src
seen from Russia
seen from Russia
seen from Brazil
seen from Ukraine
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from Russia

seen from Spain
seen from Türkiye

seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from South Korea

seen from United States

seen from Belgium
src
calvin and hobbes
My favorite genre of self-portrait is cartoonists being bothered by their characters while trying to draw
Bill Watterson – Calvin and Hobbes (1986)
Hergé – Tintin (1947, Tintin Magazine)
Albert Uderzo – Asterix (the cover of Uderzo l'Irreductible (2018), but originally much older)
Jeff Smith – Bone (1993, Bone Holiday Special)
Walt Kelly – Pogo (1950, Maclean's Magazine)
And a bonus:
Berkeley Breathed – Bloom County
I grew up reading Calvin & Hobbes, and one of my favorite running jokes was the snowmen that Calvin would build.
I thinks folks expressing incredulity at the quality of the writing and composition in Calvin and Hobbes are often missing the context that Bill Watterson is arguably the most influential sequential artist of his generation. Like, this is a guy who once told the editors of nationally syndicated newspapers to go fuck themselves when they wanted to mess with his panel layouts, and not only did he keep his job, he got his way. He could have had literally any gig he wanted, and he chose to be the Sunday funnies guy because that's what made him happy. He's basically the Weird Al of sequential art.
Love this strip