Anchor Graphics @ COLUMBIA COLLEGE CHICAGO VOLUME 3 NO. 2 SUMMER 2009 2 ANCHOR GRAPHICS COLUMBIA COLLEGE CHICAGO recent events 1 our mission Anchor Graphics @ Columbia College Chicago is a not-for-profit printshop that brings together, under professional guidance, a diverse community of youth, emerging and established artists, and the public to advance the fine art of printmaking by integrating education with the creation of prints. GLOBAL IMPLICATIONS: THE 2009 SGC CONFERENCE By all accounts the 2009 Southern Graphics Council Conference was a smashing success. Between March 25 and 29, Chicago was overrun with printmakers as attendance reached almost 1800 people. With events and exhibitions at nearly fifty different locations, this was truly a citywide effort. A special thank you to all the coordinators, hosting organization, volunteers and attendees for making this year’s conference so special! STUDENTS FROM GREENWOOD ELEMENTARY SCHOOL VIEW PRINTS THEY CREATED ON VIEW AT COLUMBIA COLLEGE. support Funding for Anchor Graphics is provided in part by contributions from individuals, the Illinois Arts Council-A State Agency, the Chicago Community Trust, the Terra Foundation for American Art, the Oppenheimer Family Foundation, the Packaging Corporation of America, and Target. contents PHYLLIS MCGIBBON PROOFS A PHOTO POLYMER PLATE DURING HER RESIDENCY. 2 letter from the director david jones 3 relocation: mccarthur binion james iannaccone 7 what is happening here chris dacre 11 this thing called blab! bill north 14 upcoming programs If you would like to make a donation to Anchor Graphics please contact us at 312-369-6864 or anchorgraphics@colum.edu. Donations can also be made online through our website at colum.edu/anchorgraphics. ON THE COVER: CHRIS DACRE, WAR IS FUN, INSTALLATION AT LULUBELL TOY BODEGA, TUCSON, AZ, 2007 PHOTO BY TOMIKO JONES BROAD SHOULDERS AND BROTHERLY LOVE East coast style met Midwest sensibility in Broad Shoulders and Brotherly Love, a group exhibition at the Hyde Park Art Center of print-based work sampling the archives of two of the most highly respected national nonprofit organizations dedicated to innovative techniques and concepts in print media. Both Anchor Graphics and Philagrafika selected an outstanding variety of work from the other’s residency and invitational portfolio programs. Digital prints, silkscreen, woodcut, lithographs, engravings, linocut collages, printed paper constructions, and smoked paper prints presented in this show demonstrated the experimental trends in printmaking today. This exhibition was on view January 18 – March 29 at the Hyde Park Art Center. WINTER WORKSHOPS AND DEMONSTRATIONS As part of its educational mission, Anchor Graphics has presented a number of workshops and demonstrations over the past several months focusing on various print media. Workshops and demonstrations were conducted in collaboration with Columbia College, the Columbia College Alumni Association, the Center for Book and Paper Arts, Monroe Elementary School, the Minneapolis Print Club, Homewood Flossmoor High School, Harold Washington College, the Smart Museum of Art, Wheaton College, the University of Chicago, Oak Park River Forest High School, Greenwood Elementary School, and the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. 2 ANCHOR GRAPHICS COLUMBIA COLLEGE CHICAGO recent events 3 Letter from the Director [ continued ] DAVID JONES, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF ANCHOR GRAPHICS. Dear Friends, Warm weather and summer have finally come to Chicago. We have had a busy year with the Southern Graphics Council Conference bringing over 1,700 printmakers to the campus of Columbia College. I was struck by how many friends we all have in common and how close the community actually is. I am amazed at how enthusiastic everyone is about the possibilities of printmaking. It was an incredible event and if there were ever any conversations about printmaking being dead, they were dispelled during this conference. As our 2009 Artist-In-Residence program gets underway, I continue to be impressed by the caliber of artists selected to participate. Out of all of our activities at Anchor Graphics I find our AIR program the most stimulating. We, staff and artists, are offered new opportunities to problem solve, talk about aesthetic concerns and share who we are with one another. It is really about that space where ideas can germinate and blossom. After the artists leave it is often we who are enriched by their time here. I find that by having these individuals in our midst I am challenged, inspired, and encouraged to take creative risks in my own life and work. If you are reading this newsletter it means that you are curious about prints and printmaking, either it’s history or it’s varied processes. If you want to learn a bit more about the work created in our shop, we invite you to drop in and look around. We hope that perhaps, in some way, when you leave Anchor you will be as inspired as we are when working with students, faculty and artists. Sincerely, David Jones Executive Director MCARTHUR BINION WORKS ON FILMS TO BE SHOT ON TO PHOTO LITHO PLATES TO CREATE HIS PRINTS. Relocation BY JAMES