Showing posts with label Morose Macabre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Morose Macabre. Show all posts

Monday, April 22, 2013

Aaron Doctor and the madness of Dr. Morose- Interview

www.gothicteasociety.com

The Aaron Doctor Interview
by Wednesday Black


An amazing artist with a beautiful sense of creep and style! Aaron Doctor aka Dr. Morose. I have a hard time not coveting everything this man creates! If you have not seen his work, where the hell have you been? 

Dr Morose is the other half of the Morose & Macabre duet of Creeps behind the  Morose & Macabre Atrocity Exhibit. You can find out how to attend HERE




GTS- Who are you and what do you do?

--My name is Aaron Doctor, or sometimes "Dr. Morose", when it comes to signing my artwork, as that's the moniker I've been creating and working under for the last five years or so with Morose & Macabre. I do lots of things, artistically speaking... or I try to do lots of things, anyway. 

GTS- Where were you born and raised? Family?

--I was born in Butler PA, and that is where I grew up. That's where I spent the majority of my life, right up until moving last year. 

My family is great. My dad and I have some big differences, but my mom and I are really close, and I have a younger brother and sister who I couldn't be more proud of. And most of my extended family isn't completely batshit crazy. MOST... So, I'm not doing too badly in the family department. Oh! And of course all my friends who are family to me and my furry babies (all dogs!) who I'd be lost without. 

 Shadow Box

Poppets

GTS- Were you a spooky child?

--Yeah, I was always this way. My mom has a bunch of stories she could tell you, and it's funny because I think she kind of knew that it wasn't "just a phase" all along. For example, when I was in kindergarten, aside from drawing skulls on EVERYTHING, which is worrysome to your teachers, there was a particular incident that I still laugh about, because it's so stupid. It was Valentine's day or something and our teacher was asking us to write a card to someone we loved, so I wrote mine to Satan. My HORRIFIED teacher sent my ass to the principal's office, my mother was called and told that there was some awful thing I did and they needed to see her and when they explained what had happened, she had to explain to them that Satan was the name of our doberman. My dad named that dog and I wasn't raised in a religious house so I didn't understand what the Hell I did wrong. So, I started the business of spooking my teachers early. 

My mom sorta perpetuated all that though, because she knew it made me happy. She bought me monster toys and let me watch horror movies and just let me grow up to be a weirdo and loved me anyway, cause she rules. She still buys me goofy Halloween toys and monster movies as gifts.




GTS- What medium do you most enjoying working with?

--My preference changes a lot. If you asked me that a year ago, I'd have said acrylics, because I was still painting more than anything else. Right now, I'm enjoying exploring different mold-making techniques, which my very patient fiancee is trying to teach me, and casting and sculpting things and trying to figure out ways to best employ what talents I have in several areas at once. so, it's a mixed bag.





Even Jewelry!


GTS- What memorable responses have you had to your work?

--I've had some great ones, some bad ones, and some funny ones. People in Cleveland at this art-walk we (Morose & Macabre) tried to vend didn't seem to respond well. We ended up putting up a page on our website with quotes from satisfied customers and putting in some of the "what the fuck is THAT?" comments we've had too. Overall, though, I find that most people respond positively, even if it's not their "thing". 



GTS- My Personal Favorite! I just missed getting the original.

GTS- What inspires you? or gives you ideas that you want to create?

--Alot of things. other artist's work, of course. Architecture, the concept of an afterlife, even though I'm uncertain there is one... Anything macabre,  mad collectors, nature and natural history, urban decay. Death, obviously... Life, sometimes. HALLOWEEN, horror films, ghosts (actual or metaphorical). Specific moods of my own, but those can make or break me and are quite often detrimental to me rather than helpful because sometimes I'm not careful and don't properly manage them. 





GTS- What is the last book you read?

--I'm almost always involved in several books at once, and they're usually short story anthologies and they're always horror. But, at the moment, I think I'm just about finished with Clive Barker's 'Mister B. Gone'... I've not been reading a lot lately. 



GTS- What is Goth?

--The reason I got beat up in high school.  

I could give you the lecture I give to everyone else and the textbook definition, but it seems to be something different to everyone. It is a counterculture movement that grew up around a specific type of music, like most other subcultures. For me, it will always be 80s bands with big, fabulous hair and androgynous singers dripping with layers of fishnet and looking for all the world like they just crawled out of some spooky German expressionist nightmare... But that's just me. A friend of mine recently said something about how we live in a "mashup culture", which is both exciting and disheartening at the same time. It leaves a lot of wiggle room for interpretation and new music and fashion and ideas but it also means that every time I go to a goth bar I hear Lady Gaga (I'm looking at you, Bar Sinister! Why?). 


