Cat
Gets a Feline Facelift
Josh
Shalek, a college senior and self-proclaimed “fourth-year freshman”
was recently given the opportunity to paint his drawings of cats
on the previously bare walls of The Cat in the Cream coffeehouse.
To find out a bit more about the man behind the new feline additions
to the space, Lucy Roche sat down with Josh to talk about his project.
Lucy
Roche: How did you come to paint the cats on The Cat in The Cream’s
walls?
Josh
Shalek: When I was a freshman, there was a painting of a somewhat
demonic-looking cat behind the stage in the Cat in the Cream. It
got painted over in the first few weeks of school. Thus began my
four year odyssey…actually, I was sketching late one night
this year and drew a cat that I liked. Soon afterwards, I was introduced
to someone on the Cat in the Cream staff and I asked her, in passing,
whether the Cat staff members wanted a picture there anymore. I
submitted a bunch of cat pictures over last semester and then painted
four of them during Winter Term.
LR:
Is there a story or process which led to these particular cats?
Do they have names?
JS:
I didn’t name the cats because I wasn’t sure that they
would be used. When I was painting them, their personalities came
through their poses. I like the big one because he’s just dangling
there above the stage. I also like the look on the face of the cat
that is to the right of the front door.
LR:
I really love the one above the fridge because of it’s bewildered
look. It reminds me of my cats — they are often confused.
JS:
Yeah, they all look fairly contented and I’m glad of that.
I kind of went crazy with the tails — I liked having their
long tails flowing all over the place.
LR:
What was the process of painting them like? How did you do it?
JS:
First I took the drawings I did — from my sketchbook —
and copied them onto transparencies. It was great to do it over
Winter Term because I borrowed a projector and traced them up on
the walls in one day. I painted, loosely following my penciled lines.
By that time, I really knew those cats because it was the third
time I’d drawn them.
LR:
Did you have help?
JS:
No, I was a lone gunman. I was in the Cat in the Cream for hours
at a time communing with the walls. I listened to 98.5, Cleveland’s
classic rock station. It was very cool to be in there alone —
it’s a place I’m so used to seeing packed with people.
LR:
How do you feel your cats fit into the space?
JS:
Well, I picked black and white for the cats so they wouldn’t
distract too much from the performers on stage. One detail I like
is how the cat in the far back corner is being stared at by the
guitar player from the existing mural.
LR:
What other outlets do you have for your drawing?
JS:
I draw a comic for the Review. I guess with this interview this
issue will be “Josh-heavy.” The comic is called “Atticus
and Glen.” It’s got a wise squirrel, Atticus, who’s
alternately helping and mocking a somewhat naïve boy, Glen.
LR:
How long have you been doing that?
JS:
I’ve been doing it since my freshman year and I got it in the
paper my sophomore year.
LR:
So this spring, graduation will mark the end of those characters
living in the Review, will they continue on beyond your college
years?
JS:
Yeah, this will be my last with that strip. I probably won’t
continue with those characters — they’re too rooted in
Oberlin. As a kind of farewell to those characters, I’ve drawn
a comic book with Atticus and Glen in it as my Winter Term project
this year, in addition to the Cat in the Cream cats.
LR:
How do you feel about leaving behind this bit of your creative self
in the Cat in the Cream?
JS:
I jokingly refer to it as my legacy. I’m just glad to have
had the chance to leave something so tangible to the school. It’s
also good proof that I did, in fact, attend a college.
LR:
Do you like cats in general?
JS:
Yes, I do. I’ve had three cats in my life; my current cat,
Hobbes, is probably sleeping on my bed in Arizona as we speak. Cats
are great.
LR:
Yeah, much better than say, hamsters.
JS:
Yes. Hamsters are the substitute pet. They’re just a last resort
pet, if your mom won’t let you have a cat.
LR:
Well, thanks for sitting down and talking to me.
JS:
You’re welcome, and thank you for the free Juicy Juice.
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