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ON Sunday, June 5, Book Beat will be hosting an exhibition, MOROSE DELECTATION, in conjunction with Ryan Standfest’s new drawing and comic collection, Black Eye: Graphic Transmissions To Cause Ocular Hypertension. A talk with curator/editor/artist Ryan Standfest will begin at 3 PM. He will be joined with several of the featured artists. The Book Beat is located at 26010 Greenfield in Oak Park. Our hours Sunday are 12-5 PM.
The first scheduled event to coincide with the publication of BLACK EYE 1: Graphic Transmissions to Cause Ocular Hypertension, will be a companion exhibition of works by ten of the book’s contributors. However, the work included in MOROSE DELECTATION will not be drawn from that in BLACK EYE, but will be work that has been newly-created for the exhibition as well as older, unpublished works. The following is the press release:
MOROSE DELECTATION
An Exhibition of Works on Paper, Occasioned by the Release of
BLACK EYE 1: Graphic Transmissions to Cause Ocular Hypertension
A New Comics Anthology of Black and Absurdist Humor by 41 International Artists and Writers, Edited by Ryan Standfest and Published by Rotland Press + Comic Works, Detroit, Michigan.
WHERE: Book Beat Bookstore & Gallery, 26010 Greenfield Road / Oak Park, MI / 48237-1050 / (248) 968-1190
WHEN: JUNE 5th – AUGUST 5th, 2011; OPENING EVENT with discussion and signing on June 5th, from 3 to 5 PM.
“Its good to know that comics are still being confiscated today” – Chris Ware
The exhibition will include work by:
Max Clotfelter (Seattle, Washington)
Andy Gabrysiak (Plymouth, Michigan)
Ian Huebert (San Francisco, California)
Kaz (Hollywood, California)
James Moore (Brooklyn, New York)
Tom Neely (Los Angeles, California)
Paul Nudd (Chicago, Illinois)
Onsmith (Chicago, Illinois)
David Paleo (Buenos Aires, Argentina)
Stephen Schudlich (Dearborn, Michigan)
Curated by Cary Loren and Ryan Standfest
This exhibition, held at the Book Beat Gallery, showcases works on paper by ten artists who are contributors to the comics anthology BLACK EYE No. 1. The exhibition is meant to be a companion to the anthology, and the work presented here reflects a continuation of the sensibility presented in the pages of BLACK EYE, namely a focus on black and absurdist humor that sits uneasily on the border between what is funny and what is not.
The exhibition will have an OPENING EVENT ON SUNDAY, JUNE 5th, from 3 to 5pm, during which there will be a discussion concerning BLACK EYE and the nature of black humor, as well as a signing with some of the contributing artists present. A limited edition letterpress print by the artists Onsmith & Nudd will be available for purchase and for signing, along with copies of BLACK EYE.
Further information about BLACK EYE can be found at the Rotland Press + Comic Works site: http://rotlandpress.wordpress.com/
Black Eye was the subject of international controversy recently after the book was confiscated by Canadian border agents. Copies of the collection were being taken to a comics convention in Canada and agents considered it obscene material. Here is a link to the incident on the Comics Journal website.
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Posted in: Art, Author signings, Comics & Graphic Novels, Detroit & Michigan, Psychedelia, pop culture | 1 Comment » |
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The following article was lifted from Shelf Awareness a daily newsletter about events in publishing and books:
“I know I’m going to be portrayed as bipolar for having Jack and the Box and Breakdowns come out at the same moment,” Spiegelman says. Yet, he argues, “It’s all on a weird continuum.”
He and his friend Jay Lynch started a magazine called Blasé as teenagers and both worked at Topps writing copy for Wacky Packs, as Spiegelman writes in his introduction to Wacky Packages (Abrams, June 2008). Now both Lynch and Spiegelman have written titles for Toon Books, a series of beautifully produced paper-over-board comic books aimed at beginning readers and edited by Françoise Mouly (see Shelf Awareness, March 5, 2008). Spiegelman’s Jack and the Box (Toon Books, October 7) explores the idea of a child overcoming fear through his repeated experiences with a Jack-in-the-Box, a gift from his parents. The bunny hero’s name is Jack; the fellow in the box is called Zack. A teal-colored palette establishes the world that Jack inhabits with his parents; when Zack pops up, he introduces touches of red (in his bulbous nose, accordion-style collar and top hat). But when the boy Jack is alone with his gift, the palette changes for each “scene,” divided into four-panel spreads. When Zack pops out, the panel tilts, often against a different-colored backdrop. “Come out and play!” says Jack. After repeated pleas to an elusive Zack, Jack says, “Bad toy!” So Zack pops out to defend himself. And later, when Zack jumps out of his box entirely, bouncing about the boy’s room, chaos ensues, including the addition of a tiny man named Mack and his pet duck, Quack. But Jack and Zack work things out for themselves, and come to an understanding of each other.
