Author Archive

Over the past decade, James Jean has wowed the worlds of art and pop culture with his delicate, hauntingly beautiful, exquisitely rendered paintings. His work has graced comic book covers, a fashion line from Prada, art galleries and museums around the world. I’m very pleased to share some images from James’ latest work, Rift.

Housed in a slipcase cover, Rift features 15 gold foil stamped panels showcasing a series of images that fold to reveal different eye-catching landscapes. Here’s a preview video James posted to his website:

Chronicle will be debuting Rift with a limited number of copies at Comic Con in San Diego this July, and James will be signing copies on Saturday, July 24th at 12PM.

James Jean Signing Rift
San Diego Comic Con International
Saturday July 24th, 2010
Autograph Area AA21, 12:00-1:00PM

If you can’t make it to Comic Con, you can always pre-order Rift on our website!

Jason Sacher
Associate Editor

Popularity: 1% [?]

Last Friday, we locked the front door of our building and headed out into the city for our 2nd annual Chronicle Books Volunteer Day. With a variety of events across San Francisco, we had a blast mulching, painting, sorting books, and caring for our city’s trees, amongst many other activities.

Here’s the team at Oakland’s City Slickers Farm after a day of harvesting edible goodies in their Secret Garden in Emeryville.

Over in the Presidio, with the help of AmeriCorps and the Presidio Trust Forestry Team, we tended to a patch of infant cypress trees, as the Presidio continues a long-running effort to replant and maintain the park’s historic cypress groves. Special thanks to the Presidio trust’s Jenny McIlvaine for helping to organize the event, as well as the forestry team and the expert AmeriCorps volunteers who guided us through the project.

At Friends of the Urban Forest in Bayview, the Chronicle team did their part to help with FUF’s mission of building a healthier more sustainable urban ecosystem. Trees! Mulching! Weeding!

Here’s team Chronicle after a hard day’s work at the urban agriculture research project, Hayes Valley Farm.

Team Hayes Valley would like to extend a special thank you to Jay Blue Tape.

Considering Friday’s weather, it was nice that some of us got a chance to do some indoor work, including the folks who visited Opportunity Impact to help sort and label books, amongst other activities. In this pic, you can also see an adorable mural that the Chronicle team helped paint at last year’s visit.

Over at the San Francisco Public Library, a team of bookworms helped organize and sort boxes of donated books.

These were all truly enriching and engaging experiences–thanks to all who participated and all the hard working people at the various organizations who helped us throughout the day. To find out more about any of these organizations, follow the links provided above, or visit volunteermatch to find out more about opportunities in your community.

Jason Sacher
Associate Editor

Popularity: 1% [?]

Brooklyn letterpress favorites enormouschampion have been designing some of the most charming, colorful and creative gift and stationery products for a few years now, and as can be expected, the love for them and their awesome stuff runs deep here at Chronicle. So it’s with great pleasure that I’m able to say that Chronicle has partnered with Jordan and Jason to work on a postcard portfolio featuring some of their most popular love-themed designs.

Our Love Is Here to Stay: 15 Postcards of Affection will be publishing later this year—and it’s quite frankly gorgeous. Here’s a few of the lovely images you’ll find inside this accordion portfolio:

Add a comment below if you want to be kept updated on the publication of this one-of-a-kind art object—we’ll let you know when it hits the streets!

Also, if you’re in Brooklyn, this weekend, check out enormouschampion at the Prospect Heights Craft Fair.

And finally, check out Jason’s other endeavor, the utterly cool and eye-catching typography collective: Friends of Type.

Jason Sacher
Associate Editor

Popularity: 1% [?]

Hey folks! Last week, our Senior Designer Kristin Hewitt blogged about the awesome new Yellow Owl Workshop projects we’ve just published, and now’s your chance to win some free samples of these two cool pieces of functional, fun-to-use art. See below for details!

Yellow Owl Workshop is a San Francisco-based gift company run by Christine Schmidt and her husband, Evan Gross. I like Evan because he’s a fellow Yankee fan and isn’t afraid to buy you a beer every now and again, and I like Chris because, along with being a tremendous force of creativity, she makes a tasty matzoh ball soup. Together they are responsible for all kinds of cool baubles, stamp sets, and stationery that always feel fresh and are consistently fun to behold, use and collect. Check out their website to see their full line of unique gift products.

