Roll the Presses
Christopher Schulz’s Pinups Magazine may be the coolest thing to happen to print since McSweeney’s turned book design on its head. “When I had the idea for Pinups, I was fantasizing about print,” Schulz explains. “It’s really not something that can exist the same in any other form.” He’s not exaggerating, either: Pinups is an exercise in exploiting the core concept of a nude pinup: each issue can be pulled apart and reassembled into one giant 32” by 70” poster of a nude male.
Schulz is just one of a number of queer creators who are choosing to work in a medium that many say is doomed: print. As magazines and newspaper struggle with dwindling circulation numbers and ad revenue leached by the Internet, these auteurs have begun offering alternatives to the glossy, commercialized culture presented by traditional gay media.
Pinups, as well as other contemporary gay zines of its ilk are intended to be physical objects of art, not merely displaced Internet content that happens to be printed on paper. “As a kid, I was always drawn to design and there was something official and final about print—like it wasn’t real until it was printed in quantity and distributed,” says Schulz. In some cases, as with Pinups, print is the only way that the project could be done.
“I feel that with nude erotica, it should be more tangible rather than simply images on your computer screen,” notes Darren Ankenbauer, editor-in-chief of Handbook, a zine that recreates the classic feel of vintage gay magazines with black-and-white pictorials that have a definite erotic edge. “You can’t curl up in bed with your computer as comfortably as you can with Handbook.”
“Since Original Plumbing (a trans-centric zine) is a photo-based magazine, it’s especially important for it to exist past the screen,” says creator Amos Mac. “I want it to take up space and for people to be able to rip out a page and hang it on their wall. I want it to be in a dusty box in the GLBT archives in 100 years. Having it be web-based only would never make me feel the way I do when I have a finished product in my hands or see it on a shelf.”
Schulz is just one of a number of queer creators who are choosing to work in a medium that many say is doomed: print. As magazines and newspaper struggle with dwindling circulation numbers and ad revenue leached by the Internet, these auteurs have begun offering alternatives to the glossy, commercialized culture presented by traditional gay media.
Pinups, as well as other contemporary gay zines of its ilk are intended to be physical objects of art, not merely displaced Internet content that happens to be printed on paper. “As a kid, I was always drawn to design and there was something official and final about print—like it wasn’t real until it was printed in quantity and distributed,” says Schulz. In some cases, as with Pinups, print is the only way that the project could be done.
“I feel that with nude erotica, it should be more tangible rather than simply images on your computer screen,” notes Darren Ankenbauer, editor-in-chief of Handbook, a zine that recreates the classic feel of vintage gay magazines with black-and-white pictorials that have a definite erotic edge. “You can’t curl up in bed with your computer as comfortably as you can with Handbook.”
“Since Original Plumbing (a trans-centric zine) is a photo-based magazine, it’s especially important for it to exist past the screen,” says creator Amos Mac. “I want it to take up space and for people to be able to rip out a page and hang it on their wall. I want it to be in a dusty box in the GLBT archives in 100 years. Having it be web-based only would never make me feel the way I do when I have a finished product in my hands or see it on a shelf.”
For my essay Queer Print I interviewed the publishers of three top zines: Christopher Schulz of Pinups Magazine, Darren Ankenbaur of Handbook, and Amos Mac of Original Plumbing. As much as I would have liked to, it was impossible for me to quote extensively from the interviews within the essay, so I'm publishing the complete interviews on my website. The first interview posted is with Christopher Schulz.
The second interview, this one with Darren Ankenbaur of Handbook Magazine, is up now!
Love the discussion. I, for one, have always been a great fan of Firsthand Magazine, for its ring of authenticity. I also miss the frankness of STH Magazine.