Synopses & Reviews
The Clayton Brothers' idiosyncratic paintings and constructions have won them acclaim as unique if twisted visual storytellers. Their art collaborations have been seen in movies such as Monkeybone, music videos for Oasis, and print campaigns for the X Games. The Most Special Day of My Life showcases some of their best projects, including Tim House, a 6' x 8' x 13' church/schoolhouse installment with bizarre portraits of people real and imagined clinging together inside. Designed to be sampled rather than read front to back, this sumptuously illustrated book tours the work, and minds, of two masters of postmodern art.
Synopsis
The Clayton Brothers' idiosyncratic paintings and constructions have won them acclaim as unique if twisted visual storytellers.
Synopsis
Following in the painted footsteps of Nagarya, Na , mah, the woman warrior, has a body with all necessary things in the necessary places and planty of it. Drifting in a world where sexual stimulation is happening at every moment, where creatures of all sorts couple in acrobatic poses, where body parts are enhanced to better satisfy sensual longings, Naimah keeps her cool while competing for the title of Hottest babe in the Universe. Magical warriors, spells and curses, and large quantities of Hot Sex make for one of the widest titles ever at Priaprism Press.
Synopsis
The Most Special Day of My Life is a collection of works by visionary artists Rob and Christian Clayton, both as collaborators and individuals. In tandem, they are known as The Clayton Brothers, producing dynamic, extemporaneous, yet purposeful images, sought after for commercial use as well as by private collectors. Their work is narrative, autobiographical, ethereal and subliminal; culled from memories of suburban decay, sprinkled with the sour irony of truth. The Clayton Brothers' approach to painting, drawing, collage, and installation is a narrative feeding frenzy; one brother beginning a painting, then handing it off to the other for his interpretation. Back and forth the brothers work; twisting, elaborating, reinterpreting, editing and redirecting each others' marks. They never enter a painting with pre-conceived notions of what the end result will be.