American cartoonist
James Kochalka
(born May 26, 1967, in
Springfield, Vermont
) is an American comic book artist, writer, animator, and
rock
musician. His comics are noted for their blending of the real and the surreal. Largely autobiographical, Kochalka's cartoon expression of the world around him includes such real-life characters as his wife, children, cat, friends and colleagues, but always filtered through his own observations and flights of whimsy. In March 2011 he was declared the cartoonist laureate of
Vermont
, serving a term of three years.
[1]
Early life and early career
[
edit
]
Kochalka grew up in
Springfield, Vermont
. He attended the
Maryland Institute College of Art
and has an MFA in painting.
His first published comics work was around 1994. He has cited cartoonist
Daniel Clowes
as being a key inspiration in leading him "towards a whole world of comics that [he] never knew existed."
[
citation needed
]
Kochalka strongly believes that simplicity is desirable in comics and says that "craft is the enemy", and has had public debates in print and online with other cartoonists who disagree with his position.
[2]
Kochalka's "Craft Is the Enemy" essays were collected in the 2005 book
The Cute Manifesto
.
Career
[
edit
]
Kochalka spent six years working in a Chinese restaurant in
Winooski, Vermont
, before leaving to devote his full energy to cartooning and music. His song "Hockey Monkey", recorded with the band
The Zambonis
, was the theme song for the
Fox
series
The Loop
.
Comics and graphic novels
[
edit
]
Comic book writer/artist
Frank Miller
told
SuicideGirls
that he is a "big fan of James Kochalka," predicting Kochalka is "going to become more important and it's going to be fun watching that happen. He reminds me of me when I was six years old and I came into my mother's kitchen with a bunch of sheets of typing paper folded over and stapled in the middle that were covered with drawings and I said 'Mom this is what I'm going to do for the rest of my life.' I've learned a lot from people like Kochalka because they do stuff that shouldn't work but does."
[3]
Kochalka is prolific in his comics work. He told an interviewer in 2002 that he had created 2,000 pages of comics by the time he completed high school. His comics have earned him four
Ignatz Awards
(Outstanding Minicomic 1997, Outstanding Series 2002, Outstanding Online Comic 2003 and 2004), a
Harvey Award
(Best Online Comic 2006), and multiple nominations for the
Eisner Award
. His work is characterized by a simple drawing style, bright colors, and frequent appearances by cats, robots, elves, and monkeys.
Among his most widely disseminated works is a four-page story, "Hulk vs. the Rain", that originally appeared in black-and-white in an unauthorized alternative comic called
Coober Skeber
. The story was later redrawn in color by Kochalka for inclusion in
Marvel
's
Incredible Hulk
2001 Annual. The first issue of his comic
SuperF*ckers
sold approximately 2,500 copies through
Diamond Distributing
.
[4]
In 2002, Kochalka said that all 5,000 copies of the first printing of the
Monkey vs. Robot
graphic novel had sold out.
[5]
There has since been a second printing, and in an interview in August 2006 Kochalka said that over 10,000 copies of
Monkey vs. Robot
have been sold to date.
[
citation needed
]
Kochalka created the comic
Impy And Wormer
, which appeared in
Nickelodeon Magazine
.
In July 2012 Kochalka won the Eisner Award for his book
Dragon Puncher 2: Dragon Puncher Island
.
Kochalka's two primary publishers are
Top Shelf Productions
and
Alternative Comics
. He has also published numerous short stories in comics anthologies, self-published his own
mini-comics
, and published graphic novels through other publishers such as Black Eye,
Slave Labor Graphics
and
Highwater Books
. He also makes the SpongeFunnies in the
SpongeBob Comics
series of comics.
American Elf
[
edit
]
For more than 14 years, from October 26, 1998 ? December 31, 2012, Kochalka kept a daily diary comic strip. These strips have been published by
Top Shelf Productions
, first as
The Sketchbook Diaries
and then in collected form as
American Elf
.
[6]
Kochalka told
The Onion
that he wrote the first diary entry while traveling by plane to the
San Diego Comic-Con
.
