Friday, February 22, 2008
F.O.A.D.
I just picked up the latest issue of Terrorizer and discovered that my drawing for Darkthrone has been voted #3 in the 2007 Reader's Poll for 'Best Cover Art'! And while we're on the subject, does anyone remember the great Black Uniforms song called 'Fuck Off And Die'??
Saturday, February 09, 2008
Schadenfreude!
The February 2008 issue of Metal Maniacs refers to my Darkthrone art as one of three "curveballs" hurled at the band's fans. According to writer Nathan T. Birk, the F.O.A.D. cover art was "released to resounding groans the world over...[with] mid 80's Broken Bones written all over it, which is perhaps being kind" (zing!). He later goes on to say, "...when the F.O.A.D. artwork was revealed...whoa. An even greater avalanche of derision..." (ouch!). This is perhaps the most scathing review of my art since I discovered this little gem on some message board a few months ago:
"Oh Dennis Dread. Interesting that all the gravestones have Hebrew on them."
First of all: the gravestones don't have hebrew on them. Second: I suspect there is an insult here but I can't tell if I've been accused of being a "jew" or a "nazi". I have no idea what this comment means. But it's funny. And it has launched another CONTEST! That's right, jews. Your assignment is to draw your favorite dictator, tyrant, or general enemy of humanity (real or imagined). The best drawing will be displayed in this year's ENTARTETE KUNTS exhibit and the winner will receive their very own DESTROYING ANGELS t-shirt (priceless!). All entries must be received by April 1st, 2008 (April Fool's Day).
"Oh Dennis Dread. Interesting that all the gravestones have Hebrew on them."
First of all: the gravestones don't have hebrew on them. Second: I suspect there is an insult here but I can't tell if I've been accused of being a "jew" or a "nazi". I have no idea what this comment means. But it's funny. And it has launched another CONTEST! That's right, jews. Your assignment is to draw your favorite dictator, tyrant, or general enemy of humanity (real or imagined). The best drawing will be displayed in this year's ENTARTETE KUNTS exhibit and the winner will receive their very own DESTROYING ANGELS t-shirt (priceless!). All entries must be received by April 1st, 2008 (April Fool's Day).
Mail your art to:
DENNIS DREAD
PO BOX 40667
PORTLAND, OREGON
97240-0667.
"ARBEIT MACHT FREI!"
DENNIS DREAD
PO BOX 40667
PORTLAND, OREGON
97240-0667.
"ARBEIT MACHT FREI!"
Sunday, January 27, 2008
SUPER TRASH!

My latest drawing is a tribute to Sergio Martino's satanic giallo All The Colors of The Dark, starring the painfully gorgeous Edwige Fenech! I wish I had a bit more time to work on this one but it still contains several noteworthy exploitation highlights: anguished portraits that barely resemble the cast, pseudo occult symbols, gratuitous nudity, and a snarling decapitated dog head that doesn't appear in the actual film. The original drawing is 12" x 15" but hopefully you can see some of the loving detail in this low-res scan. I drew this for the Super Trash Film Fest and the original will be on display Friday February 1st through Sunday February 3rd! Prepare yourself for 72 hours of mind-fucking celluloid, vendors, beer, dancing girls, celebrity guests, and an entire exhibit of re-imagined movie poster art! Come for the art, stay for Big Trouble In Little China!
SUPER TRASH
February 1-3
Bagdad Theater
Portland, Oregon
February 1-3
Bagdad Theater
Portland, Oregon

Click this photo for more detail of the original art!
Friday, January 25, 2008
VAMPIRA

"black dress moves in a blue movie, grave robbers from outer space, your pulmonary trembles in your outstretched arm...tremble so wicked two inch nails micro waist with a pale white feline face inclination eyebrows to there mistress to the horror kid cemetary of the white love ghoul, well take off your shabby dress come and lay beside me come a little bit closer come a little bit closer come a little bit closer come a little bit closer to me..."
~Glenn Danzig
R.I.P. VAMPIRA!
R.I.P. VAMPIRA!
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Roctober #44
There's an interview with me in the new issue of Roctober magazine! This is a dense 136-page monster of a zine that celebrates "unjustly obscure musical icons, enigmas, and eccentrics"! I hope I'm an eccentric and not an enigma. The new issue also features a tribute to Dickie Peterson of Blue Cheer!!!! Support this badass independent publication!
Thursday, January 10, 2008
ROBERT CRUMB UNDERGROUND

