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2020 Lucy Shelton Caswell Research Award Winner: Kevin Cooley

Will Eisner and Lucy Shelton Caswell

The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum (BICLM) is pleased to announce the winner of the annual Lucy Shelton Caswell Research Award.  The award of up to $2500, named for the founding curator of the BICLM, Professor Emerita Lucy Shelton Caswell, supports researchers who need to travel to Columbus, Ohio to use the collections materials of the BICLM on site.

We were delighted to receive a robust and diverse range of proposals from both national and international scholars and artists. A panel of reviewers from a variety of disciplines at Ohio State was appointed to assess the proposals.

The recipient for 2020 is Kevin Cooley. Cooley holds a Master of Arts in English Literature from St. Bonaventure University, and is currently completing his Doctorate in English Literature from University of Florida. Cooley will utilize the research award in support of two related projects. First, in support of his dissertation and monograph Queer Beyond Here: Animated Sex and How To Get Used To It, which Cooley states “chronicles the development of queer animation from the earliest moving image devices to contemporary cartoons like Steven Universe.” In order to do justice to this lineage, Cooley “found it crucial to investigate the queer energies (and sometimes characters) of the formative comic strips that inspired early animation.” During a research visit to The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum in the summer of 2019, Cooley found that George O. Frink’s strips Circus SollySlim Jim and the Force and The Picture Show revealed “obvious influences on the chase scenes of Warner Bros. animation (impossible physics, drag performances, and all).” This has led him on an exhaustive pursuit of Frink, including a visit to the Elgin Mental Health Hospital, the contemporary site of the asylum in which Frink was institutionalized and where he died. As a result, the second project that the award will support will be an article and monograph about Frink’s life, tentatively titled Acrobats, Asylums, and Would-Be Animators: The Surprisingly Queer Stories of George O. Frink, the Forgotten Cartoonist. Cooley will utilize the San Francisco Academy of Comic Art Collection to conduct close readings of Frink’s strips The Awful Bore, The Goat Family, Mister Mainbrake, Mrs. Clubberly Clubber, Tommy Town, and Ratty and Algy, as well as those of his contemporaries at the Chicago Daily News.

Congratulations Kevin Cooley!

The application process for the 2021 award will take place in Fall 2020.

Ongoing support of this award was made possible by a generous gift from the Will and Ann Eisner Family Foundation, which was matched by many additional donors to create an endowment.  The endowment will provide funding for one award to be given each year. Past awardees include Dr. Susan Kirtley, Dr. Daniel Worden, Xavier Dapena, and Frank Santoro.

Carta Monir Collection Donated to Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum

 

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: January 9, 2020

Carta Monir Donates Original Art to Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum

Carta Monir, original art for forthcoming graphic novel “I Want To Be Evil”

COLUMBUS – Cartoonist Carta Monir has donated hundreds of pages of original art, including complete and near complete works, to The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum.

Carta Monir is also the founder and publisher behind Diskette Press, a small-press publishing house which focuses on publishing and distributing mini comics and zines by trans and queer comics makers. Monir’s own minicomics and zines marry her fascination for analog technologies with autobiographical narratives about her experiences as a trans woman, family loss, abuse, grief and resiliency. Video and computer games appear frequently as a motif throughout Monir’s work, which she uses as a vehicle for blending perceptions of reality, the body, and the future with dysphoria, memory, violence and discovery.

Monir says the donation includes, “nearly all of the original art I created since the end of college, including a substantial amount of art I created before coming out as a woman. Many of the pieces are no longer in print, and some of them have never been printed anywhere. Most of the stories are complete, although some (such as Secure Connect and RIPMOM) are missing pages which I gave away as gifts to friends and lovers.”

In addition to Secure Connect and RIPMOM, BICLM was honored to receive original art from Monir’s Cave Dreams, Lara Croft Was My Family, Stealth Mechanic and I Still Want To Kill That Boy as well as partial and complete art for various other zines and web comics. The collection also includes the art for Ready to Pop, which appeared in the 2019 anthology Drawing Power: Women’s Stories of Sexual Violence, Harassment, and Survival edited by Diane Noomin.

Caitlin McGurk, Associate Curator and Assistant Professor, said of the collection “The voice that rings through Carta Monir’s work is singular, thought-provoking, and unafraid. We are so honored that she has trusted us at The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum with preserving these deeply personal stories for future generations of students, scholars, and fans to study and find inspiration. Monir’s work has already appeared in two of our museum exhibitions, Koyama And Friends: Publishing, Patronage, And The New Alternative Press, and currently, Ladies First: A Century of Women’s Innovations in Comics and Cartoon Art. With this generous addition of her artwork to our collection, I am certain it will appear in many more.”

“I chose to donate my original art to the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum for several reasons” stated Monir via email. “I love visiting [The Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum] and have had some very emotional experiences there. Knowing that my art would be taken care of alongside the art of some of my greatest heroes just means the world to me. I believe deeply in the work that Caitlin McGurk and the rest of the team is doing, and I know my art will be treated with care and respect. I encourage other creators to donate their original work to the Billy Ireland as well.”

Carta Monir’s first graphic novel, I Want To Be Evil, will be published by Youth in Decline. The book focuses on her late mother’s terminal cancer, and Monir’s experience with coming out to her family.

In 2019, Monir was the recipient of the Cartoon Crossroads Columbus (CXC) Emerging Talent Award.

Click to learn more about Carta Monir and Diskette Press.

Carta Monir, original art from “RIPMOM”, 2017

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