We've got it all right here, folks! Everything that's ever been written up, photographed, and discussed on the Sad Mag website. Enjoy browsing our archives!



 

Self-Portrait
Cole combed his hair just for Sad Mag

Small prairie towns are no place for a fervid skateboarder. “The roads are crappy and there are no hills,” says ColeNowicki of his hometown Lac la Biche, Alberta.

The 24-year old came to Vancouver four years ago in pursuit of greener pastures (AKA smoother concrete) and settled in the Commercial Drive neighbourhood—in great proximity to the city’s skateparks, but also in prime people-watching territory.

In September 2013, Cole started documenting his “run-ins, pass-bys and overhears” with Vancouverites—capturing their quips and quirks, using them as a platform for reminiscence or introspection. He posts 2 or 3 original sketches each week on his Tumblr, “Portraits of Brief Encounters.” It’s what might happen if you placed Humans of New York in Vancouver, and replaced its photos and overt sincerity with a sharpie and a healthy dose of irony. Cole’s keen observations and wry sense of humour make Portraits a resonant visceral experience. The result is poetry, both written and visual.

“I’ve always liked making things—drawing painting, making figurines out of twist ties. And I like storytelling so this combination of art and text seemed like a natural progression,” he explains.

BriefEncounters Gå Bajs

Inspired by fellow skateboarder and contemporary artist Ed Templeton, Cole loves the connection between skateboarding and art: “Skateboarding is my passion—the longest relationship I’ve ever been in—but it’s also where I gather creative inspiration.” He combines the two on his skate/art site: sundaydrivedigest.com

Cole will be creating an original sketch for Sad Mag once a week, but in between you can follow his Brief Encounters project on Tumblr and Instagram.

BriefEncounters Matter of Convenience

BriefEncounters The Stranger BriefEncountersCrowdsourcing #2

Ola Volo is a Vancouver transplant whose intricate illustrations address the personal, the animal, the urban and the organic. Her penwork has been gracing walls, books, posters and more in Vancouver, carrying with her traditional Russian and Polish patterning and myth. Her technique blends the improvisational and the precise, and places the animal alongside human in central importance. This ties in wonderfully to our latest issue, Vanimaux, and so I met with Ola at her studio/apartment to discuss her style and inspirations.

Maegan Thomas: Tell me about how the animals in your pieces act as communicators.

Ola Volo: If I want to get a message across, or put a certain feel to a story, from the patterning of the animals come the personalities, the era they fall in – sometimes I draw from Polish roots or Russian pattern making, sometimes I draw things from Native art to give a Canadian feel. For me, and hopefully for others, the animals create a certain state of mind and put childhood storytelling back into peoples lives.

The feeling I want comes first, for example in this piece [indicating her 24 foot piece Baba Yaga, Ludmila and the Sea] who would be the heroic animal to get the heroine through her journey? I chose the wolf which represents power, strength to me personally – it might not even look like a wolf exactly but it comes from the gesture, the feeling, the size. Animals have so much personality; I want to balance the two as I don’t think a human is more significant than an animal. Like, with the swan [in the piece City, pictured], they are holding each other, they are the same size and take the same focus.

MT: Your style is very distinctive, how did it evolve?

OV: I’ve been in art classes since I was a little girl, and I have always been a very detail oriented person when drawing, ever since I can remember, and I’ve been doing illustration for a long time. But the focus on the storytelling is recent.

Pattern making is really addictive, you can’t stop, once you start it: it pieces together as if you’re sewing or knitting, this is the pattern I have to follow.

MT: It’s meditative?

OV: Definitely.

MT: Why not use digital, what is it about inking that you love?

OV: I like the idea of the traditional process actually having paper and pen ready to go, having that space for mistakes – I could do the work digitally as well but it’s not about the perfection, it’s about the imperfections of the patterns, the inconsistencies.

I do plan the composition of the piece, I plan it out and I do a lot of sketching and I have a lot tracing pads but if I look at it and if it doesn’t feel organic or natural I can’t start inking. I need to get to a point where it feels natural and looks like it flows. But once I start inking it just comes, it’s spontaneous; it’s in ink so when you make a mistake; you have to make it work as you can’t go back. It’s one mark following another.