This month sees the opening of two amazing art exhibits in Seattle!
The traveling Robert Crumb exhibit parks its sordid ass at Seattle's Frye Art Museum on Saturday January 26th with a special lecture by comix historian Patrick Rosenkranz at 2pm. This promises to be a very special afternoon with one of the world's leading experts on underground comix art. Get there early! Also this month, in conjunction with the Crumb exhibit, is a very special show at Fantagraphics Books & Gallery entitled Rebel Visions! This exhibit features rarely glimpsed original work by such masters of underground art as Rick Griffin, S. Clay Wilson, and Greg Irons (who incidentally worked as a tattoo artist at the infamous Seattle Tattoo Emporium prior to his untimely death in 1984). This is a rare opportunity to celebrate REAL underground art! Rebel Visions will be on display through February 6th so don't miss it!
Tuesday, January 08, 2008
GROSS ANATOMY (part 3)

Welcome back, fiends! It's been a while since I last posted so it's time to ring in 2008 with a new drawing & a new installment of Gross Anatomy! This time we'll take a look at the evolution of my recent drawing for Welsh expatriate & D.I.Y. publisher Pete Lewis' zine Foul Weather! Pete's zine explores everything from surfing to politics and he still listens to Excel when he's skating so you know he rules. Ok, lets' go...

This drawing is inspired by two things that people should really care more about: impending environmental disaster and Sacred Reich. I start out real loose just to get a feel for the composition and the motion I'm trying to convey...

From the initial sketch I start formulating exactly what I want this fucker to look like and I basically de-flesh the surfer. Why? Because re-animated skeletons are just more fun to draw than surfer dudes. This has almost nothing to do with the actual content of the zine. Anyway, you can see all the important details that will emerge later when I hit it with the ballpoints. Most of the problem solving happens during this stage...

Surf Guantanamo! I spend hours painstakingly laying on the ink to make the details of this frozen moment leap out. Note the droplets of water all around the surfer's body. Those have to be carefully planned and worked around because I can't erase at this stage (I guess I could use white-out but it just wouldn't look the same). This is a raw scan of the final image. Enjoy!
Click on the images above to get a closer look at the detail.
Until next time...never surrender to the undertow!
Until next time...never surrender to the undertow!
Saturday, November 24, 2007
CONTEST!
That's right kids, it's time for another CONTEST!
This Tuesday November 27th ENGORGED is playing Portland's Roseland Theater with Municipal Waste & Suicidal Tendencies! I will personally present a free ENGORGED t-shirt to the first person to successfully stage dive during the ENGORGED set. By "successfully" I mean:
1. You make it from the crowd of rabid thrashers onto the stage.
2. You jump far enought off said stage that your body clears the security barrier and lands in the crowd.
3. You live to collect your shirt.
* Please note that the Roseland Theater security will very likely eject you from the venue if they catch you attempting to stage dive. That's not my problem. You will probably hurt yourself and others performing this stunt. That's not my problem either. Also please note that, "If it ain't insane, then you can't get rad!" Good luck.

Saturday, October 13, 2007
STUMPTOWN COMICS FEST 2007

Here's a shot of my fucking killer DERANGED shirt (circa 1988)!
Oh yeah, and that's the DESTROYING ANGELS table at this year's Stumptown Comics Fest. This was the best Stumptown Fest yet and the new issue sold surprisingly well considering it's not a comic. Despite being completely sleep deprived this year, I had a great time hanging with my pals and Dave Walker of BadAzz Mofo magazine! Support this brotha cause his shit RULES! And if you don't already own a copy of DESTROYING ANGELS #9, order soon before I get sick of printing them! Thanks to Ocean Yamaha for the photo.
Monday, October 01, 2007
WE GOT A WINNER!!!!

