LPWTF? -|- Canadian record cover art, uncovered

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Purity Ring + Kristina Baumgartner = Shrines’ supernatural sheep guardian

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Purity Ring: Shrines [July/2012] — Crafting images to complement the stirring mystical ecosystem of Megan James’ lyrics and voice and the heart-jacking, spine-jangling textures of Corin Roddick’s soundscapes can’t be easy. And Kristina Baumgartner admits to sketching out a lot of different ideas for the cover of Purity Ring’s much anticipated full-length debut before she had the right one. But once it took shape, the rest of the Shrines packaging illustrations flowed from there.

Baumgartner didn’t have a lot of cash to spend on art supplies when she was creating the drawings, so she worked with what she had. “I drew everything with pencil crayons and wax pastels on large sheets of brown construction paper, which I cut into 12-inch squares.”

Improvisation seems to be one of Baumgartner’s habits; just this month she released her first zine, called House Plant, which she painted and self-produced. She describes it as “10 little paintings [like the one below] all done in ink that represent my home life this winter. I spent most of the season alone in this big apartment with my cat, and I got sucked into my own little world. The paintings are about that.” Baumgartner is selling House Plant in some Montreal shops and online (or you could pick one up at Purity Ring’s merch table on their North American tour in April and May 2013 — for which she also designed a new poster and tote bag).

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LPWTF: I read about how the illustration with the coffin was entirely based on “Crawlersout.” Can you tell me about the specific lyrics or ideas that inspired the Shrines album cover image. Also, how did sheep originate as an appropriate symbol for the band and its music?

KB: For the Lofticries 7-inch [see below], I had cut out dozens of photographs to collage together for the cover. Corin really liked some of the sheep ones I had. I was interested in Catholic imagery at the time and so I came up with this image of a girl watching over her flock of sheep. To me, sheep represent a kind of innocence and purity and so I thought it was an appropriate symbol for the band.

When we were coming up with ideas the Shrines cover, I originally wanted it to be a photograph of a girl laying with her sheep in some kind of sacrificial setting. However, Megan and Corin really wanted me to draw the cover. So it’s essentially the same idea only simpler. The lungs overhead come from a line from “Fineshrine.”

[Get a little closer, let fold / Cut open my sternum, and pull / My little ribs around you / The lungs of me be crowns over you]

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Why are hands and fire also good symbols to represent the songs on Shrines?

A lot is based off some of the meanings of Megan’s lyrics. And since she doesn’t reveal what they mean, neither will I.

Without going to deep into it, Megan often writes about people’s spirits and about some type of motherly figure looking out for her. The ghost hands and then the human hands that surround the girl under the coffin are meant to represent those two forces.

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All of the images seem to be set in some sort of dreamscape or non-physical space, which I think gels nicely with the record’s lyrics and textures. Was this what you intended?

When I listen to Megan’s words, they all seem to be set in some non-physical space and I wanted the artwork to reflect that. The girl is a guardian of sheep and a dead loved one, and she lives in her own world.

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Who is the girl?

No one specifically.

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Where are the original illustrations now?

One illustration is framed in my living room, one I gave to Megan. The front and back cover are somewhere in the shed.

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What do you like about these images?

It feels weird for me to say what I like about the images when I made them. The only thing I can think to say is that I like how homely they are. And by that I mean that I like that they look so handmade. You can see all the pencil marks and texture on the LP. You can’t tell after it was all printed, but I coloured in all the black background and it took hours and hours. It left smudges, because I used a black wax pencil — well, I really went through like six of them — but we didn’t edit them out. I like the mistakes.

All images by Kristina Baumgartner. Story by Eric Rumble. Buy Shrines from 4AD.

    • #Purity Ring
    • #Shrines
    • #Kristina Baumgartner
    • #Cover artist
    • #LP cover
    • #album cover
    • #cover art
    • #LP Art
    • #album art
    • #lpwtf
    • #Lofticries
    • #Crawlersout
    • #Corrin Roddick
    • #Megan James
    • #House Plant
    • #Tallulah Fontaine
    • #Fineshrine
    • #record art
    • #record cover
    • #4ad
  • 2 months ago
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Hook & Eye + Marc Rimmer = The shortest, silliest LPWTF post ever?

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Hook & Eye: North St. EP [Feb/2013] — Sometimes, impulsiveness is the best medicine. Sometimes even for record covers. 

My hyper-brilliant friend Marc Rimmer — whose work I profiled to get this blog off the ground almost two years ago, here — recently looped me in on the fabulously uncluttered guidance that led to his latest piece of kick-ass record packaging. Musician Jeff Macleod had enlisted Rimmer (an old buddy from the Calgary music scene) to design the cover art for his new band’s forthcoming EP.

Given that these two guys now live about 4,000 kms apart, this is how they settled on the image you see above, via text message:

Jeff: “I need an album cover. Got any sad, dark, lonely photos kickin’ around?”

Marc: “Not really, but here’s a photo I snapped at a farm on the weekend.” [At left, below.]

J: “Nice! It has the right mood, but needs something. Can you try superimposing a fire on it?”

M: “Sure, here you go.” [Middle.]

J: “Shit yeah! Well, while we’re on topic, if you make it an old Ford truck that’s on fire, I’ll give you free hand jobs and pizza for life.”

M: “Done.”

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Rimmer wrapped up the image by adding some glow coming off the truck and onto the surrounding grass. The original photo was taken on Rimmer’s iPhone during a foggy farmland excursion to Huberdeau, Quebec (about an hour and a half northwest of Montreal), and he suggested it because of its “isolated, ominous, super-surreal” qualities. (The fire came from one of his old camping photos, and he fixed up and recoloured a stock photo of the truck.)