IANNACCONE THE ELECTION OF Barack Obama has lead some to speculate on the possibility of a post-racial America. While most would agree that this ideal is a ways off, it is remarkable to note that just 70 years ago many African Americans were still sharecroppers, working the land much as their families had done since the end of the Civil War. Sharecropping was not the most economically efficient form of farming however, often leading to debt and bankruptcy for both the farmer and the landowner. The forward march of industrialization brought with it mechanized farming techniques, which by the 1950’s would further diminish the profitability of such practices to the point of their virtual extinction, at least in the US. Sharecropping still persists in areas of India, Pakistan and parts of Africa. The collapse of the sharecropping system in this country left hundreds of thousands of farmers out of work. Like 1.3 million of their fellow Southerners had done since 1915, they would eventually head to the North or to the West in search of greater economic opportunity and racial equality as part of the Great Migration. Between 1940 and 1970 an additional five million people would resettle and by its end, the African American population would be thoroughly urbanized with over 80% residing in cities across the country. Among the families participating in this exodus was that of McArthur Binion. McArthur was born in a three-room row house in Macon, Mississippi. It was home to eleven people, had no running water, and only a wood stove to provide heat. At age three, he and his siblings were sent out into the fields to pick cotton. In search of greater prosperity for the family, his father and uncle headed for Detroit in 1951. Finding employment at the Cadillac plant, they become part of the then thriving auto industry. The rest of the family soon followed and by the time they reached Detroit the Binion family numbered eighteen, all of whom would occupy a two-bedroom house on 8 Mile Road. Since then this road has become a de facto dividing line between Detroit’s [ continued on page 4 ] 2009 ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE PROGRAM OFF AND RUNNING Our 2009 Artist-In-Residence program is under way. We have already had three wonderful artists working on some spectacular projects. As Anchor’s first resident of 2009, Phyllis McGibbon created a series of photobased prints that continued her recent work with collaged postcards. Contained within a suitcase, this set of modified souvenirs acts as a visual essay prompting questions about place, space, global interdependence, and the legacy of the grand tour. Chris Dacre was also in the shop working on several prints. You can read more about Dacre’s work in this newsletter. Most recently Michael Barnes has been working on several lithographs depicting weapons from throughout history diseased by excessive violence and abuse of power. Stay tuned for more on upcoming 2009 Artist-InResidence lectures and receptions. SCRAPING THE SURFACE LECTURE SERIES COMPLETES ITS FIFTH SEASON The Scraping the Surface Lecture Series continues to draw crowds wishing to learn more about print media. This past season featured lectures by James D. Sullivan, who discussed the subject of his book On the Walls and in the Streets: American Poetry Broadsides from the 60s; Jim Sherraden, Manager of Hatch Show Print, who talked on the history of this Nashville based letterpress founded in 1879; Victor Margolin who presented on various types of World War II propaganda from posters and buttons to comics; and Lea Rosson DeLong, independent curator and author, who spoke about the late lithographs and drawings of Grant Wood. Scraping the Surface will return in October for its sixth season. MCARTHUR BINION DRIVING THROUGH MISSISSIPPI IN CHICAGO (DETAIL) 14 COLOR LITHOGRAPH 22 ½” X 26 ½” 2009 OPPOSITE PAGE: MCARTHUR BINION DRIVING THROUGH MISSISSIPPI IN DETROIT 14 COLOR LITHOGRAPH 22 ½” X 26 ½” 2009 Such personal stories embedded within the shared history of a larger population form the underpinnings of McArthur’s art. Using events from his own life McArthur strives to tell the story of his family and that of so many others who found themselves in similar circumstances. predominantly poor, African-American neighborhoods and the wealthier, mostly white northern suburbs, and became the title for the semi-autobiographical film of rapper Eminem. At the time, however, the Binions would be the first African American family in the neighborhood. McArthur would continue to push racial boundaries by becoming the first black person to graduate from Cranbrook Academy of Art with a Master of Fine Arts degree. In 1973, McArthur’s personal migration would also continue when he left Detroit, headed for New York where he would stay till 1991 before moving on to Chicago. Such personal stories embedded within the shared history of a larger population form the underpinnings of McArthur’s art. Using events from his own life McArthur strives to tell the story of his family and that of so many others who found themselves in similar circumstances. Such personal histories act as a starting point to be distilled down to a more graphic form, a