precious little fictions in 500 words (or less).

Quick Fiction 15

April 2009
Quick Fiction 15
$8.00

Table of Contents
It Doesn’t   (full text)
Randall Brown
Parcel Post   (full text)
Lydia Copeland
Their Health   (full text)
Dylan Nice
Limber
Andrew Brininstool
War Dish
Jami Brandli
Big Swing
Kenneth Calhoun
Heist
Elizabeth Ellen
Parcel Post
Lydia Copeland
Sofa
Scott Garson
Wisdom of the Hawaiian Monk Seal
Charles Lennox
The Practical Application of Beauty
Andrea Kneeland
Clerk
Stefan Kiesbye
Sunday Morning
Lee Martin
Flight to Maui
Jen Marquardt
The Book on My Marriage
Sean Lovelace
Geoeroticism 101
Michael Meyerhofer
A Story about the Foot
Taylur Thu Hien Ngo
The Inconspicuous Beginning of Our Disappearance
Andrew Michael Roberts
Outside It's Cold And The Sun Is Shining
G. C. Perry
A Better Canal
James Scott
Three Pigs
Joanna Ruocco
Your Child's Pain
Helen Klein Ross
The Day Before
Don Strange
Zmiana
Daniel E. Wickett
In All the World's Oceans
Jensen Whelan
The Cost of Lighting
Mabel Yu
Wish Him Well
Mike Young
Stolen Goods
Spencer Wise
22 Market Street
Blythe Winslow

Cover Art

“Mourning Glory” by Ray Caesar

Ray Caesar creates fantastic, grimly hopeful and gravely whimsical images of wizened children who radiate an enigmatic serenity. Sprouting bio-mechanical limbs and appendages, the figures are otherworldly, a melding of sci fi fantasy, lush landscapes, and Victorian sensibilities. Working for 17 years in the Art and Photography Department of The Hospital For Sick Children in Toronto, Ray documented things such as child abuse, surgical reconstruction, psychology and animal research. The artist explains, “I often awake in the middle of the night and realize I have been wondering the hallways and corridors of the giant hospital. It is clear to me that this is the birthplace of all my imagery.” These experiences continually haunt and present themselves in his dreamy images, which draw inspiration from the works of Frida Kahlo, Salvador Dali, and Paul Cadmus. 

Ray's work is most astonishing in the fact it is all digitally created; most people assume they are looking at paintings due to the seamless blending and "painterly quality" of the work as well as its unique emotional impact. Creating models in a 3D modeling software called Maya, he then wraps them in painted and manipulated texture maps. Each model is set up with an invisible skeleton that allows him to pose each figure in its 3D enviroment. Digital lights and cameras are added with shadows and reflections simulating that of a mysterious and strange “real” world.

Find more of Ray's work at jonathanlevinegallery.com and www.raycaesar.com.


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