July 7, 2009

SO MUCH TO ANNOUNCE!!!

Holy moly, we've been BUSY.
We're going to take the numerical approach here, to make sure we don't miss anything!

1) Papirmasse, the mail-art subscription we publish, is

it is only

YES!  That's only $60 for ***12*** signed and editioned art prints!   And they come in the mail every month!!!  What are you waiting for?  These are limited edition.  There are only 1,000 subscriptions available.  If you miss out, how else are you going to fill your house with art and have tons of amazingly unique presents at the ready for birthdays that sneak up on you?

You can go straight to our Etsy store to sign up, or, if you're new to the whole concept of Papirmasse, you might want to visit the website.  Which brings us to:

2)


YES!  We redesigned the website.  It is now WAY nicer.  The main page looks the same, but we highly recommend you scroll through the issues published so far, and also: click on the 'papirmasse in the news' button at the bottom, where you will see stuff such as:

3) The beautiful magazines that have been hyping us up.

Parlour Magazine out of Edmonton listed Papirmasse as one of their favourite things in their breakthrough Lady Gaga issue:


and SNAP! magazine, out of Montreal (and one of the best things about Montreal too!  Make sure to pick up a FREE copy if you are ever in this beautiful city) wrote a short piece about us in their latest issue, below.


It is extremely well written and articulates many things about the mail-art project better than we ever have, so props to them.  An excerpt from the article appears on our 'in the news' section, and the entire issue can be browsed on their website.

4) The June issue of Papirmasse is out!  Look what you get for $5!  Articles about corporate graffiti and the art market on the back.  17" x 20".
Here's the May issue. 12" x 18".
And April - a reversible book!!! Each page measures 5.75" x 8.75"

See all this and more at www.papirmasse.com

Okay, 5) is a digression, but our studio mate Evil Alice put up a great tour of our shared studio space, 100-Sided Die, on her blog.  Thanks Alice!  Now you can see where I work!  Remember how badly I wanted a real studio?

Also, 6) I might have some buttons for sale at the Warped Tour, courtesy of Thoughtcrime Ink.  I submitted 20 designs to them, so we'll see which ones they choose to print (if any, no pressure Jeff!)

And 7) No more t-shirts for a while.  I am sick of the tormented waiting and weird highschool popularity contest feeling.

That's it for the next few days at least!  I do have some art shows coming up though, so I'll be back with more news before too long.

Older but a Gooder


I did this Deerfish a couple years ago, and came across it again recently.  You know what?  I really like it!  It's for sale this month at Usine 106U in Montreal.  If it doesn't sell there, look for it at my etsy shop soon.

July 1, 2009

New Design UP, Out and About

Vote at Threadless.  There's a Flash file and everything.  It looks way cooler than this.  Click on the link below or here.

E*X*P*L*O*S*I*O*N - Threadless T-shirts, Nude No More

June 25, 2009

Massive Art Sale this Saturday!!!




We've turned one of the studios at the 100 Sided Die into a store.  If you don't know about the Die, well, it's basically a huge shared studio in the Mile End.  Tons of artists share the space, so there's a real variety of work.  But our store is only open one day a month, so don't miss it!

Posters , Drawings , Paintings , Tshirts , Badges , Weird Clothing , Tapes , Art prints , Records , Books , Zines , Toys , Art Objects , CDs By::::: Just Seeds Collective , Seripop , Jacinthe Loranger , Jesse Purcell , Jasa Baka aka Parlour Treats , Nomn Ryn, Alice Phieu , Kirsten McCrea, Felix Morel , Walter Scott , Psychic Handshake Recordings , AIDS Wolf++++++

Date:
Saturday, June 27, 2009
Time:
12:00pm - 6:00pm
Location:
The 100 Sided Die
Street:
5334 De Gaspe -- room 1202
City/Town:
Montreal, QC
Click here to be whisked away to the Facebook event.

June 16, 2009

New Illo! Eye Weekly!

A new illustration for Eye Weekly about how it can sometimes be harder to be a good father than a good mother, because in order to be good fathers men need to be emotional in ways they aren't used to.  

The photo above is a little dull compared to the file I sent in, because: BEHOLD!  What happens when you try to display a file with a CMYK profile on the internet (which works in RGB).  Sigh, I feel like I am always learning and there are 1,000,000 things that can go wrong when computers and printing get together.  

Actually, it looks kind of cool.  Way to work the complimentary colours, internet.
Work in progress: getting near the end.  I really fell in love with the multi-face thing going on above, but ultimately decided that it was the art part of my brain that loved the weirdness of it, and that the illustration part of my brain needed to focus on communicating a message.  In that respect, keeping the second face looking more like a mask was probably a good choice.  Also, the double face thing might be visually confusing to everyone but, say, the person who drew it.  That was my main concern, anyway.