simplified geometry on which layers of pigment and meaning can be built up much as people build up experiences over the course of their life. At Anchor Graphics, McArthur has produced two lithographs. Both start with a layer of artifacts that come from a very specific and personal history. They use pages from the personal address-book he kept while in New York City. Before the days of cell phones that could store such information internally, these pages listed the names and phone numbers for personal friends and professional contacts. Separating the six pages in each print is a t-shaped grid of repeated images. For Driving Through Mississippi in Detroit the image is of Aretha Franklin. Here the Queen of Soul represents the entire city of Detroit as well as her own individuality. Like McArthur she spent her early days in the south before moving to the Motor City where she would become the figurehead for a cultural and musical movement that would become synonymous with the city itself. For Driving Through Mississippi in Chicago, McArthur chose an old photograph of the house where he was born. Though located in Macon, Mississippi, this house acts as a representation of Chicago as seen through a filter of dislocation. McArthur has noted, “There’s a particular area in Chicago that had the rural reminiscence of Mississippi and is now totally demolished due to developers. Some of the former residents continue to come back everyday to vacant lots to socialize, to sites that were once their homes.” For McArthur and the Chicagoans he speaks of, reminiscing about a former dwelling is more than simply thinking about a building. It is the desire to return to a community that no longer exists in a physical sense but still lingers in the hearts of its former inhabitants. Over the images of Aretha Franklin and the house in Macon is dropped a layer of transparent black, to shroud them in a fog of nostalgia and the diming of memory. Over the phonebook pages are layers of colored marks. The colors are selected from a particular box of crayons McArthur used to make drawings with as a kid. The patterning imitates kente textiles of Africa, a sacred cloth of kings produced by the Akan people of Ghana. Legends say that kente was first made by two friends who went off hunting in a forest only to become distracted by a spider making its web. After two days of intense scrutiny the friends returned home and began to weave like the spider. This story along with many other important Akan myths are called anansesem, which literally translates to “spider story” but can also be taken figuratively to mean “traveler’s tale”. Taken in this context the timeline of the story recounted by McArthur through these prints is extended back beyond his own lifetime to the forced migration of his and so many others’ ancestors. McArthur’s work not only records social history but also cultural history. In addition to African textiles it references western art of the 20th century. His geometry is influenced by modernism and has connections to minimalism, at least in appearance. Though McArthur’s looser, more expressive, and more personal handling of materials combined with his narrative ambitions distances him from such artists. The rough handling of materials also gives it the physicality of action paint- ing and an ethos earned through hard labor, like that of a field hand or factory worker. Specifically, McArthur’s art brings to mind the urban grids of Mondrian. Landing some where between the figurative and the abstract, both attempted to balances the narrative of image with the expression of pure shape and color. Though McArthur’s work often takes on the added challenge of trying to simultaneously represent both the city and the countryside. At its heart McArthur’s art is a document of change, personal change for him and his family, and historic change for the country and the world. It maps demographic and cultural shifts while telling tales of travels taken by him and millions of others. McArthur Binion is full-time faculty in Fine Art at Columbia College Chicago. He has exhibited widely in New York, Detroit, Chicago, and Italy, with work is in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and the Detroit Institute of Art. More information can be found at mcarthurbinion.com The Installations of Chris Dacre In His Own Words HAT IS HAPPENING HER CHRIS DACRE AIR FORCE WON INSTALLATION ROSARIO, ARGENTINA 2007 IT’S IMPORTANT FOR the stuff that I deal with in my work to know a little bit about my background. The key piece being that right after high school I joined the air force to get away. There was nothing really there after high school so I found this as a way to get out and travel. I’ve always been really interested in the iconography of the military, the airplanes, tanks and things. I always liked to watch movies that dealt with this and to hear stories from some of the old guys who have been in the military. It was very interesting for me to hear about the camaraderie and the things that took place on the battlefield. So I joined the air force. I was guarding airplanes for a while then I was an EMT. I was in a total of eight years, four in active duty and