Showing posts with label Pref Mag. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pref Mag. Show all posts

7/03/2009

Feature in Summer issue of Pref No. 33


In stores today is the new Summer issue of Paris-based magazine Pref Mag No. 33, featuring a 7-page spread of my series Economerotics (Page 62-69). Accompanying the spread is an article about sex and exhibitionism by Bruce Benderson. Also, for your viewing pleasure, is a photograph of my naked self smelling my ginch for an article about jock-strap whorship.

Each Summer, PREF releases an plastic-enclosed issue which allows frontal nudity to make it to print, and they always ask me to contribute, as I have been happily doing for a couple of years now.

The photographs look great in print, so if you'd like to view the full-series, pick up the magazine in any major magazine store, or online at http://www.prefmag.com/



The visuals from this newer series came to me in a dream. Film Noir, half-naked (literally), business men, in severed suits, boasting a retro style. My subconscious is clearly exhausted from hearing the buzz-word(s) "THE ECONOMY".

For information on how to acquire my limited edition pieces, please contact my gallery: Envoy, NYC.

11/18/2008

REMEMBER SUMMER?


It was not so long ago, but summer seems like but a sweet distant memory. Since it's so fucking cold here in Montreal, lets warm up on a little summer reminiscence:

Last August, my series "Android" was displayed in the Summer 08 "Sensual or Sexual?" issue of the Paris-based magazine Pref Mag No. 27.

The photos are accompanied with an article about me, and some of my thoughts on the piece; However, it's in French. I DO know what I was thinking when I was first sketching out this series (as all my series start as illustrations), and the gist is: Technology is addictive. Rapid technological advance is suicide. Eden can be considered as pre-industrial world, the long stillness before the machine, and the like. This was but one of the series I shot along this line, while the others are pending publication.

Android is a robotic boy misinterpreting humanity, as he aspires to it. Here is the full series, with a few that hadn't been published in the magazine. For information on how to acquire my limited edition pieces, please contact my gallery: Envoy, NYC.