Ladies & Gentlemen,
Digestor raises a goblet of rotgut to EVERYONE who got off their lazy asses and mailed an entry to the 2007 Ghoul Coloring Contest! The entries poured in (actually they trickled in like a slowly weeping wound) from both coasts and as far abroad as Sweden. They look great and we received a colorful array of media: pencils, highlighter pens, markers, crayons, watercolor paints, & even photoshop. If you submitted an entry, consider yourself a winner. At least you're not a slack-jawed internet poser. No, you're a slack-jawed WEIRDO that sits around coloring pictures of ZOMBIE PUKE! What the hell is wrong with you??? But I digress. The winner? Ladies & Gentlemen, the winner of the 2007 Ghoul Coloring Contest is...The King of Stereoscopics, Mr. Ray Zone! Congratulations, Ray! Not only have you championed 3-D art for more than 2 decades, you are now the proud recipient of your very own DESTROYING ANGELS shirt (priceless!) plus a copy of the finest underground art zine in the world (huh?). And don't you losers...er..."runners up" worry! The entries were ALL so impressive that EVERYONE who sent us a picture before the September deadline will receive a complimentary copy of DESTROYING ANGELS! Now strap on your 3-D goggles and take a leap into the forbidden 3-D ZONE!!!!
Digestor raises a goblet of rotgut to EVERYONE who got off their lazy asses and mailed an entry to the 2007 Ghoul Coloring Contest! The entries poured in (actually they trickled in like a slowly weeping wound) from both coasts and as far abroad as Sweden. They look great and we received a colorful array of media: pencils, highlighter pens, markers, crayons, watercolor paints, & even photoshop. If you submitted an entry, consider yourself a winner. At least you're not a slack-jawed internet poser. No, you're a slack-jawed WEIRDO that sits around coloring pictures of ZOMBIE PUKE! What the hell is wrong with you??? But I digress. The winner? Ladies & Gentlemen, the winner of the 2007 Ghoul Coloring Contest is...The King of Stereoscopics, Mr. Ray Zone! Congratulations, Ray! Not only have you championed 3-D art for more than 2 decades, you are now the proud recipient of your very own DESTROYING ANGELS shirt (priceless!) plus a copy of the finest underground art zine in the world (huh?). And don't you losers...er..."runners up" worry! The entries were ALL so impressive that EVERYONE who sent us a picture before the September deadline will receive a complimentary copy of DESTROYING ANGELS! Now strap on your 3-D goggles and take a leap into the forbidden 3-D ZONE!!!!

Until the next contest, remember...
"THESE ARE STEREOSCOPIC TIMES!"
"THESE ARE STEREOSCOPIC TIMES!"

Tuesday, September 04, 2007
STUMPTOWN COMICS FEST 2007!

Once again I have a table at Portland's very own Stumptown Comics Fest! This is a fun event that celebrates D.I.Y. creativity without all the fanboy slobs wandering around in Star Wars costumes made out of vacuum cleaner hoses and bad lingerie. I'll be hustling the (ahem) "highly anticipated" new issue of DESTROYING ANGELS and I'll have kickass t-shirts in all sizes. If it's anything like previous years, I'll also be drunk and way too happy to see you. Don't miss it!

Monday, August 27, 2007
contest update!
Ok, ok! Due to "popular" demand, I've agreed to push the contest deadline back so all you numskulls have a chance to really shine. All entries must be recieved by Friday SEPTEMBER 14th. And in a blood-chilling turn of events, the contest winner will now be determined by Digestor himself! Pay attention, here's how it works:
PRINT out the Ghoul drawing below (it should fit on 8.5" X 11" printer paper).
COLOR it in with any media you choose (pencil, paint, markers, crayons, blood, etc).
MAIL the finished art to: DENNIS DREAD PO BOX 40667 Portland, Oregon 97240-0667.
Digestor will reveal his favorite entry on October 1st. The winner will receive their very own Destroying Angels shirt (priceless!) and the upcoming issue of Destroying Angels zine (we can't wait to see it!). Got it? GO FORTH & COLOR!!!!
PRINT out the Ghoul drawing below (it should fit on 8.5" X 11" printer paper).
COLOR it in with any media you choose (pencil, paint, markers, crayons, blood, etc).
MAIL the finished art to: DENNIS DREAD PO BOX 40667 Portland, Oregon 97240-0667.
Digestor will reveal his favorite entry on October 1st. The winner will receive their very own Destroying Angels shirt (priceless!) and the upcoming issue of Destroying Angels zine (we can't wait to see it!). Got it? GO FORTH & COLOR!!!!

Wednesday, August 08, 2007
DARKTHRONE

Here's my new drawing for DARKTHRONE! It was a pleasure to work with Nocturno Culto & Fenriz and I'm really pleased with how this turned out. The new album is titled F.O.A.D. and should be out in late September. Jump in the fucking grave!
Sunday, August 05, 2007
DREAD ORIGINS
This is just like those Marvel "origins" stories except the art isn't as good and I'm not a superhero! I did this long interview with my pal William McCurtin a few months ago. He asked lots of questions about my early childhood influences, which was fun to think about. William is a great cartoon artist who publishes a zine called Story of My Scab. I'm not sure if this interview will ever actually be published anywhere but I think it's a good one so I thought I would post it here in the meantime. Everything you never wanted to know...and more!

