Michael M. Wartella is an American undergroundcartoonist, animator, writer and director based in New York City, generally publishing under the name M. Wartella or just Wartella. He is best known for his work inThe Village Voice and on Cartoon Network's MAD. He is the founder of Brooklyn's Dream Factory Animation, a boutique studio specializing in the production of animated shorts for corporate and indie clients.
Print career
According to his 2013 autobiography, Strip Show: 25 Years of Comix, Controversy & Copyright Infringement, Wartella began his professional career at age ten producing a weekly comic strip called Clubhouse Kids for a local newspaper, which ran for two years during 1986–1987. Later, while a student at The University of Virginia, Wartella created the absurdist art comic Ackxhpæz which he then expanded and nationally self-syndicated to alternative weekly newspapers from 1998–2000. The humor in many of the cartoons was controversial as exemplified in a 1999 comic about the Columbine High School massacre which prompted an outcry when it was published in Denver. From 2007 to 2009, Wartella's intricate single-panel "reportorial" cartoons began appearing regularly in The Village Voice, where he is still listed as an honorary contributor. Wartella's sequential comics have appeared in Eisner and Harvey Award nominated anthologies from DC Comics and Fantagraphics Books and in magazines including Andy Warhol's Interview and Spin. His illustrations have primarily appeared in "underground" publications including Arthur, Pop Smear, and he was the creator of the infamously rare scratch-off cover of Vice Magazine. Wartella has also contributed several titles and paintings to the "all-new" series of Wacky Packagestrading cards from Topps, and created similar product parody spoofs for Nickelodeon Magazine in the 2000s. Wartella also did new artwork that appears on the cover of the re-launched MAD Magazine #6 featuring miniature Alfred E. Neumans in an M.C. Escher style cubist background.
Animation career
Wartella is a noted animator and director. Considered a pioneer of online animation, Wartella was among the earliest to use the animated.gif format to create story-driven independent animation. In 1998, The New York Times described his early animated web short The Dinky Dog Archive as "the Steamboat Willie of the internet". From 2010 to 2014, he created nearly 300 hand-drawn animated shorts for Cartoon Network's MAD, where his work was featured in every episode during four seasons. In the 2000s, Wartella was an artistic contributor to several animated television shows including MTV2's cult hitWonder Showzen, and Adult Swim's series Superjail!. He has directed several music videos combining live action and animation for musical acts including Teddybears and King Tuff. Wartella's music videos have received accolades from Blender Magazine and Stereogum. In 2013, Wartella opened his own full-service production studio, Dream Factory Animation, in Brooklyn NY which has conceived, developed and produced animated programming for clients including Condé Nast, @radical.media, The Creative Agency and Warner Bros.
Books
Wartella's STRIP SHOW: 25 Years of Comix, Controversy & Copyright Infringement by Wartella,