Here's a graphic recording of sorts - sketched at the table during the lunch - to celebrate a great event!
Today I had the pleasure of attending the Mayor's Lunch for Arts Champions - a first-time event celebrating Calgary artists, art patrons, and anyone else who's being irresistibly drawn to the incredible arts-empowered vibe in Calgary these days. It was fun to have lunch at the find it table with a few members of the find it team (and a few others I didn't even get the chance to get to know!). It was inspiring to see so many Calgarians who are passionate about the arts... including the folks at City Hall! And, for me, also nice to take a step away from my usual mostly-stay-at-home-mom life in Ramsay and mingle with so many members of Calgary's arts community. Here's a graphic recording of sorts - sketched at the table during the lunch - to celebrate a great event! And now, back to the only "creative" work I can ever realistically get done while my son's awake...!
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It's almost Valentine's Day, and that reminds me of something really fun that happened this time last year. There was a knock at my door, and standing there were Jim and Louise Campbell. I'd never met them before, but they had come to Ramsay to track me down.
Part of a walking club for retired Calgary teachers, Jim and Louise were organizing the group's monthly walk. They'd read my comic strip about Ramsay in the Calgary Herald, and it had inspired them to bring the walk to my neighbourhood. After giving the community a once-over and plotting their route, they came over to my place to invite me for the walk! And that was how I found myself pushing a stroller at the head of a crowd of forty dedicated walkers clad in Valentine's-themed garb. Many had never been to Ramsay and enjoyed its history and scenery. I was told that not everyone in the club turns up for each walk - particularly in winter - but that Ramsay drew the whole group! It was fun to meet a whole lot of new people from all over Calgary and see them enjoying a new part of town. After a chilly but invigorating walk, everyone ended up back at Caffe Rosso to warm up. What a great memory. Happy Valentine's Day! I sure like the Calgary Herald, but this opinion piece by Naomi Lakritz reads like a paid advertisement for urban-sprawling development projects - except that they can't have paid that well, because there are just so many holes in what isn't even really an argument. Well, it's an opinion, which is just fine. I don't usually like to criticize other people's opinions, to which they have every right. But this one was published by a newspaper that claims to represent our city, for a readership of thousands. These readers should know that there's another side to the story, right here in Calgary. At the time of writing, it looks like there are already quite a few Calgarians getting their dander up about this closed-minded piece. But I can't resist adding my two cents, a little bit of ink of paper, and a firm belief in the possibility of a walkable city: Some excerpts from Ms. Lakritz's article (to all of which, I say: phooey):
(*I don't know the context for this remark, but it doesn't leave me with a great impression of Alderman Keating's vision for the city.) I know I've referred to this comic strip story in a few other places, but just in case anyone would like more details about my weekly Lakritz-defying walk, here's the map of my neighbourhood walk in Ramsay (also published in the Calgary Herald back in December 2011).
My walk to the market engaged me with my community in a way I'd never experienced before (back when I was a flight attendant who never spent any time at home). It was the first step towards a local artwalk (pictured here) that livened up my street in 2012. It was the first step to reassuring me that it would be safe to let my son walk to our local school when he's old enough to attend it - after all, he's already friends with almost every neighbour between the school and our house. But think about this... the fact that the market was THERE, 800 metres from my door, gave me a destination, a place to do my shopping, a place to make friends, a place to take my toddler that came complete with indoor bathrooms. (Actually, I've also drawn a comic strip about that evolving relationship with the Crossroads Market.) The point is that I am lucky to live in a neighbourhood in which this option is available. Yes, I still head to Superstore about once a month to buy a big package of toilet paper and a few other things that fit in my trunk. But if more neighbourhoods were premised on "walkability", I'm guessing we'd see more positive changes than just a higher rank on the Walk Score. And by the way... for those of you who are just waiting to point out that not everyone is as mobile as I: don't get me started. Or, if you'd like to get me started, please let me know.
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sam hesterI am a graphic recorder based in Calgary. I like local stories. I write comics when I have free time. And I leave eraser shavings everywhere I go. Looking for a
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Some nice things people said about my work:
“If Breitkreuz and Foong [founders of the Calgary Comics & Entertainment Expo] represent the Type-A side of Calgary's self-publishing community, Hester may be the community's right brain.” – Tom Babin, FFWD Magazine
“…A strong graphic style similar to other autobiographically-inclined Canadian cartoonists like Chester Brown and Julie Doucet.” – Gilbert Bouchard, Edmonton Journal
The 23rd Story: an indie comics creator's tales of life in Calgary