Thomas Allen’s Pop-Up Pulp

Julie Greicius bio ↓  ·  December 11th, 2009  ·  filed under art

The January 2010 Harper’s Magazine (print) features a few photographs from Thomas Allen’s “Epilogue,”  the last in his long series of photographs of transformed pulp fiction book covers.

This was the first I’d seen of Allen’s incredible work, even though he’s been carving up covers for the camera for at least five years. Allen’s work is done without digital retouching, just the rudimentary rigging required to set up the shot—knives, pins, tape—and the long shadows and dark backgrounds to dial up the melodrama. Paintalicious has a great collection of his work. You can see more images on his blog and in his book, Uncovered.

Related Posts

  • No related posts...
···
Julie Greicius is the senior literary editor and a regular contributor for The Rumpus. She works as ghostwriter by day and a licensed (really) hula hoop instructor by night. She's co-editor of Rumpus Women, Vol I, and has an MFA from Columbia University. She lives in California with her husband and two children. Follow her on Twitter. More from this author →

Leave a Reply

Notify me of followup comments via e-mail. You can also subscribe without commenting.