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Fred
Noland draws from a deep well of inspiration ranging from the Expressionists
to Underground Comics. His illustrations have appeared in the SF Weekly,
LA Weekly,
Tennis, Bike, Nickelodeon, Canoe and Kayak,
Illinois Times, XboX Magazine,
TokyoPop, Santa Fe Reporter and more. His sequential art has
been featured
in the Cartoon Art Museum, and the Oakland Museum at the OAK installation.
He has
also taken part in group shows at San Francisco's SOMARTS and Amaru Galleries
and
RPS in Oakland.
As a
cartoonist, he has produced a series of increasingly innovative and eccentric
minis.
His current project, Black Sheep, features his most ambitious work
yet. The six-part
"Neighborhood of the Beast" explores the darker side of suburbia.
Other highlights include
the Southern Gothic Midnight Creep and his self proclaimed "jam
comic from hell"
Mantequilla del Pato (with the incomparable Trevor Alixopulos).
Fred
resides in Oakland. When he's not working you can find him cycling through
the
East Bay hills.
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