We love our comics here in Seattle and we support our DIY small press folks throughout the year at various festivals and gatherings. If you’re in Seattle, you’ll want to come to the first annual “SHORT RUN” to be held at the Vera Project in Seattle Center, on Saturday, November 12. Admission is free.
Category Archives: Art
Eroyn and Tory Franklin Art Show at Vera Project
“Short Run” cofounder, Eroyn Franklin, is collaborating with her sister, Tory Franklin, to bring you the art show, “ Tales of Two Sisters,” at the Vera Project in Seattle Center. Both sisters are known for providing thought-provoking work shrouded in just the right mix of mystery and cerebral wanderlust. The show runs from October 4 thru October 28. The reception is October 12 and runs from 6:30 to 10pm.
Filed under Art, Comics, Eroyn Franklin, Seattle, Tory Franklin, Vera Project
Finding An Authentic Voice for 9/11
It is a necessary thing to aim the bar high when attempting to present the most remarkable expressions about 9/11. But we shouldn’t get so intimidated by the subject matter that we end up falling into stilted language and a stilted vision. I was reading The New York Times and was surprised by what I read in a think piece entitled, “Outdone by Reality,” by Michiko Kakutani. The writer couldn’t think of any novel that truly captured the raw feeling of 9/11. The one that comes to mind for me is “Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close” by Jonathan Safran Foer. Kakutani does mention it but dismisses it within the portion of his article he entitles, “Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.” The problem with that novel, for him, is that it resembles the structure of Gunter Grass’s “The Tin Drum,” which also has as its protagonist, a boy named Oskar. I would simply say that is part of the art of the novel. But no, for Kakutani finding the words is oh such a struggle. I don’t think so at all. In fact, Foer’s book does a remarkable job of not being on a high horse, shrugging one’s shoulders and weeping because the words aren’t there.
The words are there! You just need to organize your thoughts. The character of Oskar, a very precocious 9-year-old, speaks for the turmoil felt by so many after the 9/11 tragedy. In this case, Oskar lost his father that day. It’s a very symbolic and effective construct. Oskar is a mess. He finds a key among his father’s belongings. For most of the story, he is seeking the lock to that key. We seek our own answers too. Are they all at the same level of intensity? Of course not. You could be someone living on the Upper West Side or in Kansas City and not have lost anyone in 9/11. The connection to the event, for most of us, is what we consume from the media. Are we all traumatized by the event, rendered mute? No, that would be nutty in the extreme and highly prententious at the least. Anyway, I am veering off the topic. I just think Mr. Kakutani had a job to do: write a think piece for The New York Times. And it reads as such. Take from it what you will. It’s just human nature. You can live in close proximity to where a major event occurred and still have a, say, provincial view of it. For Mr. Kakutani, it was the installation in 2005 of Christo’s “The Gates,” a series of saffron draped gates that dotted Central Park, that he acknowledged as a successful work of art that addressed 9/11, albeit indirectly. Well, that is Kakutani’s neighborhood. He let down his guard and enjoyed the art. Now if he could just go back and give Mr. Foer’s book another chance, assuming he ever read it in the first place. Well, he can always see the movie starring Tom Hanks and Sandra Bullock and complain about how off the mark that movie was to healing our collective wound. It’s a major motion picture. It probably will miss the mark but it could spark a better understanding for many who have not even heard of the book yet, much less its paying tribute to “The Tin Drum,” both an excellent novel and film.
Filed under Art, Books, Culture, moives, pop culture
Hank Art: Horror Theme
This piece is something I created for a Dia de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) celebration. For many of you, myself included, Day of the Dead can be observed year round. This ink on paper work is available as an archival 18″x24″ print for $20 US dollars. Shipping and handling is free. Just twenty bucks. Go to PayPal HERE.
Filed under Art, Dia de los Muertos, Hank, Henry Chamberlain, Horror
Daniel Johnston at Wieden+Kennedy Gallery
If you happen to be in Portland, consider stopping by the offices of Wieden+Kennedy and check out their art gallery. Artist Daniel Johnston has a show running from August 4 thru September 1. Ever the purveyors of the zeitgeist, as distilled through impressive advertising, you can always expect something new and different at W+K.
Filed under Art, Comics, Daniel Johnston, Portland, Wieden+Kennedy
BLAB! art show at Roq La Rue
Roq La Rue, the well regarded art gallery in Seattle that focuses on pop surrealism and underground art, is putting on a show that features art from the comix/art anthology, Blab! Magazine.
The press release follows:
Roq La Rue Gallery
presents
” The Blab Show “
a group show curated by Monte Beauchamp
Opens Friday August 12th 6-9pm!
