Erika Moen's Tumblr

I'm a comic book artist working out of Periscope Studio in Portland, OR.

Portfolio: erikamoen.com Real Blog: Bloggity Blog Webcomics: Bucko and DAR!

DO NOT SEND FANMAIL. If you want to contact me, use my email address. I DO NOT read any fanmail messages sent over Tumblr.
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  • Life Begins at Incorporation, a collection of political cartoons and essays by Matt Bors, is my favorite book I’ve read this year. Both his comics and writings are hilarious and brutal (brutally hilarious? Is that stupid to say?), cutting through American politics with laser-like precision. I honest-to-god laughed out loud while reading this and had to stop every other page to lean over to my husband and say, “This one! Read this one!”
His book is self-published with funds raised on Kickstarter and I can think of no better way for you to spend that $20 that’s been burning a hole in your pocket than right here, directly supporting an independent cartoonist who’s made political cartoons worth reading again. 
Life Begins at Incorporation!

    Life Begins at Incorporation, a collection of political cartoons and essays by Matt Bors, is my favorite book I’ve read this year. Both his comics and writings are hilarious and brutal (brutally hilarious? Is that stupid to say?), cutting through American politics with laser-like precision. I honest-to-god laughed out loud while reading this and had to stop every other page to lean over to my husband and say, “This one! Read this one!”

    His book is self-published with funds raised on Kickstarter and I can think of no better way for you to spend that $20 that’s been burning a hole in your pocket than right here, directly supporting an independent cartoonist who’s made political cartoons worth reading again.

    Life Begins at Incorporation!

    • 13 hours ago
    • 38 notes
    • #matt bors
    • #political comics
    • #political cartoon
    • #politics
    • #cartoons
    • #comics
    • #self-publish
    • #book
  • Bucko: an appreciation

    I dare you to find a better book introduction anywhere.

    stevelieber:

    Bucko cover

    My friends Jeff Parker and Erika Moen asked me to write an introduction for Dark Horse Comics’ hardcover collection of their webcomic Bucko. I said yes, then took advantage of a once in a lifetime opportunity to shit all over them in print. It’s reprinted here for the first time online.

    Periscope has a couple of copies available at Periscope Studio’s Etsy store, or you can order them directly from Erika.

    Bucko: an appreciation

    It was once a popular belief that a pair of recording angels follows us, noting “the deeds of all individuals for future reward or punishment” and “keeping a general account between man and his maker” as the Jewish encyclopedia phrases it. Sounds nice, but being old testament angels, I suspect they’d pay much closer attention to bad behavior than good. Or perhaps I’m just projecting, because that certainly describes my relationship with Jeff Parker and Erika Moen as they created Bucko.

    I was there for much of the project’s creation. Long before Erika joined Periscope Studio— the all-freelancer art studio in Portland, Oregon of which we’re all members— Jeff liked to drop weird questions in our laps, knowing that he could get us so hung up arguing that no one would get a goddamn bit of work done for the rest of the day. Our editors would hate us and our incomes would drop and he’d just chuckle and put on headphones, knowing he’d trolled the room. One of these questions concerned a desperate need to take a dump when there’s a corpse on the floor of the bathroom. It destroyed our productivity and had us arguing for weeks. 

    No one knows how Erika came to be a member of Periscope. She certainly never came out and asked anyone if she could join. She just sort of hung around until we figured she ought to at least pay us something for taking up space and ripping one heinous fart after another, polluting the room. The spark for their collaboration came when Erika mentioned in an interview that she might like to work with Parker someday. That passive approach is typical for Periscope. Why nut up and say something to your studiomate’s face when you could tell some jackass podcaster about it instead? Erika in particular has an astonishing ability to avoid telling anyone anything directly, leaving her open to the worst interactions imaginable. Horrible people are drawn into Erika’s orbit because they know she won’t tell them to fuck off, rendering her one of Portland’s most powerful shit-magnets.

    Fortunately, their comic is largely concerned with those sorts of people. Bucko’s Portland boasts a population that’s self-absorbed, lazy, stupid, rude, manipulative, self-congratulatory, and flat-out creepy— just like the real Portland! Yeah, there’s a lot of the delightful stuff here, too— the things that have the New York Times standing beneath Portland’s bedroom window holding up a boom box— but none of that is as entertaining as the shots Bucko takes at clueless freaks and self-conscious weirdos, the twin cancers that are killing our city. 

    Make no mistake; this is a mean comic. Jeff Parker is whaling hard on the people he’s writing about. But because he’s using Erika Moen’s likable, friendly drawings to do it, it all seems affectionate. And he knows that with Erika’s much higher internet profile, she’ll take the flack for anything really offensive. This is another way that “passive approach” I mentioned before manifests itself. Every time Parker writes something horrible, Erika loses twitter followers. 