Macleod describes North St.’s songs as “lo-fi, moody, indie” — which sounds exactly as they should, considering they were recorded by another lo-fi, moody, indie Calgarian, Clinton St. John. (Those two played alongside the indomitable Matt Flegel in The Cape May a few years ago.) The EP will be self-released on Fir Trade Records in early 2013, and Hook & Eye will support it with some shows in Calgary and probably a small western Canadian tour in the spring.

Although the dosage of forethought that went into the cover art creation is perfect, I asked Macleod to elaborate a little on the choice, albeit not too seriously: 

Why did a sad, dark and lonely image need to be on the cover of this record?
“It suits the mood of the music — especially ‘North St.’ and ‘Late Night Karate Practice’.”

Can you describe what you like about the cover image?
“I think it has a pretty starkness/somber beauty to it.”

What have you got against Ford trucks?
“Haha. Nothing. I was having sushi with a friend, and he saw an old one in his neighborhood earlier that day. It just popped into his head when we were deciding what to burn while texting with Marc.”

Can you tell me about the most enjoyable fire you were ever involved in building?
“My friends and I still have illegal fires down in a secret spot on the city reservoir all the time. We just bring wood, Roman candles and beer.”

How is your music similar to an abandoned patch of land?
“Hmmm… not sure. Maybe listen to ‘North St.’ on our bandcamp. It’s an instrumental. Very minimalist.”

And for good measure, I asked Marc to send me a handful of other photos that he took on his road trip to rural Quebec. Enjoy: 

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All images by Marc Rimmer. Story by Eric Rumble. Hear and/or buy North St. from the Hook & Eye bandcamp page, or on vinyl from Fur Trade Recordings.

    • #LP cover
    • #LP Art
    • #lpwtf
    • #cover
    • #cover art
    • #Cover artist
    • #record cover
    • #record art
    • #hook and eye
    • #marc rimmer
    • #north st
    • #clinton st. john
    • #Montreal
    • #Fur Trade Records
    • #Fur Trade Recordings
    • #Matt Flegel
  • 6 months ago
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Apollo Ghosts + Amanda Curti = Landmark’s dark and stormy urgency

Apollo Ghosts: Landmark (May/2012) — THERE ARE DENSE subtleties tucked into the name of this west coast band’s third full-length record. There’s a cryptic link to their first two LPs and some of their EPs, which are named for specific places — Mount Benson, Hastings Sunrise, Forgotten Triangle, Cedar Street. The reference in this case is to the building where most of the songs where written, also called Landmark. Apollo Ghosts’ songwriter, singer and guitarist Adrian Treacher describes it as a “no-nonsense brick shithouse” that managed to stay dry during Vancouver’s leaky condo crisis in the 80s and 90s.

Treacher also likes the tongue-and-cheekiness of the album title. “A landmark record sounds like a pretty bold or presumptuous or pretentious idea, but we made this ourselves for, like, five dollars.” More directly, the name taps into Treacher’s life trajectory. “I’m in my 30s now, and just getting to that point where people around me are getting married or having kids or breaking up or making big life decisions, and that definitely has a connection to the title and to the cover. People are coming in to make a nest or make a choice to stay somewhere permanently, whereas the last record was a lot more about childhood and looking back at younger years.”

While Treacher says that “about 90 per cent” of the record was written in Vancouver, the rest of it materialized on the other side of country, notably the cover image. Treacher had landed a writer-in-residence grant in Sackville, New Brunswick, in 2011, “so I got to basically go there and just hang out and write songs for the summer — it was awesome.” Not so awesomely, his band’s gear was stolen during Sappyfest (thievery aside, arguably the country’s most compelling homespun music festival), so he ended up staying at a local hosting house for a few days. It turned out to be a very special place, complete with a jam space and other transient musicians willing to share their equipment (the diabolically wonderful Chad VanGaalen among them). 

“Almost anytime there’s a band coming into town, we always invite them in ‘cause we have a huge house, and I love hosting bands and cooking for them,” says Amanda Curti, the artist and Mount Allison University undergrad who lives in and looks after the place. A series of large, unconventional family portraits by Curti are spread around the walls (more on those later), and “weird cartoons drawn all over the walls” according to Treacher. 

There are also a half-dozen collages hanging in the bathroom, all of them a few years old, also done by Curti. Mostly they depict ducks with smokestacks coming out of their heads and octopuses attached to garbage — “I was living in Windsor at the time,” says Curti,” so pollution and dirtiness had a major effect on everything I was doing.” They’re all untitled, made on discarded pine cabinets with images liberated from old Sally Anne books, and coated in dark lacquer. The oddball of the bunch — landscape orientated, with no polluted wildlife — became both the cover image and finishing touch on Landmark. In a pinch, evidently. 

“Like most of our ideas, which truly spawn from being in the bathroom, I was just awestruck by this really cool collage that she had made,” says Treacher. “Sometimes it’s a small thing like a record cover that will be that last piece of the puzzle. You’re looking, you have a general sense of a batch of songs or a theme or a feeling or something, and then you walk into a bathroom and there’s the final piece. It just seemed instant. I looked up and I saw it, and I was like: there’s the album cover, right there, that’s how this record feels to me. After that it was really easy to finish the record.”

For Curti, creating those pieces was also cathartic, albeit tied to a different lever in her creative process. “They were just fun pieces that I did when I was bored, and I kept them,” says Curti. “If I feel stuck when I’m painting or printmaking, I usually go back to collage to get everything flowing again, because I can’t draw. I’m a horrible drawer. I don’t know how I’ve made it through art school being such a shitty drawer.”

Self-deprecation aside, Curti didn’t really pour any conceptual ideas into the piece when she made it, “but then once I looked at it I felt like it was kind of charged.” She recalls that the ships were British, and the floating monks and the crowd of people were from a Chinese history book (the mob was focussed on some sort of explosion before being cut out). Along with the floating monks, these ingredients resulted in a “weird religious political thing all smushed into one piece.”

