Author/Illustrator, most recently of Bad For You (Holt) and activist comics Migrant. Frequent contributor to L.A. Times. WW3illustrated contrib/co-editor
RIP Mike Davis, an ancient Irish prophet disguised as a truck driving academic clairvoyant, a North Star of integrity, righteousness, and fearlessness. The greatest LA non-fiction writer ever -- an omniscient who saw doom everywhere but refused to give up hope or quit fighting.
Happy mid-October from Evergreen! We have up a haunting new graphic essay: “A Body in the Woods” by author & illustrator @KevinPyle2evergreenreview.com/read/a-b…
Great exhibition at The Fitzwilliam museum at Cambridge! A superlative work of scholarship and provocation by curator Doctor Richard Kelleher. @jonone100@FitzMuseum_UK
My very last Spy vs Spy (ending a 27 year run) Mad called me back for the 70th anniversary issue out now. What, me worry? #madmagazine@MADmagazine#AlfredENeuman
Today is the book birthday of Power Born of Dreams: My Story is Palestine by Mohammad Sabaaneh. To get a glimpse of the life of the artist in Ramallah check out our story all day today on Instagram! @Sabaaneh#palestine#westbank#settlercolonialism
"In my portraits I tried to summarize the martyr’s life. Where did he go? What did he like? During the night that martyr spent in the mortuary, I would make the portrait, holding a picture and memories of him in my hands.”
—@Sabaaneh for Frontlines of Repair with @WW3Illustrated
ALT ID: Features a comic by Mohammad Sabaaneh from World War 3 Illustrated’s Frontlines of Repair. Illustration features a funeral procession holding a coffin with a portrait on top. In the background is buildings far horizontally. Text reads, “During the years of the second uprising, I used to draw portraits of the martyrs. When a Palestinian was killed, his family would reach out to me to make a portrait for his funeral procession.”
ALT ID: Depicts an illustrator beginning to paint a portrait l with a bucket of paint beside him. Text reads, "In my portraits I tried to summarize the martyr’s life. Where did he go? What did he like? During the night that martyr spent in the mortuary, would make the portrait, holding a pictures and memories of him in my hands.”