Category Archives: News

NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium: Jay A. Gertzman

bond-sign-finalThe 102nd meeting of the NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium will be held on Tuesday, October 7, 2014 at 8 pm at Parsons The New School, 2 West 13th Street, in the Bark Room (off the lobby). Free and open to the public. Please note 8 pm starting time.

Presentation: Jay A. Gertzman: Look, Look, Just Look: Scopophilia and the 20th century Illustrated Book.
My talk  will be about the way 20th century drawings illustrate texts by substituting the mutual sexual  contact and its fulfillment—which is the subject of the narrative—with images which stimulate auto erotic responses in the viewer. Freud’s phrase for this is scopophilia, the substitution of the eye for the penis. What results is prurience and the substitution of shame for pleasure in establishing a loving relationship.
After a few book illustrations exemplary of gazing and fantasizing,  I will show three types of graphic illustrations. The first are drawings prepared for wealthy consumers: erotic bookplates, extra-illustrated images in finely printed editions of classic pornography, and a deluxe privately printed 1930s edition of Lady Chatterley’s Lover.
The next class of drawings was used to sell prurient but not explicit materials that could be used to interest, but not shock, middle- and working-class consumers with conventional sexual tolerances, given the moral  consensus of their communities. Illustrations for mail order fiction, non-fiction, and correspondence clubs, as well as pulp magazines and paperback novels, are rich sources for judging what these purveyors of  borderline  material wanted to tease their customers with.  Many of these also show men looking at females—the keyhole motif was famous for its frequent appearance in advertisements as well as books themselves.
A final set of slides would illustrate materials sold to, or created by, underclass and outcast people.  These are for the most part explicit (regarding various sexual acts and full nudity) and at the same time more expressive of unruly desires than they are prurient teases: playing cards, tattoos, Tijuana Bibles (“little dirty comics”),  sketches on boarded-up windows of Times Square bookstores and peep palaces,  graffiti, and  covers and interior drawings for hard core paperbacks.
In all three categories, there are drawings which subvert the concept of prurience and the identification of sex with furtive masturbatory pleasure.

Jay A Gertzman retired in 2000 as a professor of English at Mansfield U. He taught a diverse set of courses: radical themes in modern literature, noir crime fiction, D H Lawrence, Shakespeare, literary censorship, in addition to composition at the freshman and upper class levels.
His research specialty is publishing history. He has published four books on this subject.
In Bookleggers and Smuthounds: The Distribution and Prosecution of Erotica, 1920-1940 (U of Pennsylvania Press, 1999), he discussed publishers, distributors and dealers and their symbiotic relationship with private “decency” groups and police.  The book details  the methods of underground publishing and the way booksellers got sexually explicit texts into readers’ hands. His Samuel Roth, Infamous Modernist, was published in the spring of 2014 by the U. Press of Florida. It is a biography of the man who served two federal prison terms for distributing erotica through underground sources and the U.S. mails.  After publishing parts of Ulysses in 1926 without explicit permission from James Joyce, he was denounced as a “thief” and “pirate,” although there was no international copyright agreement at the time.  Roth’s long career as editor, poet, and iconoclast  culminated in Roth v. U.S. (1957), a major event in First amendment liberalization.

NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium: World War 3 Illustrated 1979-2014

ww3-coverThe 101st meeting of the NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium will be held on Tuesday, September 30, 2014 at 7 pm at Parsons The New School, 2 West 13th Street, in the Bark Room (off the lobby). Free and open to the public. Please note 7 pm starting time.

Presentation: World War 3 Illustrated 1979-2014
Celebrating the release of a new 320 page hard-cover anthology, artist/editors Peter Kuper, Seth Tobocman, Sabrina Jones and Sandy Jimenez will give you a behind the scenes history of the of the long-running zine’s past, present and future with visual presentations.

Peter Kuper is co-founder of World War 3 illustrated and has written and drawn “Spy vs Spy” for Mad magazine since 1997.  His graphic novels include The System, Sticks and Stones, and Stop Forgetting to Remember, and he has also published the sketchbook diaries Diario de Oaxaca and Drawn to New York, as well as graphic adaptations of Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle and Kafka’s The Metamorphosis.  His cartoons have appeared in The New York Times, Time, and Newsweek. He teaches comics courses at The School of Visual Arts and Harvard University.