The smush obviously appealed to Treacher, as did the conflicted mood. “I love the people’s backs at the forefront, the crowds of Asian immigrants,” says Treacher. “I like the very earthy colour tones, I like the wood texture. I also like the sea and ship imagery — I’ve written a lot about the ocean and homecoming. It just had this real Vancouver Island kind of vibe to it too, which is where I’m from. It just seemed perfect.” 

The piece also fit well with the songs he’d written. “I think it’s the darkest cover we’ve had so far, and that connects well with the lyrics, which are also darker and spookier, and a bit more depressing.” (Asked about the darkness in his songwriting, Treacher says: “I don’t have much control over what comes out, it just kind of comes out and you look at it after and go, ‘Oh man, what was wrong with me during those last two years? Why did I write those songs? Why did they come out that way?’ I don’t know.”)

Instinct obviously had a big stake in the way Landmark’s packaging art was chosen. Its other aesthetic lynchpins are tied to a couple of Apollo Ghosts’ landmark bands. “Our band are big fans of Guided by Voices, and Amanda’s piece had that sort of Bob Pollard collage vibe to it,” says Treacher. For the record’s interior packaging art, they paid a more overt homage to another lean, mean American punk band that they love. “It might not sound like it when you hear our music, but live we’re a lot more raunchy and brash, and we’re really tight with the punk scene in Vancouver,” explains Treacher. “We wanted to acknowledge our punk rock roots, so we wanted an insert that was kind of like the photo collage from Double Nickels on the Dime by the Minutemen.”

Treacher enlisted his friend Melanie Coles, an Emily Carr undergrad, to produce the packaging layouts (she came up with the handwritten typeface) and the interior designs. “I have no aesthetic sense at all,” says Treacher, “so I trusted her to pick the best photos and arrange them in this kind of weird, punk rock Xeroxed way, and use a typewriter for the liner notes and stuff, and so that’s what she did.”

Oddly enough, this kind of collaborative commissioning process is maybe the only similarity that Landmark bears to the bright, fantastical imagery on Apollo Ghosts’ previous record, Mount Benson. “Benson was more of a commissioning,” says Treacher. “My friend Michelle Vulama is a painter, she paints rock, and the album was about the biggest rock that I know in my hometown, so that was an easy sell. I told her roughly the kind of scene that I wanted, and she provided us with the front and back cover. That was a bit more direct, whereas this one just kind of came to us.”

Salted Meat (2010) | oil and acrylic on board, 58” x 54”

If a reliance on impulse and an appreciation for murkiness are the threads that knit Landmark’s words and pictures together, Treacher inadvertently found a near-perfect co-conspirator in Amanda Curti.

Curti mostly does painting (especially large-scale oil pieces), printmaking and animation. She’s certainly found a sweet niche back east: “Sackville kind of caters to musicians and artists. I have a studio that costs me $100 a month, which is amazing. I’ve lived in Windsor and London, Ontario, and you couldn’t even find a studio. Plus, I can use the printmaking studio at school because the teachers are very nice. And Struts is a great place that puts up a lot of student art.”

While this nourishing atmosphere has allowed Curti’s art practice to thrive, her creative roots are still prominently displayed (to bands coming through town, anyway) at her house in Sackville. “For a long time I was working on art about my family, because I’m Italian, and they’re crazy, and they were just the most interesting people around me,” explains Curti. “So I have a lot of family portraits.” 

The smallest one is about 4 feet by 3 ½ feet and the largest 12 feet by 8 feet — a bathtub scene that Curti describes below, along with a couple of others: “I painted a picture of my Nona in a cantina with a bunch of salamis hanging from the ceiling around her and a big fur hat on. I have another one of my brother and my cousin scrubbing each other’s feet in a bathtub – which isn’t made from my head, I actually walked into the bathroom one night and they were having a competition to see whose feet they could get the cleanest, so I went and got my camera and took a picture of that and painted it. And I have two portraits that go together of my cousin Theo and her brother Xavier, and they’re screaming at each other — they were having a fight. So I took a picture and painted it. The two paintings face each other, and it just looks like they’re screaming back and forth.” (Unfortunately — or, fortunately, depending on your disposition — you’d have to visit Sackville to catch a glimpse of Curti’s family portraits.)  

Untitled (2010) | mixed media on board, 36” x 54”

Curti generally works from her photographs, and her desire to crack the limitations of that method led her into some truly wacky territory during the last few years. “When I go to take pictures of people they always pose, even if they’re not trying to,” says Curti. “I wanted to get a true picture of someone’s face without them being able to pose, and the only two situations I could think of to capture this were either a sneeze or an orgasm, because with those two things, you can’t control what’s going on with your face. I thought I’d take the more challenging road and do the orgasm.”

Okay, so the wackiness (goofy pun intended) was essentially self-inflicted. Curti’s goal was to make large-scale portraits of people with raw facial expressions, in this case 5-foot-by-4-foot canvases of her subject’s faces, maybe with a couple of inches of shoulder. The tricky part would be coercing and convincing a bunch of friends and acquaintances to masturbate in close enough proximity so that Curti could capture their face at the money shot moment. (Actually, the trickiest part was adapting to what happened after everyone was dressed again.)  

So that nothing is misconstrued, Curti should explain her process: “Most of them were taken in a bed. My bed. I would bring people back to my house and give them anything that they needed — because I facilitate the masturbation, right? So I would give them a computer if they needed porn or anything like that, and I supplied fresh towels, lubrication and vibrators. Most of the people I took pictures of, I knew, so I was alright with them doing that. And either I would stay in the room with them while they did it or lay next to them, or I’d stand outside the room, and when they were about to cum they’d call me. And I was like, ‘At least give me five seconds,’ so they’re like, ‘Okay,’ and then I’d hear them scream at me and I’d run into the bedroom and jump on top of them with my camera, taking pictures on rapid fire until they were finished cumming.” 

