David Heatley
{{Short description|American cartoonist, illustrator, graphic designer, and musician}}
{{Infobox comics creator
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| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1974|10|17}}
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| birth_place = Teaneck, New Jersey, U.S.
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| nationality = American
| area = Cartoonist, Musician
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| notable works = My Brain is Hanging Upside Down
Qualifications
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| website = {{url|http://www.DavidHeatley.com}}
}}
David Heatley (born October 17, 1974) is an American cartoonist, illustrator, graphic designer, and musician.
Biography
= Education =
Born in Teaneck, New Jersey,{{cite news|last=Duin |first=Steve |url=http://blog.oregonlive.com/steveduin/2008/10/david_heatley.html |title=David Heatley |work=The Oregonian |date=October 24, 2008 |access-date= October 24, 2008}} Heatley graduated from Teaneck High School in 1993. He graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute in 2000.Heatley's Facebook profile. Accessed Feb. 5, 2009.
=Comics=
Though he studied painting and filmmaking at Oberlin College, Heatley started drawing comics regularly in the late 1990s. Since then, his comics and illustrations have appeared on the cover of The New Yorker, in The New York Times, McSweeney’s, Mome, and Kramers Ergot, among others. He has been featured three times in The Best American Comics series. Fantagraphics published two issues of his solo comic book series, Deadpan, which mostly featured Heatley's "dream comics", exploring his often sexual- and violence-tinged dreams in a straightforward, guileless style.
In September 2008, Pantheon Books released Heatley's first full-length book, My Brain is Hanging Upside Down. (Some of the material had originally appeared in such places as Deadpan, Mome, McSweeney's #13, The Best American Comics 2006, The Best American Comics 2007, and Kramers Ergot #5.) A graphic memoir, My Brain is Hanging Upside Down employs an unfiltered candor that borders on the confessional, presenting Heatley's life story through six interconnected narrative threads: "Sex History," (every sexual encounter of his life, beginning as early as kindergarten), "Black History" (a brutally honest reflection on Heatley's own experiences with racism, confronting uncomfortable truths), "Portrait of My Mom" and "Portrait of My Dad" (comic strip-style vignettes that both critique and celebrate his endearingly dysfunctional parents), and "Family History" (tracing his family's lineage from the lives of his great-great-grandparents through to the birth of his own children).{{cite news|department=READING LISTS |title= The Best Graphic Novels I've Ever Read| date=Aug 18, 2014| first= Katya |last=Ungerman |work=Electric Lit|url=https://electricliterature.com/the-best-graphic-novels-ive-ever-read/}} Interwoven throughout these narratives are Heatley's "dream comics," which explore similar themes through surreal, unconscious logic. In his review for The New York Times, critic Douglas Wolk wrote of the book that it "seems to encompass every uncomfortable thought he's ever had about sexuality, race and his family."{{cite news|title=Exposed |first=Douglas |last=Wolk |author-link=Douglas Wolk | date=Dec 12, 2008|work=The New York Times|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/14/books/review/Wolk-t.html}}
In 2019, Pantheon released Heatley's second graphic memoir, Qualification: A Graphic Memoir in Twelve Steps, an exploration of his experiences with twelve-step programs like Alcoholics Anonymous, Overeaters Anonymous, Debtors Anonymous, Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous, and more.{{cite web|title=David Heatley Talks 12-Steps, Family, Music, and 'Qualification' |interviewer=Brian Salvatore | date=October 8, 2019| work=Multiversity Comics |url=http://www.multiversitycomics.com/interviews/david-heatley/}} Reader's Digest cited Qualification in its 2024 round-up of the 50 Best Graphic Novels for Adults.{{cite web|title=The 50 Best Graphic Novels for Adults|first=Lucie |last=Turkel |date=May 30, 2024| url=https://www.rd.com/list/graphic-novels-for-adults/|work=Reader's Digest}}
Also in 2019, Heatley self-published (in partnership with the Brooklyn retailer Desert Island) Amy, a 190-page graphic memoir that explores his intense, unrequited love for a teenage friend, and the profound, lasting effects it had on his life. (Some of Amy had been serialized by Heatley on Instagram.) The limited-edition, digest-size work was printed in blue on a risograph.{{cite web|url=https://www.spitandahalf.com/product/amy-by-david-heatley/ |title=Amy by David Heatley|access-date=March 19, 2025| publisher=Spit and a Half Zine and Comix Distribution Service}}
=Music=
Heatley's high school band Velvet Cactus Society released two albums on Shimmy Disc in the early 1990s. In 2008, he recorded (under his own name) a soundtrack to his graphic novel My Brain is Hanging Upside Down, featuring a cover of The Ramones song by the same name. The soundtrack was released on WonderSound records.
