British multidisciplinary design duo Kai + Sunny have been creating wildly intricate, elegant, beautiful works for the commercial + fine arts world for more than a decade now. From book covers for Cloud Atlas author David Mitchell to work with Alexander McQueen to global advertising campaigns for Adobe + Apple, whether you know their names or not, you likely know their work. This weekend, the two are celebrating their very first solo show on the West Coast at LA’s Subliminal Projects. We got a chance to speak with Kai (left, above) about the origin of the duo, how their style developed, and their new collaboration with famed street artist Shepard Fairey.

Kindness of Ravens: Can you tell us a little about “Caught By The Nest”, your show at Subliminal Projects? We hear it’s largely inspired by the illustration work you did for Naoki Higashida’s The Reason I Jump?

Kai Clements: “Caught By The Nest” is the first solo show we have done on the West Coast. It consists of 24 pieces, a mural, a box set, short animation, and a mix CD along with a 3D piece. The idea for the show came about whilst working on the book The Reason I Jump. The book was very moving and we could make parallels with the text and what we are trying to say through our work.  

Right, I read that the protagonist in The Reason I Jump is a child with autism who turns to nature as a sort of refuge or calming force, which seems to me like a nice parallel to your work—you both so often incorporate the natural world in your pieces to inspire feelings in your audience. It’s interesting to me that your work, which is so geometrically based and full of so many ‘unnatural’ manifestations, so often builds it’s pieces off of the chaotic, organic, unpredictable natural world. Can you speak to what inspires your pieces and how they come about, both inspirationally and technically?

We like to use simple shapes in our work and build these up to something much more complex. We do this in much the same way that geometry does in nature; how a simple shape like a single leaf or hexagonal wax cell from a honey cone is the bases for a much more complex structure.

We use nature in our work to connect with people, provoking thoughts and memories. Nature is the basis of our work but it goes deeper than this—we use it as a metaphor for other feelings. We like to explore double meanings, simultaneously balancing the serene with the troubled. Our work has hints of subversion and deception within seemingly innocent symbols and forms. 

Yeah, how is that done, exactly?

Technically we first draw our shapes and then bring them into the computer to refine. The end stage is a silkscreen print or letter-press print on various surfaces. 

So digital/high-tech to traditional/lo-tech. Excellent. It seems to me that much of your non-commercial work is largely colorless or only brings in one or two hues. Is that so that you can focus your viewer more on shapes, forms, and movement in your pieces?

For us, our pieces sit better with less color and, yes, you’re right—the focus is then on the shapes, form, and movement. However we like color and we use it in our commercial work. I’m sure we will do a color piece one day. 

Your work is so intricate—I’m sure it varies from piece-to-piece, but can you give us an idea of how long it takes to create some of them? The cover for David MItchell’s Cloud Atlas, for instance?

The cover for Cloud Atlas came together very quickly and was the start of what we do today. Cloud Atlas gave Sunny and I recognition in the public eye when we designed it back in 2004. Since then, we have been refining our craft. Our work feels much more delicate in its approach today. Our art pieces can take up to a month from concept to finished piece before we are happy with them but sometimes it comes together more quickly. 

Are there particular designers or fine artists who you feel have informed your work?

There are many artists and designers that have informed our work. I started my career at Mo Wax, a record label ran by James Lavelle. I worked under Ben Drury as a record sleeve designer. He had a lot of influence on me in the early days. Sunny and I have been inspired by the work of William Morris. We love the work of Barbara Hepworth, Yayoi Kusama—the list could go on and on.

I’m sure. We have friends who are authors who’ve complained to us in the past about how little control they have over the design of their book covers, saying that the publisher so often has a firm concept of what will and won’t sell books. Your all’s publishing work is so creative and very indicative of your other work. How did you all first get involved with book design? Was it through a particular publisher or author? 

The first book cover we designed was Cloud Atlas with Hodder & Stoughton in the UK. Before that we were designing for record labels and fashion brands. I think because the book did so well, the publishers had confidence in us from that point on. Most of the covers we have designed we have had free rein.