Seth Tobocman, co- founded the magazine World War 3 Illustrated.  He is the author of a number of graphic books including: You Don’t Have to Fuck People over To Survive, War in the Neighborhood, Disasters and Resistance and Understanding the Crash. His illustrations have appeared in The New York Times, The Village Voice and many other publications. His art has been displayed at The Museum of Modern Art, The New Museum Of Contemporary Art among many other museums and galleries. His images have been used as posters, banners, murals, patches and tattoos by people’s movements all over the world.

Sabrina Jones created her first comics for World War 3 Illustrated and went on to edit many issues. Her graphic biographies have covered historical visionaries from Isadora Duncan and Walt Whitman to FDR and Jesus. She has illuminated the work of justice advocates in “The Real Cost of Prisons Comix” and “Race to Incarcerate, A Graphic Retelling.”

Sandy Jimenez is a comic book artist and filmmaker who has produced scores of varied and original illustrated stories since graduating from The Cooper Union in 1990, he is best known for creating the independent comic book series Marley Davidson, and the long running and critically acclaimed “Shit House Poet” stories for World War 3 Illustrated. His next work, an illustrated adaptation of Jules Verne’s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea will appear in the upcoming Graphic Canon YA collection for Seven Stories Press.

NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium: Michael DeForge, Simon Hanselmann & Patrick Kyle

tourposterThe 100th meeting of the NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium will be held on Tuesday, September 23, 2014 at 8 pm at Parsons The New School, 2 West 13th Street, in the Bark Room (off the lobby). Free and open to the public. Please note 8pm starting time.

Presentations: Michael DeForge, Simon Hanselmann & Patrick Kyle.

Michael DeForge goes through different finished and unfinished projects he’s thrown away before publication. He discusses the value of abandoning projects, scripted versus improvised storytelling and the importance of digressions in the writing process.

Michael DeForge was born in 1987 and grew up in Ottawa, Ontario. He moved to Toronto for school in the mid 2000s where he became an integral part of the local comics scene. His debut work, Lose #1, was published in 2009 and was quickly followed by a catalog of minis, zines, short stories in anthology collections, and four more issues of Lose.  In 2010 DeForge won for “Best Emerging Talent” at the Doug Wright Awards, and in 2011 he won the award for non-narrative and nominally-narative work for his Spotting Dear. In 2013 Koyama Press published DeForge’s book collection of work entitled Very Casual.

Simon Hanselmann will discuss the Australian comics scene, the virtues of Tumblr as a distribution platform, making money, ‘the future’ and his general comics making process. Also: various crackpot theories and obscure in-jokes.

Simon Hanselmann is a Tasmanian born cartoonist best known for his Megg, Mogg and Owl seriesIn July 2013  Fantagraphics Books published his  200-page collection of strips Megahex. In August 2013, Simon Hanselmann was nominated for an Ignatz award for his comic St.Owl’s Bay. He lives in Melbourne, Australia.

Having self-published comics for the better part of the last decade, Patrick Kyle will discuss the logistics of playing publisher while balancing careers as both a cartoonist and illustrator.

Patrick Kyle lives and works in Toronto, Canada. He is the co-founder and editor of Wowee Zonk, a contemporary comic book anthology featuring upcoming narrative artists from Toronto. He has been previously nominated for Doug Wright and Ignatz awards for his comic book series Black Mass and Distance Mover. Patrick’s illustrations have appeared in The New York Times, Esquire, The Walrus, Transworld Skateboarding Magazine, and Vice Magazine.

NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium: Yvan Alagbé and Dominique Goblet

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The ninety-ninth meeting of the NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium will be held on Tuesday, September 16, 2014 at Parsons The New School, 2 West 13th Street, in the Bark Room (off the lobby). Free and open to the public.

Presentations: Yvan Alagbé, Dominique Goblet and (if he gets his visa) Mana Neyestani.

1. Yvan Alagbé and Dominique Goblet will discuss their careers and their most recent work in a conversation moderated by Bill Kartalopoulos (Series Editor, The Best American Comics).

