Author Archive

Watch Out Toronto


by

Friday, August 17, 2007


Read Comment (1)

PictureBox is blowing into Toronto tonight to engage in TCAF, The Toronto Comic Art Festival, Saturday and Sunday. Frank Santoro and I will be our usual bleary-eyed slightly grouchy selves. But we’ll be happy to see you! And we will sell you things!

Debuting at TCAF is Brian Chippendale’s decade-in-the-making Maggots. We have just 30 advance copies for sale. Get ’em quick! Also, we’ll have some eye-popping prints and posters by Chippendale, C.F., and Leif Goldberg, fresh off the ink stained floors of Providence, RI.

Come and let us rock you!

Labels: ,

San Diego


by

Thursday, August 2, 2007


Post Comment

And here’s a brief bit from San Diego. I made it home in one piece, a bit worse for wear. Friends Eric Reynolds and Tom Devlin did their best to council me with sage-like wisdom but Comicon beat me bloody. The best part was really just hanging out with friends…. Anyhow, here are some images.

Tom tries to be funny. Weissman and Ryan oblige.

Special sidewise image! I accepted Ogden Whitney’s Hall of Fame
award at the Eisner Award ceremony. And they let me keep it! Haw!
As Johnny Ryan said, “what does it mean if the inductee is a better
cartoonist than the guy who the award is named for?” Good question,
Johnny! The Eisner Awards remain the best reason not to take comics
seriously as an art form (well, that and the Masters of American Comics
exhibition!). Tom looks at it enviously after a furious night of losing to
Gumby, Sandman (I lost to Sandman, too!) and other stuff waaaaaay better
than the Moomins and Tatsumi. Oh yes.

Matthew Thurber, Marc Bell and Jon Vermilyea go Bats.

Labels: , , , , , ,

New Site!


by

Thursday, August 2, 2007


Post Comment

Here’s a bit of self promotion!

PictureBox Inc. is proud to announce its brand new web site:

www.pictureboxinc.com

As designed by Circle and Square, the new site will function as both the PictureBox catalog and a hub for a carefully curated international selection of artists products. Every product is either chosen or commissioned according to PictureBox’s high aesthetic and production standards. Current site exclusives include plates and shirts by Gary Panter, prints by Brian Chippendale, C.F., Paper Rad (see above!), and Taylor McKimens, animation cells by Amy Lockhart, and zines by Misaki Kawai and John Broadley. Pictureboxinc.com is a culture unto itself, linking visual nodes across the globe.

PictureBox is a Grammy Award-winning art, music, photography, and comics publisher based in Brooklyn, New York. PictureBox specializes in bringing artists’ visions to print in startling and unexpected ways. All of our books are meticulously designed and printed to create as unique and immersive a reading experience as possible. PictureBox publishes its own books and also packages books and concepts for museums and galleries around the world. Previous books include The Wilco Book, Ninja, Paper Rad, B.J. and da Dogs, and Gore among others. Its most recent publications include Real Fun: Polaroids from the Independent Music Landscape (Ashod Simonian), Wipe That Clock Off Your Face (Brian Belott), and The Ganzfeld 5: Japanada.

Labels: ,

Go Town


by

Thursday, July 26, 2007


Read Comment (1)

Yes, we’re here in San Diego. Led by the inestimable Olive Panter, myself, Frank Santoro, Matthew Thurber, Marc Bell and Jon Vermilyea have arrived and begun selling here at Comic-Con. Great back issue shopping here. I’ve discovered that Carl Burgos rules! Also, sandwiches, anxiety, construction and hotels. Here are some pictures from the first day. Also, PictureBox has a new site with tons of new stuff! Shop your hearts out. And come see us if you’re in San Diego. Booth 1316.
Thurber and Bell work their magic.

The booth looketh good.
Thurber and Panter keep it casual.


Olive is proud of her Dad.

