Difference between revisions of "Coilhouse"

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Coilhouse was an American digital and print magazine, and corresponding blog. It was founded in 2008 by Nadya Lev, Meredith Yayanos, and Zoetica Ebb., and carries the tagline, "A Love Letter to Alternative Culture."
+
{{Infobox Zine
 +
| name                    = Coilhouse
 +
| image                  = [[File:Coilhouse 01.jpg|250px|center]]
 +
| image_caption          = Coilhouse issue 01
 +
| format                  = [[Zines|Print]]/[[EZines|Digital]]
 +
| editor                  = Nadya Lev, Meredith Yayanos, and Zoetica Ebb
 +
| publisher              = Nadya Lev
 +
| origin                  = USA
 +
| language                = English
 +
| frequency              = Quarterly
 +
| active                  = August 2008 - November 2011
 +
| categories              = Cyberpunk, Art, Music, Fashion, Film, Technology, Literature
 +
| number_issues          = 6
 +
| follows                = NA
 +
| precedes                = NA
 +
| associated_publications = NA
 +
| website                = [http://coilhouse.net coilhouse.net]
 +
}}
 +
 
 +
'''Coilhouse''' was an American digital and print magazine, and corresponding blog. It was founded in 2008 by Nadya Lev, Meredith Yayanos, and Zoetica Ebb, and carries the tagline, "A Love Letter to Alternative Culture."
 +
 
 +
==Issue Contents==
 +
 
 +
'''Issue 01'''
 +
 
 +
In our premier issue, the stark android beauty created by Andy Julia for our cover is counterbalanced inside by his elegant portfolio of vintage-style nudes. There’s an exclusive 10-page showcase and interview with taxidermy sculptress Jessica Joslin. Also in Issue 01, Coilhouse travels to Ljubljana, Slovenia (literally! we actually went!) to interview Laibach, while singer Jarboe tells war stories from her career, post-Swans. Photographer Eugenio Recuenco contributes a lush 10-page portfolio and interview, while Clayton James Cubitt delivers a poignant, visceral spread (again, literally) on the topic of gender reassignment surgery and the pain of becoming. Renowned science fiction author Samuel R. Delany shares an exclusive excerpt from his forthcoming novel, From the Valley of the Nest of Spiders, while our first installment of “All Yesterday’s Parties” digs up forgotten party photos from eras long gone, starting with London’s Slimelight circa ’95. Fans of the What is Zo Wearing column will love Z’s fashion pictorial, in which she reconstructs a Galliano outfit on a budget. Pop-surrealist Travis Louie gives us a glimpse of his inner monster, and cult painter Saturno Butto has some medical fun at the expense of Catholics everywhere. All this, and much more –including supervillain how-to’s, Coilhouse paper dolls, interviews, fashion and art– await.
 +
 
 +
'''Issue 02'''
 +
 
 +
The first issue designed by our gobsmackingly brilliant Creative Director, Courtney Riot. Courtney’s adventurous design sensibilities leave their mark on every page, giving each article a voice completely of its own. An illustrated history of cyborg hands by David Forbes, a Mark Mothersbaugh interview conducted by Jeffrey Wengrofsky, and Zo’s love letter to the magical and secret places of  Los Angeles. Joshua Ellis makes a pilgrimage to the birthplace of the atomic bomb. A Coilhouse-exclusive cover shoot with Margaret Cho and Selene Luna. Interviews with artists Madeline von Foerster and Stephane Halleux. In the photography/fashion department, Gustavo Lopez Manas and Kate O’Brien’s vintage portraits of women, followed by an escapade through the trials and tribulations of vintage clothing with some familiar faces. Conversations with Mondo 2000 creator R. U. Sirius, and artist Andy Ristaino. And a set of Rococo-inspired paper dolls by Molly Crabapple.
 +
 
 +
'''Issue 03'''
 +
 
 +
Issue 03 is another badass hodgepodge of Riot(ous) design concepts containing features on the “pirate ghetto” of Kowloon Walled City and Soviet era pulp, and doll artist Marina Bychkova, breathtaking original fashion editorials shot by Gustavo Lopez Mañas and Allan Amato (featuring designer Michel Berandi), and interviews with Battlestar Galactica‘s conceptual captain Ron Moore, punk underdog Sonny Vincent, and journalist/activist/BoingBoing editor Xeni Jardin. And much, much more.
 +
 
 +
'''Issue 04'''
 +
 
 +
Issue 04: it’s haunted, you know. Or maybe it’s possessed. Could be we’ve got a grimoire on our hands. All we know is, at some point during our editorial process—which normally involves very little cauldron-stirring or eye of newt, despite whatever “coven” rumors you may have heard—#04 took on a life of its own, and has since become a small, seething portal of the uncanny. It’s all a bit magic-with-a-k. We may giggle and wink (“O R’LYEH? IA, R’LYEH!”), but that doesn’t change the fact that these pages are spellbound. You will read of channeling and scrying, of shades and shamans, and phantoms both fabricated and inexplicable. You will meet reluctant oracles, occultists, and ghosts from the past.
 +
 
