Publishing maverick and alternative-publishing pioneer join forces on a line of books, launching in late 2013
NEW YORK, NY, JULY 2nd
- Dark Horse Comics announced today that they have entered into a joint
venture to add the newly formed Kitchen Sink Books as an exclusive and
independent publishing imprint.
Kitchen
Sink Books will begin a publishing program in late 2013, focusing on
large-format, heavily illustrated art books, archival reprint
collections, and original graphic novels.
The
new imprint will be headed by alternative publishing pioneer Denis
Kitchen and book designer/editor John Lind, who will share duties
including acquiring and editing new projects, developing talent, and
strategically guiding the imprint.
Their
previous partnership, Kitchen, Lind & Associates, served as a
packager on numerous award-winning and award-nominated books for
companies including Abrams, Chronicle Books, Disney/Hyperion, and
Bloomsbury. KLA also represented creator-owned projects at major
publishing houses from an eclectic client list, including Todd Hignite,
Jerry Robinson, Eleanor Davis and Drew Weing, Joey Chou, Rebecca Guay,
Liniers, Howard Cruse, William Stout, and the literary estates of both
Harvey Kurtzman and Al Capp.
Publisher
Mike Richardson, editor Philip Simon, and assistant editor Everett
Patterson will oversee responsibilities on behalf of Dark Horse Comics.
“I
grew up an ardent fan of Kitchen Sink Press and Dark Horse Comics, so
continuing to work with my business partner Denis Kitchen and Mike
Richardson is always a thrill,” said Lind. “Their careers greatly
influenced and inspired my interest in comics and graphic novels at a
crucial stage—in many ways, it’s what drew me to work in this field.”
Lind continued, “Kitchen Sink Books will be the nexus of our shared
aesthetic values, united vision, and dedication to quality work.”
“John
and I have packaged books for a number of first-rank publishers, but we
have long discussed the ideal house to enjoy maximum freedom and
creativity. In longtime friend and publisher Mike Richardson and Dark
Horse Comics, we found just that,” said Kitchen. “It’s a kinship born of
creator-friendly environments, a commitment to upholding comics
history, and beautiful books produced by talented creators that we can
be proud of. Our hope is that Kitchen Sink Books will connect with fans
and aficionados by showcasing some of the best this medium has to
offer.”
“I’m
extremely pleased to be working with Denis and John on this new
venture,” said Mike Richardson. “My relationship with Denis goes back to
the earliest days of Dark Horse and we’ve had a shared aesthetic with
regard to comics from day one. With John, we have one of the best
designer/editors in the business. I’m very much looking forward to the
exciting projects that will result from this new imprint.”
Kitchen
Sink Books will initially release four to six books per year. The first
book, scheduled for release in November 2013, will be The Best of Comix Book: When Marvel Went Underground!, a collection of the long-out-of-print underground Comix Book
series (1974–1976) that was originally edited by Denis Kitchen and Stan
Lee for Marvel Comics. The collection will include work from
underground creators such as Joel Beck, Kim Deitch, Justin Green, Harvey
Pekar, Trina Robbins, Art Spiegelman, Skip Williamson, and S. Clay
Wilson. The book will feature an introduction by Lee, a foreword by
Kitchen, and an essay written by James Vance (Kings in Disguise), accompanied by unpublished artwork, photographs, and correspondence from Kitchen’s archives.
Catch an exclusive preview of The Best of Comix Book: When Marvel Went Underground! on Bleeding Cool.
Look for more announcements in this exciting new line of books in the months to come!
Denis Kitchen
is a legendary pioneer in underground and alternative publishing via
his original company Kitchen Sink Press (1969–1998). For nearly 30
years, Kitchen served as publisher for an impressive list of creators
including R. Crumb, Will Eisner, Harvey Kurtzman, Neil Gaiman & Dave
McKean, Alan Moore & Eddie Campbell, Art Spiegelman, Al Capp,
Charles Burns, Milton Caniff, James O’Barr, Scott McCloud, Mark Schultz,
Jack Jackson, Michael Allred, Simon Bisley, Aline Kominsky-Crumb, Monte
Beauchamp, Joe Matt, Kim Deitch, Trina Robbins, Will Elder, Jim
Woodring, Alex Toth, and Ernie Bushmiller. In 1986 Kitchen founded the
Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, a non-profit organization that defends
the comics industry’s First Amendment rights, serving as its president
for the first 18 years. A monograph of his cartooning career, The Oddly Compelling Art of Denis Kitchen, was published in 2010.
John Lind
is Co-founder and Creative Director of Kitchen, Lind & Associates.
Since 1999, Lind has art directed and designed books for a high-profile
client list including Abrams, Bloomsbury, Chronicle Books,
Disney/Hyperion, Egmont, Simon & Schuster, and W. W. Norton.
Specifically focusing on graphic novels, art books, and children’s
books, he has worked on numerous award-winning projects and New York Times
best sellers and has had the pleasure of working with creators such as
Tony DiTerlizzi, Will Eisner, Mo Willems, and R. Crumb. Before becoming a
full-time designer, Lind was the Project Development Coordinator for
Kevin Eastman’s Words & Pictures Museum in the mid-1990s.
Mike Richardson
is the President and Publisher of Dark Horse Comics, the award winning
company he founded in 1986. The comics company was an offshoot of the
Oregon based comic-book retail chain he launched in 1980, Things From Another World.
Richardson pursued the idea of establishing an ideal atmosphere for
creative professionals, and twenty-five years later the company has
grown to become the third-largest comics company in the United States.
Richardson also founded Dark Horse Entertainment, for which he has
produced over two-dozen films and television series, including the Emmy
winning HBO documentary, Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project.
Dark Horse Comics
has proven to be a solid example of how integrity and innovation can
help broaden a unique storytelling medium and establish a small,
homegrown company as an industry giant. The company is known for the
progressive and creator-friendly atmosphere it provides for writers and
artists. In addition to publishing comics from top talent such as Frank
Miller, Mike Mignola, Neil Gaiman, Brian Wood, Gerard Way, Felicia Day,
Guillermo Del Toro and comics legends such as Will Eisner, Neal Adams,
and Jim Steranko, Dark Horse has developed its own successful properties
such as The Mask, Ghost, Timecop, and SpyBoy. Its successful line of comics and products based on popular properties includes Star Wars, Mass Effect, Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Aliens, Conan, EVE: Online, Halo, Serenity, Game of Thrones and Domo.
Today Dark Horse Comics is the largest independent comic book publisher
in the US and is recognized as one of the world’s leading publishers of
both creator-owned content and licensed comics material.
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