The Filipina cartoonist who’s making a splash in the world stage
While artwork from local comic strip legends such as Mars Ravelo
(“Darna”) and Carlo J. Carapas (“Panday”) are utterly adored throughout the
country, there is little local attention being given to a Filipina cartoonist
who is making big waves all around the world.
From critical acclaim and major showcases, to features in
prominent comics conventions and anthologies, November Garcia’s wild ride to
international notice began in earnest just a few years ago — yet, it is
something that she’s been working towards her entire life.
Born and raised in the Philippines, November Garcia always drew
and created comics for fun. However, it wasn’t until she moved to San Francisco
in her early 20s to attend art school that she discovered indie and underground
comics. “Reading Peter Bagge, R. Crumb and Jim Woodring is what made me want to
seriously make comics.”
“I tried to avoid doing any real writing because I wasn’t
confident in my abilities. Meanwhile, my professors would encourage me to enter
pieces into the school’s art shows even though I never got in. I guess they
always loved my funny ideas and weirdo characters but my art was lacking in
execution.”
Returning home to the Philippines in 2014, she continued to make
comics, persistently and diligently focusing on improving her craft, often just
posting her work online to little notice. Then, in a combination of sheer luck
and fortuitous timing, Matt Moses of Hic and Hoc Publications happened upon her
blog and offered to publish her first comic.
In 2017, Foggy Notions was released and globally distributed. It
soon garnered near-universal critical acclaim around the world. It has also
been featured in The Comics Journal, Broken Frontier, High-Low, Just Indie
Comics, and more.
Foggy Notions is a collection of autobiographical shorts that
details November’s episodic misadventures during the many years that she spent
living in San Francisco.
November’s figure drawing is simple and efficient, but that
aesthetic is also homage to her roots in the underground, indie comics of her
predecessors. Whereas her style is nothing like the ultra-rendered superheroes
people sometimes associate with the words “comic books”, hers is based on the
influence of Peter Bagge, Gabrielle Bell, John Porcellino and Lynda Barry on
her, with storytelling increasingly becoming a focal point in her craft. It is
the conscious and complete antithesis of flashy superheroes. From the
subtleties of real life, alcoholism, and the mundane come moments of great
humor and the occasional difficult times.
Her serial comic, Malarkey (which captures funny events from her daily
life, random (mis)adventures, and oddly hilarious conversations with her
mother), has also generated its fair share of critical praise.
Malarkey #1 made the list of “The Best Short-Form Comics of 2016”
in The Comics Journal. Malarkey #2 was listed in the “Top Ten Single Issues of
2017” by the Daily Grindhouse.
This year, November is the recipient of Short Run Seattle’s Dash
Grant, and will be featured as a special guest at the Short Run Seattle
festival, where she will be premiering Malarkey #3. Its original cover art will
be featured at the Fantagraphics Bookstore and Gallery show.
This year, she was approached to contribute a comic to the
Illustrated PEN, a prestigious American literary publication. It will feature
her comic about growing up Catholic in the Philippines, this November (the
month, not the person). She will also be part of the Sweaty Palms 2 anthology
coming out next year (which will feature a fellow Filipino cartoonist).
November exhibits and sells her comics at various alternative comics
shows. Most recently, she exhibited at the Chicago Alternative Comics Expo in
2017, debuting two more critically acclaimed ‘zines (Rookie Moves and More
Diary Comics from a Relative Nobody), Small Press Expo in Maryland, and locally
at Komikon (the biggest and longest running Filipino comics convention) for the
past 3 years.
She is thrilled to debut Malarkey #3 at this year’s Short Run
Seattle on November 3rd and at Komikon on November 17-18.
You can find her at novembergarcia.com and on social media as
@novembergarcia.
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