Characteristically Spiegelman broke all boundaries of the book format with his first children’s book, Open Me, I’m a Dog! (HarperCollins/Cotler, 1997). The dog, who narrates, attempts to convince readers that they really are holding a dog in their hands, rather than a book. The tail pops up, as if to wag, there’s a furry patch children can pet, and a leash attached to the spine. “Did you ever see the point-of-purchase display I did for Open Me, I’m a Dog? It was the most diabolical thing I’ve ever done,” Spiegelman, delighted, gets up from the table to grab a sample. “This had a battery and it was placed presumably at kid level. And then what would happen is the mother would be in the store and there’d be this thing with a wagging tail hypnotizing the kid and saying, ‘Buy me, buy me.’” The actual slogan on the display says, “Read me, feed me, take me home.” This was a throwback to Spiegelman’s days with the Garbage Pail Kids and Wacky Packs. “There the idea was to wrest the quarter out of the kids’ hands directly,” he says. With Jack and the Box, he has to get past the customary gatekeepers–parents, teachers and librarians: “It’s a different world where one is talking to the kid as a member of a civilized and socialized unit rather than the barbarics in a candy shop.”
As always, he did a fair amount of research for Jack and the Box. Mouly has been working closely with teachers and librarians to ensure that the vocabulary and the concepts are well matched to the beginning readers she’s trying to reach. Again, with shades of his Wacky Packs days, Spiegelman was using his equivalent of a rhyming dictionary, as he did with, say, his “Quacker Oats” trading card. “I was reading about how kids learn to read; they don’t teach Q in some schools in first grade because it’s too complicated to have a “Qu” and I thought, what can I do? I can’t misspell it; that would be wrong. So I just figured okay, if it’s Zack, Mack, Jack and then there’s a duck and his mouth is open and there’s something that says, “Quack,” they’ll be introduced to Q a couple of months before it would come their way otherwise, and all the clues are there.” He adds slyly, “So if they’re on a desert island trying to decode this book they’ll figure out what the duck is saying.”
If you don’t believe his work is all on a weird continuum, take a look at the entry in Breakdowns called “Cracking Jokes.” It stars a jack-in-the-box. Here’s what it says on Jack’s box: “The child’s jack-in-the-box provides a potent example of the joke in its primitive form. A momentarily threatening surprise proves itself to be harmless. The child learns to master its fears through laughter.” Indeed, that’s just what Jack does in Jack and the Box (though the surprise is not quite as “harmless” for Jack, all ends well). The jack-in-the-box in Breakdowns, however, sports a jester’s cap made of flaccid penises, which Spiegelman explains, was true historically–the cap indicated that the jester was impotent (a castrate) and therefore could say whatever he wanted. “I was trying to do something in ‘Cracking Jokes,’ which was to use comics to make an essay, which isn’t what comics were for,” Spiegelman explains. “They could be used to tell a joke, an escapist adventure story, a tedious history lesson in the educational comics, but to actually make an essay that made use of the fact that you had the visual component as part of the essay was for me one of the discoveries when I was doing these more experimental strips.” He says that the strip also influenced others, including Scott McCloud, who later told Spiegelman that “Cracking Jokes” is what told him how to do his book Understanding Comics.
Despite Spiegelman’s often bleak world view (“After all, disaster is my muse,” he writes in No Towers), he remains, dare we say it, hopeful about the future of comics. “You can take something appalling like Obama Nation or [something like] James Joyce and feed them both into a kindle and look at it in whatever typeface you want and it will all pour in. But comics are totally site-specific. They have to be a certain size and they have to be a certain way, and the paper makes a difference, like in the Breakdowns book the stiff paper that separates the 1970s cover from the front and again in the back, making this a three-part work. You can’t do that on a screen,” Spiegelman says. “We keep hearing about the death of the book and the rise of the kindle and all of that stuff. What’s ironically great is the same technology which is ostensibly replacing the book has made it possible to print the most beautiful books in the history of printing. And I think that’s why comics are flourishing right now.” Source: Jennifer M. Brown, Shelf Awareness
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Posted in: Art, Book Reviews, Children's Books, Comics & Graphic Novels, Graphic Design | No Comments » |
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A new cartoon is posted daily on the site Toothpaste for Dinner, a webcomic created by Drew. Each comic is a micro-view inside a tiny surreal world where anything can happen. Using basic stick figures, and a wobbly caffeine inspired line, the artist is able to write convincing social satires with dead-pan humor. I found the above comic in a recent Publisher’s Weekly blog, and since then have been hooked on these utterly sincere, bleak and desperate cave drawings. Drew has done over 2,000 strips; a comic-per-day since 2002, with his partner Natalie Dee they toil endlessly in the salt mines of the humor world selling t-shirts for chuckles.
