{Finally, it is ready for you my friends.}
This Thursday eve seems befitting to launch my new seventeen-page zine Tumble & Fall. As you are aware, the darkness of night is best for the viewing of stars. (Did you know there are said to be some six thousand stars visible to the human eye? Me neither.) I am recently returned from an opening at Ian Potter Museum of Art (Other side art: Trevor Nickolls, a survey of paintings and drawings 1972–2007) and the house is but a quiet hum. Later, should time be on my side, I plan to watch (once more) footage of an elusive female snow leopard as she scales with ease a rocky cliff face in Pakistan and those mountain goats seemingly swimming through the blanket of snow.
Tumble & Fall features all twelve of my recent star collages and it is an edition of sixty. Printed in colour with several black pages featuring a series of cutout tumbling stars for you to catch, I do hope you like this zine.
(Thank you, dear Louise, for helping me with this zine and for fashioning those natty black spines.)
It is available for you here.
{Stars tumble as polar bears keep watch.}
(With heading borrowed from Emily Bronte and her Stars poem.)