Labels: , ,

PictureBox in San Diego


by

Monday, July 23, 2007


Post Comment

Well, the PictureBox site itself is currently transitioning into a new beast, so this lowly blog will have to do for our San Diego announcement. PictureBox will be set up in San Diego in a beautiful booth. It will be designed and decorated by Matthew Thurber and Frank Santoro. Both artists will be signing books all weekend long, and so will Marc Bell and Taylor McKimens.

We will have tons of new stuff there by Paper Rad, Brian Chippendale, CF and many many more.

So: signings by Marc Bell, Matthew Thurber, Taylor McKimens and Frank Santoro, and good stuff.

Come see us!

Labels: , , , , ,

Damn Right


by

Friday, June 22, 2007


Post Comment

Frank Santoro hanging masterful new drawings

Ben Jones contemplating the universe

Tonight, at CANADA, New Mutants!

And tomorrow, at MoCCA, Comics Comics 3, 1-800 MICE, The Ganzfeld 5, and maniac artists signing galore!

Labels: , ,

Big Weekend Ahead


by

Monday, June 18, 2007


Post Comment


Well now PictureBox has big plans this weekend. We’re releasing Matthew Thurber’s 1-800 MICE #2, Comics Comics #3 and The Ganzfeld 5: Japanada! at MoCCA at NYC’s Puck Building, all day Saturday and Sunday, booths A14-16. Lotsa signings all weekend:

Saturday

12-1: Lauren Weinstein and Matthew Thurber
1-2: Gary Panter and Brian Chippendale
2-3: Paper Rad
3-4: Mark Newgarden and Megan Cash
4-5: Brian Chippendale and Frank Santoro
5-6: Taylor McKimens and Dan Nadel

Sunday

12-1: Taylor McKimens and Matthew Thurber
1-2: Lauren Weinstein and Brian Chippendale
2-3: Paper Rad
3-4: Dan Nadel and Frank Santoro

Patrick Smith: “Caterpillar”, 40″ x 48″, oil on canvas

AND! I’ve curated an exhibition opening Friday night!

CANADA
“New Mutants”
Curated by Dan Nadel for PictureBox
Opening Friday, June 22, 7-9 pm.
Artists in attendance.

CANADA
55 Chrystie St.
NYC 10002
Wednesday – Sunday 12-6 pm.

The artists:

Melissa Brown
Brian Chippendale
Julie Doucet
C.F.
Trenton Doyle Hancock
Ben Jones
Amy Lockhart
Sakura Maku
Frank Santoro
Patrick Smith
Michael Williams

The show:

CANADA presents an exhibition of imagist paintings by emerging North American artists. This group of artists is linked by its unabashed use of representative imagery in service to surreal and oblique narratives. These artists find their lineage in the midwestern explorations of the Hairy Who, deep dish surrealism of Gary Panter, the raw beauty of H.C. Westermann and the fantastics of Max Ernst. Like their artistic ancestors, the artists at hand use a private symbol language to assemble communicative pictures. This is not decorative psychedelia or overheated allegory, but rather deeply personal and formally constructed images marked by an absence of irony and an attention to the formal elements of a cartoon and vernacular based vocabulary.

Five of the eleven artists exhibited are based or have roots in Providence, RI’s fertile arts culture. Melissa Brown’s (now based in Brooklyn) mixed media landscapes elevate the horizon to an experiential hallucination, while Brian Chippendale’s collaged images enact his own cartoon narratives on an epic scale. C.F.’s all-over images accumulate dozens of small moments, forming an idea of a distinct visual sensibility. Ben Jones, of Paper Rad, presents flattened portraits of anonymous cartoons in search of a plot, while Michael Williams paints midlife crises of universal hippies. Exiting Providence, Vancouver’s Amy Lockhart’s paintings are meticulous visions of characters in midstream, while Texan Trenton Doyle Hancock’s tactile visions of his Mound-world capture a brief narrative moment. Julie Doucet, based in Montreal, creates painted objects that function like images–her drawn vocabulary suddenly occupying three dimensions. Pittsburgh native Frank Santoro combines a comic book sense for action with a traditional painter’s attention to detail. Two New Yorkers are engaged in painted introspection: Sakura Maku used texts to layer and subvert her jangly images; Patrick Smith’s portraits of spaces and faces made of and living through surreal forms are striking passageways into another consciousness.