= Personal life =
Heatley lives in Jackson Heights, New York, with his wife Rebecca Gopoian (an agnostic, Jewish-Armenian poet) and their two children, Maya and Samuel Heatley.{{cite web|url=https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2007/12/23/opinion/23opart.ready.html?scp=4&sq=rebecca%20york&st=cse|work=The New York Times|date=December 23, 2007|title=The Crèche|first1=Rebecca |last1=Gapoian|first2=David|last2=Heatley}}
Inspiration
Heatley lists among his influences Daniel Clowes, Gary Panter, Fort Thunder, and Paper Rad.{{cite web|url=http://www.drawger.com/heatley/?cat_id=323 |title=David Heatley |publisher= Drawger|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110723220431/https://www.drawger.com/heatley/?cat_id=323|archive-date=July 23, 2011}}
Selected works
=Books=
- [https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/77712/my-brain-is-hanging-upside-down-by-david-heatley/ My Brain is Hanging Upside Down] (Pantheon Books, September, 2008) {{ISBN|0-375-42539-X}}
- (with writer Ellen Potter) Otis Dooda (Feiwel & Friends, 2013)
- (with writer Ellen Potter) Otis Dooda: Downright Dangerous (Feiwel & Friends, 2014)
- Qualification: A Graphic Memoir in Twelve Steps (Pantheon, 2019) {{ISBN|978-0375425400}}
- Amy (co-published with Brooklyn's Desert Island, 2019)
=Solo Comics=
- Deadpan #1 (Fantagraphics)
- Deadpan #2 (Fantagraphics)
=Collaborative Comics=
- My Home Birth by Christen Clifford
= Anthology appearances =
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| Kramers Ergot 4 | Gingko Press | |
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| Timothy McSweeney's Quarterly Concern | McSweeney's | Original printing of "Portrait of My Dad"; |
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| Kramers Ergot 5 | Gingko Press | 15-page story: "My Sexual History" |
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| Bête Noire #1 | Fantagraphics | cover art |
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| The Education Of A Comics Artist | Allworth Press | 2-page strip called "How I Became the Cartoonist I am today." |
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| Mome Vol. 1 - Summer 2005 | Fantagraphics Books | Part 1 of serial comic "Overpeck" |
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| Mome Vol. 2 - Fall 2005 | Fantagraphics | Part 2 of serial comic "Overpeck" |
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| Mome Vol. 3 - Winter 2006 | Fantagraphics | Part 3 of serial comic "Overpeck" |
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| Mome Vol. 4 - Spring/Summer 2006 | Fantagraphics | dream comics |
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| The Best American Comics 2006 | Best American | "Portrait of My Dad" |
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| Mome Vol. 6 - Winter 2007 | Fantagraphics | dream comics |
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| Mome Vol. 7 - Spring 2007 | Fantagraphics | dream comics |
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| The Best American Comics 2007 | Best American | cover art; 10 pages of dream comics |
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| The Best American Comics 2008 | Best American | |
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| An Anthology of Graphic Fiction, Cartoons, and True Stories: Volume 2 | Yale University Press | |
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| Kramers Ergot 7 | Buenaventura Press | |
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{Official website|http://davidheatley.com}}
- [http://www.drawger.com/heatley/? David Heatley's artist page at Drawger]
- [http://www.austinkleon.com/2007/09/24/david-heatley-on-comics-and-graphic-design/ Heatley on comics and graphic design]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20080602074616/http://poetryfoundation.org/dispatches/dispatches.feature.html?id=179224 webcomic based on poem] by Diane Wakoski
= Interviews =
- [http://www.inkstuds.com/?p=214 September 2007 interview on the Inkstuds radio show]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20081017080242/http://www.comixology.com/articles/135/No-Intercourse October 2008 interview from Comixology]
{{Underground comix cartoonists|state=collapsed}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Heatley, David}}
Category:Alternative cartoonists
Category:Underground cartoonists
Category:Oberlin College alumni