Yes, sometimes there was a little awkwardness. But it also spawned great anecdotes like this one: “There was one person — he’s in a band, but I’m not gonna say names — and there were 13 people in the house, and he was like ‘I’m totally into it, but there’s too many people here.’ So I set up a tent in the backyard. I called it the masturbatorium. He went into the tent and I kinda walked around my backyard smoking a cigarette until I heard him go, ‘Curti, come here!” And then I crawled into the tent and straddled him and took my picture. And that’s how most of ‘em went — I’d just wait for them to call me and then I’d come in like a ninja and take their picture.” 

Untitled (2006) | oil, acrylic, acetate and ink on board, 14” x 11”

As you might expect, things got complicated. Curti spent a couple of years before she came to Mount Allison sussing out candidates, and ended up with nine photographs of people to paint. Apparently the paintings didn’t get a good response when people began learning what the project was, and some dismissed it as shock art. To which Curti says: “There’s no nudity, I don’t put a title on them, and nobody would know who they actually are.”

Curti wasn’t really phased by this reaction, but she does say she’s had to take a step back from the project to reevaluate it. “I kinda went crazy ‘cause once people knew what I was doing, I was getting bombarded with people who wanted to get their pictures taken. In my studio I’ve turned all the paintings around so that people can’t see them when they look in the window.” 

Likewise, the interactions with her portrait subjects become a bit of a handful. “That wall of awkwardness when you first meet a person, it goes right out the window when your first conversation is about this project,” says Curti. “Anything goes after that. It was like being best friends on high speed. You kind of just bypass all the bullshit and then all of a sudden they wanna tell you their deepest, darkest secrets. And then after I got the photos of some people, it was almost like I was dating them. I had this somewhat sexual relationship with them because I saw them at one of their most vulnerable moments. All of a sudden I’ve got like six, seven, eight people calling me and wanting to tell me all these things. I was like, ‘Holy fuck, I have seven girlfriends and five boyfriends, plus the person that I’ve actually been with for the last six years, and it’s fucking crazy and I need to relax for a minute. It was too much.”

More importantly, Curti began feeling like the work she was producing wasn’t quite right. “These paintings weren’t really translating the whole process of getting these photos, which was more interesting. You know, just going around telling people about this project, and then you mention masturbation and that you’re okay with it, and people are suddenly talking to you about the craziest shit you could possibly think of, because they feel comfortable. That idea was more interesting than the paintings.”

Augment (2010) | oil on canvas, 48” x 36”

Curti decided to experiment with creating a visual experience of an orgasm, or at least the fantasy reel that goes into one. “I went back to someone I’d done a painting of and took a video of her getting into her bed, and shots of her toes and her hands crinkling, and then it zooms into her mouth,” says Curti. She then collaborated with her subject to develop the rest of the piece’s content: “She told me what she sees and feels when she has an orgasm, and that’s what I tried to capture.” So Curti took the footage she had shot and rotoscoped it by hand, and then built the cerebral sequence with a peg board and animation paper, drawing and tracing over and over again to flesh out the fantasy.

Encouraged by her professors at Mount Allison, Curti has plans to evolve the unnamed masturbation project by collecting more camera footage and creating more animation. (She’s still looking for a good name, so fire away with suggestions.) In the nearer term, she’s working on another project that you can see if you happen to be making your way to Sappyfest this year (August 3rd to 5th, 2012). Hatched “just for fun because school is done for summer,” and in homage to one of her icons, Curti and two other local artists are putting together a tribute exhibit to commemorate their love of filmmaker John Waters. 

The two other artists are Nick Wilson — a fellow Mount Allison student who works in sculpture — and Joe Chamandy — who does “amazing drawings” and is also plays in a band called Astral Gunk. They’ve agreed that they’re all going to create some sort of flamingos to put up, and they’re also each creating something else, which they’ve been keeping a secret from one another until Sappyfest, when the show will be up at Little Armadillo on Lorne St. in Sackville. Curti will admit that she’s doing “large-scale paintings of Divine and John Waters as religious figures,” but not much else. 

Whatever Curti puts on those walls, bet on it being laced with strange, playful and unbridled impulses. 

Untitled (2012) | silkscreen on paper, 9” x 28”

All paintings by Amanda Curti. LP inner sleeve by Melanie Coles. Story by Eric Rumble. Buy Landmark from the Apollo Ghosts bandcamp page. 

***

PS: Sorry about the five-month gap between posts, folks. I landed a new full-time gig in January, and the adjustment period has been a bitch. Things are starting to even out now, and I’ll be producing three more record art pieces ASAP this summer: 

1] A brief-ish history of The Famines’ aesthetic, as crafted (and described) by the methodically enthralling Raymond Biesinger. 

2] The scoop on Cadence Weapon’s Hope In Dirt City cover image, created by Jody Zinner.

3] Origin stories for some of the strange creatures that adorn Clinton St. John’s Storied Hearts and the Three Assimilations.

Stay tuned!

