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Black Coal Print Pack

December 17, 2013 by Tim Granda

DC-tiny-wedge For all those on your “bad” list this holiday season, here’s a great gift idea to let them know how much you adore their evil ways. The “Black Coal Pack” is a collection of three prints by three different artists ( what a cool idea!). From left to right: Chris McAlister’s “Solstice”, Steve Chase’s “Digression :: Diversion”, and Jared Wright’s “Necrocist” Each one-color screen print is 8.33 x 17.5″, numbered, and on 100 lb French paper.

The “Black Coal Pack” is limited to just 20 white prints, but there’s also a few variants available as well: the “Hot Fudge edition” and the “Steel Blue edition” have just eight prints available a piece, while the “Kraft edition” is set to be even extra rare with only 5 prints being made. Each pack is a steal at only $30 + shipping . Get ’em now before they’re gone!

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Filed Under: Featured Category, News, Uncategorized Tagged With: Black Coal Pack, Chris McAlister, Digression :: Diversion, Jared Wright, Necrocist, Screen Prints, Solstice, Steve Chase

Sale at Death, Hell, and the Grave

December 17, 2013 by Tim Granda

DC-tiny-wedge After dealing with the insane weeks leading up to the Christmas holiday, Death, Hell, and the grave starts sounding like a great alternative.  Luckily Christmas is coming up fast, but so too is the ending for the brand Death, Hell, and the Grave’s holiday sale.  Make sure to get your order in before the 20th or you’ll catch them closed until January 2nd, and enter the code “DEATHSALE” at check-out to save an additional 20%.

Check out a few of their goods and then check off a few names from your Christmas list:

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Filed Under: Featured Category, News Tagged With: Death Hell and the Grave, Deathsale, Live Fast Die Now

Interview with Maxwell Paternoster

December 16, 2013 by Tim Granda

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DC-tiny-wedge Maxwell Paternoster creates some of the most unique artwork you’ll find in the scene today. Each piece pulsates with a nervous raw energy that can leave you twitching and gasping for alcohol. His world is wrapped in a twisted landscape saturated with toxic waste; a place where shriveled mutants with mile-high pompadours run wild with gun barrel eyes.

The discarded parts that are piled up everywhere are scavenged over by these freaky inhabitants, who cobble together bits of this and that to build incredible machines (which appear to run on either steam or contaminated jet fuel). The skies here are scorched with fire, and the roads are littered with the oozing limbs left behind by psychotic biker gangs patched in Hell.

Paternoster’s world is seriously twisted. You’re just as likely to die from radiation as you are to be run over by a gene-fused man-fly riding one helluva sweet chopper. But as dangerous a place as it is, I’d love to wake up there! Who wouldn’t jump at the chance to shoot lightning bolts from their eyes?

So it’s with great pleasure that I introduce to you the man behind such deviously clever apocalyptic work, one of my favorite artists out there today… Maxwell Paternoster!

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Here in the USA, you’re probably best known for your work with Lowbrow Customs. How did that collaboration come about?

Oh yea, that came about thus: a few years back people were not all overFacebook and Instagram like they are now, and it seemed more about forums and blogs. I always used to try posting artwork onto the Jockey Journal forum, and also my buddy Richard Baybutt talked me into starting my blog Corpses From Hell. So from that I had my images seen by the guys at Lowbrow Customs. I can not remember the first image I did for them, but after that I have done loads of pictures for Lowbrow!

The Corpses From Hell site is always a blast to check out. What’s the story behind the inception of CFH?”

I started to draw pictures for some imaginary motorcycle gangs and stuff like that, then I thought Corpses From Hell sounded like a cool name. I initially used it just as the name for my website/blog, but it seemed to become very popular and everybody started to know me as the Corpses From Hell person. So it stuck.

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Where were you raised, and what were the factors that led you to become an artist?

I was raised in Rural Suffolk in England; in the countryside. So yea, surrounded by fields, trees, and nature – ha ha! I do not know what the factors were that led me to do art. I seem to remember thinking it would be really cool if I could draw an awesome tractor, and to draw the engine. I think I drew some stuff and liked doing it, then some adults probably said it was really good, so I got it into my mind that I could draw and that I should keep doing it. Now its too late to stop – ha ha ha!