four in the reserves. After the air force I moved around a little bit. I always liked art but I never knew you could do it as a career. I still don’t know if you can do it as a career but I’m trying. So I ended up going to school and got a graphic design degree as an undergraduate and then I went to graduate school for printmaking. I graduated from the University of Arizona in 2006. When you are in school you are encouraged to experiment to find what you are trying to say. So I was in this experimental phase. I was working on all these different bodies of work. I do a lot of collage work on the side. I use these collages to take my mind away from larger projects, to formulate ideas and to experiment on a smaller scale. So I collect a lot of books from thrift stores like textbooks and children’s books, things that have a lot of graphic imagery in them. Things that I can cut out and use in collages. I happened across this one book, which is a children’s dictionary. So I started experimenting and making up this series of characters to interact with the characters that were already illustrated on the page. I ended up doing one for each letter of the alphabet. [ continued on page 9 ] COLUMBIA COLLEGE CHICAGO 9 CHRIS DACRE ABORT MISSION BUBBLES AND RAINBOWS LITHOGRAPH 19 1/2” X 32 3/4” 2009 CHRIS DACRE WAR IS FUN INSTALLATION AT LULUBELL TOY BODEGA TUCSON, AZ 2007 “What is the point of war? What is happening here?” These people are fighting these people, and these people are fighting them and nobody is fighting anybody in particular. I finished this whole series of children’s pages and was at this point where I had all these great characters. It felt strange to hit upon something and then be completely done with it. So I was talking to one of my friends. We were throwing back and forth ideas and he suggested that I make dolls out of these characters. That didn’t really appeal to me but the idea of taking them off the page did. I was really excited to get in and start pulling some of these characters out. I had a silkscreen kit that one of my friends had given me. I had never done silk-screen before. I thought I would learn silk-screen and print some of these characters. I used felt because I was going to try to sew some of them together. I hand cut them out and I stacked them up. I noticed that they stuck together. Then I put up a little sheet of felt on the wall and I just stuck the characters on. It was kind of this epiphany that somebody had already thought of before, when they invented the church felt boards, but at the time I didn’t put two and two together. I created characters and used all this imagery that I’ve always been drawn towards like tanks and airplanes, trucks and explosions, for my thesis show. I lined the walls with sheets of felt trying to create different landscapes within a larger overall mural type wall piece. I created these things that look like mountains, gray sky, a little cityscape, a puffy cloud coming out of a little tank, a pink piece where this rocket launcher is launching a rocket out. The intention of the overall installation was to ask the question, “What is the point of war? What is happening here?” These people are fighting these people, and these people are fighting them and nobody is fighting anybody in particular. They’re just all kind of fighting. It’s asking the question, “Why is all of this taking place and what is the point?” There is no objective but there is all this chaos and battle. After my thesis show I did a collaboration with two other artists. I made a fairly largescale tank out of felt. It was my first attempt at making a three dimensional sculpture. One of the other artists had done paintings directly on the walls around the tank. Both this piece and my thesis show were really good jumping off points for me. This took me into creating my first really put together show. I pulled my tank out and I had my thesis work. Inspired by the collaboration, I wanted to start doing wall paintings, taking some of my characters and blowing them up large. So I created an installation at a toy store in Tucson. I fixed up the tank and created all these little tanks that are the same size as the felt tanks used on the wall. I wanted to start to bring pieces off of the wall and out on to the ground. So I had the smaller tanks lined up following the big tank. I created this wall painting and started doing all this stuff that had been going on in my mind. Everything started coming together at this point. All these different elements could be used. I lined up a two-month residency in Argentina. I went down there with no supplies, because as soon as it was done I was going to travel for six more months and I wasn’t going to carry around all this stuff. I came up with the idea to use papier-mâché in a large scale way. Since I had made a tank, I wanted to see if I could make a large airplane that was suspended from the ceiling with things that were readily available. So I created this airplane that was 8’ x 8’. Its just papiermâché; there is no internal structure. For the wings I had to borrow some Styrofoam from the rooftop of the neighbors. They had these big sheets that would go in as insulation. So