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Creator Spotlight: @jdebbiel
Deb JJ Lee is a non-binary Korean artist based in Brooklyn, NY. They have appeared in the New Yorker, New York Times, NPR, Google, Radiolab, and more. Their award-winning graphic memoir, IN LIMBO, about mental illness and difficult relationships with trauma, released in March 2023 from First Second.
Below is our interview with Deb!
Have you ever had an art block? If so, how did you overcome it?
That implies I am over my art block, but I’m still in it! I think about Kiki’s Delivery Service a lot and how she had to stop doing a thing, and that you can’t really force it, and you have to let it come back to you. It’s a pretty humbling moment, realizing there is more to life than just drawing. I’ve been trying to consume other content like reading or watching movies—anything that is not drawing-related—and to trust that it will come back to me. I think not being afraid to do the small pieces before committing to the big pieces is helpful. Because big pieces are what I am known for, I dig myself into a deeper hole, thinking that each piece has to be bigger than the last one. So yeah! Relaxing and doing the small things before overcommitting to a big piece is the best way to go about it for me.
Which 3 famous artists (dead or alive) would you invite to your dinner party?
I feel like these are all artists that I have second-degree connections with! Jillian Tamaki, Victo Ngai, and Tillie Walden would be my picks!
What are your file name conventions?
…What file name conventions? I mean, I don’t have specific file name conventions, but I actually have a public Google Drive archive! But I usually put “djjl_whatever-the-title-is_final,” and I would always know it’s the final and legit version.
What is a recent creative project that you are proud of?
I did an illustration for the whiskey brand Johnnie Walker. It’s so wild because I only had four days to finish it, and it usually takes me a week and a half if I rush. And honestly, it’s probably one of my best pieces from this year, which is funny. It was for the Mid-Autumn festival, so I made it as Korean as possible.
How has technology changed the way you approach your work?
I only use my iPad to draw everything now, and if I want to pretend that I have a steady workstation, I’ll use my Cintiq. I still am not as comfortable on the Cintiq as I am on Procreate, but it’s still pretty solid and nice. That’s the good part about technology. The bad part about technology is how AI art has been messing things up for me. I’m currently in a lawsuit about AI art as a class rep. Some of my stuff got turned into AI art late last year, so I have to give a deposition at some point.
What is a convention experience that has stuck with you?
Honestly, they’re all good! I feel like Lightbox Expo has been really nice because it’s truly been a convention for artists. I feel like that’s where most of my audience is, and they’re all around because their purpose is to be better at art. That’s where a lot of original artists do well because they’re getting art they’re inspired by, not so much fanart. I like the Lightbox Expo because it encompasses the pure love of art very well.
Top tips on setting up an Artist Alley booth?
Use a Y axis, not just your X axis! Take advantage of it! Branding is also something to think about. It is definitely something I’m getting better at. Having an assistant is also very important. I’ve also heard that 8.5x11 to 12x18 inches is usually a good size for prints, but I also provide postcard-sized prints because sometimes people don’t want to commit to a larger size.
Who on Tumblr inspires you and why?
You know this is so funny. I’ve been following @alicexz for over a decade on Tumblr and other platforms. I’ve followed her work since high school, and we’ve only recently become peers. I found her, and we met for the first time in real life, and she recognized me. And then I found all my drawings from when I was in my Alice phase, back in high school, and I was like, “Yo, this is when I was trying to be you so badly!” and she was cracking up and was like “Wow, this is so good!” It was such a sweet moment. I wanted to take a picture of her holding my drawing up. It’s really nice because now we’re peers.
Thank you so much for stopping by and sharing, Deb! Be sure to check out their Tumblr blog over at @jdebbiel.
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'Dune' by Deb JJ Lee.
Officially licensed 24" x 36" screen print, in a numbered Regular edition of 215 for $70; and a numbered Variant edition of 115 for $100.
On sale Friday April 19 at 12pm CT through Mutant.
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Mutant will release Dune 24x36 screen prints by Deb JJ Lee tomorrow, April 19, at 1pm EST. The standard version (left) is limited to 215 for $75, while the variant is limited to 115 for $100.
#dune#denis villeneuve#timothee chalamet#timothée chalamet#paul atreides#mutant#deb jj lee#art#gift#frank herbert#dune part one#dune part two#dune: part one#dune: part two#shai hulud
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Huge congratulations to all those honored by the 2024 Asian/Pacific American Awards for Literature!
