>  Ganzdex, Glasses Are Free
1.16.2004
>  Ganzdex, A Tribute to Steig
10.16.2003
>  Angela Riechers, 100 Felons
9.8.2003
>  Ganzdex, Salute Satch
8.11.2003
>  Stephanie Krause, When Toast Attacks
7.1.2003
>  Leah Singer, Leah at Barney's
6.11.2003
>  Alex Kalman, untitled
5.20.2003
>  Ganzdex, Draw movie
5.20.2003
>  Ganzdex, From Our Pages: Hairy Who
4.8.2003
>  Ganzdex, From Our Pages: Tony Sarg
4.8.2003
>  Graham Roumieu, Scrimshaw
4.8.2003
>  Ganzdex, Pioneer 10 Whispers Its Last Breath
3.7.2003
>  Ganzdex: Germans und Cowboys  launch feature
  Germans and cowboys normally don’t mix, and yet my dear German girlfriend Nikki grew up watching and loving Westerns. Still does. In the spirit of healing the recent rift between our countries, The Ganzfeld presents these fine German pulp magazine covers from the 1950s. The unknown artist had a knack for capturing still moments—each illustration is a potential event about to occur: A cowboy approaching the ground in mid-fall; a man close to execution; a decision soon to be made. For me, these duotone pieces, complete with sloppy logos and headlines, are deeply mysterious artifacts. They are an odd vision of the American West by an artist thousands of miles away, and yet they seem “real” anyhow, resonating like a flash of lightning across a craggy landscape.– Dan Nadel No plugins required.
>  Lauren Redniss, Dancing
1.15.2003
>  Ganzdex, Bodoni Jonas
10.23.2002
>  Nate Pommer, Eye Am Your Eye
9.13.2002
>  Stefan Gruber, A Nautical Stereoptical Sport to Try
8.01.2002
>  Eun-Ha Paek, Eun-Ha, How Did You Get Your Name?
7.1.2002
>  Ganzdex, Cresser's Brush Store, Edinburgh
6.12.2002
>  William van Roden, William van Roden Enjoys His Sleep
5.15.2002
>  Ganzdex, The Ganzfeld Gets Modern!
4.4.2002
>  Ganzdex, Mexican Fotonovelas
4.3.2002
>  Ganzdex, Quadratino
4.2.2002
>  Peter Blegvad, Imagined, Observed, Remembered
4.1.2002
>  Ganzdex, Adamson
4.1.2002
>  Ganzdex, Bill Holman
3.2.2002
>  Ganzdex, Snickles
3.1.2002
>  Ganzdex, The Ganzfeld (unbound)
04.09.03