Yvan Alagbé (France) and Dominique Goblet (Belgium) are key and influential figures in the development of contemporary Francophone comics. Alagbé co-founded the French publishing house Éditions Amok, and Goblet was an early contributor to Frigorevue, the flagship anthology of the Brussels-based publisher Fréon. The two publishers later merged to form Frémok, which continues to publish work by both of these artists and to advocate for ever more sophisticated explorations of comics form.

Alagbé’s own work, rendered in ink and wash, expresses in both harsh lines and soft tones his clear-eyed, penetrating narratives of mysterious desire and explosive cultural conflict, evident in his celebrated Nègres jaunes et autres créatures imaginaires and in his most recent book, École de la misère. Goblet has produced a challenging body of work that questions the distinctions between fiction and autobiography, and between narrative comics and poetic image-making. Her latest book, Plus si Entente, was produced collaboratively with German cartoonist Kai Pfeiffer.

Figure Drawing Fridays Are Back!

Welcome back, students! While we hope you are enjoying your new classes for the fall semester, we are excited to announce the scheduled sessions for Open Figure Drawing at the University Center (Academic Entrance 63 Fifth Avenue), Room 619.

Open figure drawing is open to all Parsons students and faculty with a New School issued ID to enter the building. All that we ask is that you come with your own tools of choice and clean up after yourself before you leave. There are only 16 seats available however, participating students and faculty may come and go as they please.

The sessions run from 4:00-6:00 and from 7:00-9:00
Here are the dates to watch out for during this semester!

September 5th
September 12th
September 19th

October 10th
October 17th
October 24th
October 31st

November 7th
November 14th
November 21st

December 5th

October 3rd and November 28th are holidays, so there will not be a drawing session.

See you there!

 

NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium: Thierry Smolderen & Comics in the University

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The ninety-seventh meeting of the NY Comics & Picture-story Symposium will be held on Tuesday, September 2, 2014 at 7 pm at Parsons The New School, 2 West 13th Street, in the Bark Room (off the lobby). Free and open to the public.

Presentations: Part 1. A conversation with Thierry Smolderen

To celebrate the publication of the English-language edition of Thierry Smolderen’s new book The Origins of Comics: from William Hogarth to Winsor McCay, (University Press of Mississippi) the author joins us, via Skype, from France for a conversation.

Thierry Smolderen is a comics writer and scholar who teaches at the École européenne supérieure de l’image in Angoulême, France.

Part 2. Comics in the university.

Panelists : Ben Katchor (Parsons), Peter Kuper (SVA and Harvard), Jonathan W. Gray, (John Jay College, CUNY), and  Nick Sousanis (Parsons, Teachers College), lead an audience discussion on the teaching of writing/drawing, history and critical study of comics and text-image work in the university.

Parsons Festival AMT Openings and Highlights!

To view the full list of events from all divisions involved in the Parsons Festival, please go to: http://www.newschool.edu/parsons/festival-events

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Friday, April 25, 6:00 – 8:00 pm
Opening Reception – Fine Arts MFA Thesis Exhibition “Before”
The Kitchen
512 West 19th Street, New York, NY 
On view 4/25-5/3
Gallery Hours: Tuesday-Friday, 12:00-6:00 p.m.; Saturday, 11:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.

The MFA Fine Arts program at Parsons presents Before, its 2014 thesis exhibition, curated by Niels Van Tomme. Presenting a reflection on a moment rather than a well structured, overarching curatorial statement, Before explores a state of perpetual yet-to-come and fragile anticipation. The exhibition playfully negotiates Jimmie Durham’s statement that the artist always works “Before Tomorrow,” before the crux of formation and before the advent of history, while laying out a provisional display of artistic gestures. Ranging from traces of transcendent encounters to explorations of social and individual memory, as well as the emergence of narrative structures and the breakdown of identity, the works featured in the exhibition reject official narratives in favor of a more open and exploratory approach to artistic processes. Taken together, they form temporal clusters that complicate a straightforward conceptualization of linearity and purpose. In doing so,Before suggests the continuous and multifaceted interplay between past, present, and future, as well as exemplifies the challenges and promises associated with graduating from an art academy in New York City.

For more information about the thesis exhibition at the Kitchen, please visit the Parsons Fine Arts site, or contact parsonsbefore@gmail.com.
Join us on twitter #parsonsB4.  A gallery walk-through with the exhibiting students will take place on May 3.

