April 25, 2008

New York Art Beat!

Craig Mod
Online publishing

The Gotham doppelgänger of Tokyo Art Beat — New York Art Beat — is live! Congrats to everyone involved! I'll definitely be using this next month while I'm in New York.




April 22, 2008

Art and neighborhoods

Bruce Rutledge
Life in the US

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Hill Rats and other Seattle denizens, come to Kornerhaus this Friday for a discussion about how to keep the arts alive in fast-gentrifying Capitol Hill (and all of north Seattle for that matter). I'll be on the panel. Should be fun. For more info, directions, et cetera, check out the Design Kompany website.




April 21, 2008

Art Space Tokyo Tokyo launch party TONIGHT!

Craig Mod
Art Space Tokyo | Life in Japan | Readings | The industry | The lit world

Just a friendly reminder: tonight is the Tokyo launch party for Art Space Tokyo. Doors open at 7pm at The Pink Cow, located between Omotesando and Shibuya. You can download a flyer with a map.

Ashley, Takahashi and I will be holding a presentation on the production, editorial and design of the book starting at 8:30pm. The party itself will go on until at least 11pm.

Also, the Tokyo retail price of the book is ¥3400 but we'll have them available tonight for ¥3000. In summary: excellent food, free entry, cheap books, engaging presentation, sexy literary people and LOTS OF BOOKS. See you there!




April 19, 2008

Things literary and otherwise X

Craig Mod
Things literary and otherwise

It's been over two months since my last Things Literary post, so I thought I'd throw a new one up on this windy Sunday afternoon:

BBC's Stephen Fry has a wonderful one hour documentary on the Gutenberg press. People tend to forget the press is the coming together of (at least) three or four new and critical inventions. When you really consider the ingenuity and implications of these pieces of the puzzle, the whole is really quite breathtaking. Also, watching these guys set lead type by hand made me think typesetting Art Space Tokyo maybe wasn't that hard after all.

An edgy jab at "free beer" geeks by Steven (note to self: the world doesn't need any more babies named Steve) Poole on giving away your work (in his case, his writing) for free:

If the breathless advocates of “the free distribution of ideas” are serious, they need either a) to come up with a realistic proposal as to how I am to keep feeding myself while giving the fruits of my labours away for free; or b) come out and say honestly that they don’t think any such thing as a “professional writer” ought to exist, and that I should just get a job like anyone else.3 In a way, I’d respect people who came out and said the second thing. What I don’t respect is people who can’t see that those are the choices.




April 17, 2008

Envisioning Japan at Brooklyn Museum

Bruce Rutledge
Art Space Tokyo | Kuhaku, the book

kelts3.jpgWant to get a sneak peek of our latest title, Art Space Tokyo? It's not officially in bookstores until September, but it's already creating a buzz in Tokyo, and rumor has it that Roland Kelts, who will be speaking at the Brooklyn Museum's Envisioning Japan event this Saturday, just may have a brand new copy of the book with him.

Roland's essay on Takashi Murakami is not to be missed. Also, this is the fifth book Craig Mod has designed for Chin Music Press, and I believe his goal of creating a literary object may have finally been realized to his satisfaction (he's a tough guy to please). The book is a gem, with extraordinary insight into Tokyo's contemporary art scene, so go have a look at the Brooklyn Museum this Saturday.

Of course, the book is available over our website, and pre-orders are going out this week and early next week (if you're in Tokyo, don't miss the party), but if you like to leaf through a book before buying, you'll have to wait until it appears in bookstores in Tokyo this May and in the US this late summer or go find Roland at the Brooklyn Museum this Saturday.

Roland, many of you will remember, is author of Japanamerica, a fascinating look at the transpacific mobius strip formed around Japanese pop culture, and contributor to the book that started us on this crazy venture, Kuhaku & Other Accounts from Japan.




April 17, 2008

Transpacific metamorphoses

Bruce Rutledge
Japan Infusion | Life in Japan | Life in the US

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Strange things can happen when things and people cross the Pacific. Fast food seems to grow in size and calories, as Taichi Kitamura relates in his latest column for Japan Infusion. Who knew that McDonald's burgers in Japan are bigger and more caloric than their counterparts in the US? Is this the equivalent of Phillip Morris pushing cigarettes on foreign countries, or are the Japanese just less uptight about fast food?

Also, koto master Elizabeth Falconer talks about how her career as a koto player flourished once she returned from Japan to the US and fell upon an innovative way to incorporate the instrument in children's stories. Check out the interview with Elizabeth here, and if you are in the Seattle area, check her and her husband John, a shakuhachi player, at the Japanese garden in the University of Washington arboretum every Sunday afternoon while the weather is good.




April 16, 2008

Worst corporate word of the day

Bruce Rutledge
English usage

And the nominee is ... flexibilising. As in:

R&D spin offs with the appropriate investment strategy can make an important contribution in flexibilising the company's internal R&D and therefore increasing productivity.

As my daughter would say, OMG! Ugly, unnecessary and oh so corporate. Brought to you by a German firm called Festel Capital that obviously has to tweak its translation software.




April 15, 2008

Chin Music Press at Hugo House tonight

Bruce Rutledge
Business | Noteworthy Publishers | Small press watch | The industry | The lit world

The Hugo House is putting on a panel about small presses in the Pacific Northwest tonight, and I'll be part of it. Hope you can come on by.

