WHITE RIVER JUNCTION โ€” When collaborators Michelle Ollie and James Sturm set out to start a school for cartooning in the early 2000s, they were met with incredulity.ย 

Cartooning was still considered a lightweight art form, at least in the eyes of the general public, and a school devoted to the craft, in rural Vermont no less, seemed like a far-fetched endeavor.

Initial iterations of Inky, The Center for Cartoon Studiesโ€™ mascot, hang in a gallery at the school in White River Junction, Vt., on Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025. (Valley News โ€“ Alex Driehaus)

โ€œPeople were like, โ€˜Oh, youโ€™re making a clown college?โ€™ โ€ Sturm said in a recent interview. โ€œIt was such a reach for the public imagination.โ€ย ย 

But despite the raised eyebrows, the Center for Cartoon Studies, now in its 20th year, has grown into a hub for burgeoning talent and seasoned cartoonists alike. School alumni include Tillie Walden, whose autobiographical graphic novel โ€œSpinningโ€ earned her a Will Eisner Award, and drag queen Sasha Velour, whose art has appeared on the cover of The New Yorker.

In honor of the milestone, an exhibition is opening in the schoolโ€™s Colodny building that features cartoons and mock-ups from the centerโ€™s early days. The showโ€™s opening reception is set for the end of this week as part of White River Junctionโ€™s First Friday festivities.ย 

The sign from the former Colodnyโ€™s department store hangs in the building that now houses The Center for Cartoon Studies in White River Junction, Vt., on Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025. (Valley News โ€“ Alex Driehaus)

As CCS has continued to advance over the years, so has the state of cartooning. Back in the early 2000s, notions of what cartooning could look like were still evolving, and Sturm felt like he could โ€œwrap my head aroundโ€ their place in the zeitgeist.ย 

Now bookstore shelves are lined with comic books whose subject matter range from cookbooks to personal memoirs to political manifestos.ย 

The digital age has also given rise to a culture that communicates through the rapid exchange of symbols and visual imagery, be it with emojis, memes or Instagram posts.ย 

โ€œCartoons have been doing that forever,โ€ said Sturm, who turns 60 this month.ย 

Cartooning has also gotten a lot more queer, and so has CCS. In the schoolโ€™s early days, classes were mainly male, now CCS has so many women and non-binary students that Sturm said heโ€™s surprised โ€œwe donโ€™t have a target on our back from the Trump administration.โ€ย 

Over the years, the centerโ€™s faculty has also grown, too. The school currently has around eight faculty members, many of whom are alumni at the school, in addition to dozens of visiting cartoonists who teach classes over the course of the year.ย 

โ€œI used to wear 50 hats, now I wear about four,โ€ Sturm said.ย 

Commencement speaker Paul Karasik asks everyone in attendance โ€” including those on the dais (from left) Center for Cartoon Studies Director James Sturm, Board of Trustees Chair Warren Bingham and President Michelle Ollie โ€” to promise in the next 48 hours to take time to learn something new during the schoolโ€™s 11th graduation ceremony in White River Junction, Vt., on May 13, 2017. (Valley News โ€“ Geoff Hansen)

One of those hats is director of the schoolโ€™s Applied Cartooning Lab, which works with national organizations to create educational cartoons about topics such as health care, civic engagement and mental health. A couple years ago, the Lab published โ€œHealth and Wealth,โ€ a comic book in which an eclectic cast of animals break down the complexities of the U.S. health care system. The guide, which was a collaboration with students at Harvard College, was distributed to all 535 members of the U.S. Congress.ย 

While CCS has continued to develop work with some of the industryโ€™s most notable cartoonists, with only three facilities concentrated in downtown White River Junction and about two dozen students in the full-time programs, in many ways it remains a humble operation.ย 

โ€œWe punch way above our weight class,โ€ Sturm said.

In addition to the MFA program, CCS also offers one-year and two-year certificates as well as fellowships and summer courses. Tuition for the MFA program for this academic year is $29,750 before scholarships and aid.

Dave Lloyd, operations manager, shuffles through old annual appeals at The Center for Cartoon Studies in White River Junction, Vt., on Tuesday, Sept. 30, 2025. โ€œTheyโ€™re my baseball cards,โ€ he said of his collection, which he has rebuilt after his original copies were destroyed in a fire in 2020. (Valley News โ€“ Alex Driehaus)

CCSโ€™ small scale works for Sturm and Ollie. For one, it makes it easier to enact administrative and curricular changes quickly, but it also helps foster a tight-knit community among students and staff.ย 

The schoolโ€™s small operation also feels fitting given that cartooning, by nature, is a medium that can pack a punch even in the tiny margins of a sheet of notebook paper or the back of a napkin.ย 

CCS is currently in the process of further consolidating the campus. In November, the school plans to start renovations on the townโ€™s historic telegraph building to accommodate classrooms, a production lab, archives and offices.

