SPX Stream


by

Tuesday, September 30, 2008


This weekend at SPX PictureBox will unleash some serious chaos on you. Lauren Weinstein, CF, Frank Santoro, Timothy Hodler and Matthew Thurber will be in attendance.

PictureBox will debut new zines by Dash Shaw and Santoro. AND we will have limited advance copies of the books below.


The Ganzfeld 7
Edited by Dan Nadel and Ben Jones
Art directed and designed by Ben Jones
Edition of 1000

This is the final issue of The Ganzfeld. We got excited and just skipped 6 and went straight to 7. For this one we’ve really stacked the deck. Ben Jones art directed and co-edited the whole thing, even providing covers. Inside the 288 page, full color book is new work by: Brian Gibson, Lauren Weinstein, Taylor McKimens, Andrew Jeffrey Wright, Jessica Ciocci, Chris Ware, Mat Brinkman & Joe Grillo (24 pages of collaborative drawings), Erin Rosenthal, Keith McCulloch, Peter Blegvad, Joe Buzzell, Jon Vermilyea, C.F., Eddie Martinez, Chuck Webster, and many more. There are features on Marc Smeets, Joanne Greenbaum, Heinz Edelmann and Pshaw. And there are comics by Ben Jones throughout. It’s a brick. A monument. A terror. Available at very few outlets and pretty much only online.

If that weren’t enough it comes packages with 4 more items only available as part of the package:

-Problem Solvers, the DVD, by Paper Rad. EXCLUSIVE to Ganz 7
-A 12 page zine collecting the best of Kathy Grayson’s blog
-A 24 page pamphlet examining the work of L.A. genius artist Bob Zoell by Norman Hathaway
-An 18×24 two-sided poster by Lauren Weinstein


Travel
Yuichi Yokoyama

All SPX copies are signed with a drawing by Yokoyama

In Yuichi Yokoyama’s Travel, the storyline is as linear as it is sharp: it is the long, silent and crystalline description of a train ride undertaken by three men. The subject Yokoyama depicts here is less the landscape around the train (the distance covered, the regions travelled through) than the actions within the train itself. As the train moves, the three men walk through the string of cars and are confronted with the vehicle’s architecture, its machine-like environment. By above all, they are confronted with the stares and the physical presence of other passengers. Travel is a journey into the contemporary Japanese psyche – a brilliant, wordless graphic novel. Bookforum has written of Yokoyama: “Concerned with phenomena rather than character and narrative, his comics resemble the output of a drafting machine: sequences that present multiple views of an object in action and look like exploded product diagrams. Yokoyama seems to enjoy the resulting images as much for the strange shapes that are generated as for what they reveal.” This edition features an introduction by cartoonist and historian Paul Karasik and commentary by the author.


Powr Mastrs Vol. 2
C.F.

Powr Mastrs Vol. 2 follows hot on the heels of this elusive artist’s first volume– in a series of six graphic novels–which was one of last year’s most anticipated debuts. C.F. comes out of the mythic Providence, Rhode Island art and noise scene–his musical alias is Kites. In a recent profile The Comics Reporter observes, “Contrasting sharply with many of his flashier contemporaries, C.F.’s primary skill lies in overlooked nuances of comics storytelling, in particular pacing.” His distinctive voice and intricate rendering skills have attracted attention from the groundbreaking comics anthology, Kramers Ergot–he was included in the fourth issue, and featured on the cover of the fifth. Here, C.F.’s epic fantasy–an allegorical tale where power, physical identity and even gender are always in flux–picks up steam: Buell Kazee sneaks down into the cellar of the plex knowe crypt and conjures trouble; Tetradyne Cola takes a nap and dreams of Monica Glass and the lemon sparklers of star studio; members of the Marker clan compare notes on their magical crimes and the witches of Lace Temblor conspire over transmutation night.


Monster Men Bureiko Lullaby
Takashi Nemoto

“Nemoto is the undisputed master of filthy comics. His work is brutal and horrifying and sure to shock even the most jaded comics reader. And yet underneath all his absurd depravity is a beautiful and touching story of a father’s love for his giant mutant sperm son.”-Johnny Ryan

At long last, this underground Japanese classic has been translated into English. A seminal work of manga from the mid-1980s, Monster Man Bureiko Lullaby is a Candide-esque tale–if you can picture Candide as a mutated sperm brought to life by radioactivity. Unremittingly explicit, this is the comics equivalent of Henry Miller at his best: direct, honest and insightful while simultaneously beautiful and grotesque. Tokyo-based Takashi Nemoto, who was born in 1958, has been called the R. Crumb of Japan: Nemoto and Crumb share a similar, surreal drawing style and pessimistic, satirical stance, for which both have faced their share of negative criticism. Due to his unapologetically squalid subject matter, Nemoto has long been a controversial figure in Japan–clashing violently with mainstream Japanese morals–and is just now receiving some critical success there. Reviewers are finally looking past his gross-out humor to find farflung influences and connections like Mark Twain, Otto Dix and Andre Masson. Book design by King Terry.

See you this weekend!

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11 Responses to “SPX Stream”
  1. Turok Reader says:

    GREAT!!!

    on thing though,
    can you explain the thinking behind deciding to end the run of the Ganzfeld?
    Why not just put it on hold until you feel like doing another one?

  2. Dan Nadel says:

    I am old enough now to know that
    I’ll never feel like doing another one. I’m interested in other things now.

  3. Brian says:

    Is Santoro’s zine the expanded version of his MOCCA lecture?

  4. Frank Santoro says:

    no my zine is a collaboration with the incredibly talented Lane Milburne.

    Cold Heat Special number eight

    and I’ll have copies of my zine with Dash Shaw CH Special #3.

    No symmetry zine yet. Still tinkering with it.

  5. D_W_ says:

    hey Frank, special #8, nice, but what am I missing? 1-Vermilyea/2-Chunky Gnars/3-Shaw/4-Jim Rugg/5-Ryan Cecil/6-Castle Castle?/7-?
    Have a killer SPX.

  6. Frank Santoro says:

    Cold Heat Specials 6 and 7 aren’t out yet but were “assigned” already to other artists. Soon.

  7. Anonymous says:

    Not that I can be at SPX since I’m trapped in the UK, but Im very, very excited about three of those four new releases.

    ADAM

  8. Dan Nadel says:

    Ganz 7 will be available online, at PictureBox, and at a very select few stores.

  9. Anonymous says:

    hey santoro-
    you got a soda on your roof, asshole

  10. ryan says:

    Wow, fuck. Congrats guys!
    I’m super excited to get my hands on the Nemoto and Yokoyama releases.

    Dan, can you say a little about how you guys present the pages in TRAVEL? I’ve read the original in Japanese but since it’s wordless with those extensive footnotes, I was wondering how you decided to present it for English readers?

    Really, really looking forward to all your SPX debuts. Will PB be at APE?

  11. Brian says:

    Hey Dan, when you say a “select few stores” here, do you just mean Family, like it says on the Picturebox site, or would a place like Atomic Books (I live in Baltimore now, and they sell copies of Core Of Caligula, but I still feel like they’re not as good as a Quimby’s) get copies?

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