Channel Snow Perfume Oil $30.00

Channel Snow Perfume Oil

$30.00

Television static made manifest, with a glimpse of perversions hidden beneath: benzoin, black pepper, white sandalwood, olibanum, ambergris accord, galbanum, and O3.

Kabuki Scarab+Kabuki
Perfume oil blends,  presented in an amber apothecary glass vial. Due to the nature of this project, imps are unavailable.

David Mack is the New York Times Best Selling author and artist of the KABUKI Graphic Novels, the writer and artist of Daredevil from Marvel Comics, including DAREDEVIL: End of Days which just debuted in hardcover as #1 on the New York Times Best Sellers List (Co-written with Brian Michael Bendis), and the author and artist of his children’s book THE SHY CREATURES from MacMillan.
Mack most recently created the art & concept for the credit sequence on the #1 hit film Captain America The Winter Soldier.

Mack’s work has garnered nominations for seven Eisner Awards, four International Eagle Awards, and both the Harvey and Kirby Awards in the category of Best New Talent, as well as many other national and international awards and nominations.

David Mack is one of the only creators to be listed in both the Top Ten Writers List, and the Top Ten Artists List in Wizard Magazine. Mack’s writing and art work on KABUKI, have earned him international acclaim for his innovative storytelling, sophisticated content, mixed media painting techniques, and page design. KABUKI is available internationally and has been translated in seven different languages, in addition to nearly two million copies of KABUKI Comics, Paperbacks, and Hard cover graphic novels in print in the U.S. alone. The series has spawned successful lines of action figures, toys, and sophisticated collectables and art objets (many of which were featured on Showtimes TV show DEXTER). Mack has toured and exhibited his work throughout Europe, Asia, and America with numerous gallery shows, and book signing tours at premier bookstores in over a dozen countries. He was the first American to be nominated for Germany’s most prestigious Max-Und-Moritz award in the category of Best Imported Comic.

Mack has illustrated and designed jazz and rock albums for both American and Japanese Labels (including work for Paul McCartney), Amanda Palmer, actor Thomas Jane, painted Tori Amos for her RAINN benefit calendars, acted as storyboard artist & asst. Director for Dead Can Dance music video, designed toys and packaging for companies in Hong Kong, animation art for MTV, ad campaigns for SAKURA art materials, written and designed video games for film director John Woo and Electronic Arts, wrote the interactive animated viral promo for Mission Impossible four, and contributed the artwork for Dr. Arun Ghandi’s essay on the “Culture of Non-Violence”.

Mack’s KABUKI books have been the subject of under-graduate and graduate university courses in Art and Literature, and listed as required reading. His work has been studied in graduate seminars at USC and hung in the Los Angeles Museum of Art. He’s lectured at universities and taught classes in writing, drawing, and painting all over the world, including a Masterclass at the University of Technology in Sydney, Australia, for Japan’s School of Communication Arts of Tokyo, Nagoya, and Osaka, and an invitation to speak at Harvard as the Guest of Honor at their annual Science Fiction Writing convention.

Besides working for Twentieth Century Fox as a writer of the treatment to the Kabuki motion picture, Mack’s film credits also include Visual Designer, Creative Consultant, and Co-Producer.

skindeep_nologoMack created the last two seasons of Dexter Early Cuts episodes for Showtime (the first, collaborating with legendary artist Bill Sienkiewicz). The latest season earned him nominations for both the Writers Guild of America and the Producers Guild of America.

Mack’s 2010 tarot card paintings were exhibited in Paris and Brussels with successful and celebrated gallery openings and book store signings. In 2013 Mack had exhibits in Los Angeles & Chicago of his work presented with originals of Gustav Klimt & Egon Schiele, and spoke in Barcelona at the OFFFest presentation of trailblazing artists and designers.

The documentary film on Mack’s work, The Alchemy of Art, was awarded the top prize at the 40th annual Worldfest Film Festival among other film awards & in 2012 Mack delivered an inspiring TED Talk.

In 2004 Mack, along with his collaborators (and members of M.O.B) Brian Michael Bendis & Mike Oeming, formed a brand new imprint at Marvel Comics which they named ICON, to publish their creator-owned comics KABUKI and POWERS. ICON continues as an imprint of Marvel to this day publishing some of the most successful creator-owned comics, including KICK-ASS.

Mack has illustrated poetry collaborations with Neil Gaiman and U.S. Poet Laureate Billy Collins, wrote the adaptation of Science Fiction Master Philip K. Dick’s Electric Ant as a graphic novel at Marvel Comics, and is currently working on a new creator owned project with Brian Michael Bendis and new KABUKI material for this year’s 20th anniversary of KABUKI as a comic book.

David Mack on Facebook | on Twitter

Reviews

  1. kate886

    I love Kabuki, so I really wanted to try one of the scents. Looking at all of them, though, I was really unsure as to whether they’d work for me — like more unsure than I’ve ever been about a BP perfume. I thought of all of them, Channel Snow sounded like the one I’d most like, but again I was kinda hesitant. I decided to take a chance, and I’m soooo glad I did. When I received it in the mail, I took a whiff from the bottle and my heart sunk. It really didn’t smell like my thing at all. But I know that the body’s chemicals can sometimes change that, so I put a bit on to see how it went. Holy crap, it smells AMAZING on me! It starts out a bit fruity on me somehow, then transitions seamlessly into a more subtle floral/herby smell. I’m terrible at explaining, but it really works for me. I really do get the “white noise” aspect of it. Possibly my new favorite.

  2. Velvet Lilly

    This absolutely smells like white noise (Channel Snow) , it the very best way. It’s a frission of notes that makes absolute sense of static. But without the jangling noise. It’s not the loud audio, it’s purely and precisely the scent of the visual. It’s so clever. it’s smarter than “whimsical” but there is an intelligent sense of fun here…and it’s great.

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