Carrier Pigeon
Volume III Issue 1
Full-color magazine
10" x 13"
108 pages
From the publishers:
The publishers of Carrier Pigeon are pleased to announce the release of the first issue of Volume III, which continues to merge edgy contemporary fiction with fine art, illustration and design combined with new and established voices from each discipline for a growing audience of independent press fans.
The issue cover is an original three-color letterpress artwork created expressly for Carrier Pigeon by Richard Kegler at the Western New York Book Arts Center through a labor-intensive process described in the feature “Making the Cover.” The end pages feature two colorful etchings by Ellen Peckham in support of haiku. Carrier Pigeon’s ninth issue is limited to a retail edition of just 1,000 copies, making each uniquely collectible. As with previous issues, the content comprises six short works of fully illustrated fiction and six artist portfolios pulled from an international pool of talent.
The inside pages are the result of an evolving collaborative process between new and established illustrators, writers, and fine artists.
Ryan Scamehorn’s “Honor Among Thieves” is a haunting tale of drug-induced paranoia paired with fittingly hallucinatory illustrations by educator and illustrator Carol Fabricatore. “Persona Ward” is a collection of spare, narrative poems from newcomer Ryan Warwick, accompanied by bold woodcuts from artist-print maker Joseph Marshall. “The Girl Who Was Struck by Lightning” is an otherworldly tale by Christopher Stanton, rooted by black & white silhouettes formed from cut paper by Maude White. “Everything I Do Hurts Somebody,” a morbid ramble of desire, envy and fiery revenge by repeat contributor Nick Kolakowski, comes to life through appropriately creepy illustrations by Matthew Barteluce. Elahzar Rao hosts a Twilight Zone-style dinner party in “The Inviting Neighbors of Eldervale,” to which Yuriko Katori adds her stylishly quirky drawings. “Five Course Meal” by Josh Saltzman would be plain revolting if it weren’t also hilarious.Justin Sanz literally paints the picture.
First up among the artist portfolios in this issue is Jennifer Ale’s collection of evocative dreamscapes, expertly executed in aquatint etching. Chuck Webster follows with a vibrant array of monotype and oil works exploring a personal Sanskrit. Oil painter Alex Zwarentstein offers an adventurous series of urbanites “dressed in historical limbo.” The multi-talented Glen Baldridge presents a portfolio of his anxious and witty graphic scenarios in mixed media. Jessica Dunne’s passion and yearning for the dark, starlit skies of her youth is portrayed in a soft collection of nocturnes. Finally, contemporary graphic artist Bill Fick shares with us his ever “ugly/scary” and provocative creatures.