GTS-Aaron once posted these works as his rejects! I LOVE that moon especially!


GTS- What are you working on at the moment?

-- I've just begun a series of skull-faced mixed-media dolls that I'm pretty excited about. As usual, i've got a zillion ideas and my problem is managing the rolodex in my head and keeping everything in order... Like I said earlier, I've been trying to work more on sculpting and creating some more mixed media pieces, and I've recently started drawing again. Drawing was my first love when I was a kid, and I lost track of it for a while because I was concentrating on other things, but I've been trying to train myself to do something creative every day, and drawing is an easy way to exercise your art-muscles when you don't have the time or energy to devote to a more demanding project. So, you'll likely see more illustrations and mixed media stuff and less paintings from in the near future. 

GTS- What are you doing when you’re not creating? What (other) hobbies do you have?

--Hunting for and collecting strange things. Lots of bones and medical equipment and vintage photos and taxidermy - just endless stuff. I could ogle at and shop for weirdness like that for hours.... Mentally cataloguing and lusting after amazing things that I usually can't afford. I'm a huge horror movie nerd so I watch tons of movies. I also kind of enjoy cooking even though I'm not very good at it. It's nice being this close to such a major city now, so I taking weekend trips to L.A. to see friends, as well..  or just relaxing at home and spending downtime with Guytano and our pup, Belladonna.

GTS- Do you admire any artists / photographers? (Famous or not!)

--This list could be endless. I admire a lot of people's work. Some artists of note whose work I drool over: Joel Peter Witkin, John Holmes (the surrealist painter, not the porn star, though I do love porn) for all his pulp and horror inspired work that appeared on all the weird paperback books I spent so much time reading, Pierre Et Gilles, Jessica Joslin, Liz Mcgrath, Zdzisław Beksiński, Giger, of course... The list goes on and includes more than just visual artists. I'll leave out the list of homoerotic artists whose work I fawn over. And then there are all the people I've been blessed to know who have taught me tons of things and who I find really inspirational - Kelly/Macabre Noir, obviously, because we've spent a lot of time feeding off of each other and working together, Zach/MCXIII for his whimsy and sense of humor, Ryan Flowers [whose work is a must-see], Cheryl Adamson who paints a mean horror portrait, Guytano Kalicicki for teaching me how to sculpt and work with different mediums, Spinestealer, whose work I've ogled forever... Tony Cupstid [another many-talented person I've been really lucky to get to know].... just to name a few. That's another never ending list. Please feel free to familiarize yourselves and ask for links and I'd be happy to point you in the direction of any of these talented people.





GTS- Morose and Macabre? How did that come about?

--It was born of a love for similar things, and a hatred for retail. Kelly (Macabre Noir) and I both used to work a retail gig together and started hanging out and painting and stuff together and decided to try to get our stuff seen, enjoyed and ultimately sold. We were going to start printing t shirts at first, but somehow we never really ended up doing that. So, we built a website, got some shows with the help of our friend Zach, and that was the beginning. A lot of shameless self promotion and support from friends later and here we are. 

GTS- The Atrocity Exhibition? What is it and Why?

-- It was, and is, an avenue for us to show our work. That's how it began... However, it's grown (well, mutated is a better word) into something bigger and more all encompassing. We've always had friends involved since the beginning, because we happen to have a lot of friends who are artists or performers or both, but our contacts have multiplied and the show gets a little bigger every year. It is always themed, and usually involves a lineup of burlesque dancers, drag, fetish demonstrations, sideshow acts, flesh suspension, fire-breathing, live music, and other things. Any talents that can be molded to fit the bill of what we're doing that year. We've had the pleasure of working with some big names and great people over the years, as well. Jarboe, Nicki Jaine, and last year, we had Alaska Thunderfuck from this season of Rupaul's Drag Race (TEAM THUNDERFUCK for the win!!!), to name a few. It has become one of the biggest dark events in the area, and brings together a great group of creative minds, presenting them with a venue to show their talents. The turnout is better every year. Atrocity Exhibition is also mainly funded by donations from the general public. We have used kickstarter to bring this event to Pittsburgh for the last four years with pretty amazing support from people who genuinely love what we are trying to do... To entertain you and rattle your bones, show you some great art... And maybe get you a little drunk. 



With Macabre Noir


GTS- You moved here to California fairly recently. How do you like it?