[
citation needed
]
Kochalka's friend and fellow cartoonist
Brian Ralph
was working on his comics on the flight, and Kochalka was inspired to begin cartooning on the plane as well. Kochalka created diary strips during the week of the convention, and committed to doing a diary strip every day.
[7]
The strip finally ended on December 31, 2012, with one final epilogue-style strip titled "Am I alive?" published on March 23, 2013.
[8]
Additionally, Kochalka published a tribute entry to his cat, Spandy, after her death in February 2014.
The book
American Elf
is a collection of Kochalka's daily diary strips, released in a large edition by
Top Shelf Productions
in Summer 2004, compiling five years of the daily diary strips and other supplemental material. A second volume was released in early 2007, collecting years six and seven of the daily strips in full color. A third volume followed in November 2008, collecting the years 2006 and 2007 in color.
Beginning in December 2007, Kochalka made all of his daily diary strip archives free for all readers; previously the archives had only been accessible to paying subscribers, with only the newest strip available for free. Under the relaunched "American Elf Supersite," all the archived strips dating back to 2002 were free for all readers, while paying subscribers receive access to other comics and MP3s. Kochalka reported on his blog that the site had received around 200,000 hits as a result of the change.
[
citation needed
]
Subsequently he opened the archives all the way back to the strip's beginning in 1998. As of 2017, those archives are no longer available, as the bulk of Kochalka's sketchbook diaries are sold in digital editions by Kochalka's publisher Top Shelf Productions.
[9]
SuperFuckers
[
edit
]
SuperFuckers (censored as "SuperF*ckers", "SuperF***ers", or "Super'F'-ers") is an adult-rated comic book series published by Top Shelf Productions between 2005 and 2007. The series revolves around a collection of crude and rude superheroes who never actually do any superhero work.
Frederator Studios
approached Kochalka with the possibility of producing an animated cartoon based on the comics. After pitching the show around to various cable television networks, Frederator produced the series for distribution on its
YouTube funded partner channel
Cartoon Hangover.
[10]
The series premiered on November 30, 2012.
[11]
The first season consists of twelve five-minute episodes and follows closely to the comics.
[12]
The series features
David Faustino
in the lead role of Jack Krak, as well as
Maria Bamford
,
Jaleel White
,
Veronica Belmont
,
Phil Morris
, and
Jeff B. Davis
.
[13]
The series was directed by
Fran Krause
, written by Kochalka, and features the music of Anthony Davis and Dustin Pilkington of
Best Fwends
.
Glorkian Warrior
[
edit
]
Glorkian Warrior is a series of books oriented at a younger audience.
[14]
created by Kochalka and published by FirstSecond. The first (of three) is called
Glorkian Warrior Delivers a Pizza
. The second graphic novel,
Glorkian Warrior Eats Adventure Pie
was released in March 2015
[15]
and the third book
The Glorkian Warrior and the Mustache of Destiny
came out a year later.
The character was created by Kochalka and along with
Pixeljam
was made into a videogame called
Glorkian Warrior: The Trials of Glork
Video games
[
edit
]
In 2010 Kochalka and
Pixeljam Games
did a Kickstarter to fund James' idea for a game called
Glorkian Warrior
. March 13, 2014 the game,
Glorkian Warrior: Trials of Glork
, was released on the Apple App Store for iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch devices. It is currently in development for Android, PC, Mac
Teaching
[
edit
]
Kochalka was an instructor at the
Center for Cartoon Studies
,
[
citation needed
]
a cartooning school in
White River Junction, Vermont
that was founded by cartoonist
James Sturm
. Kochalka is part of the "Little Idiot Collective," a group of artists assembled by the musician
Moby
.
[
citation needed
]
Music
[
edit
]
Kochalka's band, James Kochalka Superstar, has released nine albums.
Spread Your Evil Wings and Fly
was completed some time before its release in the fall of 2005; an online petition was launched to convince Kochalka's record label
Rykodisc
to release the CD. Over 500 people signed the petition demanding the album's release. It was followed by "Digital Elf" in 2009, "Good Morning, Glorkian Warrior" in 2015, "How To Tie A Tie On The Internet" in 2018, and "Eggs" in 2019. Additionally, two of Kochalka's other recordings have been released since, "Monkey Vs. Robot" and "Why Is The Sky Blue". Both hold copyrights from 1997 and 2005, respectively, and are listed on Spotify with those release dates.