Work in progress: This is what it looked like after day one: a few hours of compiling the various elements.  Day two was refinement and colour choice.  Thank god, because it looks WAY better now.

I'm still iffy on this whole revealing my process thing I'm doing.  I wonder if it makes sense to air so much of my dirty laundry and mistakes out there.  Then again, as an illustrator who is fairly new to the game, I really like seeing how other people do their thang.  And I figure that if I want to see it, I'd better show it too.  So here it is folks!  For now, at least...  Ha ha, until some art director says, "Well, I *was* going to hire you, until I saw your passion for teal early in the process.  Deal breaker!"

June 10, 2009

And yet again...


I wish I could promise you that I'm going to start posting about something other than t-shirt competitions, but I can't.  I've become obsessed.  I mean, I'm definitely still painting every day and making "real" art, but still.  Another t-shirt design submission.  Sorry.  It will stop someday.  I promise.  

Click below to vote!  I really actually do think I could win this one.  And if I do I can breathe a sigh of relief and keep painting full-time for another few months.  Yes, it seems that voting for me is the surest fastest way to get me to shut up about t-shirts.
Take Me With You - Threadless T-shirts, Nude No More


June 4, 2009

Threadless again!


I warn you - this is going to get really annoying.  I will not rest until Threadless has printed a shirt I've designed (and yes, it's 100% because it would pay my rent for a long, long time).

May 30, 2009

Another kick at the Threadless can

I'm kind of amazed they let this enter since it *ahem* might have way too many colours.  But I submitted in a moment of...  well, I don't know what kind of a moment it was.  Want to wear this on a shirt though?  Click below to go to the scoring page.  Thanks!
All the Madness in the World - Threadless T-shirts, Nude No More

Mwahaha!

I got a picture of Stephen Harper, Stupid Hamster Face into an Ottawa newspaper!   Take that Stephen - victory is mine!!

May 25, 2009

Wa-HOO! Can-TEEN!


I had a total jet-setting Monday. From Montreal to Ottawa and back, in one glorious day. Pretty much what I discovered is that Canteen is one of my favourite art-spots in Canada (it's kind of half a gallery, half an art-book store), Ottawa smells like flowers everywhere, and Stephen Harper is not hiding behind garbage cans, waiting to ambush unsuspecting tourists, as I had been told.

Here are the pictures of my show at Canteen. If the 'Stephen Harper, Stupid Hamster Face' painting sells, I will of course be sad to see it go (it's a personal fave), but I will also know that of all the cities in the world, it is in the right place.

Bright Bear - a new one.
My work alongside some pretty amazinglyawesome art books.  
I need to go back just to peruse them!
Wham bam, thank you man - here's the whole shibang.  I gave Canteen the very last of my Bearded Lady prints (4).  I had no idea I had gotten so low on them, but I guess a few sales and a few gifts here and there, and bam - they're gone!  So if you're in Ottawa, grab 'em while they're hot.  
Thar she is.  The Bearded Lass, in all her glory.  Too bad you can't see all the swirly detail in her hair on the ol' internet.
Seripop and zines in the back room. 

This was a delightful discovery - my favourite artist, Other, made the coolest sign for a store ever.  Lucky store.  They had a pretty rad art gallery upstairs too.
And yes - tulip festival.  xoxo Ottawa.  
My work will be up for approximately the month of May, and maybe a little bit of June.  I highly recommend checking out this store if you ever get the chance - it rivals anything I've seen in New York or Montreal or Toronto or San Francisco for pure art wonderfulness.

May 12, 2009

BIG MOFO DRAWING


I just finished this HUGE sucker and damn damn damn it is pretty exciting.  It is the FIRST abstract I have ever done, and I feel like I could suddenly take my work in a whole new direction I never knew existed.  

I've been feeling guilty lately.  I moved back to Montreal 2 months ago with the goal of making art ALL THE TIME (this seems to be a caps lock post), and it took a little longer to get settled in than I had anticipated.  I was feeling like I had not accomplished enough.  A few paintings are well under way at the studio (plus I actually *have* a studio!), and I have a bunch of stretched canvases, AND I'm still publishing the art subscription, and I did another illustration, AND I got illustration postcards printed and compiled a mailing list - but STILL for some reason I felt like I had done nothing.  When I finished this today and took it out to the yard to photograph it, I realized that it's actually quite the accomplishment.  It's hanging in my kitchen now and is big and crazy and insanely detailed, and I love it. 