 +
'''Issue 05'''
 +
 
 +
Issue 05 is ALIVE. Break out the disco ball and put on your dancing shoes, because after printing the solemn, ghostly memento mori that was #04, we’ve gone somewhere completely different with this one. We proudly present you with an issue that’s colorful, frenetic, vibrant, and celebratory. Issue 05 reflects a Coilhouse family quest for renewal and rejoicing, and there’s SO FRIGGIN’ MUCH to celebrate this time around: extensive features on fascinating artists, authors, fashion designers, photographers and musicians, a personal memoir about kinship and D&D, a dialog examining the cultural history and continuing relevance of American burlesque, an exposition of 19th century populist fiction from China, and a particularly heart-jolting paper doll.
 +
 
 +
'''Issue 06'''
 +
 
 +
“Join the black and white and red parade as we march through an angular Constructivist/Futurist/Expressionist landscape where originality and oddity rule.  There are interviews with the ultra well-known and loved and with the scrumptiously subterranean. There are (literally) sharp and edgy fashion editorials; there’s a never-before-published Bauhuas-era play; there are origami revelations. You’ll view tons of exclusive, made-just-for-the-magazine content contributed by all manner of wondrous human beings, and at 113 pages, Issue 06 is substantially longer, bigger and thicker (hurr!) than any previous incarnation of the print mag.”
  
 
==Downloads==
 
==Downloads==
Line 8: Line 53:
 
! style="background: #838B8B; color: #ffffff; text-align:center"| Notes
 
! style="background: #838B8B; color: #ffffff; text-align:center"| Notes
 
|-
 
|-
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 01
+
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 01 (August 2008)
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [[User:Famicoman|Famicoman]]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [[User:Famicoman|Famicoman]]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [http://archive.org/details/coilhouse01 Archive.org]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [http://archive.org/details/coilhouse01 Archive.org]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
 
|-
 
|-
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 02
+
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 02 (December 2008)
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [[User:Famicoman|Famicoman]]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [[User:Famicoman|Famicoman]]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [http://archive.org/details/coilhouse02 Archive.org]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [http://archive.org/details/coilhouse02 Archive.org]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
 
|-
 
|-
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 03
+
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 03 (July 2009)
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [[User:Famicoman|Famicoman]]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [[User:Famicoman|Famicoman]]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [http://archive.org/details/coilhouse03 Archive.org]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [http://archive.org/details/coilhouse03 Archive.org]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
 
|-
 
|-
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 04
+
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 04 (December 2009)
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [[User:Famicoman|Famicoman]]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [[User:Famicoman|Famicoman]]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [http://archive.org/details/coilhouse04 Archive.org]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [http://archive.org/details/coilhouse04 Archive.org]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
 
|-
 
|-
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 05
+
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 05 (June 2010)
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [[User:Famicoman|Famicoman]]  
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [[User:Famicoman|Famicoman]]  
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [http://archive.org/details/coilhouse05 Archive.org]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [http://archive.org/details/coilhouse05 Archive.org]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
 
|-
 
|-
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 06
+
! style="background: #EEE9E9; color: #8B8989;"| Issue 06 (November 2011)
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
+
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [[User:Famicoman|Famicoman]]
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"|  
+
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| [http://archive.org/details/coilhouse06 Archive.org]
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| Acquired
 
! style="background: #F8F8FF; color: #8B8989;"| Acquired
 
|-
 
|-
 
|}
 
|}
  
==References==
+
==External Links==
 
[http://coilhouse.net Official Site]
 
[http://coilhouse.net Official Site]
  
 
[[Category:Zines]]
 
[[Category:Zines]]
 +
[[Category:Ezines]]

Latest revision as of 14:05, 29 April 2014

Coilhouse
Coilhouse 01.jpg
Coilhouse issue 01
Format Print/Digital
Editor Nadya Lev, Meredith Yayanos, and Zoetica Ebb
Publisher Nadya Lev
Origin USA
Language English
Frequency Quarterly
Active August 2008 - November 2011
Topics Cyberpunk, Art, Music, Fashion, Film, Technology, Literature
Number of Issues 6
Follows NA
Precedes NA
Associated Publications NA
Website coilhouse.net

Coilhouse was an American digital and print magazine, and corresponding blog. It was founded in 2008 by Nadya Lev, Meredith Yayanos, and Zoetica Ebb, and carries the tagline, "A Love Letter to Alternative Culture."

