
Annoncering

Steak Mtn: I grew up in Salem, Massachusetts. There used to be a drawing show for kids on TV that aired very early in the morning called The Nature World of Captain Bob (also titled Drawing from Nature). I think it was made in Boston, because no one in the rest of the country knows what the fuck I am talking about when I mention it.But that's exactly where my interest in art started. The personality and details of that show are the absolute root of where some of my aesthetic touches and interests come from – the washed-out and fuzzy-video look of the programme, the amazing fonts on the title card and a creepy opening sequence that had this fantastically underlit pan of a miniature sea shanty in a murky puddle. I still use that as a mental example of the perfect atmosphere to try and attain in the Steak work.You say "the Steak work" like it's by another person.
I always think of Steak that way. Always. From 1996 to 2001 I used the name the Amputees to imply that there was more than one artist involved. I made up two characters, Roland Scagnetti and Judy Riley, for if and when someone asked who the Amputees were.The Scagnetti persona was a German exchange student I “met” in high school, and he did all the illustrations and liked skulls a lot. Judy did all the font work and was a nobody off the street. It was all a lie. Part of it was that I liked fucking with people, especially idiot punks, but another part was that I didn’t want the attention. That’s all different now – well, the attention part anyway; I don’t mind that. I still like fucking with idiot punk rockers.
Annoncering
Around 2001 I changed it to Steak Mtn. I was vegetarian, and somehow the irony of calling this art a mound of meat seemed funny. It’s not – it’s retarded. I was still very interested in remaining anonymous but this time having a single character – I found it easier to hide behind a persona of some sort, stupid as that sounds.At the time, it felt like a full-blast license to behave badly, be difficult with clients and talk shit about bands. Realistically, that’s still the case – but most people that would sort of care know that Steak Mtn is Christopher Norris. Really, I wish I had a time machine and so I could name this stupid shit something else. Or just buck up and use my actual name.What was your role in Combat Wounded Veteran? How'd that get started?
My parents moved us to Tampa, Florida in the late 80s, around the time the death metal boom was happening there – and everywhere, really. I got caught up in that world pretty heavily. In 93 I discovered a local band called Assück. Chris Barnes, then with Cannibal Corpse, who I loved, had done backups on an Assück track called “Infanticide”. I was hooked on the potential art and damage that grindcore/power violence/noise had to offer.Combat started in 96, using bands like Crossed Out and No Comment – and, in the unattainable extreme, John Zorn’s Naked City project – as a loose music model for what we wanted to do. I did all the art, but I hated the black and white aesthetic of that music and made a very conscious decision to move as much humour and colour into the monochromatic world of grindcore as I could. With that came fluorescent colours, Tom Tierney children as Frankenstein monsters, haphazardly placed press type lettering and eccentric – pretentious – song titles/lyrics.
Annoncering

The Locust, which is due to Justin’s impeccable marketing of his bands to youth culture. They had real reach at that moment. Him and Gabe and all those dudes knew how to spin something strange and new out of the meathead template of fast music. They were a truly great band. Combat, on the other hand, had no charisma, no live gimmick – we were just lazy, slapdash noise held together by sloppy art that a few goofy kids thought was cool. Pretty forgettable after the dust settled on all that power violence stuff.

Only the split six-inch with Combat Wounded Veteran. They took care of their own stuff, but I think the two bands shared influences and visual enthusiasms – you see presstype, hand text and film references in their records as well.The first stuff I saw of yours was your cover for the Atom & His Package CDs. Do you remember which ones you did the art for? How'd you get involved with Adam "Atom" Goren?
I started with Redefining Music in 2001 and went on to do Attention! Blah Blah Blah, Hamburgers and Hair: Debatable. Atom’s odd humour and appropriation of electronic music to make “punk” music really excited me. I especially loved his genius track “Me and My Black Metal Friends”.
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I'm also sure I pitched him some ridiculousness about how his odd music needed a certain kind of art and that I could provide it. I'm not a bad Steak salesman when I need to be, and yeah, he was vaguely familiar with Combat because of the I Know a Girl Who Develops Crime Scene Photos LP on No Idea. So he had a good gauge of what he could expect.The cover to Attention Blah Blah Blah informed me a lot in college. The way you did the blocky lettering made a lot of sense to me and was the beginning of me understanding how to do hand text. The realistically rendered hand leading into the loose, boneless looking flesh also did a lot for me.
That’s a rad and weird thing to hear. Most feedback I get is steeped in sweaty kid lingo, like “your work is so sick”, which, as you know, is the most boring thing to hear – despite it being a very nice thing because at least someone is excited. But it’s great when it comes around on you and an artist you love says what you are saying. It’s cool.
Annoncering
Nope. Hopeless Records paid me $1,000 (£580) for that record. Punk labels are notoriously cheap when art is concerned – actually, all labels are these days – as that's what I still get paid when working with “major” “punk” labels. Which is why I don’t take a lot of that work, unless it’s a favour for a friend or by the some strange act of God I like the band – that never happens, because we all know that there is no god, and even more realistically, all punk bands make terrible music for boring teens.