That’s great. So, I heard that David Mitchell actually wrote a short story in response to your pieces in the show too.  

This is correct. We asked David if he would be interested and he was really excited about it. We sent him the works from the show. We told him we were inspired by the book The Reason I Jump, which David translated. The story he wrote for us which is called “Lots Of Bits Of Star” is fantastic—it will come in a letterpress box set and a much larger silkscreen version will be available at the show.

Can’t wait to see it. What can you tell us about the collaboration you’re doing with Shepard Fairey for the show? We’ve heard very little about it leading up to the show.

The collaborative print is a version of one of Shepard’s Mandala pieces. We both felt the combination between our style and Shepard’s shape would be a great pairing. We are really pleased with the results. 

It looks awesome from the shots you sent us. We’ve worked almost exclusively as a traditional, commercial, client-based design studio for years now, but, clearly, some of your most exciting work is in collaborations and in the fine art realm. What came first for you all?

Sunny and I first worked as a design studio and then started a fashion Label called Call Of The Wild. We saw the label as an art-based one and would present our collections with in-store installations. We did this at Liberty, Selfridges in London and Collette in Paris. We did our fist complete show with the fashion label in Shoreditch, London at Jaguar Shoes back in 2004. Our first solo art show under Kai and Sunny without the label was in 2007 at Stolen Space gallery in London. 

Very cool. And now you’re here in the US. I wanted to ask—we’re huge fans of much of Alexander McQueen‘s work—how did that collaboration come about?

We are too! This was a great project and something we are very proud of. We were contacted by the art director and the project went from there. 

Do you have any other exciting projects coming up in the near future that you can speak to?

We have a few projects lined up when we get back but can’t talk about them till they actually happen. 

Fair enough. Is your relationship with Subliminal Projects a new one?

Yes this is the first show we have done with Subliminal. I met Shepard at Art Basel in Miami at the end of last year and he invited us to show then. 

Synergy! Do you have any other plans while you’re here in LA? Maybe hit the beaches? Tool around Rodeo Drive à la Pretty Woman?

I’m here for just over three weeks. We arrived on the 20th of August. My wife is from here, so we’re seeing lots of family. My two small boys are with us too. Lots of family time and meeting old friends. The trip has been great so far! Universal Studios was amazing!

Ah! We have yet to go. Adding it to the list. Thanks so much and looking forward to the opening.

Angelenos + others in the area—Kai + Sunny: Caught by the Nest runs from September 7 to October 5 at Subliminal Projects – 1331 W. Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles. They’ll be kicking things off with an opening reception Saturday night from 8-11PM.

Below:
Section: Smashed Dandy, 2013 (hand-pulled 2 color screen print);
Section: Lots Of Bit Of Star – Copper, 2013 (hand-pulled 1 color screen print);
Section: Lots Of Bit Of Star, 2013 (hand-pulled 2 color screen print);
Section: Migration South, 2013 (hand-pulled 2 color screen print);Section: Moving Dune, 2013 (hand-pulled 2 color screen print);
Section: Shepard Fairey x Kai & Sunny, show print, 2013 (hand-pulled 2 color screen print);
Section: Wild Flower, 2012 (hand-pulled 2 color screen print);
Section: Sycamore Seed, 2012 (hand-pulled 2 color screen print);
Section: Signed/Stamped Shepard Fairey x Kai & Sunny, show print, 2013 (hand-pulled 2 color screen print);
Section: Shepard Fairey x Kai & Sunny, show print, 2013 (hand-pulled 2 color screen print);
Kai + Shepard hard at work.

Dear LA friends who think we’re crazy because we’ve been talking about almonds the entire time we’ve been here: This is why.

Fat Uncle Farms, a Wasco, CA-based almond farm that, among other things, offers up our new favorite snack—Blistered Almonds.

Blistered Almonds is fancy marketing speak for dehydrated almonds, basically, but describing them as such doesn’t communicate how wildly delicious + addictive these things are. We had some at our friend Nina’s dinner party shortly after arriving in Los Angeles and we seriously had a hard time not parking ourselves in front of the bowl of almonds for the night and ignoring the hosts and other guests. Though it would have been worth the consequences of such a social faux pas, no doubt, we instead high-tailed it to the farmers’ market the following weekend to get our own.

