POP CON 2019: Thank You, SA!!

San Antonio Pop Con 2019San Antonio Pop Con 2019 is a wrap! Thanks for bringing the love yesterday, SA! You were amazing.

I’m hearing that on a very busy events day in the Alamo City, the attendance this year exceeded last year’s inaugural number, and when you consider that the Author and Artist Guest Rosters were loaded with legends, cult favorites, and rising stars — this was a helluva sophomore year for Pop Con. WELL DONE, SAN ANTONIO PUBLIC LIBRARY. Hats off to Pop Con Goddesses and Gods — Rhonda Woolhouse, Connie Hejl, Haley Holmes, and all of the amazing librarians and volunteers who pour their hearts and souls into this unique festival (and thanks to artist Lauren Raye Snow for helping to manage my booth).

San Antonio is the home of Alamo City Comic Con, a major Fall gathering focused upon celebrity autographings, artist appearances, and an ocean of vendors. San Antonio Book Festival is an April tradition focused upon a strict schedule of author-only appearances, but does not welcome the visual arts end of publishing in a significant way. That’s a word-only event. Both are terrific on their own, BUT that leaves a large ‘third-coast’ pop culture territory that is fast becoming the domain of San Antonio Pop Con, where authors and artists lineups are carefully curated by the SAPL, alongside appearances by voice actors and pop icons. Gaming, anime, comics, books, art, YA novels, film, and major screen media fanbases are all celebrated and welcomed here, and it makes this event a potentially potent, annual literary and arts gala.

New York Times-bestselling author Kelley Armstrong and World Fantasy Award-winning artist Gregory Manchess were the headliners this year, along with the legendary Michael Moorcock, bestselling author Shea Serrano, last year’s Pop Con Guest of Honor C. Robert Cargill, Gonzalo Alvarez, Wes Hartman, Allison Stanley, Freddy Lopez, Jr. and many more. I think with increased media support from TV and print outlets, coordinated advance publicity, and continued championing by the SAPL librarians and staff — San Antonio Pop Con can fill a void that no other event can, and it will build a flagship 21st-century culture for a town that’s so often a mere follower, but perhaps is now ready to lead, thanks to SAPL.

I’m sincerely impressed by what Rhonda and team are building here, and as always, I’m grateful to EVERYONE who swung by my booth to score my art swag and especially all of the Loteria Cards, Posters and Prints this weekend. It was a GREAT day. Thank you for allowing me to be a part of it, SAPL!

(Photos by @thepunisher210, Allison Stanley, @casuallyalfred, Lisa Juarez, Tammy Wadzeck, Justin Burke, Dianna Marie Garza, Gonzalo Alvarez, Gregory Manchess.)

Coming To San Antonio Pop Con!

2019 San Antonio Pop Con GuestsThe 2nd Annual San Antonio Pop Con is almost upon us, happening at the downtown Central Library, this Saturday, February 16th, from 9am-4pm. As you can see above, the roster of artists and authors is EPIC — ranging from legends like Michael Moorcock and Gregory Manchess to bestsellers such as Kelley Armstrong and Shea Serrano, as well as fan favorites Nicky Drayden, Gonzalo Alvarez, C. Robert Cargill, and more.

And yes, I’ll be there too — bringing my latest Loteria Grande Cards, Posters and Prints — and I know many of you have been waiting to get your hands on the new ‘La Musica’ Loteria Grande Cards. I’ll have them in stock at Pop Con along with the debut of the brand-new ‘La Palma’ Grande Card!Loteria Grande Cards by John Picacio (Published by Lone Boy)Many of you have been requesting various giclee prints of my book cover art and Loteria imagery so I’ll have a limited supply of those large prints for sale, along with my limited-run Loteria Posters. Here’s a look at the ones that I plan to have available at Pop Con. Quantities are extremely limited.Artworks by John Picacio.If you see one that you want, I highly recommend that you vouch for it in advance. OR if you see an image on my website, and you want a print of that, please let me know by Thursday, February 14th at 5pm CST, and I’ll make sure you can pick it up at Pop Con. Giclee Prints are printed on thick art paper, sleeved in an archival bag with archival backing board, and signed by me.

I normally sell these for $100 to $125, but at Pop Con, they will be available for only $75 each. If you live in the San Antonio metro area, and have been waiting to get your hands on my Loteria merchandise — this is the chance you’ve been waiting for. Apologies that I’m not able to make this offer available for mail-order sales. This is only for sales that are picked up at San Antonio Pop Con this week.

