Wednesday, October 23, 2013
Canzine on BlogTO
Had a great time at Canzine last weekend! Great people, great conversations-- zine fairs like Canzine always feel like a big reunion. Contrary to what my expression says above (I look PISSED), I had fun.
It was brought to my attention that I got a pretty nice mention on BlogTO in the wake of the fest. Check it out here.
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Canzine 2013
15 years after my very first appearance at Canzine (I tabled with my zine distro when I was 16 at the first ever Canzine held at the long-defunct Club Shanghai on Spadina in '98!), I'll be at Canzine hawking my wares for the first time in several years this Sunday. Canzine is holding a Symposium on the Saturday before the big Sunday fair, which looks great. What will I be selling this year? This is a mystery even to me at this point, but I promise there will be some new goodies up for grabs. Hope to see ya'll there!
Canzine Toronto 2013
Sunday, October 20, 1-7pm
918 Bathurst Centre
(North of Bathurst Subway Station)
Toronto
Tuesday, May 07, 2013
Symposium Recap

Monday, July 30, 2012
Zine Dream 5
Zine Dream-- the annual zine (among other things) fair-- is happening again in August, but this year it has grown into an impressive three-day event. Opening night is at the new location of Art Metropole; day two will feature a panel discussion moderated by small press/art/craft queen Shannon Gerard; and the main event takes place on day three-- a zine fair with 50+ vendors, entertainment and more.
I missed ZD last year on account of skipping town for Baltimore, but this year I'll be there with lotsa goodies. I'll have a few old zines up for grabs as well as these posters and a brand new collaborative zine that I'm hoping will be done by the 12th! Hope to see y'all there.
Event deets can be found here.
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Burning Schoolhouses
Just in time for Canada Day...fireworks! I'm happy to announce that I'll have some work up in an exhibition that will be a part of the Planet IndigenUS Festival in August. The festival will take part mainly at Harbourfront Centre, but also at partner institution Woodland Cultural Centre in Brantford, Ontario. The exhibition is a showcase of the work of students of the Aboriginal Visual Culture program at OCADU. I am not in the Aboriginal Visual Culture program myself, but I'm grateful to have been invited by department head and incredible artist Bonnie Devine to take part anyway. My piece is called Burning Schoolhouses-- more on them below.
Burning Schoolhouses, 2012
Fireworks, Japanese Kozo paper and adhesive
Installation dimensions variable
Each unit approximately 15cm X 14cm X 6cm
Burning Schoolhouses is a series of sculptural multiples inspired by the essay Confessions of a Born Again Pagan by Fred Kelly. The multiples employ the use of the classic firework, The Burning Schoolhouse, to explore the explosive issue of residential schools just over fifteen years after the last residential school in Canada was closed in 1996. The objects simultaneously connote a sense of celebration, violence and catharsis while embodying the complex and painful process of reconciliation for both aboriginal and non-aboriginal Canadians.
Tuesday, May 15, 2012
Under 30 at 30 at The Japanese Paper Place
Monday, March 12, 2012
A History of Hunger




Here a is new-ish project I completed recently called A History of Hunger consisting of one dozen mini-scroll "books" made of a dozen white eggs. Admittedly, this was a project for school. Here's a statement about it...sorry if it comes across as a little clinical sounding.
A History of Hunger
Eggshells, Japanese paper, adhesive, egg carton
Edition of 12 unique objects
A History of Hunger is a series of 12 miniature objects inspired by books. Using the phrase “break in case of emergency” as a starting point and combining creative writing with research and sculptural processes, I used broken, empty eggs to frame an exploration of hunger and famine across time and space. Through online research, I learned about both contemporary and historical examples of famine and food insecurity such as the Irish potato famine as well as periods of hunger during communist rule in China, WWII and the Great Depression. Each of the twelve book-objects represents a year when a famine or food shortage existed somewhere in the world, and contains a short poetic response to a condition or situation that I read about. A guiding idea in the series is that in opening each egg and finding it empty aside from a short piece of text reflecting an experience of hunger or famine, one might learn not only how widespread hunger is, but how people have coped with food shortages, as well as how they come to exist.
This project is in keeping with the guiding principle of our class publication-- playing with time by imagining the present through the lens of the future, and guessing what aspects of our contemporary cultural/societal condition will carry over to become major issues in subsequent decades. Food security is an issue worldwide that will likely only get worse with increasing climate change. The series of multiples resists providing a linear narrative or definitive history of hunger, and the inclusion of a multiple marked with the year 2042 alludes to the fact that hunger will likely be a continuous problem in a rapidly growing and warming world.
Many of the material/formal decisions I made in the execution of A History of Hunger grew out of my initial decision to use a carton of broken eggs as a starting point. While the content of the multiples is historical, the use of a contemporary carton of eggs marked with nutritional information at a recent date stamp root the work in the present. The multiples play with the scroll-- a historical format that is echoed in word processing applications, web browsers and film credits. Typing directly onto the narrow scrolls required the use of short words in my poetic responses to each historical example of hunger, making them resemble Haikus and giving them a quiet quality that softens the tragic imagery contained in some of the text. The long scrolls made out of Japanese Kozo paper were designed to mimic the look of egg yolks and whites pouring out of their shells. Finally, the fragility of the eggshells fits with the precariousness of food security across time, as well as the increasing instability of our environment.
Friday, February 10, 2012
First Art Purchase