Again, it’s hard to describe how good these are, but we’ll try: dehydrating local, California-grown almonds, which, admittedly are already really good as are, pulls all of the moisture out while condensing their almond flavor and leaving the nuts dry and pleasantly crisp, giving a chip-like texture as if they’d been fried but without all the oiliness that would entail.

In short though, you’ve just got to try them.

Angelenos, you can find a full list of the markets at which Fat Uncle holds court on their site—as of writing, you can find them somewhere in the LA area every day except Monday. And despair ye not, non-Californians! Fat Uncle also has an online shop, where you can order Blistered Almonds as well as all their other products, like nut butters, marzipan, and raw + roasted almonds.

The other day, I was talking with a friend about the merits + pitfalls of ‘getting the band back together’, which seems to be all the rage these days. Name a seminal punk, emo, or early indie band from the 90s—half of them have done it and I would venture to say that the results vary from ‘yeah, that’s okay I guess’ to ‘thanks for crushing my adolescent dreams and spinning me into a wild state of depression, band I used to love’.

Some people might argue with me on this, and surely they have every right to, but I’m pretty soundly in the Anti- corner of the ring when it comes to getting bands back together after many years of inactivity. More likely than not, it seems to this writer like you just end up with an older, less energetic version of this band you used to love made up of a bunch of over-the-hill parents bizarrely singing about fighting ‘the man’ and adolescent heartbreak before driving their respective minivans to their respective suburban kid-filled homes.

Don’t get me wrong—minus the kids + minivan, I have a whole lot more in common with these geriatric rockers than not. But that doesn’t mean I want to see them unsuccessfully recreate something I already have very fond memories of—and recordings of—already.

Which is one of many reasons to give mad props to Kathleen Hanna, frontwoman of the groundbreaking band, Bikini Kill, and prolific figurehead of the riot grrrl movement.

After a long battle with illness and relative absence from the musical scene, Hanna has chosen to create anew rather than try to rebuild from the ashes of Bikini Kill or more recent electro-socio-political-dance band, Le Tigre. Though her new band, The Julie Ruin, kind of shares a name with her one-off electronic solo project, Julie Ruin, which was book-ended by Bikini Kill + Le Tigre, the new project’s only real common thread to the earlier work is Hanna’s voice + passion. Sure, some of the band’s tracks from their debut, Run Fast, feature prominent keyboard from Kiki and Herb’s Kenny Mellman, but the songs are all rooted in a driving, rhythm- and guitar-heavy sound. And all of them build first + foremost from Hanna’s iconic wail.

Listen to this week’s featured Song, “Ha Ha Ha” and see what we mean. If you like it, you can download the more low-key, soulful “Just My Kind” from the band’s SoundCloud page and then stream the entire album over at NPR. Also below, video for the first single from Run Fast, “Oh Come On”. Finally, be sure to check out a really nice Q+A with Kathleen Hanna that was recently posted over at Stereogum.

The album’s available digitally and on CD + vinyl over on the band’s store page and via the iTunes. Though The Julie Ruin’s NYC show tonight is understandably sold out, you can catch the band’s other tour dates on their site, including their September 19th show at the Echo in LA, not quite sold out as of yet….

One place high on our list of LA restaurants to revisit right away was Susan Feniger’s STREET, a vegetable-forward restaurant that, while not 100% vegan, is SUPER-vegan-friendly.

STREET was one of many great suggestions given to us back in April by former Queen of Vegan LA, quarrygirl (she calls London home these days). Since, it’s become one of our favorite spots around, with it’s street-food-inspired menus and innovative, really fucking tasty combinations of flavors, courtesy of Chefs Susan Feniger + Kajsa Alger.

On our most recent visit, we got a chance to catch up with Kajsa and try some of her new culinary experiments, a few of which we got off shots of—below, an eggplant + snow pea stir fry mixed with these stellar, chewy radish-rice cakes that are ground together and then baked; a melon salad with pesto + fried shallots; and a really amazing tomato salad with a black garlic glaze.

