Saturday, October 24, 2009
SCREAMFEST!
Tattoo Love Magic



MEGACON!
CARNIES

It’s tough enough being a carnival worker. The pay sucks. You have no home. You travel across the country never staying anywhere for more than a week at a time. The way people look at you sometimes, it’s like you’re not even human.
Now imagine being the featured attraction at the carnival sideshow. Imagine being ridiculed and taunted on a daily basis. Imagine being looked upon with disgust, fear, even hate. It comes with the territory. It’s my job, but I don’t have to like it.
It was inevitable that someone would eventually cross the line. Somewhere, somehow it would go too far. Then they would get more than they ever bargained for. And for that one night, it would be us freaks laughing.
But that night cost us our livelihood and the only life we ever knew. Where once we lived out in the open, now we hide in shadows. They hate us because we’re different, because we’re strange. Truth is, we’re more terrible than they could ever imagine.
So begins Snakeman in the prequel issue of Carnies. Also developed as a 6 issue mini-series, we put the project on hiatus due to the release of another book titled Carny. This title will also be included in the anthology book we're developing.




GIFTED

Around the time the 3DDD prequel was out, we had begun developing a couple of other projects we were looking to shop around to different publishers. One of these projects was GIFTED, the first project that sprung out of my mind without the benefit of one of Luis' paintings to inspire me. I wrote it as a 6 issue mini-series. The story centers around a strange young girl named TK who all of a sudden reappears into her brother's life on the first day of his senior year at high school. TK's brother is a model student, captain of the football team and one of the most popular boys in school. TK is dark, eerily quiet and weird. Her arrival causes a stir and turns her brother's world inside out. But there's more to TK than just her strangeness, there's a dark secret from her past. One that her brother desperately wants to keep.
3 Days the Devil Danced

It started out as a project at Grafika Press and grew into a full fledged graphic novel which is actually still in production. [As is most of our work :( ]
Grafika produced a prequel issue that was well received by the comic public and press. The cover by Luis Diaz was accepted into the Spectrum Fantastic Art Annual. We were also among the first to ever create a trailer for a comic book, which you can watch on this post. Click here to download a PDF version of the prequel.
From the provocative cover image to the grunge-realism of the interior artwork, this comic is going for the jugular."http://www.brokenfrontier.com"Remember how you got a cold chill reading Garth Ennis's works with John Constantine? Remember how your skin crawled when The Preacher, Jesse, discovered what was behind the door at the meat packing plant? Well, better up your meds kids cause the Devil is coming to town and he wants to party."http://www.horror-web.com"Fantastic and moody, the art is perfect for the story. The story telling grabs a hold of you and doesn't let go. Prepare yourself for the shockwave that this book will leave in its path."http://www.comicmonsters.com"
Friday, October 23, 2009
Grafika Press

Jason Arthur
John Belkewitch
Brian Clark
Barb Lien-Cooper
Luis Diaz
Darla Ecklund
Ty Gorton
Jason Hanley
Jessica Hickman
Dennis Kroesen
Ilkka Lesonen
Mark Matlock
Michael May
Josh Medors
Milx
Phillip S. Neundorf
Ricardo Porven
Jim Reddington
Andrew Ritchie
Josh Ross
Aadi Salman
Gavin Spence
Paul Tucker
Anthony Ventura
Aaron Weisbrod
Our First Interview
Who are you?
We go by the names of Ricardo Porven and Luis Diaz, but that doesn’t really answer the question. We have been brought together to fulfill a purpose. A purpose that doesn’t contribute to the greater good or bring about some ridiculous high-minded ideal such as world peace, justice, or freedom from sin, but is no less important. We’re the best-kept secret in the world of independent comics, but not for long.
What do you do?
We create comic books for adults. Really, really good ones.
Why do you do it?
We have no choice really. For as long as we can remember these stories and characters have lived inside us and lately they have grown restless. If we don’t get them out on paper, they may turn on us. The thought terrifies us.
Where are you from?
I’m from an extinct tribe of sadistic Judeo-Cuban Filipinos who took great pleasure in torturing lizards and other small animals to pass the time in the wilds of Hialeah.
Luis hails from the very depths of Hell, or Westchester, as some are prone to call it. I conjured him to do my bidding while I played with my Ouija board one night.
Seriously, we are Cuban Americans from different corners of the globe. Ricardo Porven was born in East Newark, NJ and moved to Miami at an early age. Luis Diaz was born in Cuba, but also grew up in Miami. Somehow, I think that’s scarier.
Where are you going?
Though after reading our stories many may think we’re headed straight to Hell, we believe we have the ingredients necessary to propel us to elite status in the comic book industry. Cocky? Perhaps, but if we didn’t feel we had the stuff, we’d just spend our days like most comic fans; playing video games, arguing about what superhero would beat what superhero in a fistfight, and spending a year planning our Halloween costumes.
Where and how did you start?
We’ve spent many years planning our hostile takeover, but just recently decided to do something about it. We had our first submission, “The Penitent and the Damned”, a ten page short horror story, accepted for publishing in “Tales from the Inner Sanctum”, a horror anthology by the message board members of steveniles.com.
Who or what inspires you?
It is the many artists before us who were driven by a passion to create and motivated by the sheer enjoyment of the process that inspire us. It’s rare to find that combination today; so much of it is all about business.
Who are your influences?
We are influenced by everything around us including the media. But mostly from our own life experiences and unresolved issues. Conflict makes for good storytelling, or so I’m told.
How can you be reached?
You can reach us through our websites, www.rabidart.com or www.hallucinonia.com or find out more about our upcoming comic book projects through our studios’ site www.grafikapress.com
Anything else you want people to know?
Keep an eye out for us in 2005! We are currently shopping a series to the 3 major independent comic book publishers and also plan to release an independent miniseries through grafikapress.com. You can also see Luis’ work in an upcoming series of Garbage Pail Kids trading cards from Topps, Inc.
The Penitent and the Damned

This was our first published work together. Like many of our stories at the time, the inspiration was drawn from one of Luis Diaz's paintings, "Basement Man". It was a powerful image but it's all I had to go on. The image and the burning question, "How did this thing get there?" The end result is the story that appeared and led off the fan published book, Tales from the Inner Sanctum. It is a tale of great pain and sadness, infidelity and religious fanaticism taken to the extreme. And lucky for you, I've made it available for download as a PDF by clicking here. All we ask is that you return and give us your comments.
JAQ

It began with a rabbit. A completely sickening and psychotic rabbit. But a rabbit nonetheless.
My artistic and completely hetero relationship with Luis Diaz began shortly after his graduating from college where as an ad agency Creative Director, I gave him a brutal and completely sadistic freelance job of turning around 9 storyboards in a weekend. The drawings sucked, LOL, but in the end, he delivered what I needed. The curious thing about this is he remained my friend afterwards, which still puzzles me to this day. At that time, he shared his portfolio with me and I was completely blown away by his art. It was dark, erotic and magnificent, and somehow crept in to my innermost thoughts and made itself at home in my mind. Time passed and Luis began to talk to me about what he wanted to achieve in comics. The conversations led to his favorite character Cottontail, The Killer Rabbit™ and how he had never been able to find a writer that could capture what was in his mind. So I convinced him to give me a shot at it. (he was just being polite, I'm sure) Amazingly, he discovered that I was as sick as he was... perhaps more. This early collaboration led to a long and storied period of creative collaboration that continues to this day. The story we developed for Cottontail has yet to see the light of day, but when you least expect it, this homicidal hare will take its place in pop culture history. I'm certain of it.Thursday, October 22, 2009
The beginning.