Issue Contents

Issue 01

In our premier issue, the stark android beauty created by Andy Julia for our cover is counterbalanced inside by his elegant portfolio of vintage-style nudes. There’s an exclusive 10-page showcase and interview with taxidermy sculptress Jessica Joslin. Also in Issue 01, Coilhouse travels to Ljubljana, Slovenia (literally! we actually went!) to interview Laibach, while singer Jarboe tells war stories from her career, post-Swans. Photographer Eugenio Recuenco contributes a lush 10-page portfolio and interview, while Clayton James Cubitt delivers a poignant, visceral spread (again, literally) on the topic of gender reassignment surgery and the pain of becoming. Renowned science fiction author Samuel R. Delany shares an exclusive excerpt from his forthcoming novel, From the Valley of the Nest of Spiders, while our first installment of “All Yesterday’s Parties” digs up forgotten party photos from eras long gone, starting with London’s Slimelight circa ’95. Fans of the What is Zo Wearing column will love Z’s fashion pictorial, in which she reconstructs a Galliano outfit on a budget. Pop-surrealist Travis Louie gives us a glimpse of his inner monster, and cult painter Saturno Butto has some medical fun at the expense of Catholics everywhere. All this, and much more –including supervillain how-to’s, Coilhouse paper dolls, interviews, fashion and art– await.

Issue 02

The first issue designed by our gobsmackingly brilliant Creative Director, Courtney Riot. Courtney’s adventurous design sensibilities leave their mark on every page, giving each article a voice completely of its own. An illustrated history of cyborg hands by David Forbes, a Mark Mothersbaugh interview conducted by Jeffrey Wengrofsky, and Zo’s love letter to the magical and secret places of Los Angeles. Joshua Ellis makes a pilgrimage to the birthplace of the atomic bomb. A Coilhouse-exclusive cover shoot with Margaret Cho and Selene Luna. Interviews with artists Madeline von Foerster and Stephane Halleux. In the photography/fashion department, Gustavo Lopez Manas and Kate O’Brien’s vintage portraits of women, followed by an escapade through the trials and tribulations of vintage clothing with some familiar faces. Conversations with Mondo 2000 creator R. U. Sirius, and artist Andy Ristaino. And a set of Rococo-inspired paper dolls by Molly Crabapple.

Issue 03

Issue 03 is another badass hodgepodge of Riot(ous) design concepts containing features on the “pirate ghetto” of Kowloon Walled City and Soviet era pulp, and doll artist Marina Bychkova, breathtaking original fashion editorials shot by Gustavo Lopez Mañas and Allan Amato (featuring designer Michel Berandi), and interviews with Battlestar Galactica‘s conceptual captain Ron Moore, punk underdog Sonny Vincent, and journalist/activist/BoingBoing editor Xeni Jardin. And much, much more.

Issue 04

Issue 04: it’s haunted, you know. Or maybe it’s possessed. Could be we’ve got a grimoire on our hands. All we know is, at some point during our editorial process—which normally involves very little cauldron-stirring or eye of newt, despite whatever “coven” rumors you may have heard—#04 took on a life of its own, and has since become a small, seething portal of the uncanny. It’s all a bit magic-with-a-k. We may giggle and wink (“O R’LYEH? IA, R’LYEH!”), but that doesn’t change the fact that these pages are spellbound. You will read of channeling and scrying, of shades and shamans, and phantoms both fabricated and inexplicable. You will meet reluctant oracles, occultists, and ghosts from the past.

Issue 05

Issue 05 is ALIVE. Break out the disco ball and put on your dancing shoes, because after printing the solemn, ghostly memento mori that was #04, we’ve gone somewhere completely different with this one. We proudly present you with an issue that’s colorful, frenetic, vibrant, and celebratory. Issue 05 reflects a Coilhouse family quest for renewal and rejoicing, and there’s SO FRIGGIN’ MUCH to celebrate this time around: extensive features on fascinating artists, authors, fashion designers, photographers and musicians, a personal memoir about kinship and D&D, a dialog examining the cultural history and continuing relevance of American burlesque, an exposition of 19th century populist fiction from China, and a particularly heart-jolting paper doll.

Issue 06

“Join the black and white and red parade as we march through an angular Constructivist/Futurist/Expressionist landscape where originality and oddity rule. There are interviews with the ultra well-known and loved and with the scrumptiously subterranean. There are (literally) sharp and edgy fashion editorials; there’s a never-before-published Bauhuas-era play; there are origami revelations. You’ll view tons of exclusive, made-just-for-the-magazine content contributed by all manner of wondrous human beings, and at 113 pages, Issue 06 is substantially longer, bigger and thicker (hurr!) than any previous incarnation of the print mag.”

Downloads

Issue User Link Notes
Issue 01 (August 2008) Famicoman Archive.org
Issue 02 (December 2008) Famicoman Archive.org
Issue 03 (July 2009) Famicoman Archive.org
Issue 04 (December 2009) Famicoman Archive.org
Issue 05 (June 2010) Famicoman Archive.org
Issue 06 (November 2011) Famicoman Archive.org Acquired

External Links

Official Site