The restaurant is just wrapping up a month of special “Date Night” Tuesday dinners with menus featuring things like homemade seitan with caramelized onion broth, vegan strawberry shortcake with bourbon baked peaches + vanilla cream, and red shishito peppers, which I didn’t even know existed. They also plan to renovate the bar area in the coming months to allow for tap beers and some other fun surprises. Check them out if you’re in the area and get a chance—highly recommended.

You can read the interview we did with Chef Kajsa Alger and watch quarrygirl’s video on STREET here.

Crafters of all things spookily beautiful, The Wild Unknown will touring up + down the West Coast starting tomorrow to show off their awesome Tarot Deck—which we wrote up at the beginning of the year. They’ll be visiting like-minded retailers from LA to Vancouver in the next week or so doing free, in-person Tarot readings, which we’re super-psyched about.

Get it? Psyched?

Events will feature ‘mystery’ raffles + refreshments for added excitement + refreshment, respectively. We’ll be at one or both of the LA ones, being held first at Silverlake’s ReForm School (super-cute home goods, clothing, and bric-a-brac) + then at Highland Park’s Mount Analog (curator of all things artistically musically artistic). See you there?

You can see a couple of the shots we took of TWU’s stunning, hand-illustrated Tarot Deck below and read January’s full write-up. With the full write-up, be sure to check out the comments, where an anonymous reader classily refers to me as an idiot in all-caps.

Oh, the Internet.

Okay, Reader, we’re going to ask you to bear with us here for a moment and not judge this week’s featured band—LA’s Smallpools—based solely on the above promo shot. Yes, band frontman Sean Scanlon comes off as a bit smarmy with his come-hither bedroom eyes and ‘oh, did I forget to shave, again?‘ five o’clock shadow, but maybe he lost his razor…? Maybe his loving girlfriend is taking the photo and he just can’t not look at her that way, man! Maybe?

Regardless of whether the band is or is not douchey in person, we’re loving what the newcomers are doing on their recently released EP. Start-to-finish, the band comes off as polished + tight, sounding anything but newly formed (the band played their first live show last month at Brooklyn Bowl). Drawing comparisons to other keyboard-/vocal-forward indie rock bands we won’t mention in this space, Smallpools creates catchy, hook-filled songs that make it really hard to hate them, come-hither eyes and all.

Also, what’s going on off-screen at this shoot? Those guys on the left + right are super-interested in whatever it is. I think the photographer needs one of those squeaky toys they use when taking dog portraits.

Listen to this week’s Song, the excellent “Mason Jar” below, then check out the video for another great stand-out track, “Dreaming”. Again, with the video, don’t judge too quickly—what initially seems like the unapologetic glamorization of another cliché LA house party ends up being pretty clever + awesome. We swear. Plus, stellar track.

And no offense meant with regards to the work of talented photographer Dan Monick…who may or may not be dating the frontman of Smallpools.

You can hear the rest of Smallpools’ EP over on their soundcloud page + buy it via iTunes. They’ll be playing Neon Gold‘s Popshop West at The Echo in LA next Wednesday night and then hitting the road with the also excellent Walk the Moon this fall. You can see the bands full list of tour dates on their Facebook page.

As we get our professional, social, cultural, and musical bearings here in LA, we’d be remiss not to use this space to mention the coming 10th annual FYF music festival—formerly awesomely known as the not-so-easy-to-market Fuck Yeah Fest—Los Angeles’ massive, eclectic coming together of musical artists + comedians.

Though the many big, fairly well-known bands like My Bloody Valentine, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, TV on the Radio, and MGMT are stealing most of the headlines these days, we’re most keen on the chance to see some of the smaller acts gracing the various stages of FYF.

One such band that we’re especially excited about is Lemuria, a trio that plays edgy pop music pulling from the best aspects of the early 90’s East Coast indie rock scene while deftly sidestepping outright musical derivation. Their most recent album, The Distance is So Big, is honestly phenomenal from start-to-finish, drawing listeners in with power-pop-style energy, hooky melodies, thoughtful lyrics, and dueling vocals from guitarist/vocalist Sheena Ozzella + drummer/vocalist Alex Kerns. Bassist Max Gregor rounds out the sound of the band and crucially provides to the bands driving rhythms and tattoo + beard aggregate, which can be handy with shows in the south/Brooklyn.