Virtually all of Kochalka's CDs come packaged with his cartoons in the accompanying pamphlets, in some cases using the pamphlet as a full-length mini-comic.
Kochalka's best-known musical works are probably the songs "Pizza Rocket" and "Hockey Monkey", the music videos for which were shown on
Nickelodeon
's animation showcase series
KaBlam!
.
Rolling Stone
named "Britney's Silver Can" one of "The 100 Best Songs of 2006".
[16]
The song "Hockey Monkey", which James co-authored with
The Zambonis
, was used as theme song of the Fox comedy,
The Loop
.
Kochalka was also in the band Jazzin' Hell, and contributed vocals as the character Frank Poole in the rock opera CD,
ODYSSEY!
Moby sang back-up vocals on a seven-inch single from Kochalka's former band Jazzin' Hell,
[17]
an outtake of which resurfaced on Kochalka's album
Don't Trust Whitey
.
[18]
Personal life
[
edit
]
Kochalka lives in
Burlington, Vermont
with his wife Amy and their two sons, Eli and Oliver.
Bibliography
[
edit
]
- American Elf
(limited edition hardcover; published by Top Shelf) (May 2004)
- American Elf
(softcover; published by Top Shelf) (2004)
- American Elf Vol. 2
(softcover; published by Top Shelf) (Mar. 2007)
- Atlas 1
(backup story; published by Drawn and Quarterly)
- Bizarro Comics
(wrote
Hawkman
story illustrated by
Dylan Horrocks
; DC Comics)
- Bogus Dead
(zombie anthology with two-page story by Jason Cooley and James Kochalka)
- Conversation
#1 (with
Craig Thompson
; published by Top Shelf) (May 2004)
- Conversation
#2 (with
Jeffrey Brown
; published by Top Shelf) (Aug., 2005)
- Cute Manifesto, The
(Aug. 2005; published by Alternative Comics)
- Dragon Puncher
(2010; Top Shelf)
- Dragon Puncher Island
(2011; Top Shelf)
- Deadbear, Circus Detective
(self-published hardcover)
- Fancy Froglin's Sexy Forest
(2003; published by Alternative Comics)
- Fantastic Butterflies
(2002; published by Alternative Comics and Highwater Books)
- Fungus
(2011; Retrofit Comics)
- Fungus: The Unbearable Rot of Being
(2014; Retrofit Comics / Big Planet Comics)
- Horrible Truth About Comics, The
(2001; published by Alternative Comics)
- James Kochalka Superstar #1?11
(Self-published mini-comics)
- Johnny Boo: The Best Little Ghost in the Whole World
(Vol. 1) (Top Shelf)
- Johnny Boo: Twinkle Power
(Vol. 2) (2008; Top Shelf)
- Johnny Boo and the Happy Apples
(Vol. 3) (2009; Top Shelf)
- Johnny Boo and the Mean Little Boy
(Vol. 4) (2010; Top Shelf)
- Johnny Boo Does Something!
(Vol. 5) (2013; Top Shelf)
- Johnny Boo Zooms to the Moon!
(Vol. 6) (2014; Top Shelf)
- Johnny Boo Meets Dragon Puncher
(2015; Top Shelf)
- Johnny Boo Goes Like This
(Vol. 7) (2016; Top Shelf)
- Johnny Boo and the Ice Cream Computer
(Vol. 8) (2018; Top Shelf)
- Johnny Boo is King!