#Finding Papa#The Truth About Dragons#Ruby Lost and Found#Parachute Kids#I'd Rather Burn Than Bloom#In Limbo#full disclosure I was NOT conscious enough to watch this bit live#so all of my HOLLERING was BELATED#Deb JJ Lee#CHRISTINA LI#Shannon CF Rogers#Betty C. Tang#Angela Pham Krans#Thi Bui#Julie Leung#Hanna Cha#very excited for all these excellent humans#Asian/Pacific American Awards for LIterature#ALA Youth Media Awards
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There is a candidness in their approach to gender exploration and identity as well. Lee, who is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns, is loud and proud about their journey toward and experiences of gender identity and presentation. But it wasn’t always this way for Lee, as depicted by their recently published graphic novel memoir In Limbo (2023). The graphic novel details the illustrator’s navigation through mental health problems, self-worth issues, and “tricky relationships” between 2010 and 2014 while they were attending high school in northern New Jersey. Having moved from Seoul, South Korea, to the United States at a young age, Lee was situated in the murky grey area of non-Korean and non-American, speaking to the book’s title in just one of several ways.
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25 Days of Prints with INPRNT: Deb JJ Lee.
Today's selection for 25 Days of Prints with INPRNT is the beautiful work of artist Deb JJ Lee, all of which are available as fine art prints in their INPRNT Shop.
Be sure to follow INPRNT on Tumblr, too!
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EEAAO
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Comics Review: 'In Limbo'
In Limbo by Deb JJ Lee
autobiography
bullying
depression
domestic violence
family
memoir
racism
My Rating: 3 of 5 stars
IN LIMBO is a complicated read. The graphic novel is an ongoing and endless contortion of teenage ostracism, the commonality of human arrogance, and the occasional bout of heedless self-martyrdom. Not necessarily in that order, and not necessarily always stemming from the perennially anxious narrator. IN LIMBO is about the risks of accumulating emotional debt, but readers won't know that until they're about 180 pages into the book.
The problems Deb faces are not unique, but they feel all-encompassing. She struggles to adapt to the faster pace of high school. She's behind in her schoolwork. She's cracking under the pressure of her first-gen immigrant parents. She's drifting away from her best friend. She's losing interest in her extracurricular feats. Deb's tribulations, in isolation, are not particularly exhausting. Nor are they, viewed at length, particularly worthy of note. But isn't that the point? Growing up is hard.
For Jung-Jin Lee, for Deb, the world is spinning faster and faster, and she's doing her utmost to keep from falling apart as she tumbles to the ground. IN LIMBO curls its tendrils around one or two of these problems and personalizes them in meaningful and grueling ways (e.g., What's it like to lose a childhood friend? What's the value of filial piety when it succumbs to child abuse?). The book then exposes how seemingly normal problems in suburban America tend to metastasize in ways very few people see, recognize, believe true, or deem worthy of acting on.
And that's how this graphic novel goes. There are so many points of interest, one will invariably find it difficult to figure out what the book's theme or focus is supposed to be. The immigrant experience? Failed friendships? Racism? Bullying? Academic underperformance? Domestic violence? A young woman with weight issues? IN LIMBO is largely episodic, fragmented, and emotionally dislocated.
Friends come and leave. As do parents' mood swings, pop quizzes, and indifferent therapists. Deb fights to keep it all at bay, and she mostly does a good job of it. But fighting off the stressors of not being good enough (for her friends, for the Korean diaspora, for her parents, for herself), often distracts her from the possibility of finding solace (in listening to her friends, in revaluing her connection to her heritage, in apologizing to her father, in forgiving herself). And that, one presumes, is also the point.
IN LIMBO doesn't tell a linear tale of mental health decline, and that's because so few struggles with depression, anxiety, and suicide rarely manifest so cleanly in the real world. It's the type of book best afforded to readers who know what they're getting into (and know what to look for). Otherwise, the book's first and second halves may read like two completely separate titles. This graphic novel is long, and can feel wayward due to its lack of a resonant theme (beyond a high school girl having multiple bad days). But the emotional curvature bends toward betterment. Eventually. And that, too, is probably the point. One hopes.