New Illustration

A new illustration for Vue Weekly in Edmonton. Edmonton is in Alberta, a province familiar with booms and busts due to its reliance on oil mon
ey. The concept was to depict a millionaire in a soup line, to accompany an article on the emergence of the 'bust' part of the cycle.

Since I always find myself wishing more illustrators showed their process, I'm going to try out showing mine, even though I'm very much a novice compared to the illustrators whose blogs I compulsively read.  So here we go: concept sketch
Final sketch (looking at them now I kind of prefer the concept sketch 
to the final one.  I think I lost some of the spontaneity, and had better composition).
I tried to make the millionaire look a little less cartoony than he does here.  Other than that, there's more I want to say (I always feel like I have SO MUCH to learn!), but I think I'll save it for another post.  Here's the cover as printed:

May 10, 2009

ReVIEW: Reversible Book!

Now that the April issue of Papirmasse is out and safely in the hands of subscribers, we can tell you why we were all atingle about it. It's a reversible book! Printed on one very large single sheet of paper, this beauty folds down into a 6 x 9 inch book that features two-toned drawings on one side, and hand-written artist profiles on the other.  

The front and back cover of side 1.

Inside: Bruce Lee and Ride 'em Cowboy.

More doodles.

Faces from the Kid Koala drawing sessions in Montreal 
this past February, and Goodbye Hands.

Back covers!

Front and back cover of side 2.

Featuring a round-up of my favourite artists (ie. who I steal my ideas from).
Josh Holinaty, Turf One, Produkt, and Other...

...the YPF Collective and David Choe...

... & last but not least Jillian Tamaki and Dietrich Rosteck.

For more information check out www.papirmasse.com.
Click HERE to subscribe!

May 6, 2009

I sell my stuff monthly at this super cool/weird/eclectic Montreal gallery. Come check it out this Thursday if you're into art openings. I personally think that art is 100% better when viewed in a crowded space surrounded by happy, loud, drunk people. I really, really do.

This month I'm selling a kind of old but really nice nude painting in oil - I rediscovered it when I moved. It's framed and looks pretty good. Also some screenprints and subscriptions to Papirmasse. Last month I sold a monoprint of hearts that I really, really liked. Kind of sad to see it go. Also, it has gone to live in North Carolina, which is cool, but also far away (and kind of weird to think of a small part of myself in NC).

Full details:
SUBTERFUGE
May 6th to May 31st 2009
Opening Thursday May 7th 5hPM to11hPM

USINE 106U
160 Roy E.
514-728-9349

http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=97729149815&ref=mf
http://www.myspace.com/usine106u


USINE 106U is glad to invite you the opening of the astounding exhibition SUBTERFUGE presenting the artwork of 29 visual artists: Mark Prent, Eric Braün, Mimi Traillette, Karine Allard, Yves Milet-Desfougères, Jean-Michel Cholette, Daniel Erban , Sweet Grognasse, Majka Kwiatowska, Xavier Landry, Alexandra Cuellar, Scott Ferry, Adam Norris, Kirsten McCrea, Patrick Lamoureux, Luc Poudrier, Serge De Cotret, Winky, Natasha Clayton, Marie-Hélène Cauvin, Jérome Bertrand, Jean Pronovost, Dominique Cantin, Julia Niemczynowska, Antonin St-Jean, Annabelle Nicole, Mathieu Bories, Matthieu Lapointe et Florent Veilleux.
Hallucinogenic paintings, pop-art silkscreens, disquieting sculptures, erotic etchings, original drawings, trash plush toys, surrealist jewelry other fascinating curiosities will massively take over the space. 

The exhibition takes place at USINE 106U, 160 Roy E. from May 6th to May 31st 2009, and the opening will be held on Thursday May 7th from 5hPM to 11hPM.

Opening hours are Saturday to Wednesday noon to 6hPM , Thursday & Friday from noon to 9hPM.

April 27, 2009

Machine Wash Cold/Tumble Dry Low


Moniker Designs in Montreal has an annual t-shirt competition where they print the works of 15 artists onto a limited run of shirts, throw a big party, and sell sell sell those shirts! This year my horse design got picked, and I have to admit that I'm pretty stoked with how it turned out. I wore it for probably longer than I should have in the days after the opening...

Speaking of which, here are a few shots of said opening last week! Click here to go to their website, where you can see and buy the whole collection.
My shirt!

The hall, lined with amazing photos of the clothes (hopefully they'll post these photos on their site).

The nifty screenpress.

Years of build-up on the plates.

Some of the other shirts in the show!

And last, some really amazing GIGANTIC wood blocks 
(for printing, I assume?) in the press room.