Eric

    • #Apollo Ghosts
    • #landmark
    • #Mount Benson
    • #Amanda Curti
    • #Melanie Coles
    • #Mount Allison student art
    • #cover art
    • #cover
    • #lpwtf
    • #record art
    • #record cover
    • #LP Art
    • #LP cover
    • #Cover artist
    • #Robert Pollard
    • #Minutemen
    • #Double Nickels on the Dime
    • #Adrian Treacher
    • #Hastings Sunrise
    • #Forgotten Triangle
    • #Cedar Street
    • #Sappyfest
    • #Sackville
    • #collage cover art
  • 10 months ago
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Grimes + Claire Boucher = Visions’ ferociously playful head spaces

Grimes: Visions [Jan/2012] — CLAIRE BOUCHER SAYS she wanted the cover of her 3rd full-length Grimes recording to be “something very beautiful, and also very assaulting and violent, like the music.” She wanted the image to be zoomable — “like a Bosch painting” — and very movement-oriented. More than anything else, though, both the songs and their packaging had to be absolutely sincere. 

Boucher can certainly be candid about what she was going for musically. “I wanted to make something that reads like a symphony,” she explains. “It arches — it begins in a sort of meek but inspired way, becomes very powerful, and then becomes very sad and lonely. I want people to enjoy themselves when they listen to it, but in the end feel very distant.”

And the drawing she made for the cover definitely mines one of her main creative veins: an affinity for Mesoamerican style. “When I went to Mexico, I was actually really inspired by a lot of Aztec art. I went to the museum of anthropology and Teotihuacan. It was all so horrifying and elaborate. More similar to my own art than a lot of stuff I’ve seen, even just structurally, because they use lots of little images of screaming faces and strange patterns to make big elaborate pieces.” 

At the same time, Boucher says that “generally when I draw there is no concept, it’s just free form, I always improvise in whatever way feels best and that’s what I get.” Which sounds sort of like how she makes music too, having described a locked-in-her-bedroom recording process for Visions that involved tinkering and experimenting her way into the depths of sleep and natural-light depravation, self-isolating through the foggy and euphoric layers of her own songs.

Boucher says she usually draws during movie marathons, and that the Visions cover image was hatched with India ink, watercolour paper and “Ghost in the Shell II night, so I was thinking a lot about death and shit,” she says. “I do visual art in the same manner as music in that it’s intensive, but it’s not private at all. The album cover image took about 16 hours, I did it over two days. But it’s weird because I was sitting in my friend’s living room the whole time, so it was a much more social experience and there was a lot of feedback from my friends, and it was a bit different in that regard. At this point there is way less pressure for me to make visual art, so I only really do it out of love, whereas music has deadlines and pressures and stuff, so it’s not as free anymore. It used to be the opposite.”

This is probably why the prevailing influence on the Visions pieces is very personal — “my symbols,” Boucher calls them: the penetrating eyes (or lack thereof), the writhing textures, a weeping alien, the slanted hearts, flush roses and cushy bows, which apparently she’s been drawing since high school. “The eyeball was my first symbol and I use it in lots of ways all the time, but I also really like faces without eyes — which is why I’m attracted to skulls a lot. The alien head is my newest symbol. I have a tattoo of it now on my hand. It’s crying cuz, I dunno, I was sad at the time.”

Whatever mindset sparked the details, Boucher’s visuals are spiked with the same playful streak as her songwriting. The horizontal line of script atop Grimes on the cover says “I love” in Russian, and the two vertical lines are written in a conjured foreign tongue. “I’ve always been into fake writing on my art, particularly things that look kind of Japanese, because I love manga and anime poster art a lot,” she says. 

Jasper Baydala, who helped Boucher produce the packaging layout, added a few more hints of mischief. The pink block on the right side is actually the word Grimes “jokingly” copied and pasted over and over and over again — “We both thought that it looked good so we left it,” explains Baydala. (He also alludes, also jokingly, to the roots of that particular idea, apparently inspired by sharing a living space with Arbutus Records’ honcho Sebastian Cowan: “I hear the word ‘Grimes’ hundreds of times per day.”) 

Just as he did while producing the layouts for all of the Arbutus’ 2011 releases, Baydala hid a very small Ninja Turtle on the Visions packaging. And then there’s the giant pink alien head. Boucher had wanted to base her design on “another album cover that she liked, and we arranged the elements of her album cover to roughly match it.” For one of her departure points from aping this unnamed record (Baydala’s lips are sealed), Boucher suggested an alien head. A large-filter Google search quickly brought up the original alien head image, created by a then-anonymous artist, “who turned out to be a middle-aged man in Mississauga named Mark Khair, who makes alien heads in his spare time,” explains Baydala. “He was excited that we used it. It is a good alien head. I especially like that when we inflated it to put it on the back of the record, it became pixelated — that is the modern version of grain.”

Baydala says his favourite part of the Visions artwork is the fact that Khair’s alien head is so big on the back of the vinyl. “That is fantastic. It is hard to get away with something like that, and in the future Claire will not be able to get away with anything like that.” No matter how Boucher’s aesthetic ends up being affected by her popularity, Baydala puts her DIY sensibility nicely into context when he mentions the green bevelled lines he added to the packaging design. “I like the bevel because it is just like Photoshop. Maybe Grimes is distinctly Garageband.”

That said, Boucher’s Visions illustrations also show her visual art arsenal shifting to much the same trajectory as her music — embracing more risk, trusting her instincts, filling out the space of her canvases with idiosyncratic tangents. When she painted the piece that became the cover of 2009’s excellent Geidi Primes record, Boucher was just getting warmed up. “That was the first painting I ever really made, and one of my first ‘eyeball’ pieces, so it was sort of a revelatory experience,” she says. “Like, ‘Oh shit, art is way better if you use something besides a mechanical pencil!’ Plus, I realized that drawing on big paper is way more enjoyable and less tedious, and it looks better in real life.”

Even as her implements and materials evolve, thankfully it sounds like Boucher can’t help but maintain a mind-gripping art practice: “I remember not doing a lot of other important things in favour of doing that painting.” 

Images by Claire Boucher. Story by Eric Rumble. Buy Visions from Arbutus Records. 