The art style is a mixed bag. Lee's character art is composed of delightful and sinewy line work that showcases the author's incredible skill for capturing a character's emotional frailty in a wan facial expression or an errant hand gesture. Elsewhere, the totality of the comic's background art and environmental design is derived from a photo-realistic style whose flat, static countenance feels ruefully disjointed from the story's variably textured mood.
❯ ❯ Comics Reviews || ahb writes on Good Reads
#comics reviews#graphic novel#depression#review#autobiography#memoir#first second books#bullying#domestic violence#racism#asian characters#characters of color#authors of color#deb jj lee#mental health decline#delightful and sinewy line work#lack of a resonant theme#Korean diaspora#seemingly normal problems in suburban America
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A little BTS from Deb JJ Lee.
paint by numbers except I’m making the numbers
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Deb JJ Lee (@jdebbiel) stopped by during NYCC 2023!
Deb JJ Lee is a non-binary Korean artist based in Brooklyn, NY. They have appeared in the New Yorker, New York Times, NPR, Google, Radiolab, and more. Their award-winning graphic memoir, IN LIMBO, about mental illness and difficult relationships with trauma, released in March 2023 from First Second.
Check out their Creator Spotlight here.
📸: Rob Douthat
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The Other Side of Tomorrow chronicles a harrowing escape from North Korea
The Other Side of Tomorrow chronicles a harrowing escape from North Korea #comics #graphicnovel #ncbd
From never knowing where they’ll find their next meal to avoiding soldiers lurking at every corner, many North Koreans have learned that sticking around can be just as deadly as attempting to flee . . . almost. Both shy, resourceful Yunho and fierce, vibrant Myunghee know this. So when they each resolve to run away from the bleak futures they face, it’s with the knowledge that they could be…
#deb jj lee#featured#graphic novel#graphic novels#harper alley#the other side of tomorrow#tina cho#video
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Exclusive new prints from Mutant available during the San Diego Comic Con (booth #616), at the San Diego Convention Center, San Diego, CA, July 24-28 2024.
Wednesday July 24: 'Fallout' by Daniel Danger. Officially licensed 24" x 36" screen print, in a numbered 7 day TIMED Release Regular edition for $65 (from Wednesday July 24 at 10am PT through the Mutant website); and a numbered Variant edition of 140 for $80 (Wednesday SDCC Booth exclusive).
Thursday July 25: 'Saltburn' by Ken Taylor. Officially licensed 24" x 36" screen print, in a numbered Regular edition of 165 for $65; and a numbered Variant edition of 90 for $85 (Thursday SDCC Booth exclusives).
Thursday July 25: 'Dune: Part Two' by Deb JJ Lee. Officially licensed 24" x 36" screen print, in a numbered Gold Foil Variant edition of 115 for $125 (Thursday SDCC Booth exclusive).
Friday July 26: 'The Shining' by Matthew Woodson. Officially licensed 24" x 36" screen print, in a numbered limited edition of 230 for $65 (Friday SDCC Booth exclusive).
Friday July 26: 'Cruel Universe #1' by Greg Smallwood. Officially licensed 24" x 36" screen print, in a numbered limited edition of 135 for $65 (Friday SDCC Booth exclusive).
Saturday July 27: 'Dune: Part Two' by Murugiah. Officially licensed 24" x 36" screen print, in numbered Holo Foil & Gold Foil Variant editions of 110 for $100 each (on sale Saturday July 27 at 10am PT through the Mutant website.
#Art#Mutant#SDCC#San Diego Comic Con#Fallout#Daniel Danger#Saltburn#Ken Taylor#Dune#Dune Part Two#Deb JJ Lee#The Shining#Matthew Woodson#Cruel Universe#Greg Smallwood#Murugiah#poster#print#screenprint
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Nominees announced for the 2024 Ignatz Awards
The Ignatz Awards, given out annually at SPX, honor outstanding achievement in independent comics and cartooning.
(logo by Deb JJ Lee)
#ignatz awards#comics#comic books#webcomics#graphic novels#spx 2024#small press expo#mini comics#deb jj lee
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“Swimming” by Deb JJ Lee for Procreate.
#deb jj lee#illustration#illustrator of the day#debut art#swim#ocean#watercolour art#betta fish#creatures#animals#squid#octopus#oceanic#psychadelic#colorful#people who draw
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EL DIARIO MONTAÑÉS
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