I took one of those and used it for the wings. The wings and the tail are Styrofoam but everything else was newspaper. Everything was found at the place. I was modeling this airplane after Air Force One. I had read a couple of books on how the U.S. has gone down to Central and South America and done a lot of harm in those places for the benefit of the U.S. So I created this airplane, with this shadow that is an American flag and created these little parachute with pantyhose testicles coming out of the back. The idea was of this airplane flying over the landscape with the shadow staying underneath it and pooping out these little testicle things along the way. Leaving them in the wake while the shadow and the airplane keep on going. When we had the opening I think people didn’t really know how to take it. I think they thought I was really proud to be from America, which I’m not saying I’m not. But it wasn’t that. As you can tell I deal with a little bit of political stuff, which can be really touchy. At the end of this I was like what am I going to do with this big 8’ airplane so I decided to see if it would fly. [ continued on page 10 ] COLUMBIA COLLEGE CHICAGO THIS THING CALLED BLAB! BY BILL NORTH DAVID JONES AND CHRIS DACRE PROOF ONE OF HIS WOODCUTS. We walk it through the town and decide to light it on fire and toss it off of this walk way. It started creating all this smoke and we took off. It burned all the way till a fire truck came. When I got back from that trip my girlfriend who is a photographer and video artist, and I had been talking about doing a collaboration piece. We were both living in Tucson at the time getting ready to move up to Seattle. So we took this space over and I built this helicopter out of cardboard and tape. We found a ceiling fan and Plexiglas blades that were mirrored. They were each about 6’ long. I attached two of those to the fan as helicopter blades. This exhibition was dealing with the air traffic in Tucson. There’s a big military base there with all these A-10 and big C-130 aircraft flying overhead. There’s helicopters from the police flying around everywhere with their spotlights on the neighborhoods. So we wanted to have the spotlight coming out of the helicopter and we installed a projector inside. It had all working parts, the rear rotor, the top rotor made from the ceiling fan. There was another projection coming from the rear wall dealing with things that are in flight. We also had some airplane silhouettes so the shadows would get projected onto the rear wall. We had two sound systems with helicopter and airplane noises just cranked all the way up. People would be talking then all of a sudden wersssshhhhhhh and you couldn’t hear any thing. We wanted to give this presence of what it is like. It was a big issue that was going on for years in Tucson. They finally made the planes stay higher up when they come in to land. It was a tight space and when the opening happened there was a lot of people that came in and they didn’t really know where to go. It was weird to see people all huddled up. There was a lot of tension in there. This was a one-day installation. We set it up for ten days, had a one night only opening and then took it down the next day because we were moving. I like the idea of it being very temporary. If you’re there, you’re there. If not, then you can see it in a picture. I’m starting now to get into sound and video. I want to start to create structures that videos can be displayed on. I started doing these stop animation pieces. They are little test pieces that I’ve made that hopefully can be put into my installations along with sound. I’m thinking like some military type cadence sounds. One idea I had was to project them onto a wall then put a big piece of cloth or board or something in front of it with two holes that you have to look through like binoculars. You’re just taking a little glimpse of this larger battle. Or to build a little tent with a monitor inside that you have to get down on the floor to see. For the residency at Anchor Graphics, I‘ve been working on two wood cut pieces and a lithograph. My original intention was to print them onto felt but I don’t think they will translate well. I think the prints themselves could be incorporated into the installations. I don’t want everything to have to be felt. I want to be able to incorporate other materials. I don’t want there to be this huge juxtaposition between this piece of sculpture and the rest of the installation. I don’t want it to look like they are two separate things. I always try to work with materials that are in or around the environment and let that inform the work. I don’t go out and buy things in particular. It’s all supplies that I find. Like in graduate school when people leave and they just dump whatever they have in their studios. I’ll go and pick out all these supplies. If I move and I don’t want them, I’ll do the same thing. I’ll dump them and let somebody else pick them up. In graduate school I maybe spent $500 total in supplies all 3 years I was there. I would go forage for things. That’s how I’ve always worked. I really like the idea of using recycling for my work. Chris Dacre was