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Making what Matters Stick: Q&A with Joee Patton

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When sticker artist Joee Patton watched Seinfeld with his family in the ā90s, he had no idea that the show would become his art. When he adopted his cat, Blue, he combined his feline and ā90s pop culture obsession into mystical, psychedelic images that are both bizarre and nostalgic.Ā
Whose cat is in your work? Is it the same cat?
Five years ago I adopted a cat. Her name is Blue. I started making distorted images of her. Everyone is obsessed with animals. My cat is a muse, thereās cat culture everywhere. Blue is a total diva. I make her into these mystical, psychedelic creatures.

Why cats?
I think thereās a niche out there for weird animal products. The type of thing where you see it, and you wonder for a second āIs that serious? Is that real?ā I mean, there are catnip joints out there, which act like incense. Itās so weird, but itās a product people are interested in. Iām making air fresheners with essential oils that cats like. Like rosemary infused with catnip. Or lavender-scented catnip.Ā I work as a graphic designer on the side. Iām progressively building that business. I do logos, and I often get commissions from pet lovers, like recreating a pet as a yoda painting.Ā

Your style is unique. Very ā90s.
Iām obsessed with ā90s pop culture-related images. I wanted to do a kind of vaporwave, low-fi, ā90s, low-grade Windows 99 aesthetic, very pixelated. Thatās why thereās so much Seinfeld imagery in my work. I still watch it all the time - the style, the clothing, the comedy, itās nostalgic.Ā
When I was a kid, my family would all be together watching these shows. Now my parents are divorced and my siblings all live in other states. So itās very nostalgic for me. I wanna be in my own pop culture world. A lot of my creativity comes from being consumed by pop culture. I have stints of shutting it off and reading more. I go back and forth. Pop culture - I want to mock it, but it controls me at the same time.

How did you become an artist?
I had a brain aneurysm as a kid and was half paralyzed. From that time on, I had a vision of me being an artist. My Grandma also dreamt about me being an artist before I was born. Thatās how I became an artist.Ā When I was a kid I was influenced heavily by Lisa Frank. All those dolphins, cats. At the time it was considered something for girls. I wanted to make something that was more my style.Ā
Youāre based in Austin, but you arenāt from there. Why did you choose Austin?
I moved to Austin for filmmaking. I make short films. Austin is very creative. Iām surrounded by people working in creative fields. I became friends with other artists and muralists. Seeing so much creativity and going to art shows inspires me to make my own art. Iām not musically inclined, but I love music and would often help out bands by making flyers and t-shirt designs.Ā
Austin has a very strong sticker art culture. Especially on bathroom walls. Theyāre covered with stickers. Theyāre cool, random strangers can see them. Anarchy Cat got his start here.

How many stickers have you made so far?
Iāve made around 80 different stickers to date. Stickers are a piece of me. Over the past year Iāve progressed quite a bit. Iāve been making more, selling more. Iām making something called Catās Cult right now, itās catnip-infused bottled water. My cat is obsessed with water, and Iām obsessed with my cat. So itās natural.Ā
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StickerYou blog posts are written and published by members of theĀ StickerYou teamĀ at our headquarters, located in the beautiful city of Toronto, Canada.
