Turpentine Ray & Ken Nash Live at the Basement Bar, Prague - May 3
The Ken Nash Selfie, Series 1
Recent Illustration Work
Check out my other blog about protest signs
ARTĚL Holiday Card 2013
Berlin Tech Start-up Scene: Boom or Bubble?
I may be writing a song about you. Yes YOU!
It's a contest! To enter you just need to like my
music page on facebook or follow me on twitter. A winner will be drawn
at random on December 1st. And I will write and record a song just for
YOU. http://www.facebook.com/iamkennash
https://twitter.com/iamkennash
https://twitter.com/iamkennash
Ken Nash Releases New Album "Human Creatures"
It took a few years to get this baby out the door. During that time I've written enough songs for at least two more albums. Wish I could speed up my production process!
Give the album a listen for free on bandcamp. If you like what you hear, download a copy and share/repost the link wherever you can. There is also a physical CD in hand-made packaging that's available. Order yours now while they're still available.
![](http://f0.bcbits.com/img/a4088774920_10.jpg)
New Ken Nash CD "Human Creatures" to be released November 2
The Two Lives of Edward Hopper
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equus news
THE TWO LIVES OF EDWARD HOPPER
The thirty-odd stories in Ken Nash’s collection The Brain Harvest present
a variety of styles, themes and arguments. There are elaborate,
developed narratives with detailed characters and plots (as in “The
Cello Garden,” the fictional account of the life and fate of a beautiful
cellist Anna Leibowitz), and there are sketches in a few rough
brushstrokes (“Making Babies” and “My Lobotomy,” two very different, yet
eerily funny renderings of amorous failures). They feature real-life
characters and narrators trapped in surreal or unreal states and
situations (e.g. “Maurice Utrillo” who achieves an epiphany of space,
surface and depth when observing a commonplace wall); but they also brim
with completely fictional or even fantastic characters in equally
surreal situations (for example, “Anima Husbandry,” a three-page
description of a wife’s dismantling and packing her husband into a
suitcase for a trip to Paris). This blending has as its combined effect
not only the defamiliarisation of the real, but the equally unsettling
familiarisation of the unreal, ultimately posing the question of whether
one can or indeed should distinguish between these two in a fictional
world such as Nash’s. Equally unsettling is the basso continuo that
prevails underneath the episodic brevity and constant shifts in
narrative perspective performed by these tales: Nash’s preoccupation
with language and the bizarre names inhabiting and describing both the
natural and the corporate worlds. To take but two examples, there are
the “Cambodian Vine Rattan, Sinai Braided Sea Grass, Singapore Cane,
Burmese Celery Hemp, Uyghur Cave Moss” in “Baskets,” or “afternoons
watching Korean soap operas dubbed into Cantonese, and evenings watching
bootleg videos or playing high-stakes mahjong, while chain smoking Mann
Si Fat cigarettes” in “The Hostage.” Nash’s manipulation of the
particular and the minute has all the attention for the bizarre and the
ability of evoking the grotesque. In terms of analogues and precursors
to Nash’s “playful and quick-witted style,” Clare Wigfall’s cover blurb
speaks of the “maverick American greats like George Saunders and Donald
Barthelme.” To those one can plausibly add Nash’s avowed influence of
the labyrinthine structures of Jorge Luis Borges and the evident
presence, behind the eerie waft of the everyday turned into the
grotesque that hovers over the collection, of Prague’s chief literary
revenant, Franz Kafka. Described by the Prague Post as “an
eclectic, deceptively witty collection of short fiction that represents
the crystallization of one of Prague’s most resourceful and imaginative
English-language writers” and commended by Wigfall as a collection whose
every short story is “distinct and memorable in its jewel-like
compactness,” Brain Harvest is a richly imaginative and heterogeneous collection.
Read The Two Lives of Edward Hopper here
Read The Two Lives of Edward Hopper here
Yes, you can still order "KEN NASH is stalking me" t-shirts.
"The Spinoza of Market Street" and how it brought me to Prague
David "Doomsayer" Attenborough Quoted in The Guardian Newspaper
Royal Baby Photo
Can't get enough of the Royal Baby photos. Apparently this is the first "official" photo. Congratulations William and Catherine on your big win!
Poster Design for 27 June Show with Ocean Versus Daughter and Neon Swan
Review of The Brain Harvest in NecessaryFiction.com
Read the whole review by Ryan Werner here.
I ❤ Fan Photos!
Playing in Berlin, May 2013
Back in Gelegenheiten for an evening of music with videos. Should be loads of fun. 18 May, 21.00.