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Monday, April 28 – May 22
MFA Photography Exhibition

Hours: 10:00 am – 8:00 pm
University Center, 6th Floor Library
63 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY

This exhibition features work by first and second year MFA Photography students. The program seeks to redefine the creative role of photographer within contemporary culture. As illustrated by this exhibition, these pieces represent a wide range of interests, inquiries, methodologies, and approaches. The artwork presented by these emerging photographic artists push the boundaries of the medium and the limits of creative vision.

Tuesday, April 29, 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Opening Reception – “Making Meaning”
Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Gallery, Sheila C. Johnson Design Center
2 West 13th Street, New York, NY 
On view from 4/28-5/23

Curated by graduate students at Parsons and presented under the thematic arc of Making/Meaning, this Parsons Festival exhibition showcases the work of undergraduate and associate’s degree students across Parsons, providing a lively snapshot of ideas and issues that inspire the students themselves. AMT is widely represented in this show by a number of talented artists across all our programs. See the full list here.

This exhibition takes place in both the Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Gallery and the Arnold and Shelia Aronson Galleries at the Shelia C. Johnson Design Center.

Thursday, May 15, 11:30 am – 1:30 pm
The Business of Illustration
Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Auditorium, Sheila C. Johnson Design Center

The BFA Illustration program presents a panel discussion focusing on established and up-and-coming artists with non-traditional career paths connected to the world of illustration. The event will demystify the ever-changing professional landscape of illustration, enabling students to identify with what they may encounter when they leave school.

Friday May 16, May 17th, 10:00 am – 6:00 pm
MFA Design and Technology Symposium
Theresa Lang Community and Student Center, Arnhold Hall
55 West 13th Street, New York, NY
Room I202

The MFA Design and Technology Symposium is a two-day curated forum held in conjunction with the program’s thesis exhibition. Students will discuss both their individual processes and the intersections between projects.Please visit mfadt.parsons.edu for event schedule and details.

Friday, May 16, 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Open Studios Reception – MFA Photography
66 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 
3rd floor

Three times a year, students in the MFA Photography program host informal gatherings to share their work-in-progress with their peers in the New York City photographic community and the general public. Open studios is an opportunity to celebrate new work and strengthen the ties between students, alumni, and working artists.

Monday, May 19th – Friday, May 23rd 
Hours: Monday, Thursday, Friday – Noon – 6:00 pm
Tuesday and Wednesday – Noon – 8:00 pm
Words and Pictures: Illustration Pop Up Shop
Sheila C. Johnson Design Center, conference room (lobby, next to Kellen gallery)
2 West 13th Street New York, NY

Browse and purchase editioned and one of a kind works from the Illustration program Seniors including prints, zines, toys, and other great stuff.

Tuesday, May 20, 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Opening Reception – BFA Fine Arts Senior Show
Parsons East, 4th and 5th floor
25 East 13th Street, New York, NY
On view: 5/20-5/23

The BFA program in Fine Arts exposes students to an array of studio practices, ideas, communities, and global relationships. Students learn to translate concepts into individual expression through composition, color, form, space, and performance while developing a solid set of skills and contemporary artistic strategies. They embrace interdisciplinary approaches to thinking about visual culture, and above all they cultivate the intellectual, conceptual, and critical thinking required to successfully launch their careers as professional artists.The BFA Fine Arts Senior Show celebrates and showcases the thesis work completed by our graduating students. The exhibition takes place in the Fine Arts studios, galleries, and classrooms and includes painting, drawing, installation, sculpture, photography, video, and performance-based work.

Tuesday, May 20, 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Opening Reception – Printmaking Exhibition 
Kerrey Hall, Lobby
65 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY
On view 5/12-5/24

This exhibition presents etchings, screenprints, monoprints, woodcuts, lithographs, and examples of letterpress and book arts in a comprehensive show of printmaking work by students from across The New School. A workshop and on-going demonstrations will occur in the print shop, on the 4th floor of 2 West 13th Street, during the exhibition opening.