Name & age?
Dennis Dread
June 2, 1972
Gemini
Year of the Rat
How did you get started making art?
At the risk of stating the painfully obvious, I’m self-taught. I’ve only completed one formal art class and it was a college requirement. Drawing is just something I’ve always done. I have no idea why or how. Some of my earliest memories are of sitting around the house drawing homemade comics and listening to Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath records with my brothers. One of my first comics was about a serial killer called ‘The Slasher’. I think the first Halloween movie had just come out and my oldest brother went to see it and reported back to us. I immediately sat down and attempted to capture in pictures the emotional thrill I got from his retelling of the story. I remember drawing that comic in nearly one obsessive sitting and when the black pen I was using ran out of ink, I had one of the characters suddenly break a light bulb and the rest of the story was drawn in blue ink. It was like an improvised visual effect that actually worked. I took the finished comic and tried to sell it door to door in my grandparents’ neighborhood. It was very bloody and nobody bought it. In many ways this incident has foreshadowed most of my commercial ventures ever since.
What was the first LP or tape you got?
My very first record was KISS ‘Destroyer’. I loved that Ken Kelly painting with the band playing invisible instruments and dancing over the ruins of a burning world! Shortly after it came out I was jumping on my mom’s bed while she was at work. I was almost 5 years old and my brothers were babysitting when I fell off the bed and smashed my head into the corner of a bedside table. There was blood everywhere and they thought I had lost my left eye. I’m told that the only thing that would calm me down while they wiped away the blood was KISS ‘Destroyer’. Once my head healed I think my brother just gave me his copy of the record. I still associate music with blunt head trauma.
How did you get interested in horror art & movies? Favorite movies or directors?
Looking back, it’s not a huge leap from collecting bug carcasses and road-kill skulls as a child to horror art and heavy metal. Growing up in New York there was a show on TV called Drive-In Movie that featured either a monster flick or kung-fu flick every Saturday afternoon and I would tune in every week. Before that there was Chiller Theater that showed late night horror movies. Chiller Theater also had great opening theme “music” with this crude claymation hand that rose up from a puddle of blood! It scared the shit out of me but I loved it! I’ve always found this kind of imagery incredibly powerful. I guess there is something fascinating about uncovering the taboo or hidden, whether it is imaginative art or occult subcultures or human anatomy or death itself. Scary films excel at showing that which is not meant to be seen. That’s the essential nature of horror. I really enjoy the films of Mario Bava, Lucio Fulci, Dario Argento, Ingmar Bergman, Alfred Hitchcock, David Cronenberg, Alejandro Jodorowsky, Roger Corman, and Ken Russell, to name only a few. My favorite directors are those that challenge the viewer on some level and generally transgress etiquette and restraint. A good sense of humor is important too. Ultimately it is the task of all great dramatic art to, as Francis Bacon suggests, “Unlock the values of feeling and therefore return the onlooker to life more violently.”
How did you get interested in punk rock?