(Vol. 9) (2018; Top Shelf)
- Johnny Boo and the Midnight Monsters
(Vol. 10) (2019 (upcoming); Top Shelf)
- Kissers
(1999; published by Highwater Books)
- Little Mister Man #1?3
(Slave Labor Graphics)
- Magic Boy and Girlfriend
(1998; published by Top Shelf)
- Magic Boy and the Robot Elf
(2003; published by Top Shelf)
- Mechaboys
(2018; published by Top Shelf)
- Mermaid
(1998; published by Alternative Comics)
- Monica's Story
(1999; published by Alternative Comics)
[19]
- Monkey vs. Robot
(Vol 1) (First Edition) (2000; published by Top Shelf; 2nd edition, in smaller size published in 2005 by Top Shelf)
- Monkey vs. Robot
(Vol 2): Crystal of Power (2003; published by Top Shelf)
- Noisy Outlaws, Unfriendly Blobs, and Some Other Things
(anthology featuring 12-page Kochalka story; 2005; published by
McSweeney's
)
- Paradise Sucks
(Black Eye Books)
|
- Peanutbutter & Jeremy #1?4
(2000?2003; published by Alternative Comics)
- Peanutbutter & Jeremy's Best Book Ever
(Dec. 2003; published by Alternative Comics)
- Perfect Planet and Other Stories, The
(1999; published by Top Shelf)
- Pinky & Stinky
(2002; published by Top Shelf)
- Quit Your Job
(1998; published by Alternative Comics)
- Reinventing Everything #1
(self-published mini-comic)
- Reinventing Everything #2
(self-published mini-comic)
- Sketchbook Diaries
(Vol 1) (2003; published by Top Shelf)
- Sketchbook Diaries
(Vol 2) (2003; published by Top Shelf)
- Sketchbook Diaries
(Vol 3) (2003; published by Top Shelf)
- Sketchbook Diaries
(Vol 4) (Dec. 2003; published by Top Shelf)
- Squirrelly Gray
(Aug. 2007; published by Random House)
- Sunburn
(2000; published by Alternative Comics)
- Sunturd
(2003) (mini-comic written by Jason Cooley, same art as Sunburn)
- SuperFuckers #1
(Mar. 2005; published by Top Shelf)
- SuperFuckers #2
(Aug. 2005; published by Top Shelf)
- SuperFuckers #3
(2006; published by Top Shelf)
- SuperFuckers #4
(2007; published by Top Shelf)
- Tiny Bubbles
(1998; published by Highwater Books)
- Top Shelf #1
(anthology title with Kochalka contribution; published by Top Shelf)
- Top Shelf #5
(anthology title with Kochalka contribution; published by Top Shelf)
- Top Shelf #6
(anthology title with Kochalka contribution; published by Top Shelf)
- Top Shelf Asks the Big Questions
(anthology title with Kochalka contribution; published by Top Shelf)
- Triple Dare #1?2
(1998?2000; Published by Alternative Comics)
- The Glorkian Warrior Delivers a Pizza
(2014; First Second)
- The Glorkian Warrior Eats Adventure Pie
(2015; First Second)
- The Glorkian Warrior and the Mustache of Destiny
(2016; First Second)
|
Discography
[
edit
]
Albums
- 1995,
The True Story of James Kochalka Superstar
(CD, Dot Dot Dash, DOT 7)
- 1996,
4-Track Egomaniac
(cassette, self-release)
- 1997,
Monkey vs. Robot
(CD & comic book, Tarquin Records, TQ-018)
- 1998,
Punk Ass Bitch
[with Jason Cooley] (cassette, self-release)
- 1999,
Kissers
(bonus CD with graphic novel, Highwater Books)
- 1999,
Carrot Boy The Beautiful
(CD, Sudden Shame, SS024)
- 1999,
Mermaid
[with R Stevie Moore] (cassette, self-release)
- 2001,
Don't Trust Whitey
(CD, Tarquin Records, TQ-025)
- 2002,
Hot Chocolate Superstar
(download-only , Dangerfive Records)
- 2002,
Danger Force Five Singles Club
[with Colin Clary] (download-only, Dangerfive Records)
- 2004,
Punky Brewskies
[as Punky Brewskies, with Jason X-12] (cassette, Icebox Records IB3-001)
- 2006,
Spread Your Evil Wings & Fly
(CD, Rykodisc, RCD-10840)
- 2009,
Digital Elf
(CD, Top Shelf)
- 2012,
Beautiful Man
(download-only, self-release)
- 2018,
How To Tie A Tie On The Internet
(internet release, Kochalka Quality)
- 2019,
Eggs
(internet release, Kochalka Quality)
EPs
- 1992,
Egg Hunt
[with Jazzin' Hell] (7", Thicker Records, TQ-003)
- 1996,
Bad Astronaut
(7", Mustard Records, MUST001)
- 2012,
I Am The Beast
(download-only, self-release)
Singles
- 1994,
"Superstar Rastafari"
b/w "2000" [The Pants] (7", Split Records, SPL-004)
Compilations and Best-Of
- 1995,
"Hot Dog Hot Rod Rider"
from
Good Citizen Vol 1 The Soundtrack to the Zine
(CD, Good Citizen)
- 1996,
"Ballbuster"
(Headlock cover) from "Burlington Does Burlington, Vol 1 & 2" (CD, Good Citizen)
- 1997,
"President Kochalka"
from "Pop Pie" (Big Heavy World)
- 2003,
"Even The Clouds Get High"
from Rykodisc The Anthology (CD, Rykodisc)
- 2005,
Our Most Beloved
(CD, Rykodisc RCD 10678) (a best-of compilation packaged with a five-video DVD)
- 2006,
Why is the Sky Blue?