We caught up with the band this week as they made their way across the United States, taking a few minutes to talk with us before a show in Phoenix.

Listen in as we talk about the band’s influences, how having three members in three different cities impacts the band, and conspiracy theories about reptilian humanoids. Oh yeah, and check out how I classily start the interview off sounding like Biff Tannen—”So dat’s like a mythical continent or sumthin’?”

After you give the interview a listen, be sure to check out the excellent “Brilliant Dancer” + “Chihuly”, both also below.

Lemuria’s third album, The Distance is So Big, is available on CD + vinyl and via iTunes. If you’re in the LA area, you can catch them at FYF Saturday at 230PM on the Miranda Stage.

And yes—all four stages are, in fact, named after the Sex and the City gals. FYF organizers enjoy reaching back to their 8th grade years for tongue-in-cheek cultural references.

We’ve used this space before, Reader, to give voice to the opinion that Los Angeles holds a veritable wealth of amazing food options for vegans. We may have even used the term ‘chock-a-block’ to describe how full of animal-friendly offerings the City of Angels is—from heavily vegetarian strip mall cafés to vegan-friendly mainstream restaurants to high-end, white tablecloth plant-based establishments, we’ve been thoroughly impressed by LA’s food scene and, even more importantly, how easy it is to be vegan out here.
One place that falls into the first of those three categories is the nearby Locali, a tiny café + convenience store on Franklin Ave in Hollywood that focuses on offering locally sourced food + products with a vegan leaning. As they put it:
“With an emphasis on vegan options, we advocate minimizing the consumption of animal products due to its aggressive impact on the environment. We carefully select all vendors and look forward to increasing your connection to the sources of what you consume daily. With a heightened awareness of where our food comes from, we can make conscious decisions about what we eat in order to aid our personal health and vitality, while minimizing our negative impact on the environment and other people. At Locali, everyday is a celebration of the choice to do better for our planet, ourselves and each other.”
Now, we’re still holding on to a good bit of our stereotypically New York cynicism for good measure, but I think these guys are being sincere. Regardless though, the food is definitely going to be bringing us back soon. Though their bowls are a little small in terms of portion size, their sandwiches far from small and pretty phenomenal.
Below, the vegan Reuben with Daiya, sauerkraut, vegan Thousand Island dressing, and frightfully realistic beet-/vegetable-juice marinated Tofurkey Deli Slices playing the part of corned beef on a really nice marble rye (I thought they didn’t have good bread in LA!). Below that, the vegan BLT with tempeh bacon, romaine lettuce, tomato, stone ground mustard, and vegan mayo on toasted sourdough.
We’ve also got it on good authority that the Baaadasss Breakfast Sandwich—vegan sausage patty, Daiya cheddar, chipotle sauce, and maple syrup on a sprouted multigrain english muffin—is mind-numbingly good. I’m guessing that’ll be showing up on our Instagram feed soon enough.
Locali is located at 5825 Franklin Avenue, right by the Gelson’s and between Canyon + Van Ness. They offer a few two-top tables inside + outside and are open every day from 8AM to 10PM.
What do you get when you creep into the gaudily bright, whirring, click-clacking dreams of a late 19th century French child and throw everything you find on a formerly abandoned island between Manhattan + Brooklyn? Fête Paradiso, it would seem.
This is something we heard about from friends shortly after opening and have been meaning to write up since we visited, just before leaving New York. Situated on Gotham City’s newly shining jewel of idyllic recreation, Governors IslandFête Paradiso is essentially a traveling festival of original vintage carnival rides, carousels, and games. But to leave it at that would be a bit of travesty. We’ve been going to Governors Island since it reopened in 2010 and this is easily the coolest thing that’s ever taken up residence there. From Paradiso‘s site:

“The extraordinary festival of artisan-crafted, vintage carousels and carnival rides—like a French film miraculously come to life—is the first of its kind to appear in the United States. Among the attractions, which come from the collections of Francis Staub and Regis Masclet, is a bicycle carousel from the late 19th century—one of only two in the world that were created in Paris to encourage the use of what was then the new mode of transportation, the bicycle (the only other bicycle carousel can be seen in the feature film Midnight in Paris). Fête Paradiso…also include(s) an early 20th century Music-Hall Ball Guzzler, a carnival game that features life-size caricatures of Josephine Baker, Charlie Chaplin and other celebrities of the time. To further enhance the nostalgic, dreamlike experience, a bumper car pavilion from 1900 has been transformed into a beer garden and special event space, and food reminiscent of a French carnival will be served by New York’s legendary French bistro Le Gamin. In addition, a 1930 children’s carousel has been repurposed into a music kiosk, where performers will entertain visitors with period music and side show performances to heighten the Fellini-inspired environment.

Truly, the old, wooden rides are excitingly rickety and unforgivingly rough in this overly safe age of walled in trampolines + overly sanitized living. And, while the hand-painted, hand-carved embellishments are beautiful + enchanting, some of the end products—like the menacing Mickey Mouse + militaristic centaur (?)—are downright creepy, again, in only the most charming, French way. But, more than those individual parts, the atmosphere that’s created by the carnival and its sometimes in-character, dressed-up carnies is what’s most remarkable + lovely about the Fête.

Fête Paradiso is open to the public every weekend through Sunday, September 29 from 1030AM to 630PM, so, if you live in New York or plan on visiting soon, get thee to the carnival. Note that, though the island itself is open from 10AM to 7PM, the first ferry from Brooklyn Bridge Park’s Pier 6 doesn’t leave until 11AM. Full ferry listings here.

Below, various shots of the rides and games at the Fête and a quick video of us riding the bicycle carousel with our friends, Thad + Agatha.

Who’s this fresh-faced young lad, you ask? Well, he’s just ‘the next big thing’, according to everyone who sits around talking about who ‘the next big thing’ is going to be, that’s all.

For the record, we called One Direction as the next big thing way back in 2003.

Dan Croll is a Liverpool-based solo artist who studied at Mr. Sir James Paul McCartney’s Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts and won the national Songwriter of the Year award from the Musicians Benevolent Fund in 2011. He was also described by the Guardian last year as sounding like “Paul Simon jamming with Prince.” So, no pressure, dude.

To be fair, “Paul Simon jamming with Price” could very well sound like ass, now that I think about it. But, alas, Dan Croll does not sound like ass (please put that review in your press materials, Mr. Croll).

No, Croll sounds like solid, hooky, beautiful vocal-forward pop music peppered with just enough electronic glitchiness to make things interesting but not overly video-game-y and just enough tropical undertones to sound light + airy without veering into white boy island music territory. Which, while enjoyable with its faux steel drums and dark + stormy specials, is getting a little old after so many years…I’m looking at you Tanlines!

Give Croll’s new number, “In/Out” a listen and let us know if you can keep from tapping your foot or, I don’t know, maybe even ‘raising the roof’. If you do raise the roof though, be sure to lift with your knees and to put it back properly when you’re done.

Below that, Croll’s video for his debut single, 2012’s excellent and slightly more rocking (read: employing live drums) “From Nowhere”. You can hear more music from Croll and a number of nice remixes over on his SoundCloud page. You can also get a free track, “Can You Hear Me”, by heading over to Croll’s site and signing up for his newsletter.

No word yet on when to expect a full length from this young fellow, but he’ll making landfall stateside this October, with shows at LA’s Troubadour Wednesday, October 9 + finishing up his US tour with a show at one of our favorite venues—Brooklyn’s Glasslands—on Tuesday, October 15 as part of this year’s CMJ Music Festival.

Since that’s CMJ, though, we can only assume he’ll be picked up by roughly 72 other showcases at the festival. Rest up, Croll. Rest up.

Photo above by Lasse Fløde (he’s actually got a whole project portfolio on Croll that’s really beautiful); photo in the player below from Croll’s video for “In/Out”.