词条 | Buttercup Festival |
释义 |
| title = Buttercup Festival | image = | caption = "The protagonist ponders an unponderable durable pond." (author's caption) | author = David Troupes (alias Elliott G. Garbauskas, or "EGG") | url = Buttercup Festival | status = Updates every Monday | began = 2000 February 17 | genre = Humor }} Buttercup Festival is a webcomic created by poet and author David Troupes.[1] The comic's first run, from February 17, 2000 to January 10, 2005, began as a feature in the University of Massachusetts Amherst newspaper, The Daily Collegian, where Troupes was an editor during his college years. It was written under the pseudonym "Elliott G. Garbauskas." At various times during its first run it was published in the newspaper, on its own web site, and in other student newspapers and independent periodicals. The second series ran from January 28, 2008 to November 24, 2013. The third series started on February 4th, 2019 and is presently ongoing. Buttercup Festivals typical format is a strip of three or four panels, with the last often a non sequitur. Early installments feature simple two-value illustrations; as the author's skills matured, he began drawing larger tableaus and events.The comic's humor is marked by whimsy, puns, parody, and a gentle, eccentric madness. However, not all strips are wholly humorous; many are intended simply to evoke a sense of beauty or wonderment at nature (especially Sunday issues, painted in watercolor and often lacking dialogue), somewhat reminiscent at times of Calvin and Hobbes. Individual strips were collected in three print editions: Buttercup Festival, Irony is Killing my Soul, and Buttercup Festival: Unsinkable Affection for the World. As of January 2005, all are out of print. The author's other works include a short poetic graphic story called An Island People Go To, likewise out of print, and another webcomic called Green Evening Stories. CharactersThough Buttercup Festival has little, if any continuity from one strip to the next, and does not build on past strips, the same protagonist appears in every strip, and several other characters recur.
Recent developmentsOn December 21, 2007, Troupes posted a three-line message to the Buttercup Festival mailing list apparently announcing a second Buttercup Festival series: Friends,It has been awhile.But there is news. See the website. EGG On that day, Troupes's front page at buttercupfestival.com featured a reference to "Buttercup Festival Series II" set to launch January 28, 2008. Buttercup Festival Series II updated until 2013 on an unfixed schedule; typically, new comics appeared on a Monday, about once every two weeks. Series II was generally more visually oriented, featuring elaborate outdoor backgrounds and neatly written, minimalist dialogue. On November 4, 2013, Troupes announced that "Buttercup Festival Series II" had come to an end, but that the comic would absolutely make a comeback. On February 3, 2019, David Troupes announced that Buttercup Festival was back, and on February 4, 2019, he posted the first strip of "Buttercup Festival Series 3". References{{more footnotes|date=September 2008}}1. ^[https://web.archive.org/web/20120819101826/http://www.saltpublishing.com/horizon/issues/02/text/troupes_david.htm Brief biography and poetry sample] from Horizon Review *Review in Comixtalk
External links
6 : Comic strips started in the 2000s|American comic strips|2000s webcomics|Comedy webcomics|Webcomics in print|2000 webcomic debuts |
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