Were there any artists that made an impression on you while you were growing up?

I didn’t have much access to many shops or money to buy comics and stuff as a youngster, but there was a pile of British comics I always looked at. They wereWizzer and Chips, Beano, Dandy, and one called Corr!!, or something like that. Also loads of animation stuff on telly, Tom and Jerry and all those mad cartoons. I also liked an artist called Steven Wiltshire, who was on TV, and he could draw everything from memory.

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You have one of the most recognizable styles in the motorcycle scene today. Were there any particular pieces along the way that proved to be significant in defining your style?

Ha ha! Not sure it’s the most recognizable!! Hah, maybe, I dunno. Until a few years back, I did not really do so much motorcycle related artwork. I had been focusing on developing my illustration style for many years in the world of art, comics, and illustration.

I was always a bike fan, and an artist, but did not mix the two things together because bikes were much less popular a few years ago. I drew bikes, but only for myself in my sketchbook. So I think my style was already sort of defined, but I just started to get a lot more motorcycle related jobs and projects.

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So when did your interest in motorcycles begin?

I think I must have just been born with that or something. I saw some on TV and stuff, or in comics, or something, and I always wanted one. I wanted a dirt bike. But yea, actually, as a kid I had a two-stroke Suzuki 70cc step-through – ha ha! Then an MZ TS125 two-stroke, which father painted Mad Max on the fuel tank – ha ha!

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Haha, too cool! Are there any artists out there today that you really dig?

Yea, loads – ha ha! Maybe too many to mention!! If you want to see something rad, look at Will Sweeney, for example. Also, look at the Koyama Press website; there’s a stack of rad artists on there!

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I see that you’re participating in the “Live for Myself, Answer to Nobody” Steve McQueen exhibit, which is happening right now in London. What were the circumstances that led you to become involved in the show?

Oh yea, the Steve McQueen show came about through being involved in the bike scene here in London. We have been asked to participate in a few things now that bikes are in vogue – ha ha ha! For example, they opened a Belstaff store in London, and they wanted a bunch of bikes to ride about in front of the shop on opening night – ha ha ha! It was hilarious for us. I have no clue how I was selected for that, but yea, the Steve McQueen one was through my buddy, the photographerSam Christmas, who was in the show and opened the door for me and some other art people.

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What are you working on next, Maxwell? Do you have anything in the pipeline that you’d like to share?

There is a bunch of stuff in the pipeline, a few tanks, and some preparation for a show in France (details TBC). Also t-shirts etc; a bunch of things. I want to do more CFH t-shirts and things too.

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Lastly, if you could travel through time, where would you go?

Cool! Depends on how many trips I’m allowed, ay? Maybe if it’s many goes I’d go back to check out some dinosaurs, then go into the future a bit at a time to make sure I didn’t land when the earth was destroyed. But if I only have one go I might just stay here, actually – ha ha!

Haha! Thanks a ton, Maxwell, for setting aside some time for this interview. It’s been a blast speaking with the dude behind so many iconic images, and I can’t wait to see what you come up with next!

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Filed Under: Featured Category, Interviews Tagged With: Australian Cafe Racers, Beano, Belstaff, Bonneville, Buzz or Howl, CFH, Corpses From Hell, Coste, Dandy Corr!!, Devil Inside Cycles, Devil Inside Speed Shop, Devil Power Cycles, DicE Magazine, El Solitario MC, ESMC, Jockey Journal, Koyama Press, Lazer Death, Live for Myself Answer to Nobody, Lowbrow Customs, Mad Max, Maxwell Paternoster, MZ TS125, Pau Speed Shop, Richard Baybutt, Sam Christmas, Steve McQueen, Tom and Jerry, Wizzer and Chips

Maxwell Paternoster Interview – Video Tease!

December 14, 2013 by Tim Granda

DC-tiny-wedge Teaser video for the  Maxwell Paternoster interview! Stop back on Monday to check it out!