Here's the dope:

The Hugo House InPrint Series presents:

Why Publish With an Independent or Small Press?
An Evening with Northwest Independent Press Publishers


Tuesday, April 15th, 2008, 7:00 - 9:00
Richard Hugo House, 1634 11th Ave. Seattle
Admission $3 members/$5 non-members

Why Publish With an Independent or Small Press?

The Northwest features a handful of excellent independent press publishers who are producing interesting work and attracting positive critical attention and awards.

Tonight editors and publishers from several publishers will be on hand to explain the advantages of publishing with an independent small press and how to go about it. Our speakers will cover the editing and business side of small press, from queries and pitches to editorial preferences and distribution.

Small press publishers can serve audiences that aren't normally served by larger publishers who can only publish very commercial work, allowing them to get away from publishing only work that appeals to the largest common denominator of readers. Once books have been published and received positive reviews, they often attract the attention of larger publishers for broader distribution. All of your questions will be answered and you'll come away with valuable information and contacts for publishing.

OUR PANEL:

Black Heron Press: Jerry Gold, publisher and editor-in-chief

Chin Music Press: Bruce Rutledge, journalist and author

Fantagraphics: Eric Reynolds, editor

Aqueduct Press: L. Timmel Duchamp, author, publisher and editor

Payseur and Schmidt: Jacob McMurray, publisher

Wood Works Press: Paul Hunter, publisher and editor

The InPrint Series is a quarterly forum designed to connect writers with agents, publishers and publishing industry experts. The mission of Richard Hugo House is to build a vital learning community that develops and sustains practicing writers doing essential work. (206) 322-7030




April 07, 2008

Art Space Tokyo — Tokyo release party!

Craig Mod
Art Space Tokyo


Art Space Tokyo — Tokyo Release Party
Tuesday, April 22nd from 7pm to 11pm
The Pink Cow
(6 minute walk from Omotesando station exit B2)

Come join us as we celebrate the Tokyo release of Art Space Tokyo! There'll be DJs and special guests and short but vibrant and mind-blowing presentations about Art, Life, Books, Love, Water, Sexuality and Galleries.

As always, this literary event is graciously hosted by The Pink Cow. An establishment which, without a doubt, serves up some of the most gut pleasin' Mexicana style burritos and curries in Tokyo.

The event is only two weeks away so mark your calendars! And hope to see all you (Tokyo dwellers) there!




April 06, 2008

Confessions of a canned-coffee collector

Bruce Rutledge
Coffee Mondays

cc-book.jpegMikio Yamazaki, once an avid canned-coffee collector, wishes he could dream of nubile coeds when he drifts off to sleep. However, it's cans of coffee that speak to him when he's in a subconscious state — or more specifically, cans of coffee, 8mm projectors and urban ruins. Why, you may ask. To find out, read the latest installment from our beloved Canned Coffee site, the urban response to cowboy poetry.




April 03, 2008

CMP & 101Tokyo

Craig Mod
Book fairs | Japan market | Marketing

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Starting from yesterday, April 3rd, Chin Music Press is selling some of our books at the 101Tokyo international art fair near Akihabara. I stopped by for the opening preview on Wednesday night and I have to say I was very impressed. The design of the exhibition space, by POINT Architects in Tokyo (with whom we share office space at co-lab) is excellent. They've managed to convert a low ceiling area (200 square meters or so?) in an unused middle school into a very formidable exhibition space. The fluorescent lighting of doom is still there, but they've accented it with track lighting built into all the booths. The end result is a bright, warm space with a lot of energy. There are some excellent pieces on display and it runs until Sunday the 6th, so hop on over.

Believe it or not, this is currently Tokyo's only international art fair. This is really surprising (or maybe just sad?) considering how mature the Tokyo art world is. It's also worth noting that China's market, while much younger than the Japanese, is having many high-profile international art fairs. I attended the Shanghai biennale last September and I have to say it was impressive -- both in scope of work, range of galleries and the space in which it was held.

From the warmth of reception and success in execution, it looks like 101Tokyo is a first but formidable step in kicking the Japanese art market back in the ass, getting foreign eyes (and wallets) interested in the Tokyo scene again and helping to break up some of the stiffness art fairs in Tokyo seem to carry with them.

We have interviews with the 101Tokyo founders, as well as Tokyo Art Fair coordinator, Misa Shin in our Art Space Tokyo book. AST also covers some thoughts on the Chinese market and how Japan should react / integrate / respond to this surge in interest towards Asian art.




April 03, 2008

The Butterfly quickie book tour in pictures

Bruce Rutledge
Goodbye Madame Butterfly | Bookstores | Readings

Sumie&Yuko.jpgSumie Kawakami's quickie North American book tour (two stops: Get Lost Travel in San Francisco and Elliott Bay Books in Seattle) went extremely well. These were her first readings in North America, and of course, they were done in English, her second language. Sumie actually didn't read from the book; she gave a spirited talk about how the project came together and then fielded a slew of questions (in both cities) from people in the audience. In Seattle, Yuko Enomoto, who translated most of Butterfly, opened the evening with a dramatic reading of the climactic scene in "Red Circles."

The tour marked a first for Sumie, and also a first for Chin Music, because it was our premiere event at Elliott Bay Books, one of America's great indie bookstores. What follows are a few snaps of Sumie and Yuko in action (From the top: Yuko & Sumie in front of Elliott Bay Books; Sumie talks at Elliott Bay; Yuko reads from "Red Circles"; Sumie talks at Get Lost Travel).


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Continue reading "The Butterfly quickie book tour in pictures"


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