I am unbelievably excited to announce that I've made my first major art purchase! It's a 'Putz' bag of chips sculpture by the artist STO, inspired by the regional chip brand Utz from Pennsylvania. Utz chips were a staple in Baltimore-- they were everywhere there, and we ate a boatload of them. So this is a super cool joint Valentine's gift for us, financed mainly with my own art sales at Katherine Mulherin's new-ish Queen West art shop, No Show Exhibits.
The chip bag was originally included in a New York exhibition called My Slow Called Life in NYC at Mulherin Pollard Gallery. For the show, STO recreated his entire apartment in paper mache. Photographs of the installation can be found here on STO's blog.

Here is Ben wishing these were a real life bag of Utz' Crab flavoured chips, a Baltimore favourite of ours...either that or Carolina-Style BBQ...
Monday, January 09, 2012
Danville Community Encyclopedia

A few days ago, I finished my latest zine, Museozine. This got me thinking about how artists have used the interview format in both performance and printed matter. Tonight in my Publications class I was introduced to a really awesome example of this (somewhat minor) tradition called the Danville Community Encyclopedia by artist Anna Callahan. For this project, Callahan hung out in a public library in Danville, Illinois interviewing members of the public of all ages about their respective areas of expertise. She eventually filled an entire book with transcriptions of the interviews she collected-- the encyclopedia entries as diverse as Ghostbusters, Gospel Songs, Attention Deficit Disorder, Protest, Chicago Illinois, Canada and Tupac.
This was an uber-limited edition. I wish I could buy this!
For more on Anna Callahan and her community projects, check out her website.
(P.S: This is my 300th post!)
Friday, January 14, 2011
Restocked at Art History
I re-stocked a bunch of crafty bits and art multiples (what's the diff?) at Art History today. If you have a particular hankering for plaster fingers or ears, onion pins, tea pins, corn zines or Shrimplace, that is the place to get them locally.
Art History
1080 Queen Street West
(at Dovercourt)
Toronto
http://arthistorytoronto.blogspot.com/
http://www.nowtoronto.com/lifestyle/stores-story.cfm?content=173793
http://www.designlinesmagazine.com/guide/guide_detail.php?id=1116
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Crossed Stitches



On a broader scale, this same idea relates to the concept of ownership. How much can we really claim to “own” our ideas? The repeating, reworking and re-contextualizing of ideas from the past is part of the postmodern condition. So many ideas have come to fruition over the course of history…when we make something, what are the odds that it hasn’t been made before? Anyone who has come across the work of another artist that is uncannily similar to their own knows what it means to have their sense of ownership over an idea thwarted.
How can we as artists deal with this sense that we cannot truly “own” our work? Perhaps the solution is to forfeit ownership altogether.
My piece, Crossed Stitches, explores these ideas. Using two very similar pattern samples as inspiration—one is by William Morris, and one is by a contemporary independent textile design studio called Terrain—I went through the painstaking process of creating accurate and fully-functional cross-stitch patterns that correspond to each design. This process involved transferring each design onto a large grid and translating each pattern so that it is comprised of squares on a grid. These large-scale grid drawings were then used to make a cross-stitch pattern on another piece of grid paper, dividing the colours of the pattern into symbols as “real” cross-stitch patterns do. This final pattern was then included in hand-made cross-stitch kits which include embroidery floss, a needle and canvas, so people can make their own William Morris or Terrain cross-stitched “fabric swatches.”
This piece plays with ideas of ownership (as well as consumerism and trends in art and design) in a number of ways. Crossed Stitches is a piece of work I have done based on the work of two other artists/designers. One might argue that the Terrain design was derivative of the William Morris design. If one was to take one of my William Morris cross-stitch kits and complete it, how much of the finished piece is considered their work, my work, or the work of William Morris? At the root of this work is the inevitability of “shared ownership” as a part of the current climate of making creative work in any media.
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Call for Submissions: The Wunderkabinet

Friday, April 09, 2010
Zine Workshop at Wise Daughters

Friday, March 26, 2010
PRCSSC at Art History

Friday, February 12, 2010
Crafts and Multiples at Art History

Friday, January 29, 2010
An ear, my dear?

Sunday, January 10, 2010
Punk Rockers on Creative Survival and the Survival of Creativity

Friday, September 25, 2009
Etsy Shop

Sunday, August 16, 2009
Zine Dream II

Toronto Zine Library Open House/Collaborative Zine Making Workshop!
Performances by:
Nick Flanagan (www.toromagazine.com/popculture)
Anna May Henry
Zeesy Powers (http://www.zeesypowers.com/)
Music by:
Carl Didur (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vfh0eQxa4mM)
Andre Charles Theriault (http://www.myspace.com/andretheriault)
James Anderson
Braintrust (electronic duo of Peter Thompson and James Kirkpatrick!!)
and DJs:
Wes Allen (http://doingittodeath.wordpress.com/)
Boner Dragon (http://offwhiteto.blogspot.com/)
and Body Beautiful (http://robertdayton.blogspot.com/)
12 - 6 PM, PWYC
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Po.lar.i.ty