All of these painters refuse to be pigeonholed, allowing themselves and their images to change and mutate through multiple media.

Labels: , , , , , , , , , ,

BIG BOW-WOW BOOK BLAST in BILLYBURG!


by

Monday, June 18, 2007


Post Comment

Introduce your little ones to Bow-Wow, the tenacious terrier star of BOW-WOW BUGS A BUG!

“Hip” and “witty” -Family Fun Magazine

Cartoonist Mark Newgarden (GARBAGE PAIL KIDS) and illustrator Megan Montague Cash (WHAT MAKES THE SEASONS?), the team behind Harcourt’s newest picture book sensation will present an audio-visual performance featuring it’s curious canine star! Included will be an amazing on-the-spot book collaboration between Megan and the audience (ages 3-8 and up) as well as a book signing, and other surprises!

The event will be hosted by Williamsburg’s beloved MINI JAKE, “A Modern Children’s Store” as part of their Grand Opening Celebration in their big, beautiful new location.

PRESENTATION AND BOOK EVENT
SUNDAY, JUNE 24
2:00 pm

MINI JAKE
at their new location
178 N. 9th Street
(between Bedford and Driggs Avenues)
Brooklyn, NY 11211
(718) 782-2005

For further info contact:

MINI JAKE
http://www.minijake.com
jake@minijake.com

BOW-WOW BOOKS
http://www.bow-wowbooks.com
(for bios, reviews, info, etc.)
bowwowbooks@aol.com

Labels: , ,

A Fine Day for Comics


by

Monday, June 11, 2007


Read Comments (3)

Well, I’m a lucky fan boy today. In my inbox this morning was a lengthy email about a massive, 464 page reprint of Winsor McCay’s Dream of the Rarebit Fiend. I’m quite excited about this, and hopefully the print quality will be as good as Pete Maresca’s groundbreaking McCay volume.

So, that’s cool. Plus, the mailman brought my review copies of Paul Karasik’s indispensable I Shall Destroy All the Civilized Planets. Ol’ man Karasik really did it this time, bringing all his obsessive zeal to bear on Fletcher Hanks, who I hope will soon be recognized (along with demented brethren Milt Gross, Ogden Whitney and Ernie Bushmiller) as one of the great cartoonists of the 20th century. His ability to make indelible images in comic book panels is nearly unparalleled. What can I say? It’s a brilliant book. Paul was my very first serious interview back in 1999, and his section of the Ganzfeld 1 helped make that book, my maiden voyage in publishing, really special.

Annnyyyyhoooowwww, I also received Drew Friedman’s The Fun Never Stops, an excellent overview of the last 15 years of his comics and illustrations. A perfect book for toilet reading! He remains hilarious and just awesome to hang out with (in book form).

Comics. It’s fun.

Labels: , , , ,

Bow Wow. Wow. Ow.


by

Tuesday, May 29, 2007


Post Comment


Our friend and contributor Mark Newgarden has a fantastic new children’s book coming out in collaboration with our friend and hero, Megan Montague Cash:

Bow-Wow Bugs a Bug.

I highly recommend it for kids ages 2 to 82!

And so here is the blurb:

Cartoonist Mark Newgarden and Illustrator Megan Montague Cash will be signing their new wordless picture story at ROCKETSHIP in Brooklyn. 8 pm, Saturday June 2!

“What an odd, sweet, surreal, and hilarious adventure from Newgarden and Cash. It’s what Crockett Johnson, Ernie Bushmiller, and Rod Serling might have come up with if they shared a bench at the doggie park. I love it!”–Lane Smith

ROCKETSHIP
208 Smith Street
Brooklyn NY 11201
718.797.1348

www.bowwowbooks.com

Labels: , ,