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Showing posts with label zine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zine. Show all posts

Monday, May 4, 2009

Freddy

I owned a cat called Freddy while I was growing up. He was 17 or 18 when he died and I was away at university. I started dreaming about him regularly so i thought maybe I needed to make a book for him, about him, remembering all the good times we'd spent together. So I made my 'Freddy' book. Originally the book was made using digital prints on good paper and hand bound with lovely japanese binding. I finished the edition of 10 in 2004 and sold the books, but I wanted to make a more accessible edition of this book. So recently I decided to remake it as a photocopied zine. 



I have these books at market with me and every time someone looks though them I feel happy that Freddy is being remembered! I still dream about him every now and then. Jeremy says he feels he's known this cat all his life too for all the talking of him that I partake in, even though Freddy died in 2000 and I only met Jeremy in 2005. It makes me feel warm and safe when I wake in the morning if I've dreamt of Freddy. He's almost become more than just my old dead cat, he's 'dream cat' and he often talks to me in these dreams in a very comforting way, almost like a parent reassuring a child.

Anyway, I've listed Freddy book on etsy and I'm going to leave some off in Sticky Institute, the zine shop in the Flinders Street subway, sometime this week.



Here is a poem that I fell in love with. It is one of the poems in the Australian poetry book I had the pleasure of illustrating last year. It reminded me of Freddy.

The Old Colonist by Andrew Taylor  

1
Our old tomcat, with is weak heart,
anything over eighty, though once
menace of the whole district, preferes 
to piss in the sink, in the frying pan, 
on the vegetables. 
Anything but go outside in the rain 
and cold. Anything 
than go at all. We house him 
now in the laundry, on an old cushion 
on the antique copper. He pisses 
on the soap, finally on the cushion. 
The laundry was a hazard of stale shit. Yet 
when we scrubbed it with disinfectant, 
hosed out the stink, encouraged clean air in, 
he was neither grateful nor malcontent, 
but with ravelled, unwashed dignity, 
intelligent eyes, and ears alert, 
from great age and it's obscurity 
pissed on the ironing with deliberate intent.  

six days later  
Too old at last even to wash himself 
his only thought was to be comfortable. 
Mostly on the table under the vine 
he lay on his side, watching all his years 
slip quietly from him, kittens prowl 
backyard and lane that had been once his pride. 
His tail was a scattered skipping rope, 
his haunches rejects of an Op-shop coat: 
you almost thought the moths would pass him by 
he was so tattered. Hardly weighed a pound. 
He had stopped eating, would sniff milk. take 
barely a bite to eat then turn away, 
content that we had offered him the choice, 
would purr when we coaxed him, but still turn away. 
And yet he had his spirit to the end. 
We used his table for our lunch, and found 
him comfortable among the cutlery 
minutes before the guests arrived - not once 
but three times. Lunchtime yesterday. Our last 
sight of him was a scornful rickety leap 
over the fence, tail raised in a vague 
vanishing salute. This afternoon 
we found him, dead, ants beginning to swarm, 
stretched in the sun, warrior to the last, 
sprawled like an insult on the mayor's front path.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Sticky Zine

My friend arrived from London on Wednesday last and had to experience the 47 degree heat with us. We are all very saddened and shocked at the terrible fires just north of us in Melbourne and others around the country. I have donated a number of gocco prints to the new etsy shop set up for the bush fire appeal called OzBushfireAppeal. Etsians donate their work and all the money made goes to the red cross bush fire appeal. They might not be listed yet, but keep looking, there are plenty of other great items for sale. I'll be donating an etching also.

This week I've been making a zine for Sticky's target 144. To be honest I'm not entirely sure what it's all about, but the zine shop Sticky Institute (in the subway under Flinder's Street Station) is trying to get 144 zines made in 144 hours and then selling them at the... hold on, I'm not even sure where they are selling them. I've been trying to find out on the net, but nothing seems very clear.
Anyway, here is my zine, after numerous paper cuts and a chipped tooth. It's made of photocopied dry point etchings of all the instruments in our house. After going looking round the house for them I kept finding new ones Jeremy has hidden away!

My pile of 25 editions waiting to go to Sticky Institute on Friday


The original etched prints.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Thirty Minutes


Yesterday I made a new book. It's called "Thirty Minutes in St. James' Park, London" and contains a collection of drawings of (mostly) birds I drew while in St. James' Park, London, last September. I am editioning it out of 50 and they are photocopied on my scanner printer machine from pen and ink drawings and then hand bound.


I have been wanting to make a range of small artist books and zines for a while now. My first one in this range is called "Seagulls Outside State Library" and I was selling it at my market stall before Christmas. I want to sell them on etsy, but I'm not sure which shop to put them in, or maybe I should open a new shop, but three shops might be a bit much! I'm going on holiday tomorrow, to the beach, so hopefully I'll be able to work it all out by the time I get back!