ReadyMade Magazine also loves Yellow Owl and we joined forces with them earlier this week to give away some of these new stationery items. The giveaway was a huge success resulting in nearly 200 comments and retweets in a matter of hours!

Chronicle’s partnership with Yellow Owl features a riff on Chris’ very popular LCD notecards, now packaged with an electric-red pencil and a selection of differently-sized notecards, and a set of Kraft-paper notepads, bound together with a removable grommet and featuring Chris’s eye-catching artwork.

Post a comment below by March 29th telling us what else you’d like to see Chronicle Books do with Yellow Owl and five lucky winners will take away the Yellow Owl Woodlands Notepad Set, and five additional winners will go home with the LCD Notecards.

Jason Sacher
Associate Editor

Popularity: 2% [?]

Everybody’s a critic, but not every critic is an adorable little rug rat with razor sharp wit and a keen artistic eye. Cue the Tiny Art Director, an ongoing collaboration between Brooklyn artist Bill Zeman and his daughter Rosie. The idea is simple, Rosie commissions Bill to paint a picture to her specifications, and Bill gives it his best shot. But like any client/artist relationship, things get messy fast. The hilarious blog that Bill started to document his Tiny Art Director’s exacting standards and high-concept commissions (anyone ever want to see what a poo poo airplane looks like?) is now a book, collecting old favorites and never-before-seen pieces and chronicling this charming relationship that will ring true to any father.

I recently asked Bill a few questions about the process and experience behind Tiny Art Director…

Bill, I think one of the most endearing parts of reading Tiny Art Director (the blog and the book) is watching your daughter (and your relationship with her) grow over the years. Do think that the TAD experience has made you closer?

I do, but obviously it took some perseverance to get there – she was always such a Mommy’s girl that for a long time she viewed me as an interloper. She now actually loves my art and is very interested in “helping” me. That sense of her growing is one of my favorite parts of this project too, and I have to admit that I keep reading through the book myself just to experience that and hear her two-year-old voice again. It really makes me happy that she has hung onto her intensity and confidence as she has matured. I also think it means a lot to her to have me listen to her opinions. That knowledge, that what she says is important and worth listening to is one of the things I most hope she can hang onto in life from this experience.

What’s your favorite TAD moment?

Oh, I’ve really loved the whole project, even through the period of her terrible twos, but I think the more recent pieces where she has drawn her own versions of my paintings, like “Purple Gatorade” (her goldfish), and the Renaissance Snails are my favorites. I love the way she prefers her versions because they match her inner vision better.

Do you feel the TAD pieces have a different flavor when they’re in a book instead of online? Did anything surprising happen as you viewed the pieces in print? What does Rosie think of the book?

The book is such a lovely object; the design is great, the size is just right and I’m very happy with the color reproductions. I really think it’s the natural way this project should be experienced rather than on the blog and I know people will agree when they put the thing in their hands. Of course the biggest problem with the blog is that it goes in reverse chronological order. Reading through the book in the right order is so much funnier and makes her character come alive. TAD is very proud of the book too, especially the pink smiley-face daisy endpapers.

Does the Tiny Art Director’s acute critical eye crossover into other arenas? The dinner table? Film?

Funny you should mention film – we actually have a film review of a Barbie Movie coming soon for the blog. It’s pretty hilarious. And I plan to post some art criticism pieces based on museum visits as well. We recently took her to the Metropolitan Museum for a Vermeer show. She was instantly and literally bored to tears until she came across “The Allegory of Faith,” a big painting that features a snake being crushed in the bottom corner. She stood about two inches from it for 15 minutes while we all got to enjoy the rest of the exhibition. The museum guard stopped her from touching it a couple times. So I don’t know if I would credit her with a sophisticated taste yet, but she is certainly very engaged and interested in art and lets it affect her deeply.

Anything new for TAD?

Well, I thought she had out-grown this project, but lately we have gotten back into it with a bunch of new pieces and quite a bit of really fun collaboration. So who knows – there may be a TAD II. But whatever else happens I have a feeling this won’t be the last book anyone writes about her!

Find the Tiny Art Director on Facebook and Twitter. And buy the book!

Jason Sacher
Associate Editor

Popularity: 3% [?]