    • #grimes
    • #visions
    • #claire boucher
    • #jasper baydala
    • #arbutus
    • #geidi primes
    • #lpwtf
    • #lp cover
    • #lp art
    • #cover
    • #cover art
    • #cover artist
    • #record cover
    • #record art
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Shoulda, woulda, coulda + 2011 = Cover art I wish I’d uncovered, but didn’t

IN LOVE AND life and (evidently) self-imposed free labour, there will always be the ones that got away. So in lieu of a half-assed year-end content rehash, here are 10 record covers that grabbed me by the eyeballs in 2011, but not with so much force that I just had to stalk their makers for the scoop on how, why, where, when, by whom and with-what-in-mind they were created. 

Please don’t hesitate to send me potty-mouthed notes about any great Canadian cover art that I’ve overlooked, or simply to share why you think LPWTF is the cat’s pyjamas. I hope you enjoyed this year’s stories — keep your eyes peeled for a bigger, better, broader tales in 2012. 

The Rural Alberta Advantage: Departing [Mar/2011] — Embedded in an uncertain journey, we lean into the blown-out-of-proportion void. Hopeful and harrowing, desolate and rich, light and dark. This is the most gorgeous place I don’t wanna be.

The Burning Hell: Flux Capacitor [May/2011] — Teasing out the motivations behind madness like this is the reason I started LPWTF. I can’t tell if Santa is being inhaled or hurled.

Dirty Beaches: Badlands [Mar/2011] — I did sneak in one very short e-mail exchange with Alex Zhang Hungtai about the cover of his eerie, smoldering, simple-yet-irresistibly stylish full-length record. But then it exploded, and he got preoccupied with the likes of GQ. 

The image was captured in his friend Mike Lau’s basement in NYC, and intended to ape old-school mug shots with “something that was iconic and minimal, impressionist even.” Hungtai also says the ghostly atmosphere “plays into the blues mythologies Badlands was based on,” and that the image was essentially made the same way he made the music for the LP, by cramming compelling ideas together. 

“I wanted people to have that cover burned into their minds when they saw it. Even though it does not have any titles or names on the cover, I wanted the image to be a standalone symbol that summarized the gist of the material: Spirits, possession, the devil, exorcism, exile, lingering ghosts from a lost time you can’t pinpoint.”

Hooded Fang: Tosta Mista [Jul/2011] — Imagine an every-luchadore-for-him-or-herself throwdown between these masked marauders. Now, imagine it as the main event at a Hooded Fang show. Has the band considered this? Could they, please? Would they need to concoct full costumes to match the masks, or have those already been made? How do you fit space for an amazing moustache onto the front of your luchadore mask? The questions and fantasies I could tap from this record might actually be impossible to exhaust. 

Timber Timbre: Creep On Creepin’ On [Apr/2011] — An indelible film noir pilgrimage of a record cover, appropriately from the band I’d want playing dark folk fables around the campfire while I worked up the nerve to go see what the hell that building is. 

Sandro Perri: Impossible Spaces [Oct/2011] — Between making sand angels or climbing those chocolate mountains, I’m not sure what I want to do more. Either way, I totally need to stop peeking through the grass and wander around in this cover art.

Feist: Metals [Oct/2011] — As if the scenery wasn’t lovely and enchanting enough, you can’t help but grin with tickled envy when you realize she’s secretly laid out on the giant F’s middle branch, soaking up that epic landscape. Better still, she dropped the first hint of all this with a paint-by-numbers gimmick. What happens if Leslie Feist lets too much awesome out of the bag too early in her career? 

Evangelista: In Animal Tongue [Sep/2011] — Another enigmatic and beautiful otherworld on the cover of a Constellation Records release. Man, do I want a hit of whatever she’s smoking.

Bry Webb: Provider [Nov/2011] — Primordial, murky, deceptively simple, oozing with raw textures and curves, bloody with metallic fissures, and imbued with the twinned illusion of soft and hard. Just like Webb’s songs about gripping into manhood.

Six Heads: Carboard Oracle [Nov/2011] — A small run record of disarmingly weird songs with creepy silk-screening on recycled cardboard for cover art? If I were going to try and fuck an LP from 2011 (and I guess technically I could, if it were a 7”), I’d almost definitely go after this one, and I’d almost certainly PE.

    • #Badlands
    • #Cardboard Oracle
    • #Departing
    • #Dirty Beaches
    • #Evangelista
    • #Feist
    • #Flux Capacitor
    • #Impossible Spaces
    • #In Animal Tongue
    • #LPWTF
    • #Metals
    • #Rural Alberta Advantage
    • #Sandro Perri
    • #Six Heads
    • #The Burning Hell
    • #cover
    • #cover art
    • #cover artist
    • #lp art
    • #lp cover
    • #record art
    • #record cover
    • #Bry Webb
    • #Provider
    • #Timber Timbre
    • #Creep On Creepin' On
    • #Hooded Fang
    • #Tosta Mista
    • #2011 records
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Komodo + Howie Tsui = Shadow Dance’s sexual self-cannibalizing mongrel

Komodo: Shadow Dance [May/2011] — TO BLEND WELL is to bend the mind. Oftentimes, the more layers and levels you can slyly mash together, the better. 

The intoxicating cocktail of lust, mysticism and deformity that graces multi-instrumentalist and DJ Komodo’s new-ish record only hints at the intricate web of crazy ideas, cultural stewing and synchronicity that led to its creation. Tip of the iceberg isn’t quite the right phrase to describe this cover art. Perhaps: tip of the tongue, hiding cavernous metres of digestion. 