Tuesday, May 20, 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Opening Reception – Graphic Design Exhibition
Sheila C. Johnson Design Center
7th, 10th, and 11th floor showcases
2 West 13th Street, New York, NY
On view: 5/20 – 5/29

The Big Talent Show(case) by graduating students in the AAS Graphic Design program will include a variety of work including editorial and publication design, brand identity, interactive and web design, typography, posters, and non-profit work, as well as printmaking and book arts.

Tuesday, May 20, 6:00pm – 8:00 pm
Screening and Opening Reception and for BFA Communication Design / BFA Design and Technology 
Sheila C. Johnson Design Center
10th floor classrooms (exhibition reception, on view: 5/20-5/23)
Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Auditorium, lobby level (screenings)
2 West 13th Street New York, NY

Experience an evening of multimedia works from seniors in the BFA Design and Technology and BFA Communication Design programs. Students with physical and/or experiential work will create select installations for public viewing, on the 10th floor of 2 West 13th St. Back down at the lobby level, enjoy narrative shorts, documentary, animation, kinetic type, sound, performance, and experimental videos screening in Kellen Auditorium. …

Tuesday, May 20, 8:00 pm – 10:00 pm
Book/Web Launch Party for BFA Communication Design / BFA Design and Technology
Sheila C. Johnson Design Center, lobby  
2 West 13th Street New York, NY

See the work and celebrate the launch of the 2014 catalog featuring more than a hundred graduating students. Projects address a wide range of practical and theoretical concerns across a variety of media, inflected with their shared optimism about the role of design in a global context.

Tuesday, May 20, 6:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Opening Reception – BFA Photography Exhibition
Milk Studios, Main floor
450 West 15th Street, New York, NY
On view 5/20-5/30 

Parsons The New School for Design and Milk Studios present an exhibition of photographs, installations, video projections, and magazine and book displays by graduating students in Parsons’ BFA Photography program, which challenges students to use analog and digital technology to create bodies of work influenced by film, design, fine art, video, and sound.

Wednesday, May 21 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Opening Reception MFA Design and Technology Exhibition
Albert and Vera List Academic Center
6 East 16th Street, New York, NY
12th floor 
On view: 5/17-5/25

MFA Design and Technology presents its 2014 exhibition featuring projects from more than 70 graduating students. From installations to performances, objects to apps, games to video to interactive experiences, MFA Design and Technology students explore the dynamic role of technology in our lives.These projects are an interdisciplinary convergence of inquiry and application designed to traverse issues related to technology, including its value. We invoke the playful, the informative, the empowering, the critical, and the subversive to investigate emerging issues and provoke discussion.

Date tbd 
Opening Reception: 2×2 – A Curated Exhibition with Parsons Illustration Program
Space Ninety 8, 98 N. 6th St., Brooklyn, NY (Williamsburg)
On view 5/12 – 5/16 12:00pm-9:00pm

Space Ninety 8, a new concept store in Williamsburg will be hosting the Illustration senior show. Thesis, non-thesis work and work for sale will all be on view.

Wednesday, May 21 9:00 am – 4:00 pm 
Pecha Kucha – BFA Illustration
Kellen Auditorium
66 Fifth Ave, New York, NY
ground floor 

The senior class present their theses projects in 3-5 minute slide talks followed by short Q&A’s for each. A faculty panel will rotate throughout the day to facilitate questions and challenges to the students on their ideas and work.

Wednesday, May 21, 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Book Release Party, Screening and Opening Reception for 12th Floor Exhibition – BFA Illustration
Sheila C. Johnson Design Center lobby (book release party)
Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Auditorium, lobby level (screenings)
12th Floor (exhibition, on view: 5/20-5/23)

2 West 13th Street New York, NY

The Illustration Program senior thesis class releases our second Illustration Annual featuring works by all class members. This book contains a diverse range of images and objects that span the many facets of the industry. Celebrate the accomplishments of the senior Illustration class at this fabulous event. In Kellen Auditorium, we’ll also be screening time based and animation works.  The animation focus within AMT covers a wide range of time based media from traditional animation to more experimental works. Illustration students show off their unique takes on this genre. On the 12th floor, we’ll be celebrating the works and ideas that lend themselves to a wide variety of careers including editorial illustration, comics and graphic novels, picture books, motion and animation, toy and product design, and gallery art through a variety of installations and gallery style exhibitions of senior class works.