--I did! I moved here in December of 2011 to be with my man Guytano (who is a talented artist in his own right and is constantly showing me new tricks) so, I've been here over a year, now, and I'm still sort of adjusting. It was a huge life change for me, and 2011 was a really chaotic year. I am enjoying it here, though, and have had a lot of really magical experiences since I've been here and am really grateful for the opportunity. Now, if I can just move all of my friends and family from PA here, I will be totally set. 

GTS- Disneyland?

--I  had never been until I visited Los Angeles for the first time in June 2011 but have been several times since. I was surprised how much I enjoyed it. Of course, you know I have to go on the Haunted Mansion like ten times before I can call it a day and leave the park.

GTS- What do you dislike?

--This is a really dangerous question. You're a facebook friend of mine so you see first hand how I am cooooonstantly pissed at something. A VERY truncated list: homophopia/bigotry/racism/sexism/ageism/size-ism/etc. When people are rude, especially to people in the service industry. The news, in general... It's funny how much more relaxed everyone on the west coast is. And then there's me, all aggro and mouthy and irritated. I don't know if that will change over time or not... Maybe the longer I'm here the softer I'll get? People who know me are rolling their eyes reading that bit, surely. 




GTS- Biggest misconception about you?

--That I want to see photos of people's babies. Ha! 

Or that I'm mean. This has always been a thing. I'm sorry that my resting face looks like a scowl, but I'm not really mean until I have a reason to be, I promise. Just put that picture of the baby away and we'll be alright. I'm a huge softie, I just happen to have a big mouth and a protective shell... But if you peel back all the layers of broken glass and rusty metal and poisonous corrosive toxic waste there's a mushy gooey center in there somewhere. i don't know what it's made out of though... it might be poisonous too. It isn't FDA approved or anything. 



GTS- OK I really want this one!


GTS- If you could trade places with any other person for a week, famous or not famous, living or dead, real or fictional. with whom would it be? Why?

--Trading places with someone who's dead seems like an unfair trade. But seriously, without totally overthinking it...  I want to be David Bowie for a week. In the 70s. Ziggy Stardust era. He is a hero of mine. I love him and have always wondered what it must have been like to live that life of excess and glamour and makeup and big shoes and orange hair (not that I didn't do it when I was a teenager, but I want to do it in a bigger budget). I guess I'd have to get over that stage fright, though. And this sort of kills two birds, because he was real and fictional all at the same time, and technically while David is still alive, Ziggy is dead now, so that covers all the bases here. 


Aarons artwork is available HERE
So, what are you waiting for?


All artwork used by permission and copyright of Aaron Doctor.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Miss Macabre - The Macabre Noir Interview

www.gothicteasociety.com



An Interview with Miss Macabre - Macabre Noir
by Wednesday Black

The moment I first saw Miss Macabre's artwork I was a fan. This Pittsburgh bombshell is an extraordinary artist, doll- maker, burlesque dancer, one half of the duo Morose & Macabre, and a walking work of art.  I am sure you will find her style and art as intriguing and inspiring as I do.




GTS- Childhood and family? Where did you grow up?

MN- I grew up an only child in a rural farmland area of western Pennsylvania.  It was just myself, my mom, and my dad in a house they built by hand from the ground up (that is still an on-going project) in a wooded area, which is sadly now surrounded by a housing plan.  Both of my parents worked in their independent, small business, so I spent a lot of my time drawing in a corner of their country shoppe or flitting around talking to the customers....at one point I even tried to peddle my crayon drawings for quarters.  



GTS- Did you enjoy school? Why?

MN- Nooooooo.  I was a weird, weird child and an even stranger teenager.  My style was not widely accepted by my peers.  It made it a fairly miserable existence until my senior year.  The friends that I DID have were probably not the best influences, but when you are an outsider, you kind of flock towards the only people who are accepting of you.  I focused on art classes and got in a lot of trouble for both my mouth and cutting class....and sometimes even my wardrobe.  I honestly have to give credit to my art teachers for keeping me on some kind of path.  




GTS- What did you think you were going to be when you grew up?

MN- I always knew I was going to be an artist, the family knew, my teachers knew, my friends knew.  I picked up a pencil and started drawing before I was even speaking proper English.  I spent the majority of my time with my nose down and involved in some sort of project. 



MN- What traditions have been passed down in your family?

