KINGBROWN Issue #2 (2006) Street Art/Design; Magazine
Street Art/Graffiti/Art/Design/Culture Magazine, Used
Fucking raddest magazine in Australia,....or the world? Sitting somewhere between a book, a magazine and an art zine, Kingbrown is a super limited edition periodical. Each issue is handcrafted, delivered inside a silk screened brown bag which is designed and curated by some of the world's leading innovators of photography, illustration and urban and skateboard art and design. This issue does not have brown bag, but is in excellent condition, and early issues are rare to come by. Inside Kingbrown you will find profiles and interviews that take you on a twisted journey inside the studios and minds of some of our very talented friends, with the aim of keeping you inspired and connected to the subcultures we love most. Printed with quality in mind, each page is essentially a collectable item. (Image shown does not match product)
14K: issue #8 (Switzerland) Broadsheet Graff Zine (1995)
Graffiti/Street Art/Art/Design Broadsheet Magazine, Used
This classic zine from Switzerland will certainly quench your ink-brain thirst with its huge (24) A3 pages and extraordinary graffiti which is represented in almost 300 flicks in this issue. You'll find all aspects of European graff well covered, from hardcore train bombing to large-scale productions. Covered countries in this issue include Denmark, Germany, Spain, France, and even a few from the United States. 14K also has an extensive mailorder supply of zines, caps, and other graff-related goodies! Check it out, but don't expect to enjoy the articles unless you know German.
DEATH FROM ABOVE issue #1 (Melbourne Graff Zine) 2003
Graffiti/Street Art/Art/Underground Magazine; Used (Mint - as new)
Ironically titled, Death From Above hails from Melbourne, and Issue #1 (the only issue ever printed I believe?) is a strong example of the quality of the writers in Melbourne City. Its high quality pages are camouflaged well by its rugged design and appearance. The majority of the photos, which were carefully selected, are trains spanning the years 2001-2003 and reflect the many styles of the city. The train flicks, consisting of E2Es, T2Bs, window downs, inside bombs, etc. would probably even make a NY pioneer long for blockbuster nights gone by. Walls and other surfaces are not as plentiful as the metal, but our friends at DxFxAx did put together a nice b&w centerfold of hand styles, throws and other spontaneous markings. All in all, a solid debut. Fucking RAD!
BANANAFISH Number 17; Magazine
Zine/Noise/Avant-garde/Experimental/Cult Magazine + free noise/experimental CD, Used
Issue 17 of San Francisco’s cult influential and idiosyncratic noise zine 'Bananafish'. Over the years, Bananafish’s compelling taste in obscure music, art and performance, as well as the amusingly irreverent tone and content, elevated it from a well-produced amateur fanzine to a renowned scene figure in its own right. Some of its subjects, like Dylan Nyoukis of Prick Decay and Bruce Russell of the Dead C, became contributors, and others were avid readers. Wolf Eyes’ John Olson, who appeared in Issue #13 in 1999, wrote via email that he had followed it from beginning to end, and Australian drone guitarist Oren Ambarchi sought out every issue after he first found it in a Sydney record shop in the late 1980s. “It was a very important resource for me, being in Australia without much ‘literature’ on the noise underground – and it was hoot,” recalled Ambarchi, who was interviewed in Issue #16 in 2002. “It shaped what I did as a young musician, as I would search for releases of the artists that Bananafish covered,” he said, describing a search for Bananafish’s hardly-known subjects. “I would pore over it to find more clues about this mysterious underground music/culture.”