A clutch of comics by kids, and families, in my Comic Art Masterclasses this month in Leicester, Camden, Bow and Salford.
In Portstewart last month, at £30 a ticket, we sold out two classes. In these six instances, where the classes were free, we got very low turnouts indeed. These two Leicester examples, at Central Library, had nine and twelve attendees, when I can accommodate up to thirty. They did great work, and were fun to work with. I just wish I could have reached more of them.
The classes at Bow and Poplar libraries mostly involved dragging in kids who'd come to the library without knowing a class was going to be taking place. One pair of kids were in attendance while their Mum was having a Citizens Advice meeting next door. They had great fun, all of these groups, and produced great work by the way. And thanks to all these libraries for having me. What we've really demonstrated is a frustrating but common feature of the promotion of classes for kids: if it's ticketed, they mostly come, and indeed clamour to the point of sellout quite regularly, and when it's free you hardly ever get a lot of kids there. Hey ho, we do what we can.
As if to prove the theory, these two classes in Eccles and Swinton libraries were ticketed and paid for (I failed to ask how much they charged) and they had good numbers (fourteen and sixteen, plus the parents who watched, and then bought books afterwards). Not sellouts, but just that bit bigger than the free classes. And if the surrounding area of a library is anything to go by, if anyone needed free classes it'd be the kids of Swinton which has, at first glance, seen better days. Quite possibly the ticket-buying punters come from further afield.
The celebrities these eight groups chose to appear in my demonstration strip ranged from the predictable - Taylor Swift (twice), Mr Beast, and Sabrina Carpenter - to the more imaginative - Elvis Presley, Richard The Third (twice), and Sir Francis Drake.






















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