an Artist-In-Residence at Anchor Graphics May 5–27, 2009. This text was taken from a presentation he gave at the end of his residency. More information on Chris Dacre can be found on his website chrisdacre.com. ©2006 RYAN HESHKA, FROM SUN RAYS OF DEATH, BLAB! #17 BLAB! WHAT IS IT? Ten inches square. One-hundredtwenty pages. Once a year. “It’s like The New Yorker for mutants,” proclaimed the Los Angeles Reader. “A place open to a wide variety of voices and styles, where the best of a number of worlds mingle, flirt, and make art,” observed one writer. BLAB! is an annual anthology of visual art produced by Chicago-based graphic designer and art director Monte Beauchamp. From its beginnings as a self-published, one-shot fanzine devoted to EC Comics over twenty years ago, BLAB! has evolved into a highly regarded venue for contemporary artists working in sequential and comic art, graphic design, illustration, painting, and printmaking. To be clear from the outset—BLAB! is not a comic book, and it is not about comic books (though it once was). BLAB! is a place where some very serious artists have some very serious fun. It is a playhouse on paper Beauchamp has built for himself and the artists he invites to join him. But, it is not just fun and games. BLAB!’s influence has cut a broad swath across contemporary visual culture. It has helped launch many artists’ careers. It has introduced American audiences to important contemporary European graphic and comic 11 12 ANCHOR GRAPHICS COLUMBIA COLLEGE CHICAGO ©2001 THE CLAYTON BROTHERS, FRONT COVER, BLAB! #12 artists. It has been a sustained force in blurring the boundary between alternative graphics and mainstream illustration. It has been a staunch advocate for the creative freedom of illustrators, graphic designers, and other artists-for-hire. And, not least of all, BLAB! is a significant forebear of the current generation of visual arts anthologies. The history of BLAB! comprises two distinct periods: 1986 to 1992 (#1-7) and 1995 to the present (#8-18). Soon after graduating from Southern Illinois University with a degree in graphic design, Beauchamp set out for Chicago to begin a career as a graphic designer and art director. By the mid-1980s he was a highly successful art director in advertising. Though he found the creative aspect of advertising work challenging and satisfying, the politics of the industry was distasteful to Beauchamp. His wife at the time suggested he create a comic book as an outlet to vent his mounting dissatisfaction. Beauchamp had a different idea. He would create a fanzine about comics. His idea for BLAB! was based on a belief held since high school—”that if it wasn’t for MAD, the sixties counterculture never would have happened.” As Beauchamp recalls: “I thought why not write the core artists who formed the counterculture and see what they had to say about it within the context of memoirs. I wanted them to talk about it... blab all they wanted, which then gave way to the title.” By 1994, Beauchamp had tired of the digest-sized format of BLAB!’s first seven issues, finding it restrictive and no longer challenging. He wanted to design BLAB! anew and brought the request before his publisher’s editorial board. They said no. BLAB! #7 had just won a Harvey award (the comic industry’s equivalent of a Grammy), and the board was reluctant to tamper with the annual’s award-winning format. So that was it, Beauchamp thought. BLAB! was done. Beauchamp recalls: “It was no big deal when they did. I didn’t lose any sleep over it... We’d had a good run, and were going out in style—with a Harvey.” Several months later, his publisher telephoned him to ask when he could expect the eighth number. Beauchamp ©2000 STEPHANE BLANQUET, FROM THE OAK SORROW, BLAB! #11 replied there would be no eighth number, explaining that after the editorial board’s decision regarding his request to change BLAB!’s format he had no desire to continue the publication. The publisher rescinded the board’s decision and agreed to a new design. BLAB! re-emerged in the summer of 1995 with a new format and a significant shift in editorial focus. Beauchamp considered the new BLAB! as completely distinct from the first seven numbers and his changes were more than formal and cosmetic. From #8 forward the annual saw a significant reduction in the number of prose pieces. These were limited to several illustrated fiction or non-fiction stories related to popular culture or topics of historical interest. The most significant change in editorial vision was Beauchamp’s decision to prominently feature the work of illustrators. This was a direction that would have significant ramifications for the annual and would come to define its special place among visual arts anthologies. Generally, BLAB!’s readership was delighted with the make-over. One enthusi- ©1997 GARY BASEMAN, FRONT COVER, BLAB! #9 astic reviewer of the eighth number praised Beauchamp’s emphasis on “aesthetics over intellectuality,” exclaiming: “Simply put, BLAB! looks like a fuckin’ million bucks.” Except in rare cases, all of the work appearing in BLAB! is created for BLAB!. As Beauchamp has explained: “I want only new work created from scratch. It