Aggressive music and horror have really been parallel artistic influences for most of my life. I get an emotional charge from both that is almost a physical reaction. I discovered punk rock accidentally by playing around on my radio as a kid. One night I was twisting the dial and landed on a college radio station that was broadcasting what sounded to my uninitiated young ears like the ranting of an insane person. It was disorienting and exhilarating all at once. Just like a good horror film. Later I learned that it was the ranting of an insane person. The song was ‘Inside’ by Rudimentary Peni, an amazing and haunting introduction to the genre. The first punk record I ever bought was the Misfits ‘Evilive’ because the colorful horror-inspired cover art resembled a more primitive version of the Iron Maiden covers I worshipped at the time. I still remember how weird it seemed that they were cursing and fighting with their own audience! This was very liberating to my concept of musicians and artists as somehow disengaged, mystical entertainers. “You think you’ll get out of the hospital in time?”
What was your first punk show or concert? Did you see a lot of CBGB shows growing up?
My first punk show was Suicidal Tendencies on the ‘Join the Army’ tour in '87 or '88. I guess some purists would argue that they were metal by that point, but I grew up during the crossover era and that was my first night of stage diving and taking sucker punches in the pit. It was at a little club called Streets in New Rochelle and I jumped on stage and sang ‘War Inside My Head’ with Mike Muir. It was amazing and…uh…it changed my life. Probably for the worse. I didn’t catch many shows at CBGB’s, or anywhere else for that matter. I grew up about 40 minutes away from some of the most powerful hardcore ever recorded but when you’re a young kid with no car and few friends, you might as well be living on another planet. My radio was like an umbilical cord during the 80’s. I did manage to catch a memorable Born Against show at CB’s but those matinees were sometimes incredibly unfriendly and it was an ordeal just getting through that neighborhood alone sometimes. During my last year of high school I set up an internship with CBGB’s as an excuse to go down and hang out every Friday night. I actually got school credit for sitting with Dennis Dunn and learning how to operate the stage lights. Dennis is the guy on Agnostic Front’s ‘Live at CBGB’ record that gets up on stage and threatens to kill the audience if they don’t quit fighting. He was actually a remarkably nice guy. I learned a lot from him. Aside from that I caught some great bands at other venues like The Damned, Cro-Mags, Carnivore, and Danzig on his first solo tour. I also saw Anthrax at L’amours on the ‘Among the Living’ tour. It was a Christmas Eve show with Anvil Bitch, who had a great song called 'Maggot Infestation'!
What was the first zine you saw?
I discovered zines through Fangoria magazine. When you ordered a subscription to Fangoria you got to post a few free lines in the classified section. I posted a blurb requesting pen pals and pretty soon I started receiving letters from all over the country, including weird bondage photos from some creepy English guy. Some people sent their Xerox “horror fan newsletters”. I don’t even remember them being called zines back then. A few years later, when I was about 16, my drawings were first published in a relatively literate horror movie newsletter called Scareaphanalia. Strangely enough, the guy who put out that zine and gave my crude drawings an audience has since gone on to become the managing editor at Fangoria magazine! Around that same time, when I finally learned to navigate the Metro North train system and began exploring New York City, I discovered See Hear on 7th Street in the Lower East Side. Back then, See Hear was a tiny shop at the bottom of a narrow staircase off the sidewalk and it was completely filled with “self-made magazines”. There was always some cranky guy at the counter, but if you checked your bag you could just hang out and read for a long time without anyone bothering you. I discovered a ton of cool zines down at See Hear, including Factsheet 5, which opened up the world of D.I.Y. publishing. I didn’t start publishing my own zine until many years later.
Who were some of your favorite artists growing up? And now?
Growing up I was influenced by the usual trash-culture ephemera of the day. I loved exploitation movie poster art, Wacky Packages, Marvel comics, cartoons, and tattoo flash. Tattoos were still very underground and illegal in New York during the early 80’s so getting my hands on a tattoo flash catalog was very exciting. Video stores were like art galleries. I was also a huge fan of Frank Frazetta. Obviously I was influenced by album cover artists like Derrik Riggs, Pushead, Nick Blinko, Joe Petagno, Ed Repka, Mad Marc Rude, and Michael “Away” Langevin of Voivod. As a teenager I began visiting the Metropolitan Museum of Art and delved deeper into more classical styles, specifically the dark allegorical work of Durer, Bosch, and Goya. Around the same time my mind was blown by the discovery of psychedelic posters and underground artists, most notably Greg Irons, Joe Coleman, Robert Williams, Robert Crumb, and S. Clay Wilson. As an adult it was a revelation to discover the obscure Symbolist movement, particularly völkisch and occult-oriented artists such as Franz Von Stuck, Hermann Hendrich, Arnold Bocklin, Franz Von Stassen, John Delville, Felicien Rops, and Alfred Kubin. Other influential artists are Rosaleen Norton, Austin Osman Spare, Fidus, Arno Brecker, Arthur Rackham, and Theodor Kittelsen. Nowadays I find inspiration everywhere, especially among my own close friends and peers. But I think I’ve already name-dropped enough!
Who are some of your favorite authors?? Or books?
I try to always be reading and learning and I have a small library of favorite books that I return to periodically. My father had a pile of old existential novels and I was always sort of looking for traces of him so I delved into these books at a very young age. Among them was The Boston Strangler by Gerold Frank, a true-crime account of serial murderer Albert DeSalvo. I plowed through that book and became fascinated with the idea that a man could do those things. I barely understood sex, so the idea of "sex murders" was pretty intense. I also read my father’s copy of Hunter Thompson’s biography of the Hell’s Angels for a 5th grade book report and kicked the knowledge of gang rape to my squirming classmates. Despite these early literary influences, I’m actually not a particularly morbid or violent person. I think of my drawings as stories and the best stories to tell involve brutality, blood, sex, and death. I didn’t invent that formula. Take a look at the stories people have been telling each other since recorded time. The Eddas, the Bible, the Upanishads, the epic Greek poems of Homer. These stories have survived because they somehow unleash emotion and unhinge the intellect.
What inspires you to make art now?
Deadlines!
What are some of your favorite album covers? That you did? Or other artists did?
Album covers were the first “art” I ever saw and I love tons of covers for very different reasons. It’s really difficult to narrow down my favorites to a small list. As for my own stuff, it’s difficult to be objective but I really like my latest drawing for Abscess [Horrorhammer]. I worked on that particular drawing under some incredibly stressful conditions but the results are very close to what I imagined and the band was very pleased. It even reproduced well on the CD, which isn’t always the case. For instance, I really like my drawings for the Hellshock/Consume split 7” but they reproduced very dark and lost much of their depth. I also did two different versions of that back cover because the Hellshock guys accidentally gave me the wrong song list. I think they decided to change one of their songs at the last minute but I had already incorporated the song titles into the art. So the first 500 copies of that 7” were sold during their European tour with an explanation and when they returned I drew a new back cover with the correct song titles for the repress. Maybe someday that first pressing will be collectible.