Roq La Rue is pleased to present a group show curated by the illustrious Monte Beauchamp of Blab! Magazine fame. Monte is bringing us a dynamic and fun exhibition featuring a varied assortment of artists and illustrators, whose work all around the theme of Krampus. Who is Krampus? In Alpine tradition, Krampus is a creepy devil figure who accompanies St Nicolas during the holidays…if you are good, St. Nick gives you presents, but if you’re bad then you might wind up in Krampus’ sack and beaten with a switch! Krampus has become an object of counterculture curiosity and this show reflects both the scaryness as well as the wonderful camp factor of Krampus. But wait- why are we having a show based on a Christmas demon in August? All we can say is Roq La Rue didnt get where we are today by following the rules! So pop on some devil horns and join us for a festive opening on August 12th at the gallery!
Please contact us to be placed on an email preview.
Roq la Rue Gallery
2312 2nd Ave
Seattle WA 98121
Find out more at:
http://www.roqlarue.com
Filed under Art, Blab! Magazine, Comics, Roq La Rue Gallery
Friday Art: Out the Window
Filed under Art, Henry Chamberlain
New Interview with Molly Crabapple
Go over to GeekWeek and read my latest interview with the one and only Molly Crabapple.
And while you’re at it, check out Molly’s new animation over at Kickstarter.
Filed under animation, Art, Comics, Molly Crabapple
Don’t Do This: Implant a Camera into your Head
So, there’s this NYU art professor who has implanted a camera into his head. Wafaa Bilal teaches at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts. Hey, if I knew it was that easy to be an art prof, I would have gone further down the academic rabbit hole and gotten my Masters. In fact, back during my art school days, I was already well aware of this type of tomfoolery. This guy’s act is simply going to be accepted in certain elite art circles. It legitimizes a stunt. Bilal is giving art a bad name but, then again, what he’s doing is not art. Make no mistake. No matter how much intellectualizing is done over this. No matter how many lectures you may go to that cite this, and invite you to consider it within the context of his work, blah, blah, blah, it is still not art. Listen to him explain what he’s doing and the best he can come up with is to say that he wants to demonstrate that art is relevant. Well, he’s not doing that by implanting a camera into his head, now is he?
Please do not do this at home or apply for a grant and have this installed by another crazy artist. This is not art!! I am a dyed-in-the-wool artist, embrace all kinds of art, but this is nuts. Why couldn’t the guy wear a hat with a camera attached to it, you know? Doesn’t he watch LATE SHOW WITH DAVID LETTERMAN? Hey, I’ve linked it just in case he’s reading this. Hasn’t he heard of running around with a camera attached to your head–not literally implanted to your head? He would be the “Artist Cam” guy. So, when you stop and think about it, before engaging in any death defying surgery (his body has rejected parts of this insane implant) you have to come to the conclusion that this has already been done and done quite well by the talented staff at LATE SHOW. It’s comedy, not art. You don’t implant a camera in your head. That’s not art, it’s tragic.
Filed under Art
Review: Another Glorious Day at the Nothing Factory
Eroyn Franklin’s “Another Glorious Day in the Nothing Factory,” is an art book that could also be labeled a “graphic novel.” In fact, let’s call it that and get the word out on this amazing work packed with so much poetic observation and dazzling art all done with cut paper. It speaks to every artist, every young person for that matter, who, after a hard fought struggle to take the offbeat path, inevitably is entangled in the realities of conventional life. Disillusionment sets in. Despair finds a home. And a rethinking takes places on how it all went terribly wrong, or simply went terribly.
For Franklin, her story, whether autobiographical, fictional, or a combination of the two, rings true for artists and those not so inclined. It’s as much about the pitfalls of life as it is about the artistic journey. But, as an artist myself, I relate well to the parts about balancing life with art. As if engaging in performance art, Franklin’s main character in the book jumps into a marriage. It is full of wonder and adventure, at the very beginning, so it is hard to blame her. But, that excitement wears off quickly once the happy couple’s feet land on firm ground. Like it not, they come to realize they have just become each other’s starter partner and it is unlikely they will be able to maintain the relationship.
There is no denying the love and lust they shared. Franklin documents it. She lets us in to her world and like a good artist, like a good poet, she distills what we need to know. There is no denying the problems in the relationship. Franklin documents it. She gives us the information we need. What she doesn’t do is spell it right out for you. Instead, she keeps her prose lean, more like poetry, with elevated and ethereal language. After awhile, you may wish everyone communicated this way, along with the elegant cut out artwork.
In not saying everything, she tells us so much more. Here, her past fading, her future uncertain:
It’s not just the husband, everything that once was is dissipating. My former life slowly fades into the background until it is gone altogether. I’m left fumbling through the emptiness, playing hide-and-seek with the wind.
The book ultimately ends on a somewhat upbeat note, with an artist’s resistance to tie a perfectly pretty knot. You should really seek this book out. I would recommend hunting for it at your nearby independent bookstore. Ask them to order it for you, if they don’t have it in stock. Or, by all means, stop by and visit Eroyn at her site: http://eroynfranklin.com/ This book was made possible by support from the Xeric Foundation and Allied Arts. It is 216 pages, a numbered edition of 1,000 copies. $25 US.
Filed under Art, Art books, Comics, graphic novels


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