Derek Pell


Derek Pell is a visual artist, photographer, writer and satirist. He is the editor in chief of Zoom Street Magazine. He was editor of DingBat Magazine for 12 years, and a contributing editor to PC Laptop. Under both his name and his pen names, most notably Norman Conquest, Derek Pell has authored more than 30 books, many of which he designed and illustrated, including the Doktor Bey series, Bewildering Beasties, Assassination Rhapsody, Lost In Translation, and The Little Red Book of Adobe LiveMotion, along with several collections of his work.
He had been a regular contributor to Playboy, National Lampoon, LA Weekly, as well as a columnist for The Westport News. His work has been featured in such publications as Adobe Magazine, Natural History, The Times, Rolling Stone, The New York Times Sunday Magazine, and Fiction International. Since 1968, his work has appeared in hundreds of literary magazines and small press publications in the U.S. and Europe.

Biography

Derek Pell dropped out of the Art Institute of Chicago in the late 1960s and opened The Not Guilty Bookshop & Press on Martha's Vineyard. His writing & art began appearing in publications of experimental literature under various pseudonyms, most notably Doktor Bey and Norman Conquest. His primary style was incorporating mixed-media and using collage-text and cut and paste techniques. After the success of his Doktor Bey series in the late 1970s, Derek Pell moved to Los Angeles in the eighties, during this period he was charged by the FBI for defacing US Currency while working on a mail-art performance. He began experimenting with cybertext, hyperlinks, and other computer-aided art in 1991. Pell & Conquest currently reside in the Bay Area where they edit , a small independent press devoted to "Sublime Art & Literature."

Themes

Derek Pell explores literary modernism/postmodernism themes and styles in his craft. Using a remarkable range of formal discourses and methods, Pell's work often employs elements of intertextuality, metafiction and reflexivity, decenterization, pastiche, appropriation, found materials, and sampling. Through various mediums such as mail art, text-and-collage, gallery exhibits, and book object, his style uses satire, sarcasm, wit, and humor to comment, criticize, and occasionally openly mock America's traditional cultural attitudes and values though work that is as much conceptual and performance art as it is fiction.

Pseudonyms

Derek Pell has published work under various pseudonyms, some with fictional biographies, which serve to question the concept of authorial originality intention while giving focus and outlet to his different faucets of creative expression.
;Doktor Bey
Bey is a fictional scholar, born in New York City and Tibet in 1877. Author of Doktor Bey's Suicide Guide, Doktor Bey's Bedside Bedbug Book, Doktor Bey's Handbook of Strange Sex, Doktor Bey's Book of Brats, Doktor Bey's Book of the Dead.
;Norman Conquest
This is Derek Pell's visual and performance focused alter-ego and digital artist. Norman's art is featured in texts by authors such as Harold Jaffe's Straight Razor, as well as his own work, Sartre's French Phrase Book ; Interiors: A Book of Very Clean Rooms ; Extremely Weird Republicans ; A Beginner's Guide to Art Deconstruction ; The Neglected Works of Norman Conquest ; What is Art? ; Rear Windows: An Inside Look at Fifty Film Noir Classics ; Corn on Macabre & Other Conundrums.
In 1989, he founded the international anti-censorship art collective Beuyscouts of Amerika. He has created mixed-media works, book-objects, multiples, and collage works and has been featured in the Spencer Museum of Art. Several of his multiples are part of the permanent collection at the Museum of Modern Art in NYC. Conquest is currently Editor & Publisher of Black Scat Books.
Conquest edits a free monthly online journal .
;Che Wax
One of Derek's earliest fictional pseudonyms, which appeared on the novel "Brother Spencer Goes to Hell" published by The Fault Source:

Books

X-Texts

Collection of iconic sexual and erotic literature, in which each story is a meta-story, or treated version, of the original. Examples include Lady Chatterley's Loafer, Lolita, Over the Hill, and Weeks: The Long March.