enables me to visually orchestrate the issue.” He is fond of referring to the annual as a “jam,” an improvisational visual conversation between himself, the artists, and their work. Between the covers and among the pages of any given issue, one will find an eclectic gathering of stylistically varied work by illustrators, comic artists, graphic designers, studio printmakers, and studio painters. Work produced by artists more closely associated with illustration mingles with that created by those better known in the world of galleries and museums, as well as contemporary alternative comics artists. BLAB! is a level and egalitarian playing field in this regard. BLAB!’s distinctive character resides in Beauchamp’s commitment to the work of illustrators and his privileging of the visual experience above all else. As he has stated, BLAB! is a place “to relax your mind and be stimulated by pictures, not words. It’s a package of entertainment.” On the question of influence, Beauchamp notes: “The key distinction that separates BLAB! from all the other BLAB!-styled anthologies on the stands these days is that it was never inspired by another publication... I didn’t see somebody else’s mag, dig it, and then set out to imitate it. BLAB! was never influenced by ZAP, or ARCADE, or WEIRDO, or RAW. These publications certainly caught my fancy in their day, but not to the point where they spurred me on to create a similar publication.” BLAB!’s twenty-three-year-long presence, the longest tenure of any currently active anthology, has helped sustain a viable market for the anthology form. This, in turn, has given rise to publications like THE GANZFELD and the more singularly comics-oriented KRAMERS ERGOT. Through a steadfast commitment to Beauchamp’s pluralist vision, BLAB! has 13 ©2003 CAMILLE ROSE GARCIA, FROM PHARMACEUTICOOLS, BLAB! #13 quietly staked a significant claim for the legitimacy of illustrational, comic, and sequential art as valid and serious forms of personal creative expression. By providing artists from a variety of backgrounds (commercial illustration, comics, studio art) a forum within which to engage visually with a multitude of images and ideas, BLAB! has enriched the work of its individual contributors and the visual arts in general. In doing so, it has shown a range of traditionally marginalized expressive practices to be worthy of the same level of consideration accorded any other creative activity. And that’s just for starters. Excerpted from This Thing called BLAB!: Notes Towards an Understanding by Bill North, originally published in BLAB!: A Retrospective from the Beach Museum of Art; ©2009 by the author. Works by artists appearing in BLAB! was featured in the Midwestern BLAB! exhibition curated by Monte Beauchamp and Anchor Graphics on display at the Averill and Bernard Leviton A+D Gallery, June 18–July 22, 2009. For more information on BLAB! visit blab-world.com or blabshow.com Anchor Graphics @ COLUMBIA COLLEGE CHICAGO 623 S. WABASH AVE., 2ND FLOOR CHICAGO, IL 60605 312-369-6864 ANCHORGRAPHICS@COLUM.EDU COLUM.EDU/ANCHORGRAPHICS upcoming programs 10% GREEN DESIGN LEAVING A GENTLE IMPACT UPON THE EARTH’S RESOURCES AND SUPPORTING THE COLLEGE’S COMMITMENT TO THE ENVIRONMENT. THIS PIECE WAS PRINTED ON PAPER WITH 10% POST CONSUMER CONTENT. Midwestern BLAB! June 18 - July 22, 2009 This exhibition focuses on the work of five artists from the Midwest who have been featured in the pages of BLAB! Edited by Monte Beauchamp BLAB! is an annual anthology that collects the freshest and most unique in cutting-edge comics, illustration, and graphic design. Its contributors come together from all corners of the contemporary art world to push the boundaries of visual culture. This exhibition will showcases the work of Don Colley, Tom Huck, Teresa James, CJ Pyle and Fred Stonehouse who share more than simple geography. Their work taps into a dark narrative, that is both savage and beautiful, to present a magical vision of a gothic Midwest. This exhibition is co-curated by Monte Beauchamp and Anchor Graphics. It will be on display in the Averill and Bernard Leviton A+D Gallery, 619 S. Wabash Avenue in Chicago. More 2009 Artists-In-Residence Scraping the Surface Lecture Series Throughout the summer artists from across the country will continue to come to Anchor to work as Artists-In-Residence. Please stop in the shop to meet the artists and see the projects they are working on. Here is a schedule of this summer’s upcoming artist: The Scraping the Surface Lecture Series will return in October for its sixth season. As the idea of the multiple expands in directions never before thought possible these lectures seek to engage in the contemporary discourse on printmaking, focusing on subjects that fall outside of the traditional fine art framework and often incorporate aspects of popular culture. Lectures planned for the coming season will include the comics of Winsor McCay, the graphic design of the Black Panther Party, and political posters from the Lebanese civil war. Alan Lerner, June 29–July 18 Anne Muntges, July 19–August 8 David Teng Olsen, August 16–September 5 Stay tuned for information on Artist-InResidence receptions and lectures!