| RTomens, 2026 |
Wednesday, 17 June 2026
Vispo: untitled / The artist in the art
Tuesday, 16 June 2026
Monday, 15 June 2026
Print: You (for sale) / The colour black (clothes/style etc)
| You, RTomens, 2026 |
You-nique print, made from an altered photo I took and an old vispo piece. Look at the black! Love the black! See how deep it is? How deep is my black?
I don't wear black, except for that hooded Adidas coat worn only in the garden or, perhaps, to go up the garage to get some milk. Not that I'm ashamed to be seen in it, just that I don't want to look remotely like all those men (young and old) walking around town in black - no! What's wrong with them? Are they members of a cult I know nothing about? They seem to revel in black's negative connotations. "Look at me in black - grrr - don't mess with me - I'm...dangerous." Actually, you're boring. I cannot take anyone who constantly wears black seriously. They haven't read a book, for starters. I know that for sure. Maybe one book. They totally lack imagination!
It's fairly common amongst girls too, but less so because...perhaps girls/women always think a little more about what they wear. Sometimes I look at young girls (only sometimes - ha-ha!) and what they wear (slouchy gear) and wonder what I'd think of the way they dress if I was 15 again. I don't suppose I'd mind. I mean, firstly I'd have no choice and secondly, more importantly, old Ma Nature would be driving me towards them with an unstoppable force. For the zillionth time since maturity, I thank historical chance and, um, cosmic genealogy, that I was born to be a teenager in times that were more exciting, culturally and style-wise.
Still, you'll never catch me in either all black clothing or a t-shirt that says 'I Saw All The Best Bands'. I'd rather be caught wearing my slippers. Actually, that couldn't happen because to answer the doorbell I have to go outside, therefore change from slippers to outdoor shoes. (Isn't all this fascinating?) Only friends see me in my slippers...and I don't have any of those left! (OK, maybe one or two). Poor me. Time has taken so many friends...not death, but life, their lives and mine parting ways.
On that cheery note, I should end.
On an optimistic note, should you wish to purchase You, it's £75 and I ship worldwide. Should you want some black print in your life! TTFN!
Thursday, 11 June 2026
Vispo: Too Bookish? / 70s Teenage Rampage! / We're all crazy now! (full mental helmet) /Madness
| Too Bookish?, RTomens, 2026 |
We're all crazy now? More on that later...
Can you be too bookish? I dunno. I found the quote 'too bookish, too literary' in a book (ha-ha!) about Ezra Pound. I haven't read the book; not more than a few lines. It's one of those books...you know, so cheap you can't resist and you really think you'll get something out of it - I'm not even that interested in Ezra Pound other than his current (?) outsider status, cancellation by the Common Sense police? Well, he did propagandise for the Italian fascist party, didn't he? Yes, he did. he was also a key figure in...the...modernist movement? Was he?
I wasn't a bookish child but I loved books. Tom Swift...Stig of the Dump...The Borrowers...I borrowed them all from the library in my village. Actually, I was given the Tom Swift book as a prize for English at school and, you know what? I don't even think I have it anymore, which I really regret because it was one of the few actual documents testifying that I could achieve something at school.
School's out! Alice Cooper playing on the 8-track cassette player in my friend's older brother's Volkswagen. He drove us around in that. One day we came across a gang from another village and drove past, close to the kerb, with the passenger side door open. I can't remember if we hit anyone. Ah the good ol' days of mindless violence!
1972. Discos. Birds. Clothes. Music. Punch-ups (not me). What more could anyone want from their early teenage years? I wasn't very bookish then. One of my abiding memories of books at secondary school is of the Great Book Battle that took place in the annex on the fourth floor before the History teacher came in. I don't know how it started, but when it was at it's peak the fluttering pages as their covers became wings was a site to behold. Some went out of the window. There were a few casualties from heavy hits by hardbacks. What fun!
'I wanna see everybody get your boots on - everybody, everywhere!'
Slade used to be skinheads, for five minutes when their manager suggested the jump on the bandwagon in the late-60s. But even after they'd gone full Glam they were still the band for ex-skinhead yobbos like us with our hair grown out (feather cut or just touching your collar) and baggies replacing Levis. Slade and Gary Glitter made the best foot-stomping gang anthems. It was us vs the greasers at the disco and we had the best tunes. They had Silver Machine by Hawkwind and Spirit In The Sky by Norman Greenbaum (the latter I now recognise as a classic, of course, but back then it was their music).