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Filed Under: Featured Category, News Tagged With: Corpses From Hell, DicE Magazine, Lowbrow Customs, Maxwell Paternoster

Interview with Matt Kerley

December 14, 2013 by Tim Granda

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DC-tiny-wedge Matt Kerley hates you.

No, really. Matt Kerley hates you. It said so right on the pins and shirts that he’s had in his store. Personally, I found the man who creates such undeniably powerful artwork to be one really cool dude, and not once did he ever say he hated me (not within ear shot).

His illustration work is so… so god-damn bizarre! Kerley conjures up clean hard-hitting images, with such purpose and precise line work that they immediately grab hold of your brain and squeeze. And then, out of the corner of your eye, you notice some writing scrawled off on the side. After you read it, the text and image begin to meld, and what initially seemed to be just a bunch of random words suddenly makes sense. Almost immediately you get this rising feeling in your gut, like the floor has just dropped out from under you. Powerful stuff, from a super talented artist.

Kerley’s work in tattoos is just as astounding; go on and check out some of the examples below. In fact, why don’t we all head down there right now and get this interview started. Matt Kerley might hate you, but I bet when you get to the end of this interview you’ll come to the same conclusion that I did: Matt Kerley’s one really cool dude.

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I’ve heard you recently moved from Brooklyn back to North Carolina, the state you grew up in. What prompted the change?

Actually, I moved back to North Carolina from Chicago.  I lived in Brooklyn before Chicago though.  I’ve bounced around and traveled for the last few years after leaving North Carolina initially.  I lived in Philadelphia, Brooklyn, and then Chicago.  I wanted to move to the Asheville, NC because its quiet.  I was just tired of the people and commotion of major cities.  Also, I wanted to concentrate more on painting and drawing again.  So I travel and tattoo on weekends to cities that are close to where I live.

While growing up, what was it about “art” that grabbed your attention? Were you aware at the time that this was something you would pursue for the rest of your life?

I’ve drawn ever since I can remember, really.  My older brother was sick my whole life.  So while we were in and out of hospitals I would always be given a pad of paper and pencils to draw to keep me occupied.

Drawing was the only thing that really got me any attention as an introverted weirdo kid.  As a young kid I got into comic books and skateboard art.  So my attention quickly became centered in the art of comic books.  My earliest memories as a kid was sitting around my grandparents houses drawing Spider-Man, Daredevil, Hulk, etc.  The first art book I was ever given was “How To Draw Comics the Marvel Way”.  That’s where I first learned proportions and foreshortening which I still use today.  That and underground comics and cartoons at a very young age subconsciously honed my gnarly way of looking at art.

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What steered you towards tattooing, and when did you start down that path?

In high school I use to go to the local newsstands when my mom went to the grocery store.  Back then they had all the tattoo magazines in the porn section which was terrible.  But luckily a good friend of mine got a job there. I was able to sit and look at all the tattoo magazines that I wanted.

In high school I would draw comics and tattoo inspired flash.  All of it was pretty terrible really.  When I graduated high school I still wanted to draw comics.  So I got into the Joe Kubert school of Graphic Art in Dover, NJ.  But last minute I changed my mind and went to East Carolina University to get a BFA in painting.  I ended up getting a double BFA in Painting and Sculpture.

When I was in the art program, one of my instructors named Bill Dermody was apprenticing to be a tattooer.  I had always wanted to get tattooed since I was 18 but was too intimidated by the shops in my area.  So I never got one before I met Bill.  Bill ended up doing my first few tattoos.  Then I got tattooed at a few conventions and would enter tattoo flash into contest and won first place at the first few I entered.  The owner of the shop offered me an apprenticeship while I was still in school.  So by the time I was out of college I was tattooing full time.

I was pretty much at the right place at the right time really.

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At times, your tattoo work brings to mind one of my favorite artists, Basil Wolverton, so I’m curious as to who some of your favorite artists were during your formative years.

