Archive for April, 2009

The Other Side of a Smile

Friday, April 24th, 2009

other side of a smile on six gallery john felix christopher burch

This Saturday. Been waiting for this. Just on the strength of the piece that Christopher Burch has been working on on our walls here at the store I’m sure the mural they’re all working on down at OnSix is going to be crazy. The official line:

“The Other Side of a Smile is a multi media group show that celebrates the many facets of irony. The reasons why people would rather send in the clowns or just burn the big top down as opposed to sitting in quiet despair. The other side is the intersection where a sinking feeling meets survival, where laughter and laceration take turns on the swing set. It is where the phrase “its funny because of the strangeness” comes to light.”

From John Felix Arnold III :

It will be at the OnSix Gallery located in Club Six at 60 6th St. between Mission and Market streets in San Francisco. It will be held from 6:30pm until the club closes around 1:30/2am. We have put a lot into this and hope everyone that can make it will come. There will be fresh artwork for sale, Tshirts, zines… So come and do it up with us. It will the first of many great Otherside of a Smile events to come, so help us kick it off with a BANG!!!!

It is also going to be Aima the Dreamer’s birthday celebration and the first time we have worked with Night Prowl Mike Gao, and both promise to please your ears.

All the artwork is in and we will be painting a new mural in the space for a few days before the show to please your eyes in addition to each artists individual work.

See you there!

Shawn Mortensen R.I.P.

Saturday, April 18th, 2009

babylon falling shawn mortensen out of mind shaun roberts

I’m writing this from the road, but just want to get this out there. R.I.P. Shawn. Below is just a short description of my short experience meeting and hanging out with the man.

We hosted Shawn for an exhibition and talk here at Babylon Falling last December. To have Shawn come out to this tiny little bookstore and not only exhibit, but also give a talk, is testament to just how real he is. No cool guy shit at all. As a long-time fan of his photography, I was and still am so humbled to have hosted him here at the store.

After months of back and forth over logistics, we finally found a date that would work for both of us. Shit was crazy tight with Shawn flying in for the show and flying out the next morning. He walked in the store at 5pm the day of the exhibit with multiple poster tubes and photo boxes under his arms. The show was hung in time (thanks to Alex, Chris, and Kensey) and the talk he gave was full of hilarious anecdotes. He answered every question asked in a way that diverted attention from the celebrity aspect of his work, and he repeatedly underscored the importance of time spent as well as the primacy of relationships with his subjects.

After the talk he did a little book signing, taking the time to do a bubble throw up in each book he signed. It was a really dope opening reception, good vibes and good conversations.

He was staying at my and Kensey’s apartment and we hung out and bullshitted for a couple hours that night. We took him out to breakfast the next morning and over way too many cups of coffee Shawn had me and Kensey dying laughing with some of the funniest Jamaica stories I’ve ever heard. His generosity (with his time and his words) was not lost on me and the ease with which he was able to relate to us sincerely, without pretension and without the awkward formality that so often accompanies these type of interactions, is definitely a talent that few people have.

So I knew Shawn Mortensen only in passing but he made such an indelible impression on my life that I’m guessing for those that knew him well that isn’t a surprise. He’s not someone I’ll soon forget. R.I.P. homie. Condolensces to all family and close friends.

Here are a few pictures that Shaun Roberts took at the opening that I think capture the energy of the night. You can see more from the night on our events page as well.

babylon falling shawn mortensen out of mind shaun roberts

babylon falling shawn mortensen out of mind shaun roberts

babylon falling shawn mortensen out of mind shaun roberts

babylon falling shawn mortensen out of mind shaun roberts

babylon falling shawn mortensen out of mind shaun roberts

babylon falling shawn mortensen out of mind shaun roberts

babylon falling shawn mortensen out of mind shaun roberts emory douglas
Shawn, Emory Douglas, and me

babylon falling shawn mortensen out of mind shaun roberts

‘babylon falling shawn mortensen out of mind shaun roberts

We still have a big stack of signed copies of his 2007 book Out of Mind in the store. The book is a must have for even the casual fan of his photography. I’ll quote myself from a few months back talking about the significance of the book:

At a time in my life when learning how to roll a good spliff was my greatest accomplishment Shawn was in Chiapas, Mexico documenting the Zapatista uprising. Prolific and ever relevant, he has enjoyed a long career of consistent success with an uncanny ability for being in the right place at the right time, and is always positioned at the forefront of the culture. The result of 20 years of portraiture work, Out of Mind, is testament to the depth and breadth of his experience. When seen together, the seemingly unconnected portraits reveal themselves as equal parts of an ongoing commentary on our modern life. Kate Moss next to some Jamaican rudeboys, Paris Hilton beside Dr. Dre with a gun to his head…

A few of the tributes posted around the internet so far:

Vibe.com

Supertouchart.com

Rockers NYC Interview with Shawn

aphotoeditor.com

Drew Tewksbury

Store Closed This Weekend

Thursday, April 16th, 2009

The store will be closed this Friday and Saturday (04/17 & 04/18). I’ll be out of state for the weekend but the store will reopen and return to regular hours on Tuesday (04/21). Sorry for any inconvenience.

Shaun has been remastering all of our studio visits to HD and we’ve been putting them up on Vimeo one by one. You can check them out on the Babylon Falling Vimeo page at vimeo.com/babylonfalling or on Shaun’s page at vimeo.com/triplewide

Above is the remastered version of our studio visit with Emory Douglas which we did in January 2008 as a lead up to Emory’s show here at the store that February.

Also Infinite Spark Jam recently put up their video of Emory Douglas speaking at our Underground Papers exhibit this past February, 2009. You can check it out here

A few links…

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

This is a beautifully done video by Alexander Tarrant and Shaun Roberts for WalrusTV. Shaun shot the piece and Alexander conceptualized and edited it. The interview was done about one year ago here in the store but I feel exactly the same way about the store, the location, the intended core customers, etc. The only thing that I would add now is the importance of building and nurturing community. I swear that this was the only time I’ve ever use the word ‘yearning’ with a straight face.

Also just wanted to say thanks to everyone that has done farewell articles/posts so far.

SF Weekly

SFist.com - No love for the cornballs in the comment section.

Publisher’s Weekly

FunCheapSF.com

Examiner.com

Upper Playground

Juxtapoz.com

dayofthedreamweavers.com

Big Up Magazine

The sale is still going strong. We’re completely sold out of our graphic novels, the fiction is thinning out, and all the non-fiction section signs are getting closer and closer to each other, but everything is still 50% off and there’s still no filler.

And lastly I wanted to point you to a mention of Christopher Burch’s show, Folk Blood Water Babies, over at SF Weekly. Click here.

Alongside framed and unframed work, the artist has drawn on the walls of the bookstore and gallery, so that entering is like walking into a pop-up book. Burch favors a Pop Surrealist drawing style and a Goya-esque cast of figures in the process of transformation. A great whirling Mickey Mouselike head conjures up a cathartic shaking-off of dismal Disney “myth,” while an abject-looking woman giving birth to a devilish red dynamo invokes sex, death, and labor all in one. The work celebrates the grotesque in its most ancient tradition, as a spiritual totem of life.