Komodo (aka Matthew Burton) and Howie Tsui met years ago, through mutual university friends who all landed in Ottawa around Y2K or so. Burton soon ditched full-time work to concentrate on his music career in Montréal, which ebbed and flowed and flourished with his Komodo Dubs parties at SAT, and as he scoured the planet for new sounds and instruments for his DJ sets. In the fall of 2010, while collaborating with a choreographer on a contemporary dance piece for The MAI, he came across a crop of Tsui’s paintings in the gallery space that knocked his socks off, not least because he had no idea his old friend was even a visual artist. 

At the time, Tsui was exhibiting his spellbinding Horror Fables scrolls (below), but there were also some pieces in the show from a slightly older body of work called Of Shunga and Monsters. To try and put it succinctly, Tsui’s work fuses historical wisdom or mythology and antiquated styles with a sort of hyperactive 21st Century dream logic, all of it steeped heavily in Asian pop culture and echoes of his childhood imagination. 

Burton was smitten with everything he saw at The MAI, and went to check out a few more of Tsui’s paintings that were hanging at Yves Laroche gallery, where he immediately bought a piece from the Shunga series called “Carp Feed.” He loved how the small, powerful painting blended together so many ideas and emotions. “You see this kind of horrific looking fish monster thing eating these beautiful erotic women. It’s sexual and graceful and elegant and grotesque and sort of morbid all at once.” In the weeks and months after he bought it, and as he spent time with it while assembling the tracks for Shadow Dance at home, Burton realized that “to my ear, to my eye, the image felt very fitting to the music that I was working on.” 

Shadow Dance was hatched by a slowly-gestating collaboration with a choreographer named Tomomi Morimoto, which debuted at The MAI in March 2010. The piece is called Threshold, and its approach is heavily inspired and influenced by a form of Japanese contemporary dance called butoh. Burton says butoh attempts to strike a balance between opposing body languages and ideas, such as light and dark, and he notes that it “has nothing to do with anguish after the A-bomb,” in spite of what you might find online. “One of the things you’ll see is a fascination with death or darkness or fear. But it can also be very beautiful. Sometimes it’s very cryptic and minimal, and you kind of wonder what’s going on. Other times it can be very dramatic and full of dynamic movement.”

He also says it often depends on the particular choreographer, and that Morimoto’s work was very suggestive of creatures and played a lot with facial expressions. The music he was crafting for her moves was “really moody and abstract,” trying to capture some of the sexual tension and mental unravelling that he saw and felt in the choreography. (He says the track “Invisible Forces” on Shadow Dance is basically one of the core soundscapes from Threshold.) So as Burton mulled over Tsui’s “Carp Feed,” he began to see parallels in the things that all three of them blending together. 

“I look at the piece, and just the positions of the hands and shapes of the feet and the arms, and the postures of the bodies, to me it looked like they’re dancing, like they’re involved in some sort of ritualistic performance. And it kind of really captured some of the feelings we were playing with: madness, sexuality, the grotesque. Yet the first thing that I think when I look at it is that it’s beautiful, in spite of the potential horror or violence of it. It’s dark, and yet it doesn’t convey anger or depression. Are those people dying? We don’t know. If they’re making the transition into some next state of existence that involves not being alive in this body, they look like they’re okay with it — there’s some sort of acceptance as well.” 

On another level, Burton also liked that Tsui was playing with artistic traditions from Japan and China, making the sort of mash-ups that only people who’ve been exposed to Canadian-grade multiculturalism can. This gelled with what he was trying to do musically as well, especially in his DJ sets, which feature live instrumentation such as Australian didgeridoo, Turkish flute and Chinese percussion played over electronica, sampled from what he describes as world music. 

Burton started playing shows at The MAI in 2008, and a year later he began working with Morimoto on a 10-minute seed piece that would later evolve into the 50-minute Threshold show. Given the space’s mandate, it’s fitting that this is also where Tsui’s art came into the picture. “The MAI is really interested in people who are potentially cross disciplinary, but particularly where there’s more than one culture being addressed at the same time,” explains Burton of the fostering organization’s globe-trawling mash up of theatre, dance, music and art exhibitions. “The idea behind it is that, in a place like Montreal, you see lots of cross currents with different cultures, and it can be the source of new, inspirational ideas.”

Of Hybrids & Horror: Interview with Howie Tsui from Sarah Tue-Fee on Vimeo.

Preparing for his first solo show in Ottawa in 2006, on the heels of getting his first grant, Tsui did a series of paintings called Of Manga and Mongrels. He calls this series, the first he’d ever done all at once, “a rejection of the cute, saccharine, candy-coated imagery I was doing” in favour of more grotesque themes. 

As he was putting Manga together — which basically involved him creating two-layer collages by drawing over top of Hokusai manga pieces — an art zine called Faesthetic asked him to contribute to an issue whose theme was ‘Love & Death.’ So Tsui decided he’d apply the same technique to a shunga image and “push the grotesque thing a little further” to “make really freaky-ass monsters.” Shunga refers to a form of Japanese erotic art that became immensely, illicitly popular starting in the 1600s, but Hokusai’s “The Dream of the Fisherman’s Wife” from two centuries later is as good a place as any to start.

Tsui really liked the result, and began producing Of Shunga and Monsters next. He says this series “became more of a mental workout because the images are way more complex. They’re much more detailed and there’s a lot of components, so it was much trickier.” He’d printed and cut out a big stash of old shunga, and would work by taking one or two of them, “put them together and rotate them, overlap or cut off certain areas,” basically flip them around until he could “see an eye or a mouth or something. It’s very much a subconscious, looking-into-the-clouds kind of thing.”

Once he was happy with a blended composition, he’d use rubber cement to stick them face down on the bottom of a semi-opaque mylar surface, and then ink the top side. “So what happens is the collage on the backside is slightly recessed, and there’s an illusion of depth. I would ink what I see, sometimes recycle lines, fill some areas in, create textures in certain areas.”