Baba Yaga is my first big digital piece where black and white is by hand and the colouring is digital, accenting the darkness and lightness which goes along with the tone of the piece. I’m planning to do more of that, it’s a nice balance between hand drawn and digital.

MT: Any particular muses?

OV: The Brothers Grimm, they really bring me back to my childhood. And bears are the big thing for me, they are powerful, friendly, yet when you put them in the city space the relationship changes.

I studied in Rotterdam and they really push their artists to collaborate and combine to see what comes out, I never saw that here in Vancouver until I came back and now the city is pushing for it now. I did four years of graphic design at Emily Carr, so I like to collaborate on work, and challenge myself with poster making, book illustration, movie posters. But recently, I said to myself I need something new, needed to push my comfort zone when it comes to art. So I collaborated with my friend Mark [Illin] on a piece called Traffic. He is also very detailed oriented, and does ink work but his style is really logical, planned out while my work is more organic. The combination of our views brought something new.

MT: The city seems to be a big inspiration too. Compared to other urban cities, is Vancouver more successful at blending urban and animal life?

OV: Vancouver is such a different city than any other. I’m not sure if it’s blending perfectly but we just make it work because there’s just so much of wildlife. I’ve never been in a place where wildlife plays such a major role in the city; like raccoons and bears, they have a reputation here, hanging out in suburban backyards. I like that relationship we have, even in our urban culture, we come in contact with these animals; bears, swans, racoons, we still face animals in Vancouver’s unique urban environment.

Check out Ola Volo online, and in the next issue of Sad Mag where she’ll apply her signature style to the topics of glamour and performance. She’s also on posters, buses, skateboards and skin all around Vancouver. Viva la illustracion!

About Alannah: I am from North Vancouver and went to Emily Carr University for a BFA in Photography. After that I studied Art History at Concordia University in Montreal. My comics ‘New Ways to Fail’ are a fairly new undertaking and so far have been exhibited in a few shows out east. Currently I am shuffling between Toronto and and Vancouver.

See more of Alannah’s comics at her website, New Ways to Fail.

About Alannah: I am from North Vancouver and went to Emily Carr University for a BFA in Photography. After that I studied Art History at Concordia University in Montreal. My comics ‘New Ways to Fail’ are a fairly new undertaking and so far have been exhibited in a few shows out east. Currently I am shuffling between Toronto and and Vancouver.

See more of Alannah’s comics at her website, New Ways to Fail.

Clement has a portfolio case full of bits and pieces, old woodprint scraps, and ink and paint swatches as a kind of storehouse of materials. “I like the idea that bits of discarded pieces of paper can regain value and take on a new role. I love the thrill of finding exactly the right piece. It is through this layering process that my drawings come to life. The anatomically correct beetle escapes the mundane realm of ‘textbook drawing,’ and escapes the flat surface of the paper too. Through my flowing lines and vibrant colours, I hope to give my beetle, bird or tree, personality.”

Sarah Clement, interviewed by Carmen Mathes for Sad Mag #10

Get your issue at our release party, August 2nd, 2012!

On August 2nd, join Sad Mag at the Gam & Remington Galleries (located side-by-side at 110 E Hastings @ Columbia) for an incredible group show to celebrate the release of Sad Mag #10, VANIMAUX. 

The theme of the issue (“Food. Fur. Foraging.”) was inspired by the first Vanimaux show, held in October 2009 at the AMS Art Gallery.

The exhibition includes photographs, illustrations, and installations by local artists: Jeneen Frei Njootli, Jeff Dywelska, Sarah Clement, Julie Andreyev, Angela Fama, David Ellingsen, Monika Koch, Rachelle Simoneau, Cody Brown, Lenkyn Ostapovich, Everything Co. and others.

Come drink local brew, see the latest issue, and take a look at our examination of Food, Fur, and Foraging in Vancouver.

Vancouver. Animals. VANIMAUX.

VANIMAUX II
Gam Gallery & Remington Gallery (110 E Hastings)
7:00PM-11:00PM
RSVP on Facebook
Official Afterparty: The Pride Ball at the Cobalt (917 Main St)

Poster by Pamela Rounis