Drawing with Bic pens isn’t something I ever really thought about or planned. I was using ballpoint pens as a kid at school, just doodling all over the margins of my books. I was constantly getting in trouble for not paying attention. I like to think that these days teachers might recognize this sort of behavior as a strength and suggest art lessons or alternative curriculums, but back then it was really frowned upon. My mom discouraged the arts because our family always struggled financially and I think she wanted us to be more economically stable. Turns out she was right! Anyway, I realized I was able to get some very brooding tones and rich textures so I kept it up. Eventually this heavily shaded noir style emerged and at a certain point I made a conscious decision to produce larger scale drawings on illustration board. I never considered myself an “artist” so I was unhindered by the rules of proper artistic media. Ballpoint pens were what I had available. Some people look at my art and ask why I don’t just paint, as if painting would be a more valid and respectable craft, but I’m still challenged and excited by ballpoint pen. I’ve tried lots of different media such as pastels, scratchboard, various paints and inks, and colored pencils but nothing gives me quite the same effect. Someday I would really love to try tattooing, but so far I haven’t had much luck setting up an apprenticeship.
Yeah, my art has appeared in many “unofficial” formats. I’ve seen some really cool tattoos of my art and I very much appreciate when people send me photos. Sometimes I even post them on my blog. I was at a punk fest here in Portland recently and was surprised to see several of my older drawings walk past me sewn onto hoodies. I usually don’t mind this so much and if the print is homemade it’s rather flattering. The bootleggers that I don’t condone are the parasites that deliberately profit from my labor and don’t ask permission or send me samples for approval. Some chump in Oakland created a silk-screened show flyer with one of my drawings and deliberately removed my signature from the art and added his own! How low can a punk get?
Do you like showing your art in a gallery setting? Do you have any shows coming up? Where?
I’m curating a special exhibit of underground art here in Portland, Oregon this summer! The show is titled Entartete Kunts, a snide reference to the German term “degenerate art” and the infamous 1937 Nazi art exhibit that featured work that was officially banned by the fascist Government. The show will feature a broad range of underground artists, from well-known veterans to emerging unknowns, and includes some of my personal favorites. I’ve purposely organized this exhibit to coincide with a 2-day metal fest so it’s a great excuse to visit Portland and get drunk with me! I’m already planning to make Entartete Kunts an annual event. Gallery shows like this can be very fun and I’ve learned a lot by subjecting my own art to the merciless scrutiny of the general public. For instance, it is very interesting and often rewarding to observe how a diverse crowd will react to my work. There is also opportunity for valuable critical feedback, which I believe is essential for any meaningful growth. That said, I always remain very much in control of how and where my work is presented so my shows tend to be more like parties and less like pretentious “art scenes”. I just wish framing wasn’t so expensive!