For those that don’t live in the area — don’t worry. I’ll be making the Loteria Grande Cards available online soon, and everyone on the Loteria List will receive the email alert.

See you at Pop Con this Saturday, San Antonio!

 

San Antonio Pop Con 2018!

Snapshots from the first San Antonio Pop Con, hosted by the SA Main Library. Photos by San Antonio Public Library, IG: Gojira22, Laura Burress, IG: leppahcetssalc, Allison Stanley Art, Jason Limon, John Picacio.


San Antonio, we just might have turned a corner toward the better yesterday.

I’ve seen comic book and pop culture events come and go through this city. Amongst them, we witness all of the hard work that Apple De La Fuente and Austin Rogers put into Alamo City Comic Con every year. Their show largely focuses upon celebrity culture, while the San Antonio Book Festival carries a very different model, somewhat evocative of the larger Texas Book Festival. Between these models lies a lush, wild frontier where science fiction/fantasy authors and well-branded, independent artists of the fantastic can thrive within their own event, if allied with the right partnership.

I think The San Antonio Public Library may have just blazed that very trail for this city, possibly for years to come, depending on how they play it from here. Yesterday, Saturday, March 3rd, the first San Antonio Pop Con happened at downtown’s Central Library, and San Antonio embraced it. The people came and they KEPT coming all day long. They bought books and sold out titles. They bought artwork and prints by the stack. They filled the gaming tables. They made their own wands and cosplayed their hearts out. This was not just a day-long event where people discovered and met some of the best authors and artists in the sf/f industry. It was not just a day of loud, energized, young, diverse people having fun. This was a day where San Antonio said the library is cool.

‘Cool’ is a precious, elusive thing, and you can’t calculate it. You can’t just put it on and take it off like a jacket. You can’t buy it. You either are, or you aren’t. And on Saturday, Pop Con branded SA’s Central Library as a temple of cool because entire families by the thousands came to meet talented writers, artists and craftspeople they can’t meet anywhere else in one place. They came to see DR. STRANGE co-screenwriter C. Robert Cargill talk film commentary while screening the blockbuster film. They came to see former Pixar artist Armand Baltazar talk about his epic illustrated novel TIMELESS, soon to be a major motion picture, produced by Ridley Scott. They got books signed by visionary authors like Stina Leicht, Xavier Garza, Robert Jackson Bennett, David Bowles, Christopher Brown and more. They bought prints and talked process with singular artists like Jason Limon, Freddy Lopez Jr., Allison Stanley, and Matt Frank. And yes, I’m grateful to every single San Antonian that swarmed my own table looking to score some Loteria Karma. 🙂

This was a rainy, drizzly, drippy Saturday with a lot of competition for San Antonio’s weekend attention, and the city lined up bigtime for an event where the authors and artists were the pop culture. That doesn’t happen without a dedicated staff led by two visionaries who dreamed this up — Rhonda Woolhouse and Daniel Garcia. It doesn’t happen without Haley Holmes, Marcie Hernandez and a never-say-die team of librarians who believed this could happen and *made* it happen. It doesn’t happen without volunteers hungry for this city to be something more. It doesn’t happen without people like Rhonda thinking through the details — such as commissioning her chef brother to make delicious beef and sweet potato empanadas and gourmet delicacies for the pros’ green room, delighting even the most jaded veterans. It doesn’t happen without people like Rene Guzman, Randy Beamer, David Martin Davies, Stephanie Guerra and other media boosting the signal.

Pop Con was the SAPL’s first attempt at an event like this, and it was a hit.

It made this city look like it can be world-class, providing experiences that no other SA event is currently built to do. Let’s see if SAPL decides to swing for a sequel in 2019.

“You Can Always Go Downtown”

SAPLpicacio

Hey, San Antonio: I’m presenting a lecture and slideshow about my science fiction/fantasy book cover art career, including a look at my George R. R. Martin / A Song of Ice and Fire calendar art, Star Trek cover art, and my new Loteria work. The Central Library downtown (600 Soledad Street) is the place to be at 6:30pm on Tuesday, September 1st. The event is free of charge and open to the public. Kids and adults both welcome. Even better? Parking in the Library’s garage is also FREE that night.

There will be a reception after the presentation, and I’ll have a limited supply of my Loteria Grande cards and posters available for sale there, as well as a selection of art prints.

See you tomorrow night, SA! 🙂