But it was totally true. In the summer of 2009 I left Brooklyn to take a job in San Francisco at Kink.com, which, to paraphrase Wikipedia a bit, is an adult entertainment company “that runs a group of websites devoted to BDSM and related fetishes” – or, as they like to say, “We demystify and celebrate alternative sexuality by providing the most authentic kinky experiences.” I was their set decorator for three years before moving back to Brooklyn in 2012.
Annoncering
It was the only job I have ever truly loved, including all of this Steak work. The company was a perfect fit for me at the time – not in the meathead, “I like seeing naked people banging so I should get into porn” sense, because that’s boring. I am not a fan of adult material because I think it’s a turn-on or hot or whatever base way people view pornography. I am a fan because I see adult movies as one of the greatest subversive and experimental film genres of all time. It allows the potential artist/filmmaker to create anything – imagination, skill and budget willing, of course.As long as you hang a few fucks on it, the art-hiding-in-a-commercial-product can be a success. A shadowy one for sure, and a self-satisfied one absolutely, but a success nonetheless. Now, I am not totally idealistic, pretentious and blind to the material – I know what porn is and how it functions. No one pulling or playing with their privates gives a fuck if you re-imagined Brakhage’s Black Ice as a colourful kinetic fuck sculpture starring Jayden James and James Deen. I would be a full-blown idiot if I thought so. What I'm saying is that I love you can do that and it still works as the erotic service tool it was 100 percent funded to be.I brought that viewpoint with me to the set-decorator position and found a company of people who agreed, maybe not as extreme as I did, but enough so that I wasn’t laughed out of the building. It was amazing. I also loved that I had spent 25 years watching and being excited about movies, from the abject to the “classic”, and was able to utilise that enthusiasm and knowledge to create sets – sometimes dressing six different sets for six different sites, so six different styles, in four hours, daily – and help brainstorm ideas for shoots, or at least suggest a director watch something that I hoped would generate an idea for them.
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I can totally understand that. My hope was that Larkin Love and Derrick Pierce would be sexually ample and exciting enough to hold up the content while I tried to stuff every other-than-sex idea I could stuff in this one piece.My goal was to disjoint the simple narrative/catalyst of Larkin getting in trouble for spilling the milk and being “punished” and hopefully push everything into a loose dreamscape. On top of the recurring but slightly different shots of her sitting at the table, the sound design was important in enhancing that atmosphere. That may have been a mistake on my part, but also sounds like it worked in that capacity – at least sort of – but didn’t work where it really needed to: on the groin.
Annoncering

There's not much personal work happening lately. Fucking around with design ideas and drawing styles, sure, but no finished pieces and with no art shows planned. That may change – who knows. I've just been focusing on the commercial work because that’s what's on, which yes, there's a lot of Against Me! material at this moment. I started working with the band in 2005 and have done a good chunk of their visual output since then, minus a record cover or a shirt here and there.

About six years ago, David Stowe – who owns and operates Vannen Watches – asked me to do a Steak Mtn. artist watch. He had done some for artists like Drew Millward and Alex Pardee. He was a fan of some of the records I had designed so he reached out. I liked the idea, but it took me six years to figure out what I wanted to do.The spacial real estate of a watch was, for me, weird to work with – especially since I feel like I don't have a staple icon or friendly style that would translate to something as pop art-based as a simple timepiece. For my show at Beach London in 2012, the gallery made a run of I Probably Hate You scarfs I designed, and not long after that I pitched the slogan to David for a watch and he thought it was an interesting way to go. It also cleared up my design dilemma because I sometimes forget that Steak work is usually more about theme and/or humour over the style I used to execute the piece.
Annoncering

Nothing.Check out more of Steak Mtn at his website.More stuff like this kind of stuff:Did You Know Britain Had a 'Black Viz'?The Will to KillNot As Good As It Used To Be
