The Slipstream
  • Jonathan
    May 11, 2010

    Why would a living artist want to make it?

  • tripleG
    May 11, 2010

    Where can I get one of those nets?

  • Esn
    May 11, 2010

    Aaahhh…. :D

    This is like several comics in one.

  • Alex
    May 11, 2010

    I like the part where she unibrows.

  • jw
    May 11, 2010

    Cat sits on air

  • Craig!
    May 11, 2010

    Cat slowly enters a sitting position as the comic progresses.
    What does it mean?

  • Ailu
    May 11, 2010

    Contemporary art was invented by dead people- We´ll need a new category to make the difference.

  • G.
    May 11, 2010

    I love how these comments meta the comic.

  • yachris
    May 11, 2010

    Never metacomic I didn’t like!

  • Sean Pak
    May 11, 2010

    thanks for the ridiculous laugh, yachris

  • betterforsome
    May 11, 2010

    @Ailu Post-contemporary.

  • Ailu
    May 11, 2010

    Post-contemporary is too ambitious. I would say “hiper-contemporary”.

  • Ailu
    May 11, 2010

    Or “ultra-contemporary”.

  • Jonathan
    May 11, 2010

    Contemporary X-treme

  • ks
    May 12, 2010

    “Current”? Too simple? “Contemporaneous-2000”?

  • Craig!
    May 12, 2010

    “This Ain’t Your Grandmas Contemporary!”

  • JJChoi
    May 13, 2010

    Apres-post-post-modernism. Third-times-the-charm renaissance.

  • gus
    May 13, 2010

    I read it as “and put your face down in the right place,” which felt more ontologically satisfying.

  • Ailu
    May 14, 2010

    “This Ain’t Your Grandmas Contemporary!”
    jajajajaj
    that´s the one

  • Erika
    May 15, 2010

    Dead people were contemporaries of the other people who were alive at the same time. “Contemporary” just means “at the same time,” and everyone is contemporary with SOMEthing.

  • Athena
    May 15, 2010

    Aw dang, I need to get rid of all the “insiders,” “experts,” and “historians” in my life.
    But…I guess that’s everybody.

  • Major English
    May 18, 2010

    Actually the word “contemporary” has been proven to refer to a particular shade of the color blue which David Hume coincidentally could not see. It also means “Grapefruit” in Yiddish.

  • jasigno
    May 21, 2010

    @major english That’s true?! i will love to cuote that, but need to know if its true
    i guess i’ll cuote it anyways until it became true if isnt

  • Abdullah the Gut Slasher
    June 7, 2010

    And the moral of the story is… if you hold the net incorrectly, you will not catch anything!

Add comment