That’s one of the biggest compliments you could ever give me.  I love everything that Wolverton ever touched.  He was way ahead of his time in every aspect.

Growing up I was inspired by old Jim Philips graphics, underground comics like Robert Crumb, and old cartoons like “The Brothers Grunt”.  In college I was more inspired by contemporary sculptors and painters such as Basquiat, Henry Moore, David Smith, Rauschemberg, Bernini, Bosch, etc.  But at the same time, I was reading Charles Burns and Daniel Clowes books, and listening to punk rock when Raymond Pettibon was on everything I’ve ever held dear.

When I graduated college and was studying the art of tattooing, I was introduced to artists such as Ed Hardy, Daniel Higgs, Dave Lum, and Jeff Rassier.  All of which, on top of a fine art and punk rock background, have helped me develop the style I have now.

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Your first book, “Cone, Sphere, Cube” was created while on the road when you toured the USA from one city to the next. How did your new book “Further, Farther, Further” come together?

Well I started “Cone, Sphere, Cube” when I was living in Philadelphia.  I wasn’t able to paint tattoo flash where I was staying but I wanted to keep up with ideas I had.  So I kept a moleskin of ink drawings that I could do in coffee shops and stuff.  Eventually that became what is known as “Cone, Sphere, Cube”.  ”Further, Farther Further” was made after I left Philadelphia, traveled a bit more around the US, and then completed when I lived in Brooklyn, NY.

These were more refined illustrations in the same Clowes/Pettibon style of ink and brush drawings.

I started to jot down little one liners of songs or quotes I could hear while I was drawing.  To me, it was to solidify my environment I was in at that exact moment.  To hopefully put the viewer in that moment that I was in when I drew that page.

I drew, laid out, and published both books on my own. I try to be as DIY as possible.  I personally ship out every book, flash set, t-shirt etc that I sell. Both books are 100 pages of black and white illustrations.  I’ve revisited some ideas in both books for paintings and tattoos.

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Your work in pen and ink utilizes very powerful color choices, and you’ve mentioned using snippets of lyrics and quotes within each piece. To me, they function as a sort of narration over the piece itself; to be interpreted by each viewer in completely different ways. Do the drawings always come first, or have there been times where you had a phrase or description in your head before you even got started?

After I did both of the books I really liked how the wording seemed to help with the power of the image.  I think it relates directly to my comic book background.  A lot of times the phrases are very vague and ambiguous.  I think it helps the viewer narrate the image in different ways depending on how they see the image and read the words.

Almost every time the illustration comes first.  Then, while drawing, the phrase comes to mind while I’m thinking about whatever the image evokes in my head.  Although, lately I’ve been doing the reverse:  jotting down single sentences or ideas for phrases on scraps of paper, and then later adapting them to images in my head.

For me, I think of everything when I work on a piece.  I think about the wording, the overall image layout, and the color theory.  Everything is thought out while I’m working.

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Are there any new artists out there today that you’re really digging?

In the last 10 years I have completely surrounded myself with artists of different kinds, and I’m lucky to take away pieces of each of them in some way.  I’m part of the art collective Swamp Wizards and we encourage each other to develop each others work with critiques and gallery shows.  And we’re just getting started!  Its going to be a good year for the Swamp Wizards.

As far as tattooing goes I can see a very strong influence in a surreal or “Weirdo” art movement.  My favorite tattooers are Daniel Higgs, Jeff Rassier, Josh Howard, Robert Ryan, Danny Reed, just to name a few.  Each one, I feel like, comes from a similar background as me.

Every day I look at tattooers, illustrators, sculptors, comic artists, poets etc.  Everything inspires or sparks a thought that can be used for something eventually.

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I recently interviewed the artist Gorgeous George, and it sounded to me  like you two are good friends. How did you guys get introduced?

George is one of my oldest and dearest friends.  We first met at art school in early 2000s.  We were both in the painting program together.  I switched to concentrate on sculpture but we always stayed friends.  In addition to art, we built Frankenstein rat rod bicycles together, and terrorized that small town we lived in.  We were in bands together as well.  He played bass and I played guitar in a honkytonk band and a couple of short lived punk bands.

