Guest Editor’s Profile – Mark Saunders

Mark Saunders

Winnipeg, Canada
www.marksaunders.viewbook.com

In terms of your things, what does your space (studio/office/living area) look like? Please describe.
I am a designer and illustrator living and working in Winnipeg. I work at the Royal Manitoba Theatre Centre and the Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival as Marketing & Communications Coordinator – designing programs, marketing materials, the occasional ad, editing artists’ bios, as well as selling advertising space in the organization’s programs.

I am spoiled; my home and workplace are each equipped with futuristic 27” iMacs, both of which I can’t live without. Flanking these focal points is cluttered madness, which, periodically, is straightened, dusted and organized. At work, since I am constantly referring to theatre programs, my desk is littered with them. These pamphlets  – from the ‘60s to the present – remain in stacks on my desk until my current project is finished and I have time to straighten.

At my workplace, like other office-employed nerds and weirdos, I’ve decorated my space with toys and statues. I like to surround myself with 3D representations of my favourite popular culture characters from the history of comics, film and television. My office is a tame version of my home; I don’t want to alarm my coworkers with the jaw-dropping volume of my collection.

At home, I try to confine my action figures, statues, kaiju, vinyl toys and miniature figurines to a single bookshelf, though the sprawling nature of my collection sometimes necessitates otherwise. (I’m certain my wife isn’t happy about this fact.) I’m currently on the verge of a purge: dusting, cleaning and moving some items to storage.

The bulk of my possessions, though, is my comic collection, which is meticulously catalogued and filed, and safely stored. It occupies 40-something storage boxes and is comprised of a lifetime of obsessive collecting, as well as a few choice selections from my father’s late-1940s/early-1950s childhood. I doubt I’ll ever part with this collection.

Where do you normally get your things?
I acquire pieces for my collection from everywhere, though I suppose online auction sites like eBay might be the majority suppliers. Time once was that I would carry a tattered list of comic back issues I needed in my wallet. That was pre-Internet. Now, if there is anything specific I need, I’m only a few simple keystrokes away. It’s silly, but I can’t stop marveling at the ease with which completionists can find things nowadays. There isn’t much of a “hunt” aspect that remains.

What is your prize possession/”thing”/collectible/tool?
My apartment. I wouldn’t have any place to put my stuff without it!


day 332 – four silkscreened posters

posters

Thought I’d wrap up the week with a sampling of my poster and print collection. The art & culture of movies, music and toys are my passion and daily inspiration. Welcome to the walls of my apartment.

“Dummie Car” by Doma Collective
“Made in Japan” by Tim Biskup
“Life is Sweet” by Buff Monster
“Uncle Boonmee” by Chris Ware


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