Kramer’s Ergot 7
Kramer's Ergot 7

Kramer’s Ergot is to the comic book world what McSweeney’s is to the literary set. Established by cartoonist Sammy Harkham in 2000, the anthology has evolved into a standard-bearing almanac of alternative comics’ perennial favorites, veritable legends, and underdog up-and-comers. From the original 48-page self-published compilation of mini-comics to the hardbound 16″ x 21″ bookshelf-defying behemoth it takes the form of today, Kramer’s Ergot has always championed the experimental and the audacious.

Last night saw the release of the 7th installment, boasting contributions from over 60 artists representing a diverse range of styles and subject matter in their comics. Simpsons creator Matt Groening, Ghost World author Dan Clowes, and graphic design god Geoff McFetridge are a few of the heavyweights whose work can be seen in Kramer’s Ergot 7, amongst the likes of some of my favorite art world sensations like Matt Furie, Paper Rad, and Matthew Thurber. Actually, it’s a hard not to just keep naming all the awesome people who worked on Kramer’s Ergot 7, that’s how jam-packed full of quality goodness it is.

I was lucky enough to pick up a copy last night and get it signed by 11 of the contributors (including Groening – childhood dreams do come true!) at Family, the bookstore that Harkham helps run when he’s not cartooning or fostering creative outlets for his fellow artists. It has a pretty steep price, but I definitely think it’s worth the cost. It’s a fascinating look into the point at which the art world and comic books collide, and a decadent showcase for the artists who hover around that spot. I’ll leave you with an excerpt from Geoff McFetridge’s page, a simple but amazing four-panel strip that summarizes my hopes and dreams for humanity.

Kramer's Ergot 7: Geoff McFetridge

3 comments | Art, Books | posted on November 17, 2008 at 2:28 pm
Yuichi Yokoyama’s Confenctionery Color Palette

Like an aesthetically pleasing macrobiotic meal, an inexplicably traumatic piece of noise music, or a completely impractical (yet, endlessly enthralling) work of conceptual fashion design, Yuichi Yokoyama’s paintings and comics evoke a platonic sensuality with only the slimmest semblance of a familiar context tying his work to reality. Yokoyama’s manga “narratives” are devoid of almost any background details or dialogue, depicting thrilling sequences of systematically choreographed fights or, conversely, the construction of cryptic, opaque monuments implying some unknowable force of alien industrial prowess.

I came across a book of Yokoyama’s paintings at the Royal/T Cafe in Culver City, which is a highly buzzed-about new restaurant that pays homage to the “maid cafe” otaku culture in Japan. The cafe inhabits a humongous space filled out by fun, creatively curated glass-box art displays, as well as a gift shop filled with cool but overpriced (they were selling Yokoyama’s book, Painting for more than $100 when its American retailer prices it at $65) products to help you live your Japanese-loving lifestyle to the fullest.

I was immediately draw in to Yokoyama’s work by the delicious color palette he uses in his paintings, and my fascination deepened upon investigating his mangas. There’s something beautiful in the way Yokoyama exploits the cognitive tricks of comic book art, using suspense and careful framing to examine the details of everyday life, and manipulating our assumptions by carefully providing us with contradictory or intentionally illogical clues about what exactly we’re seeing. I came across an excellent analysis of Yokoyama’s manga work from Chris Lanier on the blog The High Hat. Lanier examines, among other things, Yokoyama’s use of fighting as a tool for deconstructing everyday environments, mundane objects like potted plants and kitchenware, and the conventions of superhero comics. Lanier describes a Yokoyama fight sequence set in a library, where books become weapons:

If the spine is sliced away, the cover and individual pages will detach and scatter. If a book is cut at the midpoint of the cover, from top to bottom, while still in its dust jacket, the half of the jacket without the spine will spill a sheaf of disconnected pages. If a corner of a book is cut away at the spine at a 45-degree angle, when the book opens, every page spread will have a triangle cut out of the middle. The variety becomes methodical, almost scientific — these are, in the most literal sense, cutaway diagrams. In fact, many of the books that come apart in “Livres” are books of diagrams: blueprints of floor plans, charts of evolutionary progress, maps of the globe webbed with latitude and longitude lines, geometric figures of mathematical formulae.

[...] The comic panels themselves, many of them set at skewed or slashing angles, become another kind of dissection, framing the scattered pages of the exploded books. The fighting figures and the floating illustrations in the books have the same visual weight, so the pages of the books act as panels within panels, space interpenetrating space (in fact, in one panel, a “villain” is about to get smacked with an open comic book, and the pages spread before him depict another fight). The air becomes a blizzard of information — and a fracturing and folding of space along kaleidoscopic fault lines.

Yokoyama’s paintings deal with similar subject matter and visual themes, but, naturally, find themselves divorced even further from the idea of narrative. Here, Yokoyama becomes even freer to drift into abstraction, without relinquishing the eerie uncanniness of his manga work. But best of all, the colors! They’re so reminiscent of childhood and candy and ice cream, but the content of his images never veers towards such tweeness. His paintings aren’t just colorful to make you pay attention, like nu-rave– Yokoyama really cares about the colors he chooses, and you can almost feel him enjoying the subtle mood each choice creates.