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Posted in: Comics & Graphic Novels, Humor | No Comments » |
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[Image left: Raw #6 Cover by Mark Beyer.]
Mark Beyer is a reclusive self-taught American Crawling Eye genius. One of the finest contemporary artists of today, he has sadly (yet profoundly) given his life to comicstrips and self-exiled obscurity. Like a modern day Kafka, he has stretched the boundaries of his chosen medium, and produced an uneasy and delicate jewel-like body of work, seemingly hard to penetrate but well worth the effort.
His art has had a heavy influence on graphic design and our culture’s sudden embrace and affection for the comic artform. Bending almost every rule of “comic design”, Beyer has created a unique illustrated space where story, line and shadow are stretched to their limits and emerge in a strange new world, somewhere both dangerous and joyful – a metamorphosis brought to life. His work can be both intensely psychedelic and down-to-earth in the same moment. His stories ring with the immediate truth and struggle of existance.
A collection of Beyer’s Amy & Jordan strips was beautifully produced by Pantheon books a few years ago, and was sadly ignored, despite Publisher’s Weekly’s ernest comments, “This work is a major release by one of the masters of the form, and is a must-have for anyone interested in the potential for profound art in the comics medium.”
Dark Horse also produced the most lavish Amy & Jordan bendable figure set ever: a Kafakaesque sculpture that jumped off the page: as their promo slyly states, “a ray of sunshine and sweetness in an ugly world.”
“Beyer’s work centres around two recurring characters, Amy Tilsdale and Jordon Levine, who look like lumpy rag dolls and behave like the characters in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf, constantly badgering each other for their inadequacies.
Living in a dingy New York apartment, they suffer an endless torrent of urban indignities: an overbearing landlord; a sink full of dirty dishes, a kitchen teaming cockroaches and other scabby insects, streets filled with drug addicts and criminals. And when they try to escape for the fleeting pleasures of a day on the beach, they are harassed by nasty teenagers and scabrous sea-creatures. Beyer’s skills in capturing the verminous and squalid make these unpleasant experiences all too real.
Although they’ve been roommates for two decades now, Amy and Jordon don’t do much to help each other survive in their hostile universe. While Amy is a fussbudget and busy-body, Jordon is even worse: lazy, selfish, quick to anger, lacking in generosity and mean to children. At its most intense, Amy and Jordon strips capturethe suffocation of living in a close space with someone you don’t care for.
Described in these terms, Beyer’s work sounds too painful to endure. Surprisingly, this is not the case: Obsessive and tightly focused as they are, the Amy and Jordon strips are also bleakly hilarious and life-affirming. Part of their power comes from
sheer repetition. Appearing week after week in the New York Press, Beyer’s strips were a testament to how strong life is even in the face of a hostile environment.
Like so many other newspaper features, comic strips are not about giving us the “news†as in offering the habitual pleasures of re-iteration and redundancy. Week after week, Charlie Brown is insulted, Beetle Bailey goofs off, Dagwood Bumstead runs into the mailman, Amy and Jordon fend off threats to their existence.
Within this treadmill cosmos, pleasure comes in the form of seeing what new variation can be wrung out of the old formula. In this area, Beyer is a genuine master: he’s done hundreds of Amy and Jordon strips, each one of which plays with the horizontal format.