MN- Dolls and small businesses.  Both of my immediate grandmothers, on both sides of the family, were doll makers.  My grandmother on my mothers' side made porcelain dolls and my grandmother on my fathers' side made rag dolls.  My parents were also creative people and featured in magazines for their colonial floor cloths and furniture.  They opened their first shoppe, Frog Hollow, in Butler, Pennsylvania when I was about 3 years old. 



     I have several of Macabre's dolls in my own collection!             


GTS-Describe a real-life situation that inspired your art?

MN- Oh gawd, there are soooo many it would be hard to pin point just one.  Everything around me inspires me.  The people I know, the objects I see, the music I hear, a conversation overheard, a creak in a floor board.  I draw inspiration from the strangest things, at the strangest times.  However, a dear friend of mine owns a historical and notoriously haunted hotel in mid-state PA, The Grand Midway. He has filled it with some of the most awe-inspiring belongings and artistic people.  It's become a haven for artists, poets, musicians....I dare anybody to spend a weekend in this glorious place and not come back with inspiration spilling over, it's impossible.  The aesthetic and energy of that place is food for art.



GTS-What is Goth?

MN-In my opinion, it is a state of mind and an appreciation for the darker things in life.  The understanding of things that are misunderstood and often feared by society as a whole.




GTS- Why the name Macabre Noir?

MN- The Morose & Macabre names actually stemmed from a conversation with my mother while Aaron (aka Morose) and myself were building the website and collaborative together.  We had so many different names we were tossing about and not settling on anything.  My mother found an article on Edward Gorey in the newspaper and brought it to me.  She said "this reminds me of you and Aaron, your work is also very morose and macabre."  It was the light bulb that needed to go off.  Attaching "Noir" to the name came later after I started performing because all of my costumes were black....or various shades there of (haha).  I'm Miss Macabre for the House of Oddities, and Macabre Noir for the stage and Kabarett Vulgare.  



GTS-What makes you angry?

MN-The human race's inability to accept one and other for differences, flaws, beliefs, and lifestyles.  If we were all born the same, it would be a hella boring world, and I don't understand why you would want to hurt someone for not being the same as you are.  It's ridiculous.
Also, animal cruelty....I go insanely, blindly, tear filled, angry when I see those awful abuse pictures that get passed around on Facebook.  I can not fathom why anyone would want to torture, abuse, or brutally kill an innocent creature with no understanding of why it is happening to them.  I can't imagine the fear and confusion.  Those images and thoughts stay with me and eat at me.

GTS- What never fails to make you smile?

MN- Antique stores!!!!!!  :D



GTS-What do you dislike about your work?

MN- The heavy-handed nature of my paintings.  I can't stand it.  Aaron's got a light hand and works in incredible detail, which I feel I lack.






GTS- How did the Morose and Macabre partnership come to be?

MN- We were two separate artists trying to reach out for some recognition in a small and low income community. Independent artists and misfits that had been deemed "freaks" all of our lives, the collaboration was never planned, in was born out of frustration and lack of the community's respect for a "darker art form".
 People from the area weren't buying art, very much less supporting the kind of creations that we were producing independently. Only able to showcase at "halloween shows", our work was only appreciated once a year and never actually purchased to hang in local homes, aside from friends who shared our love of odd.  We started as friends hanging out and having morbid, little painting parties for fun. 
After working with each other for a time, it was fairly clear that we were able to motivate each other and that was what we were lacking separately. We call it "one upping". One of us would paint something phenomenal and it would drive the other to want to create something equally amazing, if not better.


We had previously discussed doing a website featuring our designs and illustrations on tee shirts, but we were discovering that there was a whole other spectrum to our creativity. Our paintings eerily collaborated with one and other, although they were crafted with different techniques. Our color schemes and thoughts were meshing together in some sort of creepy harmony and were forming a collection without intention. Our website tumbled from morbidly sarcastic tee shirt designs, into a gallery for neo victorian inspired low brow horror art.
We painted and we planned in the months that followed as we built the site and began networking before our launch. We built our profiles on social networking sites and began teasing people with our dark senses of humor and the promise that "something wicked this way comes".