+ Chris Lanier’s analysis of Yokoyama’s mangas on The High Hat
+ James Benedict Brown’s thoughts on Yokoyama’s “Travaux Publics”
+ New Engineering is for purchase at the Giant Robot store
+ Travels is on sale for $16.95 at the web store of the artist’s Ameircan distributor, PictureBox

post a comment | Art, Books | posted on October 10, 2008 at 8:31 pm
Matthew Thurber’s “Hong Kong Bong”

Comic book artist Matthew Thurber is a man of many talents. In addition to his cartooning and painting (see my post on the Hope Gallery’s Male Odor Monsters show for some of his canvas work and his comic 1-800-Mice), he’s also a multi-talented musical savant. Perhaps best known for playing saxaphone in Soiled Mattress and the Springs (which, sadly, has recently disbanded), Thurber’s currently concentrating on a solo project called Ambergris, which sounds something like Captian Beefheart and Steve Buscemi getting funky in a sea of broken glass, and sometimes reminds me of early Of Montreal records, and sometimes sounds like the video game score for a dangerously jocular trek through a demonic Eastern European elementary school.

I’m not sure if this will help clarify what the project is all about, but here’s how Thurber describes the latest Ambergris release, a cassette tape entitled “Anti-Matter Alma Matter.”

The soundtrack to an art exhibit displayed in Switzerland and Brooklyn, side 1 is a radio play-style dialogue describing the amnesia-riddled dialogue between two students of the Carrot University of Time Travel, one of whom is a teenage girl made of crystal. Side two is a suite of songs which were performed during the exhibition, in which the same characters find themselves trapped in a Wormhole for all eternity, due to poor study skills.

Wormholes and Sperm Whales aside, I’m in love with the prolific artist’s latest comic book. The final Soiled Mattress album, entitled Honk Honk Bonk!, was recently released on vinyl, accompanied (for a limited time) by complimentary copies of Thurber’s Hong Kong Bong.

It’s a story of intrigue and betrayal, taking place in the near future ( “Filmed in front of a live audience at Family Bookstore, Los Angeles © MCMXI” ), when a string of Kombucha overdoses leads notorious police detective Serpico into the seedy underbelly of “The Smell” — a 2000s-themed animal-only nightclub in Upper Bed-Stuy Heights, New York, full of shape-shifting spies and sinister scenesters covering up a horrible secret! It’s worth the cost of a useless vinyl disc (JK, analog-lovers) for the hilarious puns, fedoras, and psychedelic non sequiturs alone.

+ Video interview of Soiled Mattress and The Springs from The Fader
+ Soiled Mattress keyboardist Peter Schutte’s awesome music videos for the band

post a comment | Art, Books, Music | posted on August 12, 2008 at 7:42 pm
Filthy French literature, and can the Disney Channel please gay it up?

To escape the purgatory of background work on “The Suite Life of Zack and Cody”, I spent my free time yesterday reading Georges Bataille’s Story of the Eye. It’s this crazy scandalous story from the 1920s about a couple of French teenagers who start fooling around and discover the joys of sex. Their curiosity ultimately leads them on an unscrupulous sex-starved rampage involving all kinds of gleeful debauchery, from water sports to egg-adled masturbation to non-consensual erotic asphyxiation. It’s delightfully filthy, and perhaps the perfect remedy for anyone hoping to briefly escape the the subtle whitewashing of Disney Channel hegemony.

The episode I was in yesterday was buried in layers of Disney Channel self-reference: Zack and Cody’s high school decides to put on a theatrical production of High School Musical, the Disney Channel musical TV-movie (and unfortunate cultural sensation) about a high school putting on a musical, which stars Ashley Tisdale, who also stars in “The Suite Life”. However, Ashley Tisdale’s character on “The Suite Life” is unable to land the role of Sharpay Evans (played by Tisdale in the TV movie), because no one seems to think she looks like Ashley Tisdale. So meta!

Added to that, Mark Indelicato, the little gay boy from “Ugly Betty”, plays a musical theater-obsessed drama queen who lands the role of Ryan Evans, the musical theater-obsessed drama queen in High School Musical. Of course, because this is Disney– just as in the real High School Musical– any reference to homosexuality is relegated to the realm of not-so-subtle implications, where flamboyant hats and exaggerated dances stand in for character development.

Not that I expect a serious gay storyline during a guest spot on one brief episode of “The Suite Life”, but the single-dimensional writing of his character recalled an incident which I experienced on the “Suite Life” set last summer: An obviously uninterested Dylan Sprouse was rehearsing a scene for the third or fourth time, when an A.D. became exasperated at his cardboard delivery. “Alright, let’s do this again. Why don’t we try acting this time?” he said. Dylan flipped around and shouted, “Why don’t you try not being so gay, Jeff.” The A.D. had no answer to that.

4 comments | Books, Work | posted on June 21, 2007 at 12:11 pm
Sammy Harkham’s “Poor Sailor”


Listen to “Young Bride” by Midlake [download]

Today I went to Skylight Books and picked up Sammy Harkham’s 2005 comic book Poor Sailor. It’s a beautiful story of a man who abandons the simple domesticity of his land-locked life for the perils and adventures of the uncharted sea. With sparse dialogue, minimalist style, and no unnecessary frills, the images alone evoke an overwhelming amount of emotion. Each page is adorned by a single square frame, almost like storyboards for a screenplay.

Obviously, given the nautical connotation of this website’s title, I’m enchanted by tales of the sea. However, I find it frustratingly difficult to track down good sea stories– or at least relatable ones. Maybe I’ve developed literary diabetes from too much exposure to contemporary narratives, but I just find the prose of Robert Louis Stevenson, Herman Melville, and even Jack London too alien to wholeheartedly submerge myself in. So I absolutely appreciate the unassuming, relaxed approach towards a sea tale that Harkham takes in Poor Sailor.

Harkham is also the editor of Kramer’s Ergot, a collection of comics that comes out every year or two. He also has a hand in running the amazing store Family on Fairfax Ave.

+ A quite thorough review of Poor Sailor.

3 comments | Art, Books | posted on June 3, 2007 at 11:23 pm