Hardcover, 34 pages, measures 7.5 x 10.25 inches.
A Tiger in the Land of Dreams is the first English-language edition of a legendary picture book from 1984. Tiger Tateishi, well-known in the worlds of art and comics, takes us on a journey through a surreal land with Torakichi, a constantly-morphing green tiger. The artist saw this strange tiger as a combination of an animal and a plant. Suitable for all ages, but this is the type of book you buy for the dreamy artwork.
"It may be time for you to take a trip to a strange land above the clouds where the tigers are green with blue stripes. It’s calming and odd and makes you feel like you have entered a dream. And, actually, you have entered the dream of Torakichi the Tiger. Torakichi oozes out of his translucent cube (of ice?), splashes in a pond, then transforms into a daruma-san, a fearsome looking god of luck without eyelids or limbs. There are Dali-esque adventures with Torakichi’s tail, and Escher-like stairs and mazes to wonder at."--Stephanie Tournas, Youth Services Book Review
“There’s no escaping the dream as long as this book is open.”--Yukiko Hiromatsu, author of Japanese Picturebooks: 100 Years, 100 Illustrators, 100 Books
Pencil Magazine Issue 0
Softcover, 88 pages, measures 6 x 9 inches.
Pencil Magazine is a printed publication featuring images and text created entirely with graphite pencils on paper. Contributors include: Zack Barowitz, Paul Brainard, Karen Capraro, Edward Carey, David Wade Evans, Renée Gertler, Matthea Harvey, Robby Herbst, Jeffrey Kastner, Adam J.B. Lane, Michael James Lewis, Reuben Margolin, Nick Naber, Jefferson Navicky, Tiersa Nureyev, Erik Parra, Verandah Porche, Ben Potter, Onnesha Roychoudhuri, David Sax, Diana Shpungin, H. R. Smith, Samaya Snibbe, Scott Snibbe, Sasha Wizansky, and Elizabeth Zechel.
The magazine is 6" x 9" and features 88 pages of original artwork and writing, printed sustainably in Maine.
Each copy comes with a removable dust jacket that folds out to be an 18" x 24" poster featuring artwork by Renée Gertler.
Pencil Magazine Issue 1
Softcover, 128 pages, measures 6 x 9 inches.
The theme is "Attention" and 29 artists and writers explored attention using graphite on paper. We are very excited to share the surprising, thought-provoking, and beautiful contributions that make up this timely issue.
The magazine is 6" x 9" and features 128 pages of original artwork and writing. The Issue One cover art is by Brian Lutz. The 28 (!) other contributors are: Julia Arredondo, Robert Brinkerhoff, Lauren Camp, Annika Earley, Christie George, Anne Gibson, Ignacio Henríquez, Samara Kupferberg, Wendy MacNaughton, Seán McElhenney, Doug McNamara, Emma Murray, Dana Nathanson, Sarah Pedry, Ben Pond, Kenny Rivero, Alice Ro, Eric Rodenbeck, Jeannie E. Roberts, Onnesha Roychoudhuri, Andrea Scher, Peter Schmidt and the Friends of Attention, Giorgia Scioratto, Neva Kares Talladen, Ling-Wen Tsai, Rowboat Watkins, Suzanne Wise, and Dominika Wrobleska.
Pencil Magazine Issue 2
Softcover, 152 pages, measures 6 x 9 inches.
The magazine is 6" x 9" and features 152 (!) pages of original artwork and writing.
The Issue Two cover art is by Monica Larson.
The contributors are: Kristin Albrecht, Diana Baltag, Philip Brou, Joey Bruce, Raffaele Capasso, John Caserta, Saranya Chandrasekaran, Yu-Ching Chiu, Ariel Courage, Bogna Czurczak, Putri Early, Edoardo De Falchi, Wendy Drexler, Grace Dvorak, Charlotte Fleming, Nabiha Ghani, Din ne di, Alison Griffin, Ron Hotz, Nouran Husain, Rebecca Jansson, Herin Kim, Joanne Lam, Monica Larson, Arel Lisette, Brian Lutz, Olivia Mae, Fiona McCrae, Rick Moody, Mallory Murphy, Melissa Meyer, Neil Neill, Viktoriia Pek, Pat Peralta, Amy Jean Porter, Maia Pujara, Jabeen Qadri, Connie Saems, Sarah Shaw, Amanda Stern, Stephanie Tartick, Tyti, Sarah Thigpen, Weef, Ro Williams, Amelia Wiygul
Excerpt from Pencil Magazine: Here at Pencil Magazine, we focus on all the kinds of marks that can be made in graphite. But atop many pencils sits another essential technology — the eraser. If pencils represent the infinite possibilities of creation, then erasers represent the option to change course. Revisions are as much a part of the *work* of art as mark-making. In this issue, 46 (!) artists and writers from around the globe tackle erasers/erasing/erasure in drawings, essays, comics, and other text-image experiments.
Kitchen Table Magazine - Number 6: The Pizza Issue
Softcover, 120 full-color pages, measures 7.5 x 9.5 inches.
OOEY-GOOEY, BREADY, SAUCY, CRISPY, CHEESY, CHEWY. Whether you stay pure and only worship the Virgin Margherita or whether you’re an adrenaline junkie who will enthusiastically order a take-and-bake white sauce pie topped with clams, you want—nay, you need—to chow down on Kitchen Table Magazine # 6: The Pizza Issue.
One of the most lovable forms of food, pizza is the staple of late-night work and kid-friendly sports practice celebrations, fuel for drunken nights and stoned days, a salve for hungover mornings, a bribe for the friends who helped you move. It’s convenience food after a long day, or a divine meal worthy of many pilgrimages; a blank canvas for cultural masterpieces.
Whether it’s a recipe passed down through the generations or one created yesterday and served with love to a chosen family, food draws upon our roots and allows us to honor and learn from the past to savor the present and grow in the future.
Kitchen Table Magazine - Number 7: The Future Issue
Softcover, 120 full-color pages, measures 7.5 x 9.5 inches.
THE FUTURE IS COMING! From the wreckage of late-stage capitalism, Kitchen Table Magazine reimagines Food and the Future. We talk with a Who’s Who of bakers and beekeepers and farmers and chefs in a sprawling survey about our collective journey into the great unknown, and what and how we might be eating in the future.
Things are so weird out there, we can’t accurately predict next week, let alone ten or twenty years down the road. And yet, here at Kitchen Table, we believe in a brighter future and see the potential for resistance and change that exists within ourselves and our communities. So in this world where the future is so uncertain, The Future Issue serves up a feast of ideas, stories, and art to help us imagine what’s next. Join us in shaping the future—one page, one meal, and one conversation at a time.