This Wednesday the fifth volume of Flight hits bookshelves, and I’m thrilled to have contributed a story to the latest collection. The Flight blog has a great preview of some of the stories in the book, including Scenes in Which the Earth Stops Spinning and Everybody Flies Into a Wall, which was written by Ryan North and drawn by me!
The story’s genesis is from this episode of Dinosaur Comics.
There are so many great artists and stories in the book; it’s an honour and a thrill to be included among such great talent. Kazu and everyone else involved really outdid themselves.
Out of procrastination comes another Muxtape. The tracklist:
Here’s the illustration I created for The Box Salon, and you can view the time-lapsed creation below. The inking stage turned out a little blurry after uploading it to Vimeo, so I clearly need to tinker with my compression settings next time.
Timpe Lapsed Illustration from John Martz on Vimeo.
I keep forgetting to post this, but I’ll be presenting some of my work at the Box Salon this Wednesday evening (July 9) at the Rivoli here in Toronto.
The Box is a quarterly salon night of readings, performances, screenings, interventions and networking that aims to bring diverse communities and audiences into an environment of artistic and social intermingling.
I’m still not entirely certain what I’ll be presenting, but it will most likely be a hodge podge of comics, illustrations, movie poems, and subway anagrammery. If I can find the time between now and then I’m going to try to put together a video/screencap of an illustration being completed from start to finish, which will no doubt work its way onto this site eventually. Recent deadlines have pushed my procrastination to new limits!
Anyhow, there’ll be plenty of varying presentations of art, music, and words, so it promises to be fun. See you there?
I’ve uploaded some sketches from a recent marathon drawing session up north at a friend’s cottage. Check ‘em out at Flickr.

This wretched unwatchable sham’ll
remove the once-shining enamel
from poor actor Hayden,
whose star is fast fadin’
just like his precursor, Mark Hamill.

If movies be the food of love,
the first Hulk was inedible.
This reboot might be better, but
I’d hardly say “incredible”.