Some pieces are paired because they use the same images in different configurations. Given their improvisational nature, it’s tough to pin down what exactly inspired “Carp Feed” or any of the other 17 or so Shunga pieces (most of which have actually been kept together). Tsui makes passing reference to the “Acrimboldo school” (after the Italian artist whose famous portraits are composed of painted fruit, flowers, fish and other non-facial items), maybe Brian Jungen’s masks made out of sneakers, and “a Japanese artist who does these portraits with all these little people in the face.” 

Inevitably, the work mines a deeper recess of Tsui’s imagination. “I have this weird, nostalgic, suspended adolescent thing, where everything I make has some sort of reverberation with warm fuzzy memories I have from being a kid,” he explains. “When I was living in Nigeria, my uncles in Hong Kong would send me all these really cool die cast Japanese transformer robots. I very much see this series inspired by that. There’s something transforming into something else, with these shifting components. One thing is two things, with all these components building up to a whole.”

In retrospect, Tsui thinks he mostly just wanted to exercise his technique and experiment with variations on a motif before moving back towards making epic narrative paintings again. “Now I have much more confidence with a brush, and that’s when I made my real jump away from a western, Euro-centric, heavy paint brush, physical style and went more to a lighter, Asian, painting-on-paper kind of style. It was a good detour so I could bump up my brush and line work skills, and it really pays off in the Horror Fables series that followed.”

Tsui began creating Horror Fables during a residency in Baie Saint Paul in 2008. Obviously the scrolls — made on large, thick sheets of mulberry paper, painted with Chinese pigments and long-handled brushes — represent an intensification of his attraction to the grotesque, albeit with a familiar, clever sense of mischief lurking between the lines. Astonishing landscapes ripple with deformities, demons and other unearthly beings, culled from Asian folk tales and ghost stories, the fantastical proverbs of his parents and horror movies he watched as a kid. By embellishing their ridiculousness in the form of dense, muted, gorgeous pastiches of gore and foreboding, Tsui aims to turn the idea of fear as an authoritative tool on its ear. 

He premiered the series at Carleton University Art Gallery in Ottawa in April 2009, and they’ve been received incredibly well at a handful of galleries across the country. Tsui particularly enjoyed showing them at The MAI, “because I’ve never presented it in another space with those fancy, barn-gate theatre lights. They were able to make the space really dark and really haunting, and I haven’t been able to recreate that anywhere else.” 

Not that he hasn’t tried. At his Horror Fables exhibits, Tsui paints simple, flowing, abstract shapes and gestural brushstrokes on top of large sheets of rice paper taped to the walls. He then tears off the paper and stains the areas around the remaining marks and textures with sulphur from matches, leaving a “lifeless body” of paper on the floor and the “writhing souls that serve as paranormal residue” on walls, perching like blood-flecked apparitions. He also used this technique to create the cover art for a record called No Ghost, released in 2010 by The Acorn, for whom Tsui used to play guitar. 

The video above is from Tsui’s summer 2011 show in Vancouver, called Celestials of Saltwater City. He also created a small army of wooden box projectors for exhibition visitors to play with and manipulate, so they could make his projected images interact on the gallery walls. Deploying this antiquated cinematic technology meant that he learned to build and debug the boxes, dealing with magnifying lenses, focal points, electrical wiring and other variables beyond his expertise. Similarly, the project he’s currently producing came from a curator asking Tsui to blend his style into another form and press his technical capabilities.

Collaborating with the Museum of Health Care in Kingston, he’s been commissioned to create three pieces that draw from the experiences of medical surgeons during the War of 1812. Enthralling in concept alone, one of them is a modified pinball machine, re-themed to explore the anatomical structure of the human body and the damage that battlefield medics dealt with in their day. Tsui is working with a pinball wizard/technician to replace the motherboard and ensure that all his graphical elements and triggered audio samples are operational.

Another of the pieces relies heavily on the anatomy lab at Queen’s University, where casts of donated bones and organs are being made by students to construct a huge sculpture. Tsui says it will feature “tweaked anatomy,” and that it takes some of its inspiration from a four-armed, musclebound Mortal Combat character named Goro. 

“It’s weird having people making stuff for you and just conceiving of it,” admits Tsui, who usually produces everything solo. “I wouldn’t have really made a jump this drastic if I wasn’t proposed a project with such thematic limitations, I guess. But slowly, I’ve been more trusting and more experimental in the way I’m moving into mediums and things I have no idea how to do, and am actually kind of shitty at.” 

At the same time, Tsui sees something of a full circle being realized, especially in the sense that he’s always been trying to blend strange realms into his work. “As I’m getting help from these people, I’m kind of being let into these subcultures, these tinkerers, hobbyists. It relates a lot to when I was first started making art, and I was really influenced by Otaku culture in Japan—people that are just obsessed with anime and manga. Now I’m seeing pinheads, these other bits of subculture that I didn’t know anything about. In a way, my work always kind of gravitates towards these very esoteric interest levels.”

All images by Howie Tsui. Story by Eric Rumble. Buy Shadow Dance from Sambal Records. 

    • #Komodo
    • #komodo dubs
    • #Matthew Burton
    • #Howie Tsui
    • #The MAI
    • #MAI gallery
    • #Yves Laroche
    • #Montreal
    • #Shadow Dance
    • #The Acorn
    • #Shunga and monsters
    • #manga and monsters
    • #horror fables
    • #cover art
    • #cover artist
    • #LP art
    • #LP cover
    • #record cover
    • #record art
    • #lpwtf
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Avatar Haphazardly unravelling the backstory behind record cover art collaborations by Canadian bands, performers and visual artists. Curated and created by Eric Rumble, a journalist and music binger who wishes he were still based in Montréal -- find me here: lpwtfer {at} gmail {dot} com.

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