(download-only, Rykodisc/WEA) (a best-of compilation)
- 2010,
Digital Elf/Kissers
(LP re-release, Senor Hernandez Records)
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Polston, Pamela.
James Kochalka First State Cartoonist Laureate
, 7d.blogs.com, January 24, 2011
- ^
"TCJ ARCHIVE: Blood and Thunder: Craft is the Enemy,"
The Comics Journal
(1996?1997). Accessed Jan. 7, 2017.
- ^
Epstein, Daniel Robert.
Interview with Miller
Archived
June 20, 2013, at the
Wayback Machine
, SuicideGirls.com (August 3, 2005). Accessed Dec 21, 2008.
- ^
"Diamond Comic Distributors, Inc. - About Diamond"
.
Diamondcomics.com
. Retrieved
March 12,
2020
.
- ^
Nadel, Dan.
Mars Import Interview (April 2002).
Archived
October 20, 2007, at the
Wayback Machine
Accessed December 21, 2008.
- ^
Sims, Chris.
"James Kochalka’s ‘American Elf’ Is Coming To An End After 14 Years,"
Comics Alliance
(December 11, 2012).
- ^
Kochalka, James (2004).
American Elf vol 1 listing on Amazon
.
ISBN
189183049X
.
- ^
Zack Smith (January 4, 2013).
"14-Year Webcomic AMERICAN ELF Ends, Creator Moves Forward"
.
Newsarama.com
. Retrieved
July 21,
2013
.
- ^
"James Kochalka / Top Shelf Productions"
.
Topshelfcomix.com
. Retrieved
March 12,
2020
.
- ^
"Interview: James Kochalka, Creator of "SuperF*ckers"
"
.
Verbicidemagazine.com
.
- ^
"Sweet Mystery (SuperF***ers - Ep. 1) - YouTube"
.
www.youtube.com
. Archived from
the original
on December 7, 2012
. Retrieved
January 17,
2022
.
- ^
"James Kochalka on 'SuperF*ckers': "If Superheroes Were Real, They'd be Like Teens on the Internet' [Interview] - ComicsAlliance | Comic book culture, news, humor, commentary, and reviews"
. Archived from
the original
on January 17, 2013
. Retrieved
January 2,
2013
.
- ^
"superfckers"
.
YouTube
.
- ^
Kochalka, James (March 25, 2014).
The Glorkian Warrior Delivers a Pizza
. First Second.
ISBN
978-1626721036
.
- ^
"James kochalka | the Dooryard"
.
www.the-dooryard.com
. Archived from
the original
on August 8, 2014
. Retrieved
January 17,
2022
.
- ^
"Music News"
.
Rolling Stone
.
- ^
"moby.org"
.
38.moby.org
.
- ^
"James Kochalka Superstar"
.
Ink19.com
. January 30, 2002.
- ^
"Alternative Comics: MONICA'S STORY"
. Archived from
the original
on September 20, 2010
. Retrieved
March 12,
2020
.
External links
[
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]
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