Facing Feelings: The Art of Raina Telgemeier, now on display at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum!
Last weekend, I had the deep honor of seeing my own work on the walls at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum’s exhibit, FACING FEELINGS: The Art of Raina Telgemeier!
I have been working with the museum’s curators on this show since the summer of 2021. It’s a retrospective of my nearly twenty years as a professional cartoonist, plus a selection of work I made along the path to get there: art and artifacts my parents saved from my childhood, comics I did in school, and stories from my early days as a self-published minicomics creator.
My friend Anne Drozd, who curated the exhibit, sorted through piles of my (semi-organized) original art and came up with a fantastic way of presenting it on the walls of the Billy. The philosophy behind the show is emotion: exploring the different feelings we all experience as humans, and how cartoonists have been portraying these emotions with a common visual language for centuries. I’ve always been drawn to comics with strong emotional resonance, good character writing, and expressive art. It’s the kind of work I aim to create, and sharing my own feelings through the books I make is exactly what keeps me going. I believe my readers can feel it!
My own first visit to the Billy was almost a decade ago, for the Bill Watterson and Richard Thompson joint exhibition. I broke into spontaneous tears upon seeing how much white-out was on the original Calvin and Hobbes strips! And how beautiful those scratchy Cul de Sac ink lines were! I was thrilled to be able to include a few original Calvin and Hobbes strips in the influences section of Facing Feelings.
This time around, I came to Ohio for my opening talk at the Billy with my parents in tow, and was delighted to have a few friends from out of town join us as well. We got to see the museum’s archives, view some gorgeous original art, and tour my exhibit together. My parents have always been two of my biggest supporters, and having them there meant the world to me.
Anne and I gave a joint presentation on Saturday afternoon in front of a packed house, sharing some of the thought process that went into the curation of the show and what we hope visitors might get out of it. That was followed by a spirited Q&A, and a long and joyful signing and meet & greet session with hundreds of enthusiastic readers! People were there from all over the United States. If you missed it, I’ll be back for Cartoon Crossroads Columbus (CXC) at the end of September, and will be doing another event in conjunction with the Billy for the festival. Stay tuned for dates and ticket info!
As for the exhibit itself, the Billy has extended the dates through November 19, 2023, so if you have a chance to come to Columbus between now and then—I hope you’ll visit! The museum is FREE and open to the public Tuesdays - Sundays, 1-5pm. They also have a library and reading room, and if you’re curious to learn more about the history of cartooning, they’re an incredible resource!
Finally, an exhibition catalog for Facing Feelings will be released next year, containing the art, annotations, and commentary created for the exhibit, an interview between Anne and myself, as well as a foreword by Scott McCloud! It’ll be published by Scholastic Graphix, releasing on August 6, 2024!
Unending thanks to Anne Drozd, Jenny Robb, Caitlin McGurk, and the rest of the staff and volunteers at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum. You have been a joy to work with, and I am so lucky to know you all! Comics forever!!
All photos by TOP5IVE Photography by John Landry unless otherwise noted.