Decorative ingenuity is constantly on display, with panels reinvented as: triangles, circles, cones and waves. Describing the comic strips of the early 20th century, Coulton Waugh noted that they rarely made any “pretense at depth†but rather were willing to settle for a “flat, sensible world of their own.†This “strong, two-dimensional appearance†gave the classic strips “a sort of stylized, textile-design effect.†The same is true of Beyer: not chasing after the optical illusions of perspective and depth,
Beyer patterns each strip into a unique unit.” Source: Mark Beyer’s Raw Roots by Jeet Heer, National Post
“For those of you who thought the comic strip was dead by the end of the twentieth century, here are 292 pieces of proof that you were wrong. Mark Beyer was breathing delirious, heartbreaking, otherworldly life into it by means of Amy and Jordan. Obviously, you weren’t reading New York Press... One of its most impressive aspects was the way Form served the Content—no matter how eccentric the layout got, it somehow never confused the narrative. And what narrative: it was as if Candide had been transported to the East Village and split in two like an amoeba and holed up in a squat on Avenue C. Along with giant bugs from outer space.” — Chip Kidd
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Posted in: Art, Book Reviews, Comics & Graphic Novels, Psychedelia | No Comments » |
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The typical summer avalanche of “beach books” and trash reads are busting out in the market again this year. Why not check through a few of the recommended reading books we’ve compiled below for adults & children. We’ve chosen a few titles that stand out from a variety of publishers large and small. We will be adding to this list for the next few weeks, so please check back. Stop by or order from us directly online by following the book links. ENJOY THE SUMMER!
ROOTS, 30th ANNIVERSARY EDITION by Alex Haley
Slavery. Racial politics. The history of generations. Rediscover ROOTS, the book that first sparked a national dialogue on American history 30 years ago, and learn about the history and legacy of Alex Haley’s seminal work.
One of the most important books and television series ever to appear, Roots galvanized the nation, and created an extraordinary political, racial, social and cultural dialogue that hadn’t been seen since the publication of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. The book sold over 1,000,000 copies in the first year, and the miniseries was watched by an astonishing 130,000,000 people. Roots opened up the minds of Americans of all colors and faiths to one of the darkest and most painful parts of America’s past.
Roots also fostered a remarkable dialogue about not just the past, but the then present day 1970’s and how America had fared since the days of slavery.
Roots: The 30th Anniversary Edition will remind the generation that originally read it (and watched the miniseries) that there are issues that still need to be discussed, and to introduce to a new and younger generation, a book that will help them understand, perhaps for the first time, the drama and reality of what took place during the time period. Includes a new introduction by Michael Eric Dyson.
(more…)
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Kaldırım Destanı – Kaldırımlar Kurdunun Hayatı 1 – 6
Who is Masist Gül?
Masist Gül (1947-2003) with his strong physique was a Turkish actor who played obscure roles in more then 300 hundred movies. In his private life, unknown to the outside world, he was an extraordinary artist. He produced a large amount of collages, drawings and poetry. During the 80’s he conceived and made by hand, using a periodical comic-book format, a series of 6 books with the title Kaldirim Destani – Kaldirimlar Kurdunun Hayati / Pavement Myth – The Life of the Pavement’s Wolf. Bent 001 will be the first existing reproductions of these originals. The story is based on Gül’s own life. It is written in Turkish. As all the texts are in rhyme they cannot be translated without significant loss of meaning. The narrative takes place between 1905 and 1978 in Adana. It is told as a flashback. The protagonist called Kaldirim Fahri / Pavement Fahri is a tough-guy, a mirror image of Bent Pavement Myth.
Bent 001-1: Kaldırım Destanı – Kaldırımlar Kurdunun Hayatı 1
The story is based on Gül’s own life. It is written in Turkish. As all the texts are in rhyme they cannot be translated without significant loss of meaning. The narrative takes place between 1905 and 1978 in Adana. It is told as a flashback.
Book1:The protagonist called Kaldirim Fahri/ Pavement Fahri is a tough-guy, a mirror image of Gül himself, who is telling a group of friends his life story. Whilst talking, he often pauses to fight with his best friend and adversary. The first book is the story of a baby who is found in the toilet by a witch. She calls it ‘bog-rat’ and dedicates herself to torturing the child. She keeps him in the coal shed, when he grows a little she sends him out to beg. From his first day he has to fight and he never stops.
Masist Gul Project is devoted to create soundtracks for the comic-book of Masist Gul called “Pavement Myth – The Life of the Pavement’s Wolf”
The first issue of the book inspired Munimonde aka Munir Tireli and gave him a high motivation to create an audial reflection of the masterpiece. Therefore Munimonde has produced a 36 minute web shared album dedicated to the first issue of the book.
You can download the full version of the album from the link MASISIT GUL PROJECT
In order to have more info about the album visit: KALIDIRIM FARESI
To purchase a copy of the book click KALDIRIM DESTANI BOOK ONE
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Posted in: Art, Beat & Experimental lit, Comics & Graphic Novels, Monsters & Myths, Music | No Comments » |
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