The completion of the project, slated for next fall, would mean bidding goodbye to the Colodny building on South Main Street, which the school has used since it opened. A historic building that was once a department store, the Colodnyโ€™s basement flooded five years ago and as the school turns 20, itโ€™s time to make a change.ย 

The opening reception for โ€œFounding Documents and Drawings: Marking 20 Years of CCS, 2005-2025โ€ is set for 4 to 8 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 3 in the Colodny Building on 94 South Main Street. Gallery hours are 12 to 4 p.m. on Fridays in October, or by appointment at info@cartoonstudies.org. For more information about Fridayโ€™s event, visit cartoonstudies.org.ย 

First Fridayย 

Speaking of cartoons, across the street from CCS, JAM (Junction Arts & Media) will be hosting the annual TWin STate Comics and Zine Fair as part of White River Junctionโ€™s First Friday festivities. Hundreds of zines, chapbooks, stickers and comic books will be for sale at the event, which runs from 4 to 8 p.m. The fair doesnโ€™t charge table fees, so all the proceeds from sales go to the artist. To learn more, visit uvjam.org.ย 

Several other businesses in town are holding events for First Friday. Swifties will be glad to know that Putnamโ€™s Vine/yard is hosting a listening party for Taylor Swiftโ€™s new album, โ€œThe Life of a Showgirl.โ€ The party starts at 4 p.m., with โ€œShowgirlโ€ playing at 7 p.m. Partygoers are encouraged to wear their best Swift-inspired attire with the chance to win prizes. For more information, go to putnamsvineyard.com.ย 

If Swiftโ€™s music isnโ€™t for you, Route 5 Jive is slated to perform at the Filling Station from 4 to 6 p.m. on Friday evening, too. The bar will switch gears at 7 p.m. with performances from DJ Cartier, DJ GenderEnder, and White River Junctionโ€™s own DJ Suave Sweatstain. A meet-and-greet with the Hartford Selectboard from 5:30 to 7 p.m. will bridge the two musical events. The latter of the two is a fundraiser for the tenants who were displaced following the apartment fire on Barnes Avenue last week. To learn more about the eveningโ€™s festivities, go to the barโ€™s Instagram page @thefillingstationwrj. To donate to the fundraiser, go to givebutter.com/WRJ-firerelieffund.ย 

Alumnae artย 

On Friday, in New London, the Center for the Arts is hosting a preview of Colby-Sawyer Collegeโ€™s alumnae exhibition, โ€œCome Together.โ€ Light refreshments will be served at the exhibition preview, which is scheduled from 4 to 6 p.m. The event is free and open to the public. To learn more, visit centerfortheartsnh.org.ย 

Tunes in Tunbridge

Over in Tunbridge, the annual Music at Fieldstone event is set for this Saturday at the Fieldstone Farm and Equine Clinic on Route 110. Tunbridge fingerstyle guitar player Neil FitzGerald will play at 4 p.m., followed by Brooks Hubbard, the singer-songwriter and Enfield native.

Hubbard will be joined on stage by bass player and collaborator Justin Kimball, of Nashville, Tenn., and drummer, Jeff Berlin. Brocklebank Craft Brewing will supply alcoholic beverages, and volunteer group Friends of First Branch Schools Club will sell a dinner of macaroni and cheese along with other fixings. All proceeds go towards the club.

Gates open at 3:30 p.m. For tickets ($25 online; $30 day of; free for kids under age 10) and more information, visit fieldstone.ticketbud.com/music-at-fieldstone-2025-.ย 

Jukebox in Thetford

Next Tuesday, Oct. 7, Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter Courtney Hartman will perform at 7 p.m. at Thetford Hill Church. The performance will be recorded live for The Tuesday Jukebox, a podcast concert series hosted by Upper Valley folk musicians Jakob Breitbach and Marc Shapiro. For tickets ($20) and to learn more, visit events.humanitix.com/courtney-hartman-thetford-hill.

Marion Umpleby is a staff writer at the Valley News. She can be reached at mumpleby@vnews.com or 603-727-3306.