Assassination Rhapsody

A deconstruction version of the materials in the Warren Commission Report. Examples include the use of collage and absurdism mixed with mechanical manipulations and transformations of the Commission texts' in A The Nature of the Shots, illustrations in A Bullet Theory Poem, and lipogram in The Magic Bullet.

The Marquis De Sade's Elements of Style

Introduced as a "found book" originally published by Marquise de Sade while in a lunatic asylum, with pictures and edits done by the "author", Derek Pell. Presented as a book on style, it is divided into four sections, Elementary Principles of Composition, A Few Matters of Form, Words and Expressions Commonly Misued, An Approach to Style, and an untraditional index, with wood print images either designed or found and incorporated throughout.

The Little Red Book of Adobe LiveMotion

Written as an absurdist pastiche of Chairman Mao's Little Red Book, informing the citizens of "correct" political behavior, it also manages to be a guide to Adobe's LiveMotion software. The text serves as a humorous instruction manual for using flash as a political tool to oppose corporate culture and to foster a political revolution against capitalism. Resignifying symbols, images, and texts, the book is an example of the fluidity of meaning and identity found in the World Wide Web. This is the world's first satirical technical book.

Bewildering Beasties

Written as a warning, the book is framed as a rare surviving copy of a book of endangered species from England's Victorian period. The illustrations serves as puns and wordplay combine with nostalgia, pastiche, and found materials to serve as an absurd, but nonetheless less meaningful warning on extinction and humanities role in the environment.


Morbid Curiosities
Naked Lunch at Tiffany's
Scar Mirror
reprinted in 2013 by Black Scat Books
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Doktor Bey

The Doktor Bey books are designed as absurdist collages of mixed media recontextualizing images to create these darkly humorous "How To" guides.

Doktor Bey's Handbook of Strange Sex

Doktor Bey's Bedside Bug Book

Doktor Bey's Suicide Guidebook

Doktor Bey's Book of the Dead

Doktor Bey's Book of Brats
________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Books by Norman Conquest
Ambiguity for Two
Interiors: A Book of Very Clean Rooms
Sartre’s French Phrase Book
A Beginner’s Guide to Art Deconstruction
Extremely Weird Republicans
The Neglected Works of Norman Conquest
What is Art?
Rear Windows: An Inside Look at Fifty Film Noir Classics
Snowdrop in Africa
Don't Worry, It's Not About Hats
Selected Poems of Poems of Edward D. Wood, Jr.
It's Fun to Be Rich in America
The Little Red Book of Commie Porn
Straight Razor
Burn This Book
Fervent SFdical: Selected Captchas
Corn on Macabre & Other Conundrums
Three Plus Three Makes Seven
Adventures in ‘Pataphysics
The Other Side: The Shocking Truth Behind 100 Classic Paintings
Wasted Energies, Baffled Thoughts: On the Writing of the Insane
The Little Cock That Could
True Crime: The People vs. Rrose Sélavy
—Anthologies edited by Norman Conquest—
By Any Means: An Avant-Pop Anthology
Personhood Anthology
Oulipo Pornobongo: Anthology of Erotic Wordplay
Le Scat Noir Encyclopaedia
The New Urge Reader
The New Urge Reader 2
The New Urge Reader 3

Photography

Pell has been involved with photography since 1974. He writes the Zoom Street blog and is the author of SHOOT TO THRILL: A HARD-BOILED GUIDE TO DIGITAL PHOTOGRAPHY
His only other nonfiction book is The Little Red Book of Adobe LiveMotion -a guide to Flash animation. He has worked as a press photographer for UPI, and his photographs have appeared in The New York Times Sunday Magazine, Rolling Stone, LensCulture, The Times, New York, Interview, L.A. Weekly, American Forests, Fiction International, The Village Voice, and Zink.

Publications

A comprehensive list of the works of Derek Pell and his alter-ego's is found in Larry McCaffery's Some Other Frequency.