Thursday, December 08, 2016

Mondo Unveils New "Avatar: The Last Airbender", "SpongeBob SquarePants" And "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" Posters From Their Nickelodeon Gallery Show

Last week, Mondo announced a gallery show themed around the new and classic shows from Nickelodeon, premiering posters for The Ren & Stimpy Show, Rocko’s Modern Life, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Following unveiling two new Turtley Awesome Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles posters designed by Rosemary Valero-O’Connell yesterday, Mondo has today unveiled three new posters, inspired by Avatar: The Last Airbender, SpongeBob SquarePants and TMNT, via The Austin Chronicle and IndieWire, which you can check out below!:


First look at Sarah Kipin's Avatar: The Last Airbender print for the new Mondo Gallery show, A-Nick-Nick-Nick-Nick-N-Nick-Nick-Nick Nickelodeon Show. Mondo creative director Eric Garza called Avatar "beautiful, top to bottom. What they did on that show, they seriously captured magic."


First look at Janice Chu's SpongeBob SquarePants print for the new Mondo Gallery show, A-Nick-Nick-Nick-Nick-N-Nick-Nick-Nick Nickelodeon Show.


First look at Sachin Teng's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles print for the new Mondo Gallery show, A-Nick-Nick-Nick-Nick-N-Nick-Nick-Nick Nickelodeon Show.

The gallery, A Nick-Nick-Nick-Nick-N-Nick-Nick-Nick... Nickelodeon Show!, opens this Friday, and throws open the vaults of the number one network for kids, which has aired iconic underground classics like Invader Zim and true modern televisual masterpieces like Avatar: The Last Airbender.

Mondo Creative Director Mitch Putnam said that Nickelodeon "represented everything cool and rebellious, and parents didn't know anything about it. We worked with a number of great artists to pay homage to some of the channel's most influential programming. We hope you have as much fun seeing it as we had making it."

Everybody has a favorite Nickelodeon show. For Mondo creative director Eric Garza, it's Rocko's Modern Life. He said, "Something about some of the Nickelodoen shows of the '90s, the humor was just on another level. Rocko in particular, he was just a weird, anxious wallaby, surrounded in this world of craziness that I thought was really bizarre as a kid, and even now. As we were preparing for this show, they released the complete series on DVD, and I bought that and blew through it in a weekend, and it holds up. It's so great."

Artist Dave Perillo, who heads to O-Town to catch the day-glo-craziness of Rocko's Modern Life, said he was "thrilled to be part of the Nickelodeon show with Mondo. I grew up watching Nickelodeon when my family first got cable in the early Eighties, with shows like Pinwheel and You Can't Do That on Television."

The great rival for Rocko's claim to be Nick's weirdest creation was always Ren & Stimpy. Garza said, "I can't believe that show was on Nickelodeon. The humor was so bizarre. At the end of the episode 'Svën Höek' they died and go to Hell. They whiz on the electric fence, and the last shot is the Devil saying, 'So, you whized on the electric fence, didn't you?'"

Of course, the out-there humor and aggressive surrealism of such shows brought out those traits in the artists, but Nickelodeon were 100% on board with how extreme things were going to get. Take Florian Bertmer's interpretation of "Sven Hoek", with mad Chihuahua Ren menacing his only friend and his Scandinavian cousin. Garza said, "When Florian's came in, I thought, 'I wonder if the studio is going to be in on this?' Ren looks super-super-crazy, and Stimpy and Sven look rightfully terrified of how he appears. So I was uncertain if Nickelodeon would go for that, but they've been great. They're really into what we do, and they understand what we do."

The Mondo/Nick melding also allowed for some really unique new takes on childhood favorites. Garza said, "A lot of it was just putting feelers out, and asking the artists 'Did you watch Nickelodeon at this time? What were some of your favorite shows?'"

Few blendings were more radical than master of mystery Francesco Francavilla taking on Nick's most globally successful and subversive animated character: SpongeBob SquarePants. Garza said, "We knew we want to do the episode 'Graveyard Shift', and we thought Francesco would be a great fit, with his noir and horror aesthetic leanings, that he would do something really great for SpongeBob."

Of course, Mondo's reputation is for beautiful art prints for your walls, but what would a Nick show be without slime? In an homage to You Can't Do That on Television (and Double Dare and Wild and Crazy Kids and the Kids Choice Awards – seriously, who doesn't want to get a green goo coating?), Austin's Mad Science team will be holding a slime building workshop on Saturday morning.

This new Mondo show brings back memories of the '90s animated classic shows, including hits like Aaahh!!! Real Monsters, plus some newer properties like SpongeBob and Avatar. However, that doesn't mean that fans will never see a Good Burger poster. "I would love to go back and do some of the old classic stuff," Garza said. "In a perfect world, I would love to do a whole series of Are You Afraid of the Dark?"

Mondo Gallery presents A-Nick-Nick-Nick-Nick-N-Nick-Nick-Nick Nickelodeon Show. Dec. 9-16, 4115 Guadalupe. Opening reception Dec. 9, 7-10pm. Family day with slime building workshop, Dec. 19, 10am-noon. More info at www.mondotees.com.

As is always the case with Mondo shows, whatever doesn’t sell out onsite will be available online.
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