Jesse Reklaw

Jesse Reklaw

Reklaw, photographed at the 2004 Alternative Press Expo (APE) in San Francisco.
Born Jesse Walker
1971 (age 4445)
Berkeley, California
Nationality American
Area(s) Cartoonist, Penciller
Notable works
Slow Wave
Awards Society of Professional Journalists (Northern California chapter) — Excellence in Journalism Award, 2004
Association of Alternative Newsweeklies, 2001, 2003, 2004
Ignatz Award, 2008

Jesse Reklaw (born 1971) is an American cartoonist and painter, author of the syndicated dream-based comic strip Slow Wave.

Biography

Reklaw was born in Berkeley, California and grew up in Sacramento, studied at UC Santa Cruz, and completed a master's degree in computer science at Yale University. In 1995, while pursuing a Ph.D. in artificial intelligence, he began self-publishing comics in his dream-themed series Concave Up. At the same time, he developed the weekly strip Slow Wave; when he began to have some success in syndicating it, he dropped out of Yale to work as a cartoonist.[1] He lives in Portland, Oregon, with his cat, Littles, who appears in many of his strips and zines.

Slow Wave

Slow Wave is "a collective dream diary authored by people from around the world." Readers email their dreams to Reklaw, who illustrates them in a classic four panel cartoon which credits the dreamer as co-author.[2] Reklaw pares down each dream he selects to a few sentences. Reklaw has said he likes dreams because they have "their own logic and a natural dada-like humor."[3] Examples of Slow Wave stories include one in which "a man is pursued by an all-knowing ham"; one in which "the Royal Hole in the Earth Society discusses an award for the best hole filled with water"; and "one about a man who rode a unicorn to distant mountaintops in search of the world's only bathroom".[1]

Slow Wave has been published in alternative newspapers and on the web since 1995. An anthology of Slow Wave strips was published in the book Dreamtoons. Slow Wave has also been published in Dream Time, the newsletter of the Association of the Study of Dreams, and two Slow Wave strips appeared in the textbook Introduction to Psychology, 5E by James Kalat, published by Brooks/Cole.

Other works

Chris Cilla, Reklaw, Dylan Williams, Tim Goodyear, and Andrice Arp at the Stumptown Comics Festival in 2007.

Reklaw's work has frequently appeared in small-press anthologies and self-published minicomics, many of which are available through the small-press comics distributor Global Hobo, which he co-operates. He is also the designer and editor of a small found art book, Applicant, which reproduces photographs and descriptions of graduate school applicants in the 1970s.

Reklaw maintains the ethics of the early indie zine and mail art traditions, and has been known to send strangers free mini-comics in envelopes decorated with "crazy fish stamps."[4] Reklaw is currently writing an autobiographical graphic novel called Couchtag, an excerpt of which, 13 Cats, was published in Houghton Mifflin's Best American Comics 2006.

In 1992, Reklaw was in a band called "Pissant" with fellow cartoonist Adrian Tomine.[5]

Awards

In 2004, Reklaw won an Excellence in Journalism Award from the Northern California chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists for his regular publication of Slow Wave in the East Bay Express, and he received awards from the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies in 2001, 2003, and 2004 for Slow Wave, including "Best cartoon" and "Format buster."[6]

Reklaw has been nominated five times for an Ignatz Award: Outstanding Online Comic in 2003 (Slow Wave), and Outstanding Minicomic in 2001 (Mime Compliant #5), 2003 (Lo-Horse, with David Lasky), and 2005 (Couch Tag #2). In 2008, he won the Ignatz Award for Outstanding Minicomic for (Bluefuzz The Hero).

Works

Books
Comic book series

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Anthony Weiss (May–June 2006). "Dream Job". Yale Alumni Magazine, Arts & Culture. Retrieved 2006-09-15.
  2. Oliver James (Nov 24, 2005). "All you have to do is dream". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2006-09-15.
  3. Jesse Reklaw (Nov 18, 2005). "Slow Wave Turns Ten". Slowwave.com. Retrieved 2006-09-15.
  4. "Q & A with Jesse Reklaw". Buttonhole. Feb 21, 2006. Retrieved 2006-09-15.
  5. "QUIRKY WORKS / MUSIC / Whatever Happened To Pissant?". Retrieved September 28, 2010.
  6. "Jesse Reklaw". Association of Alternative Newsweeklies. Retrieved 2006-09-15.

External links

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