He’s one of the best dudes I’ve ever known, and one of the most driven artists I’ve ever had the pleasure of calling a friend.

You just teamed up with Shirts and Destroy to release a line of your designs. How did this collaboration come together?

I’ve always been a huge fan of the label.  When I was in school I was really into Doomriders and would buy their merch from Shirts & Destroy.  And then when I was into tattoos I respected every artist that made shirts through that company.

When I lived in Brooklyn I would try and stop by the store front, but for whatever reason, it never worked out.  I was either there too early or they were closed for whatever reason.  So I was never able to meet Ryan and the other folks face to face.  It wasn’t until a year or so later that I met Ryan via the interwebz. When Ryan sent me an email about doing shirts with them, I was extremely excited.  In the last year or so I’ve been very lucky to be able to work with several companies that I’ve looked up to for a long time.

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So what’s next in the pipeline? Are there any new products or appearances we should watch out for?

Yeah, there’s a lot of really great things in the works for the near future.  There’s only a few things I can talk about right now though.  I was just asked to draw the next pro deck for Peter Ramondetta.  Hopefully that will be the gateway for other work with Deluxe in SF.  I just got done doing some design work for Affliction clothing, Holy Mountain Printing, and True Black Clothing.

I’m going to be releasing my own line of shirts tentatively called Heart Drops Clothing Co.

I’m working on a third book.  This one will be all of the color series I’ve been doing. The book will be called “The Damned” and it should be out early 2014.  Hopefully I’ll be able to find a publisher this time around; it’s too much work for me at the moment to layout and publish everything on my own these days.

As far as tattooing, I’ll be doing a few conventions and traveling around the east coast mainly.  I’ll probably be doing a month long westcoast trip too.  Keep an eye out for tour dates everybody!

On Doom Cycle, every interview to date has ended with this question, so let’s keep the tradition going: If you could travel through time, where would you go?

That’s a tricky question.  I want to say the ’50s so I could pick the brains of some very rad artists that I admire, or I’d say New York in the ’80s, so I could eat trash can burgers with Basquiat, see Danzig sing with the Misfits, and punch Rollins in the dick, all in the same day.  I’ll go with option B: the ’80s.

Haha!

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If I could, I’d like to do a quick list of thank yous.

Absolutely, Matt. Go right on ahead.

I’d like to thank anyone and everyone that purchases a book, painting, print, or t-shirt from me. Also, anyone that gets tattooed by me.  Without you, I wouldn’t be able to travel and live my life as I do, and I am forever grateful.

Everyone at every tattoo shop that has ever let me do a guest spot, or bought me dinner, took me into their homes, or gave me a bed to sleep on while I was traveling.  The overwhelming human kindness made me realize that not everyone is a bag of shit.

I’d like to thank Danny at Holy Mountain Printing for always being a good dude. Everyone at Seventh Dagger for helping me get started on design work.

Lastly, Thanks to the Swamp Wizards for being my brothers.

Thanks a bunch, Matt, for taking the time out of your schedule to speak with me here on Doom Cycle. Most of us only know an artist through their work, so when an opportunity comes along to hear from the artist themselves, it’s really damn cool! Thanks again, Matt! You rock!

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Filed Under: Featured Category, Interviews Tagged With: Basil Wolverton, Basquiat, Bernini, Bill Dermody, Bosch, Charles Burns, Cone Sphere Cube, Daniel Clowes, Daniel Higgs, Danny Reed, Dave Lum, David Smith, DIY, Ed Hardy, Further Farther Further, Henry Moore, How To Draw Comics the Marvel Way, Jeff Rassier, Jim Philips, Joe Kubert, Josh Howard, Kerley, Matt Kerley, Rauschemberg, Raymond Pettibon, Robert Crumb, Robert Ryan, Swamp Wizards, The Brothers Grunt, Weirdo

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Tim Granda

Doom Cycle is the place to keep up with all the rad artists in and around the chopper scene. It's run by this dude in MI named Tim Granda. [Read More...]

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