I actually operate two different non-profit street outreach programs. Some of the kids I meet are runaways but many of the homeless people I work with are what we call “youth identified” adults who, for various reasons, haven’t been able to get their shit together and transition into sustainable homes and jobs. Most are dealing with severe trauma, addiction, and mental health issues. I go out under bridges and into squats and camps and find these people and try to provide some supportive options. It’s exhausting and thankless and occasionally rewarding work. I keep my art very separate from my day job and, for the most part, nobody I work with knows that I spend my nights hunched over a drawing table howling at the moon. Don’t tell anyone! I got started working with homeless people shortly after I moved to Portland and couldn’t find a job. I was a dirty punk with few references and dreads down past my ass. The only places that would hire me were porn shops, bars, and the homeless youth shelter. I needed glasses and my teeth cleaned so I stuck with the one that offered benefits. Perhaps not entirely surprising, I soon found that I was good at connecting with young fuck-ups. And the hours worked well for drawing. I often complain that my day job keeps me from my artwork, but I also think that if I were drawing all the time I would probably get bored and complain that I don’t have time to do anything meaningful in my community. Ironically, I’m about one paycheck away from homelessness myself.
Favorite time of day? Favorite food? Favorite drink?
My favorite time of day is night! I enjoy the solitude between midnight and 5am and that’s when I do my best drawing, writing, and thinking. My favorite food is meatless. I’ve been vegetarian for about 10 years, with the exception of some occasional meat at solstice potlucks. My favorite drink is good strong coffee. And beer. I should probably drink more water.
How do you think living in the N.W. affects/effects your art/life?
I’ve been told that parts of Oregon closely resemble Scandinavia and that aligns well with my spiritual and aesthetic coordinates. Portland itself is a beautiful city that inspires me very much. I like the rain and the architecture and the trees and the moss. I don’t think living here has affected my art much in terms of style or content but, until recently, Portland has been a very affordable place to live and that has allowed me to be a starving artist but still enjoy a relatively comfortable quality of life. Unfortunately this is rapidly changing as people continue to move here in droves. Please don’t move to Portland. The coffee is weak and the women are ugly…
Favorite thing about Portland? And the worst thing about Portland?
Aside from what I’ve already mentioned, one of the things that distinguishes Portland from many other U.S. cities is our combination of affordable rent and basements. There is a hidden D.I.Y. “basement culture” here that seems to sprout from the mold. Everyone in Portland seems to have a basement where they make art, homebrew their own booze, play music, sew their own clothing, and generally behave like crafty trolls. Portland is also geographically positioned between mountains, desert, and ocean which makes escape from humans much easier. The worst things about Portland are probably mold, methamphetamine, and gentrification. Mold constantly threatens to ruin my drawings. Meth causes crime, pollution, and ugly people. Gentrification is rapidly destroying the last vestiges of historic architecture, affordable housing, and the creativity that made moving here attractive for all these hip assholes in the first place.
What’s next for you? Are you working on any cool projects?
I feel like I’m just getting started! The group exhibit in June has me very excited about underground art again. There are lots of other projects in the works for the coming months but I won’t mention anything specific. Suffice to say, there will be more album covers and a few picture discs later this year. I’m also finally getting to draw a full gatefold! I’ll be getting around to the next issue of Destroying Angels in the next few months too. I’m getting more requests for my work than ever before and I only wish I had time to accept more offers. But I try not to overextend myself so I can continue creating quality work and avoid burnout. If drawing ever feels like a shitty job, I’ll quit...
Dennis Dread
April Fool’s Day, 2007
April Fool’s Day, 2007

Wednesday, August 01, 2007
COLORING CONTEST!
Hard to believe, but it's been a year since I last posted a contest! Nobody won that little art challenge so this time it's a bit easier. Here's how it works: PRINT out the Ghoul drawing below (it should fit on 8.5" X 11" printer paper). COLOR it in. MAIL the finished art to DENNIS DREAD PO BOX 40667 Portland, Oregon 97240-0667. Entries must be received by September 1st 2007. Feel free to color with any media you choose (pencil, paint, markers, crayons, blood, etc). Entries will be judged according to originality, effort, & enthusiasm. The winner will receive a Destroying Angels shirt and the latest issue of Destroying Angels zine. Got it? Get coloring...

And for more coloring fun, be sure to pick up a copy of the latest Portland Fun Book! One dollar from every purchase goes to the Genocide Intervention Network.
Sunday, July 08, 2007
Thursday, July 05, 2007
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