Illustration and Design II
by Jay Kinney
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- The late Greg Shaw virtually invented music fanzines
with his Mojo Navigator in the mid Sixties.
His second zine, Who Put The Bomp , championed the
garage bands and British Invasion era sound and
helped lay the groundwork for the punk explosion.
I was "art director" for Who Put The Bomp
in the mid-70s period when Greg tried to go
semi-pro, while maintaining a zine-like feel.
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- Header art for various
Bomp columns.
"Juke Box Jury" was
originally Greg's column
in Creem, later moved to
Bomp. I did the
header art for both.
Miscellaneous Illustrations
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- Illustration
for article on
"Hit and Run
Journalism,"
In These Times,
1978.
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- Illustration
for article on
cops and writers,
"Let's Make a Deal,"
MediaFile,
1980.
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- Illustrations
for article by
Murray Bookchin,
on Social Ecology,
CoEvolution
Quarterly,
1981.
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- Illustration
for article on
drug addiction,
CoEvolution
Quarterly, 1977.
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- Illustration
for calendar
published by
Rip Off Press
1977.
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- Illustration
for article on
San Francisco
vs. McDonalds
City
Magazine
c. 1973.
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- Cover art
for
The
Nation
1978.
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- Cover art for
Screw Magazine,
c. 1972,
3-color hand
separated.
Art Director:
Steve Heller.
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- Cover art for
Screw Magazine,
c. 1973,
3-color hand
separated.
Art Director:
Steve Heller.
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- Cover art for
Screw Magazine,
c. 1972,
3-color hand
separated.
Art Director:
Steve Heller.
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- Cover art for
Screw Magazine,
c. 1973,
3-color hand
separated.
Art Director:
Steve Heller.
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- Cover art for the New York Ace, March 1972,
3-color, hand separated over Craftint board.
Art Director: Steve Heller.
The New York Ace was the immediate successor to the
East Village Other, the main NY underground paper.
It was
edited by Yippie/Zippie gonzo madmen, Rex Weiner and Bob
Singer, and art directed by the great Steve Heller,
moonlighting
from Screw. Columnists and writers included: P.J. O'Rourke,
D.A. Latimer, A.J. Weberman, R. Meltzer, David Walley, Tom
Forcade, and John Gabree, most of whom went on to
The National Lampoon, High Times, and Rolling Stone.
In this cover, I captured a common sight at my local Brooklyn
pizzeria: punky highschool girls hanging out. I was just 21, myself.