This weekend sees Thought Bubble 2017 hit Leeds and we are excited to once again be part of the event. Thought Bubble is our favourite con and it is always great to catch up with you all and meet some new faces.
You will be able to find Vice Press and Matt Ferguson on Tables 49, 50 and 51 in the Leeds Town Hall Marquee.
This year, as well as hosting Zarjaz! An Art Tribute To 40 Years Of 2000 AD at The Gallery at 164, Munro House, Leeds, LS9 8AG and bringing along some of our official 2000 AD prints to the show, we are unveiling two brand new, official licensed screen prints;
The Prisoner by Chris Weston and
Terminator 2: Judgment Dayby Vice Press co-founder, Matt Ferguson which is being released in partnership with our very good friends at Bottleneck Gallery!
All remaining prints will go on sale at
www.Vice-Press.com on Thursday the 28th of September at 6pm BST.
The Prisoner by Chris Weston
Limited Edition 7 Colour Screen Print
Printed by Lady Lazarus
Hand Numbered Edition of 125
50cm x 70cm
£40
The Prisoner Variant by Chris Weston
Limited Edition 2 Colour Screen Print
Printed by Lady Lazarus
Hand Numbered Edition of 60
50cm x 70cm
£50
"I’ve made no secret about how "The Prisoner" is my favourite television show of all time. I first saw it when it was repeated on Channel 4 on Monday nights during 1983-4. All my friends watched it too, and we’d run to school on a Tuesday morning to meet up and discuss what we’d seen the night before. We’d excitedly offer our theories about what it all meant and where it was going. Quite frequently we’d all descend into laughter whilst discussing "The Prisoner" as it had a thick vein of absurdist black humour running through it; something my friends and I really responded to. We’d all try to make each-other laugh by pulling our best imitations of Patrick McGoohan’s facial expressions: the sly smile, the frown of frustration, the medicated bewilderment…
The teenage years are ideally the best time to watch "The Prisoner". As adolescents, we were held captive in an Eighties typically British Comprehensive school, where blazers were still part of the uniform. We adhered to baffling rules and values made by a generation forged in military service. It’s pretty easy to see why Number Six became a hero to us: his uncompromising resolve to rebel against the regimen forced upon him. In most episodes, McGoohan’s Number Six never quite managed to beat the system abusing him, or escape the confines of The Village… but he never gave up! He’d find a way to sour or subvert the victories his tormenters thought they had over him.
Revisiting the show as part of my research for this print project, I was astonished at how well its production values have stood the test of time: "The Prisoner" looks great! Jack Shampan’s imaginative production designs, the costumes, the locations and the sets are all beautiful. It’s “mod” design aesthetic and psychedelic colours make the show seem quintessentially Sixties... and yet, somehow, it is simultaneously timeless. I think that’s how you define “classic”. It is photographed immaculately on 35mm celluloid by Brendan J. Stafford, and in comparison, the cinematography on your average Bond film from the Sixties looks decidedly ropey. Even in the Eighties, twenty years after its first broadcast, “The Prisoner" looked better than everything else on British television (which was mostly shot on nasty video-tape).
I have always wanted to create my own artistic tribute to “The Prisoner”, and I have frequently been asked to produce unofficial prints for the show. For some reason I turned down these offers; in my gut I knew I should hold out until I received an official offer to produce a licensed print. It just didn’t feel respectful otherwise, considering the pleasure this show has given me throughout my life. Fortuitously, my friends at Vice Press offered me the chance to fulfil my lifelong ambition to create a loving artistic homage, timed to coincide with the show's fiftieth anniversary, and these new official silkscreen prints are the result. I could not have been more delighted and I poured heart and soul into the project. I wanted to create "The Prisoner" poster that my school-friends and I would have wanted for our bedroom walls, way back in the Eighties!” - Chris Weston, Artist
Terminator 2: Judgment Day by Matt Ferguson
Limited Edition Screen Print
Printed by Lady Lazarus
Hand Numbered Edition of 225
18x36 inches
£40
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (GID Variant) by Matt Ferguson
Limited Edition Screen Print
Printed by Lady Lazarus
Hand Numbered Edition of 120
18x36 inches
£50
Terminator 2: Judgment Day Handbill by Matt Ferguson
Limited Edition Screen Print
Printed by Lady Lazarus
Hand Numbered Edition of 40
A4
£10
Ahead of the two-day Thought Bubble Comic Convention, on Friday 22nd September from 7pm onwards Vice Press and 2000 AD will be hosting a special Thought Bubble Exhibition Event at The Gallery which is FREE to attend and no ticket is required. This event will be attended by a number of the participating artists and will include a bar as well as a FREE mini print by Matt Ferguson for attendees (Only a limited number available - so get there early!).
We will also be releasing three new exclusive prints at the Thought Bubble Exhibition Event on Friday the 22nd of September at the gallery and this will be your first chance to get them! You can see the full list of prints available
HERE.
You can join in the discussion on the Zarjaz Gallery Facebook Event Page.
Any remaining prints from Zarjaz! An Art Tribute to 40 Years of 2000 AD will go on sale at
www.Vice-Press.com at a later date.