Illustration appearing with “Jimmy From Another World.“
Cosmopolitan. August 1968.
@popsixsquishcicerolipschitz / popsixsquishcicerolipschitz.tumblr.com
Illustration appearing with “Jimmy From Another World.“
Cosmopolitan. August 1968.
Christian Josef, Novum Gebrauchs Graphik, August, 1978.
Frank Kelly Freas: The Zen Gun - DAW Collectors #541, August 1983
“Videogaming Illustrated”, August 1982 Source
Fight Comics #51_August 1947_Joe Doolin cover art
“When I was first living as a punk (back at the Canterbury), I experienced a kind of acceptance I’d never experienced before. Many of us hadn’t decided if we were bisexual, queer, or how we wanted to identify, and all of it was completely accepted. If you decided to try something different, that was OK - nobody held you to any kind of expectations. I think that the beauty of punk was that it didn’t force anybody to claim anything that they weren’t ready to claim. And I think that when you’re young, it’s really important to feel that kind of looseness, that kind of freedom. I feel like true punk is about that kind of freedom, so I feel that people who don’t have that kind of freedom and were involved in some very rigid form of rock music… I don’t even consider that punk, I just think of that as something that mimics the patriarchy, that mimics the status quo, and how that’s punk is beyond me. I just don’t get it. Punk is to challenge convention, to try something new, and be daring, and dare to expose who you are. That’s really being brave, right? To feel like, ‘I have to conceal who I am just to fit in and everybody’s wearing leather jackets so I have to buy one too’ - that just seems so uncomfortable to me and so restrictive. If that’s the kind of scene that you consider punk…I…I just…I would have to disagree.” interview with KChung Radio, August 2015.
Kindai Eiga August 1953 (Showa 28