News, Other Stuff
Asylum Doors - 18
By Chris Prunckle
on 02/27/2013
We Did An Interview
By Jacob Singer
on 02/22/2013
Zak Smith is known for his collection
of illustrations inspired by Thomas Pynchon’s Gravity’s Rainbow (one illustration for every page), his series 100 Girls/100 Octopuses, and his memoir We Did Porn, about his time working in
alt-porn. His art tends to be hysterically convoluted and intricate; he paints
beautiful women (sometimes nudes, other times sexually explicit); his colors
are bold and figures exist on a sliding scale between high-brow illustration
and synthetic realism.
I met up with Zak Smith at a restaurant in downtown Chicago
in the winter of 2012. He was having lunch with a small group of MFA students
from School of Art Institute of Chicago, who had brought him to Chicago as a
guest lecturer. Needless to say, it wasn’t difficult to find them among the
typical Loop lunch crowd. They welcomed me to their table, bought me lunch, and
let me eavesdrop on their conversations regarding Smith’s time as a graduate
student at Yale, his work, and personal life. Smith seemed at home with them
and responded to their questions with his unique blend of intelligence,
self-effacing humor, and honesty. At a certain point, I jumped in and we had
the following conversation.
JS: How would you describe your subject matter and style?
ZS: I never like that question because you have the art
right there. Presumably this interview will be published next to some pictures.
I don’t like the process of describing things, which can be boring, but if I
had to describe it, which I do once in a while, I would say that they’re dense,
labor intensive, and intricate. They’re busy and they seem itchy—it’s like
they’re trying to get off the page. It’s like there is this little vibrating
thing in all my pictures. It’s not on purpose. It just happens. It’s got this
this caffeinated look.
JS: It seems that you’re actively participating in two
traditional painting genres: female nudes and still lifes. But you mash them
together in an interesting way. There will be the female nude as the center of
the canvas but she is surrounded by all this stuff.
ZS: I think part of it is that in other art and media, I
hardly see anything that looks real. It doesn’t look like life. The people look
off. Their apartments look empty.
THE WAY WE SLEEP - Kindle!
By Victor David Giron
on 02/21/2013
Our new book, our most ambitious from a cost and size perspective: a 10x10, 240 page glossy anthology of stories, comics, and interviews about beds and the things that happen there - THE WAY WE SLEEP is now available electronically for less than $5 at AMAZON.COM. It's only the text, not as pretty, but the stories are just as great. Dowload now here.
TWWS features stand-out pieces from acclaimed authors, graphic artists, and comedians including Etgar Keret, Ron Barrett, Jeffrey Brown, Steve Himmer, Billy Lombardo, Joe LoTruglio, Michael Showalter, The Residents, Mary Roach, David Wain, Brandi Wells, and Julia Wertz. Edited by husband-wife duo C. James Bye and Jessa Bye.
"The Way We Sleep represents the very best of what a book can do that no other narrative medium can touch; it's part anthology, part art-book, part interview, part graphic novel, part confessional, part essay, part sociological study. The subject matter here ranges from sex to family to coming-of-age, all rendered with a delightful wit, brevity, and charm. From Mary Roach's study of insomnia to Tony Millionaire's depiction of epic torpor to the Resident's exploration of sleepwalking, The Way We Sleep is as intimate, poignant, and humorous as anything whispered beneath the sheets."
-- Joe Meno, author of best-selling novel Hairstyles of the Damned

Asylum Doors - 17
By Chris Prunckle
on 02/20/2013
Karaoke Idol Chicago!
By Jacob S. Knabb
on 02/13/2013
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