Happy Halloween from those lovely Sculpture chaps, I could look at this all day.
Just in time for Halloween The Herbaliser premiere the video for their next single, ‘March of The Dead Things (Night Of The Necromantics)‘ featuring Canadian duo Teenburger.
Directed by Caley Maclenan and shot on location in Halifax, Nova Scotia earlier this year it sees the zombie apocalypse happen right in the middle of their new video shoot. Damn! The group sent out a message to fans in the city to sign up for the shoot and gain entry to an exclusive gig whilst they were in town.
You can grab the new album, ‘There Were Seven’ from their online store on vinyl or download (Hit the red ‘shop’ tab, top right). If you want CD it’s available in all good stores, distributed by Kudos.
If off-the-hook sci-fi is your thing then you could do worse than read Brandon Graham‘s Prophet, now up to issue 30 although it’s a reboot of an old title so the new book actually started at issue 21. With a revolving roster of artists and short back up strips in each issue it has more ideas in one page than some comics have in a whole issue. Graham has also just launched another title that he draws AND writes – Multiple Warheads – which is similarly bizarre and comes off the back of his huge King City collection.
Never seen this poster before but Dangerous Minds posted it and you can watch the film on YouTube if LSD frightspoiltation films are your thing. Whenever I see the name Alice associated with LSD I’m reminded of the Kenny Everett jingle he once did… KE – Alice D
*UPDATE* Seems that this poster was made by Markey Funk in 2006, for Agitpop Records – not for the film at all. It was for a psychedelic mix and here’s it is in three parts with additional info – well worth a listen.
I finally got to see the Shepard Fairey ‘Sound & Vision’ show at StolenSpace over the weekend and it is highly recommended. There was a vast amount of work pitched between two galleries with a shop in between for good measure and as a body of work it’s very impressive. I’ve been a fan since seeing his early paste ups in New York in the mid 90’s and attended his first London show in ’99 at the Horse Hospital. That he was doing a music-themed show was music to my ears (sorry), given that he’s designed sleeves and videos for a number of acts over the years and knows the language, always inserting musical icons into his work. For those that know Fairey’s style – it’s not a massive departure visually, the red, cream and black colour scheme dominates throughout and that’s fine because it’s a classic. He really doesn’t need to mess with the formula as there’s more than enough here to see and it gives everything a certain coherence.
He’s experimented with other ways of presenting though, a series of A2 images are repeated on brushed metal in one part of the gallery and there’s an underlying collage feel to some of the pieces where he’s pasted several layers of paper together before printing over the top, much like the fly-postered surfaces he goes over on the streets. Elsewhere multiple copies of the same print have been dissected, mixed up and reassembled so that geometric patterns are present from the different print and paper colours. These are stunning to see in the flesh, like some ancient scrolls unearthed from an Eastern archive, each one is dirty as if layers of varnish and glue have been applied and their edges remain ragged. Elsewhere he has ‘retired’ stencils pasted into collages, edges thick with paint and given a new lease of life as the tools become exhibits in their own right.
The part of the show that I thought most successful was the gallery with the records in racks, (part of Fairey’s own collection), customised turntables and 12″x12″ prints. Copies of sleeves he’d designed were randomly inserted throughout the vinyl as well as a tantalising selection of 7″ custom ‘Obey Recordings’ laser-cut sleeves and record labels. These were beautiful objects and the fact that you could touch them just added to the experience, sadly they weren’t for sale and I wanted to steal one so badly but resisted. Various vintage record and tape players were dotted about with stencils and stickers added to personalise them in the Obey way, you could even play the records on some of the turntables which was a nice touch. A lot of the prints in this gallery were fictional Obey record sleeves using advertising logos and jargon from the classic Stereo Test record era mixed with Fairey’s usual propaganda-type slogans. There was repetition of the imagery but each design held it’s own and it was hard to pick a favourite as they were all beautiful. Above the record racks sat a wall of black & white gig posters, except they weren’t. Fairey had taken existing images and posters and retooled them with his own logos and messages and this is where I start to have issues with some of the work.