In February of 2009, The House of Oddities was born. It was inhabited by those dark, little voices in the back of our minds that most people ignore. We named them Dr. Morose and Miss Macabre and instead of keeping them locked up, we built them a house to run rampant.
By the end of February we were producing artworks, post mortem shadow boxes, dolls, and simple jewelry made from pewter stampings and began selling them in our Wicked, Little Shoppe via Etsy.
Although not prepared or planning for any sort of immediate success, to our surprise, our oddities were selling......well.
Shortly after, we hit the road. We built 2 giant, bloody walls with mounts for paintings and strapped them awkwardly a top a Ford Focus hatch back and headed south in the cramped, art-packed car. Morose & Macabre's House of Oddities made our first public appearance as a collaborative in Charlotte, North Carolina in late May and early June of 2009 at Shiprocked! and Kabarett Vulgare. With the help of our dear friend, Deville, it was a flying success.
Since then, we have traveled, shown, and evolved at an amazing rate that neither of us had ever hoped, nor dared dream. Our jewelry has snowballed from simple pewter stampings on chain, to hand crafted wearable art in our Strangulations collection and Arachnophilia collection. Our paintings continue to collaborate all on their own and now incorporate mixed medias of both fibers and dead things.



GTS- Visit the Morose & Macabre website to find out more



GTS- What is the Atrocity Exhibition? How did it begin? Where is it going?

MN- "I would love to get inside your head for one day" is something we hear often.  So, we thought to ourselves, "Why the hell not let them in?"
The Atrocity Exhibition is Morose & Macabre's first independent event that houses sideshow, burlesque, and performance art entertainers as well as showcases our fellow dark artists and artisans.  It lets folks step into the House Of Oddities and experience it as a 360 degree, living art installation.  The first event in 2009 was a raging success and we were not only able to promote our work, but bring all of our misfit friends and comrades together from all over the country for one unforgettable evening and share our success with these talented folks who supported US for so long. We are currently heading into our 5th year and the event has continued to grow to monstrous proportions, as well as become a staple in the underground, bizarre art and performance community.
Where is it going?  Well, we don't really know.  We're just along for the ride.  We never expected it to take off the way that it has, and we work hard to make it as unique as possible each year.

GTS- For information about how to attend the Atrocity Exhibition on May 4th 2013,  Click HERE




GTS- What would people be surprised to know about you?

MN-I have social anxiety and a panic attack disorder, that I have been in a battle with since I was a teenager.  Performance, galleries, and hosting events has been insane therapy for me and has forced me to be a lot stronger in public situations, as I do not wish for my anxiety to control my life and the things that I want to accomplish.  It still grips me every now and then, and I'm notorious for not being able to stand still at events.  If I stand still for too long and don't have something to occupy me, while surrounded by people, I start panicking and get the intense urge to leave, like, immediately.
If I go too long without performing, my stage anxiety comes back and I get this weak and buckling knee thing that scares the crap out of me for the first minute or so I'm on stage.







GTS-What would I find in your refrigerator right now?

MN-Tofu, ton of vegetables, green juice of some variety, this amazing blueberry goat cheese that I'm completely addicted to, and a whole lot of condiments.



GTS- What is the last book you read?

MN- The Hangman's Daughter by Oliver Potzsch
GTS-  oh! I read that about eight months ago!





GTS- Favorite Tattoo? (of yours)

MN- The Edgar Allan Poe portrait on my forearm.  




GTS- What about your Burlesque Troupe? How long have you been performing? How did you start? Do you make your own costumes?

 MN- It's actually a sideshow/burlesque troupe called Kabarett Vulgare, and we focus a bit more on the sideshow aspect.  It's a bastardization of traditional American sideshow in a Weimar era cabaret formatted variety show.
I started guesting with the Charlotte, NC troupe in 2009 while performing here at home, in Pittsburgh, with The Bridge City Bombshells burlesque troupe.  Two of the Charlotte crew members, including the founding member, moved up here in 2011 and we began the Pittsburgh troupe.  I am currently one of the group's burlesque performers, glass walker, human pin cushion, and city title holder of Pittsburgh's Freak of The Year 2012.
I indeed make all of my own costuming, although sometimes I like to cruise Etsy to see what I can find by other designers and costume makers.  If it's something I don't believe I'm capable of making and I can't seem to find what I'm looking for online, I turn to my friend and fellow performer, Cherri Baum, who can fabricate just about anything that I can conjure up in my head.
GTS- Here is one of Macabre's videos




GTS- Whats next for you?

 MN- I'm looking forward to Kabarett Vulgare's spring/summer travels and shows.  I have a lot of really interesting gallery shows coming up throughout the course of 2013 and early 2014 that I'm really excited about, as I will be paired with some really killer artists.  The possibilities are endless and I'm always learning new skills and collecting new interests to busy myself......so who knows where I'll be popping up next.  :)







Treat yourself to a M&M original piece of creepy! Visit their shop HERE

Macabre Noir is on Facebook - HERE


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