    Some might say they’re heaping all this abuse out of love for their city. It’s possible, but if so, you’d think they’d want to keep their portrait more balanced. Then again, I could have done the same with this essay. But who wants to read about Erika spending long hours at the drawing board, or Parker carefully honing six panels into a perfect gag? It happened, but it isn’t interesting. Parker and Moen are Portland’s recording angels, and if they give our virtues short shrift while harping on our faults, it just means that the final ledger is going to be one hell of an engaging read.

    Steve Lieber

    Portland, Oregon

    Source: stevelieber
    • 5 months ago
    • 22 notes
    • #steve lieber
    • #jeff parker
    • #erika moen
    • #bucko
    • #webcomics
    • #book
    • #comic
    • #cartoonist
    • #dark horse
    • #dark horse comics
  • Spotted this gorgeous book while browsing a second hand shop. Oh my god, so gorgeous.
I want my next cover to be letterpressed and goldleafed!

    Spotted this gorgeous book while browsing a second hand shop. Oh my god, so gorgeous.

    I want my next cover to be letterpressed and goldleafed!

    • 1 year ago
    • 25 notes
    • #vintage
    • #book
    • #letterpress
    • #goldleaf
  • Eeeee! I JUST got in the DAR! Volume Two copies!!!
1,400 pounds, 2,000 books! EEEEEEEE!

    Eeeee! I JUST got in the DAR! Volume Two copies!!!

    1,400 pounds, 2,000 books! EEEEEEEE!

    • 3 years ago
    • 9 notes
    • #dar
    • #comic
    • #book
    • #photo
    • #erika moen
    • #webcomic
  • My latest book and the final installment of the series, DAR! Volume Two, is ready for pre-order with shipping to begin April 30th!
DAR! chronicles the six year long autobiographical story of Erika Moen, a lost 20-year-old lesbian artist-wannabe in college who falls in love with a boy in England and the evolution that her sexual identity undergoes before winding up marrying him as a queer 26-year-old full-time cartoonist. Along the way there are many vignettes about sex, farts, the queer community, the Brits, vibrators and figuring out sexual identity.
I worked super hard on this book and I’m so proud of it! It’s nice to finally wrap up this six-year-long adventure, housed between two books.
  DAR! Volume Two is available through here :)

    My latest book and the final installment of the series, DAR! Volume Two, is ready for pre-order with shipping to begin April 30th!

    DAR! chronicles the six year long autobiographical story of Erika Moen, a lost 20-year-old lesbian artist-wannabe in college who falls in love with a boy in England and the evolution that her sexual identity undergoes before winding up marrying him as a queer 26-year-old full-time cartoonist. Along the way there are many vignettes about sex, farts, the queer community, the Brits, vibrators and figuring out sexual identity.

    I worked super hard on this book and I’m so proud of it! It’s nice to finally wrap up this six-year-long adventure, housed between two books.

      DAR! Volume Two is available through here :)

    • 3 years ago
    • 8 notes
    • #erika moen
    • #dar
    • #comic
    • #book
    • #cover
    • #illustration
    • #octopus
    • #tentacles
    • #cephalopod
    • #yellow
    • #graphic novel
    • #autobiography
  • malebeautyinart:

Man reading book (1916). J.C. Leyendecker.

    malebeautyinart:

    Man reading book (1916). J.C. Leyendecker.

    Source: malebeautyinart
    • 3 years ago
    • 163 notes
    • #1900s
    • #j.c. leyendecker
    • #illustration
    • #painting
    • #yellow
    • #book
    • #man
    • #reading
    • #black
    • #handsome
  • (via toughestfrail)

    (via toughestfrail)

    Source: toughestfrail
    • 3 years ago
    • 6 notes
    • #illustration
    • #robin hood
    • #arrows
    • #limited colors
    • #cover
    • #book
  • eyetwitch:

DAR covers!  Look how cool DAR 2 is going to be! (via Erika Moen)

Aw, thanks!
If people want to see the step-by-step process of how I came up with the cover for DAR! Volume Two, I detailed the process on my blog.

    eyetwitch:

    DAR covers!  Look how cool DAR 2 is going to be! (via Erika Moen)

    Aw, thanks!

    If people want to see the step-by-step process of how I came up with the cover for DAR! Volume Two, I detailed the process on my blog.

    Source: Flickr / erikamoen
    • 3 years ago
    • 6 notes
    • #comics
    • #dar
    • #erika moen
    • #book
    • #cover
    • #octopus
    • #cephalopod
    • #yellow
    • #girl
    • #tentacles
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