Fast forward 54 (!!!) years and I'm referencing Slade in an email to someone about the artwork I'm creating for a forthcoming William Burroughs event later this year (I'll keep you posted). 'We're all crazy now!' I quote Noddy Holder. Thankfully he's old enough to get the joke. In reference to what? Another joke I'd made earlier about not wanting to be driven crazy by constant reworkings of the art.
I joked but...really...are we ALL crazy now? It's tempting to think so, largely because, courtesy of the internet, we're allowed access to the inner workings of maniacs all around the world. Not just maniacs, but nut jobs, political nut jobs...and those with 'mental health' issues (shucks, who ain't?). When online make sure you're wearing your (mental) crash helmet. It's best to actively work at avoiding falling into anyone's mentally disturbed 'rabbit hole'. Namely: don't follow them! Online lunacy is hard to avoid, I know. That person you befriended on Facebook out of the kindness of your heart is now filling your head with crap! Unfriend.
A friend admitted recently that by backing away from politics I was probably doing the right thing. He's still trying to shake off the addiction that gripped a lot of us around 2020 in the lockdown days when we had nothing better to do (it seemed) but read/listen to Politics online. Thank god I got that out of my system, eventually. Nowadays I only read the headlines. That's enough to tell me what's going on. I'm not even tempted to watch footage of recent horrors in the UK. They used to call it 'car crash TV'. Today we all have endless channels of disturbing footage at the tap of a finger. What good does it do us? I'm not saying ignorance is bliss but it can be better for your mental health.
Saturday, 6 June 2026
Vispo/print (for sale): No Disagreement / Bonkers weather / Sonny Rollins an' all that Jazz / My Jazz book
| No Disagreement, RTomens, 2026 |
please email if interested
Thursday, 4 June 2026
Vispo: You Know Something? / My lethal weapon is my mind? Art knowledge is useless! / Jim Steranko art
| You Know Something? RTomens, 2026 |
Yes, I know some things. At times I think I know less now than I did twenty years ago. Funny that, ain't it? Perhaps knowledge is overrated and ignorance really is bliss. I've met a few Clever People. They never impressed me. Knowledge can be intimidating, can't it? Anyway, like the supposedly fastest gun in the West, there's always someone who's actually faster or, in relation to knowledge, more knowledgeable.
Men love to brandish knowledge as a weapon to 'defeat' other men. It's all we have instead of clubs. Some men still use clubs. Or their fists. We're always trying to outdo each other. Even the meekest of us take pleasure in Knowing More about something. To do this, you have to find someone who wants to discuss a subject but doesn't know much. You can then assume the role of 'teacher' and feel good about it.
There isn't much I can claim to know a lot about except, perhaps, Jazz. My position in this area though is not in the premier league...more third division. That said, knowing quite a bit about Jazz puts me in a specialist league anyway, so in relation to the average person I'm very knowledgeable. It would be more impressive to most people to demonstrate great knowledge of...biology? At least everyone can relate to the body. Most of us have one, except inhabitants of the spirit world.
Art knowledge is useless, unless engaged in conversation with an art student, in which case I might say that having looked at and read hundreds of Art books I could teach them a thing or two. There I go, falling into a trap. They would shrug and make noises like a young person, totally dismissing my knowledge as old-fashioned nonsense because you don't need to know Art history to make art. You don't need to know Art to make art! Just make stuff! Or don't. Just think up stuff and present yourself, saying "All my Art is in my head." You'd get a top grade, I think.
Regulars will know I've been looking at a lot of comic books recently. Reading the stories isn't necessary. The great art in some of them is enough to more than satisfy...it actually thrills! It thrills me, anyway. The snobbery about comic art still prevails, I think. Not that it should be taken seriously either, necessarily. Considering the deadline pressure comic book artists were under in their heyday, what some of them drew is incredible. Here's a double page by one of the best, Jim Steranko, for Captain America (1969).
I don't know much about comics...but I know what I like!
Wednesday, 3 June 2026
Print: Visual Field / Seeing visual poetry up close / Buying art / Kemsley annual altered book
| Visual Field, RTomens, 2026 |
Wednesday, 27 May 2026
Horror Comics of the 1950's - The EC Horror Library (Nostalgia Press Inc, 1971)
Vispo: He Left Too Much Unsaid / Electroacoustic Music History on Murmure Intemporel
| He Left Too Much Unsaid, RTomens, 2026 |
Friday, 22 May 2026
Comic Book Crazy! / Comic Strip Vispo and the Art of Comics
| RTomens, 2026 |