the Long Weekend

8 Oct

Since publishing The Long Weekend in Alice Springs in March of this year – the first printrun sold out … quite quickly … I admit that I was a little stunned by how quick it happened. I felt a little silly for having only printed 500 copies … but then I thought, well why do I feel silly – how could I have known??!! It’s now in its second printrun and the book is now in over 20 bookstores across Australia, which is great!!

You can also snaffle your copy from Sankessto Publications for $35-

There is also an upcoming booktour in Sydney, Hobart and Adelaide – check out the poster for details.

web 2013 Nov-Oct Book tour

Recent Media reviews and spots
Charlie Ward’s blog review – a really beautiful and considered review.
Australian Newspaper Review Magazine – a massive spotlight!!
Readings Boostore – review – great endorsement from a great bookshop!
ComicOz review – a fellow psych-nurse and comic enthusiast.
Review from the Alice Springs News – Incredibly beautiful writing on the book.
Framed Magazine interview – Interview with Josh from late 2012
Alice Online article – Another Central Australian perspective
Podcast from the Comic Spot – interview with Josh Santospirito, good fun!
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