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Above drawings and handlettering
by Vanessa Davis and Trevor Alixopulos

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testimonials
from Tom Hart's students in New York City

Tom created a teaching environment that fostered open discussion, unbiased attitudes and a love for understanding how comics work and the kind of work we wanted to make.
-Jess Fink

You make comic stories, story telling so exciting and fun. I know I came to you with a crazy idea of writing a story. I don't think I'd have embarked on such an ambitious journey without your enthusiasm, boundless optimism, and most importantly, a belief in the story.
-Anna Kim

The way Tom teaches just electrifies my passion for making comics to an extent that I don't often experience.
-Hillary Allison

Tom’s approach to education and guidance offers sensitivity and candor in equal measure. He offers technical insight across genre boundaries, adapting his criteria to each student’s goals and aesthetic preferences.
- Dan Strauss

Tom picked me up from my rut, showed me what potential I had as an illustrator, and kicked my self-doubt’s ass six ways till sunday.
- Carlos Abdu

If you’re having a problem with your art or story, rather than spouting out answers at you, he’ll try to talk you through it and eventually draw a solution from you. This teaching style helped boost my artistic confidence and problem solving.
- Jon Mosley

Tom is a magical teacher and all-around great guy. He did not just help my brain understand how to create a good comic, but also opened my eyes to tons of great cartoonists, provided advice outside of class time, helped me find a thesis advisor, lent me fantastic books, etc. (the list goes on).
-Jess Worby

Tom Galambos Party/Art Show !
Saturday Feb 24, 7pm - 10pm

Tom Galambos: Bob and the Giant Squid
Join us Friday night, Feb 24 for an evening with Xeric winner, painter, cartoonist, and mesomorph Tom Galambos.
7-10pm


SAW Grand Opening with Derek Ballard Pics!

Grand opening Derek Ballard show 3 Grand opening Derek Ballard show 2 Grand opening Derek Ballard show 1
More pics here at Flick or on Faceybook.

SOLD OUT:

Week-Long Intensive With John Porcellino
March 5-9, 2012

John Porcellino WorkshopDreams, Visions and Inspiration: A Week-Long Intensive with John Porcellino

John Porcellino will guide students in this 5-day workshop from blank page to completing their own mini-comic.

Porcellino is one of the most appreciated artists of his generation. His personal stories are often called "deceptively simple." His drawing style is pure comics, and communicates both instantly and deeply. His storytelling is heartfelt and expressionistic, nuanced and deeply human.

In this week-long workshop, students will work with John from morning to evening, creating small works that they will then publish on Friday. Students will learn how John works, plans, looks to his sketches and notes for ideas and his vast stores of culture, art and nature for inspiration.

March 5-9, 2012, Sequential Artists Workshop, Gainesville, Florida

More info here


 

 

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News and upcoming classes:
Tom Galambos Show - Feb 24
Pre-Teen Class - Saturdays
Spring Adult Intro Class - Wednesdays
Spring Adult Class II - Thursdays

Dreams, Visions and Inspiration:
A Week-Intensive with John Porcellino. March 5-9, 2012

John Porcellino Workshop

Click here for more info

 

 

F.A.Q.

What is this?
Isn't this just like CCS?
Why Gainesville?
Sequential Art? What are you talking about?
What about manga?
Who is this for?
Is this an accredited program?
Are donations tax-deductible?

Additional enrollment questions? Go here.

What is this?
It is a school with a space for workshops, gallery shows and performances. Plus ideally a space for working artists to come get away for a couple of weeks to work in a peaceful environment. Also a promotional/publishing arm. See the mission statement.

Isn't this just like CCS?
Yes, a little, and maybe no. James Sturm, who founded Center for Cartoon Studies (CCS) has done a great thing in White River Junction, VT and we are in constant awe of his gumption and smarts. James has been friendly with us and he has helped us enormously by offering advice in the forming of this school. We too offer an intensive program in comic art, and will require students to publish their own work at the end of the program. Our school is new and we don't know how it will evolve. Right now, our goals may be similar, but the places and personalities (and local and state politics!) are different enough that soon the differences between the schools will become evident.

Why Gainesville?
In Gainesville students can find movies, bookstores, theaters, rock shows, cheap food and housing, sunny days, bike paths, egrets, lizards, free yoga at the library, free lunches on the University of Florida campus, midnight soccer, organizations and ad hoc sub communities within communities. It's a welcoming DIY place that rewards initiative and engagement. The University (UF) has a long-standing academic comics convention/symposium which has flown in such luminaries as Eddie Campbell, Dan Clowes and Kim Deitch. There are also a large number of academic scholars at the University dedicated to study of sequential art and these people, who have done historical research and investigated the mechanisms of comics in unique ways. The town is small but there is a lot of culture, including an art museum, a museum of natural history, an arthouse movie theater, good bookstores, a renegade video store, an alternative avant garde film festival, and great punk-pizza place/junk and toy shop and much much more. Plus, we like sun. And sunshowers. And waterfowl and Spanish moss and sinkholes and skateboarders and artists and swimming and coffee and pizza and lizards, etc.

Click here for more about Gainesville

"Sequential Art"? What are you talking about?
Sequential art, comics, comix, graphic novels, manga, bandes dessinees, fumetti, cartooning, strips, funny papers- whatever you want to call it, yes it's the same thing: words and still pictures in combination to form narrative. Following Will Eisner's lead, we like Sequential Art, which loses the humorous connotation of "comics" and the movement connotation of "cartoon" (and yes, we know the origin of the word "cartoon") and ultimately it sounds to us more like what it is.

What about manga?
Manga is such a pervasive force that we see a lot of students who have spent most of their time mastering the tics and behaviors of the most popular Japanese comics. In our teen programs, we will encourage the students to see these mannerisms more clearly, and to allow them more control and more options. In our certificate program, we will go further by emphasizing a breaking down of learned mannerisms (this is true of any over-stylized system of creating) towards finding their own personal mode of storytelling. From there, most students report a sort of breakthrough where they begin to understand their own ideas and tendencies better, and as such begin to settle on deeper and more personal methods, techniques and styles. An attentive student can now go back to a popular manga style if they see fit, though most expand on their new found inventiveness and independence.

Who is this for?
You could be: 1) College-age and wanting to focus on art before springboarding into a full-fledged BFA. 2) An aritstic adult who has dabbled in comics and wants to study and practice the form more. 3) Frustrated with your current schooling and want to study comics in a more intensive, inspiring and free environment. 4) Post-college adult looking to continue their education or pick up study they missed. 5) An established creator stuck and needing to push their work to the next level. 6) Any combination or variation on the above. SAW is a school for differing personalities and artists temperaments. We strive to find the stories and art inside you that are trying to come out. We have taught comics to art students, english teachers, truck drivers, museum guards, fine arts students, scriptwriters, graphic designers (lots of those), etc. In short, if you have passion and dedication to learning sequential art, then the SAW single-year intensive is for you.

Is this an accredited program?
Our short term goals do not involve seeking accreditation, a process that can take up to 7 years. An unaccredited MFA may be in the future, but we are still investigating this. Another option we will be investigating is a partnership with the a local college in some manner, perhaps offering BFA credits, but right now our MFA-quality program is a program without accreditation. For more on this, see the Executive Director's statement.

Are my donations tax-deductible?
Yes. The Sequential Artists Workshop (SAW) is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Contributions for the purposes of The Sequential Artists Workshop (SAW) must be made payable to Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.

Additional enrollment questions? Go here.

 

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