Before everyone pulls me up and says, “Shepard Fairey using other people’s work? surely not!? Next you’ll be telling me bears shit in the woods?” I’m pretty well versed in his history. He’s always appropriated the imagery of others, subverted existing logos and messages to his own needs, he’s by no means the first or the last to do this and various lawsuits have been filed as with any successful artist – ‘where there’s a hit there’s a writ’. The whole argument for and against appropriation could fill books and I’m not about to go into it at length here, also given that I use others materials in my own work there’s an element of the pot calling the kettle black. However I have my own yardstick for how much of something is used, abused or hinted at in any work and far too often he goes over the line with parts of his designs here. I find this work to be the weakest and it cheapens the rest of it somewhat as it’s a quick and easy thing to take an existing image or logo and reinterpret it – it’s lazy for the most part, a quick artistic crowd-pleaser.
I find it more interesting to take the benign and turn it into something beautiful by re-contextualising it like Warhol‘s Campbell’s Soup tins or Lichtenstein‘s comic art appropriations (although this still doesn’t discount the matter of copyright infringement). Fairey does this well with the various nods to the design language of 60’s and 70’s era record graphics: turntable speeds, 45 adapter shapes, retro fonts and patterns – you’ve seen it, or something like it, before but it’s not a complete rip. But by taking existing gig posters and redesigning them into more gig posters in his own image he’s not bringing anything new to the medium, just basking in the reflected glory of others’ work. Chuck D‘s Public Enemy logo is modified so that the silhouetted figure in the crosshairs now has a pasting brush, Lichtenstein’s pop art is parodied with a grenade as spray can adding an ‘er‘ to a ‘POW!’ speech balloon, Jamie Reid‘s ‘No Future’ Sex Pistols tour poster is modified and Joe Petagno‘s Motorhead logo is just used straight in a couple of pieces. Another one takes Jasper Johns‘ multi-layered number paintings as inspiration and just changes the typeface, again using the collaged bed for texture that worked far more successfully on the previously mentioned pieces where he’d used his own designs.
By parodying other artists’ work I feel Fairey is cheapening his own art, I think he’s better than this, well, I know he is because of all the other work in the show. It is littered with cultural bookmarks and (mostly Rock) icons – Joey Ramone, Lennon & Yoko, Lemmy, Iggy, Cash, etc. – again taken from existing (uncredited) photographs and homogenised in the clean, smoothed out style he made famous with his Obama ‘Hope’ poster. 80’s graffiti heroes like Haring and Basquiat feature alongside enough punk and post punk legends to fill an issue of Mojo. And that’s fine but I’m not sure what he’s trying to say by including these aside from the inherited ‘cool’ factor and the rebel nature of a lot of the subjects, linking into the subversive attitude and message in many of the other pieces no doubt. Grenades feature in several pieces and the grenade as spray can image from the ‘PowER’ piece is an extremely strong icon which he should revisit and exploit in future works rather than have relegated to a Lichtenstein pastiche.
I found the upstairs of the main Stolen Space gallery the most uneven of all the work including a few larger pieces that looked like they were experiments in a new direction but with little visual direction apparent. Interestingly, whilst virtually every piece had sold throughout the exhibition, these had not, possibly more due to their high price tag than the virtual absence of anything that said ‘Obey’ about them. It was this elevated section that seemed to have the left overs in it, odd sized pieces which didn’t fit elsewhere so had been clustered together when a few less and a bit more surrounding space would have given them more impact and taken any filler out. The best here were the retired stencils – one of his classic Andre The Giant with painting instructions – and the design for the show poster itself which greeted you when you walked in. Overall though there was way more good than bad and to have such high quality throughout with that number of pieces – there must have been around 200 or more – is some feat.
The show ends on Nov 4th so you have less than a week to check it out and we feature Z-Trip‘s soundtrack mix for the exhibition on this weeks Solid Steel.
Now that is pretty gorgeous, new print from Tycho, whose ISO50 website you should really check out if you’re a regular reader of this blog and haven’t ever been over there.
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Is it a circuit board? Is it a map of the London Underground? Is it a radio? It’s all of the above apparently.
I don’t usually go for things like this – one household object adapted to form another, like those vinyl record bowls – but the Tube map is a design classic and I have a thing for circuit boards.
Designed and built by Design Museum artist-in-residence Yuri Suzuki, these images come via the DesignBoom website. More info and a short film over there.
Nice way to start the day
I want to see this pretty badly, a long time coming documentary about Richard Williams‘ great unfinished masterpiece of animation, ‘The Cobbler and The Thief’. Looks like it’s finally finished (the doc, not the original film) and showing from next month at selected film festivals. Here’s the trailer and some clips, watching these fills me with a yearning for something that I know deep down will never be finished, the clips are so tantalising though. I first heard about this back in the 80’s and it has since passed into film legend, the story is a long and tragic one which wrote about before here.
There’s been a lot of press recently about both the impending B.P.R.D. issue 100 and Mike Mignola‘s return to Hellboy as artist with ‘Hellboy in Hell‘. Several articles have revealed forthcoming B.P.R.D. stories, the most interesting of which looks like ‘Sledgehammer’, a wartime agent not revealed before. Here are Mignola’s covers for the 2-parter that debuts next year – via the Comics Alliance site, more interior art over there too. Looks a bit like the Iron Man of this particular universe and I predict this is going to push all the right buttons with fans when it arrives.
Also Brian Bendis posted this old Dark Horse anniversary cover by Mignola a few days back on his twitter, lovely stuff.
Seriously revised pricing scheme for those who just want talks, or just want a ‘Happening’.
Saturday 17th November
Daytime (talks only) £12 / Evening (‘Happening’ only) £15 / All day ticket £20
Sunday 18th November
Daytime (talks only) £12 / Evening (‘Happening’ only) £15 / All day ticket £20
Weekend Tickets
Saturday & Sunday daytimes (talks only) £20 / Saturday & Sunday evenings only £25 / FULL FESTIVAL TICKET £38
A different kind of festival that I will be appearing at this November – Regeneration: “An interactive weekend of exploring altered states of experience”. I’ll be doing an AV set broadly based on various forms of psychedelia early evening on Sunday 18th November, at The Tabernacle in London.
Others on the bill include Wolf People, Time & Space Machine, the Bardo Light Show, talks on psychedelics and screenings of various shorts including the BFI‘s collection, ‘Solar Flares Burn For You’. The event lasts over the whole weekend and more info and tickets can be found on their site.
After stopping inexplicably after 8 episodes back in August with virtual radio silence as to why, Tron Uprising returns to Disney XD tonight at 7.30pm. Yay! We finally get to find out how Tron turned into Rinzla…
Starting tonight Shepard Fairey brings his Sound & Vision show to the StolenSpace Gallery in London. The show is themed around a record store with an installation including vintage turntables and part of Fairey’s own record collection on display. As well as that there will be designs based on record sleeves plus posters, stencils etc.
Fairey has been painting several murals around East London this week with his team (Rivington St. above), you can see plenty of photos over on his site: London trip Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3 / Part 4. The exhibition runs until Nov 4th at the Stolenspace Gallery, The Old Truman Brewery, Dray Walk, 91 Brick Lane, London, E1 6QL.
Z-Trip is in town to play at the opening and we will have a special themed mix he’s done on Solid Steel next week (26th).
I’d love to embed this video but The Space site doesn’t let you unfortunately. Instead, if you click the image you can watch Raj Pannu‘s excellent 18 minute cut up of vintage Old Grey Whistle Test footage. You may know of Raj as the AV tour DJ with Coldcut or maybe witnessed one of his amazing solo DJ sets over the years in clubs all over the world. Either way, this is worth 20 minutes of your time.
Love Reso‘s stuff, always interesting to see where he’s going with things. Great cover on this one, slightly reminiscent of the Tame Impala one I posted below with the pink/red sticker and abstract image.
The track, ‘Check 1,2’, is a killer slice of 100bpm break beat thunder which reminds be of some of those old Prodigy B-sides that were better than the A-sides. Remixes come from Starkey, DJ Kentaro, Emperor and Danny Scrilla and it’s out on Civil Music on 12″ and DL with an album forthcoming.
Really liking the new Tame Impala album, ‘Lonerism’, especially the glam-stomp of the single, ‘Elephant’. Love these covers too, not sure who did them but I’m guessing it’s the excellent Leif Podhajsky who did some for them before maybe?
Furthermore to the post I made back in June about a little magazine haul Steve Cook and I made – here’s some more. Check the Kirby-ish collage on some of the illustrations, the psychedelic lettering and the gorgeous colours.
Sculpture recently posted these zoetrope designs on their site, if you print them and spin at the right speed you can get some amazing animated effects. The complexity of these blows my mind, there’s so much doing on I could look at them revolving forever it seems. The Digitalis label are releasing edits of ‘Slime Code’ (a tape-only release in an edition of only 7 copies (!) from earlier this year) and you can listen to excerpts here. I’m hoping that at least one of these designs will be on the vinyl release in November.
They also have a new Tumblr too.