top of page

ree

We chose John F Malta to create the cover for SB52, the Art & Illustration special, after seeing his helmet design for the 21 Helmets display at the One Show 2022. We (deputy ed Mick, art ed Andy and I) had a search through his work online and agreed, he was the one we agreed on from our short list of options. One of the reasons we chose John (that's his self-portrait above) was because he was unlike anyone we'd used before, and we had no idea what he'd come up with.


Here's a Q&A I did with John.

Interview: Gary Inman

All artwork & photos: John F Malta (except where stated)

ree

Tell us about yourself - where you grew up, where you live.

I grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, spent a decade on and off in New York City, and currently live and work in the West Bottoms neighbourhood of Kansas City. For those unfamiliar with the West Bottoms of Kansas City. It’s a warehouse neighbourhood that’s filled with haunted houses, art studios, music venues, bars, and a sprawl of pop-up antique malls. It’s a neighbourhood that couldn’t be more tailored to my personal interests and one that I love calling home.


I spend most of my days drawing alongside my tiny dog Porky, out of my studio surrounded by my collections of Halloween decorations, old toys, puroresu [Japanese wrestling] artefacts, and punk posters.

ree

Do you call yourself an artist or an illustrator?

I am an artist and illustrator. The distinction has never been that important to me. I self-publish comics and zines, art direct and illustrate client projects, and exhibit work with art galleries.

How did you turn your skills into something that pays the bills?

Years of relentless hard work and self-promotion as well as a combination of luck and fortuitous timing.

ree

How would you describe your style?

Candy-coloured haunted punk wonderland.

You produce your own comics/comix/zines - can you tell us about them and what it means to produce these personal projects among the commissioned work?

I have been self-publishing zines and comics for as long as I can remember. When I was a teenager I was making zines about the punk and skate scene in Cleveland, OH, and ever since have made it a habit to collect and self-publish my drawings and interests into comix and zines. It’s how I first connected with the creative communities that I identified with and that eventually led to tabling at various fests around North America like Comic Arts Brooklyn, Comic Arts Los Angeles, Kansas City Zine Con, and the Toronto Comic Arts Festival.

To this day it’s a habit I maintain as I find it creatively energizing. It’s the source of inspiration for the projects that I Illustrate and art direct and how I work out new ideas.

ree

What commissioned work are you most proud of?

My work with Complex and All Elite Wrestling, an Op/Ed illustration I did for The New York Times titled: 'Go Ahead Millennials, Destroy Us', and the Garbage Pail Kids card I illustrated for Beyond the Streets.

This is not commission work, but my comic series Haunted Francis is the project I am most proud of. Haunted Francis follows a punk kid who has a sentient skull burst out of his chest that ruins his life in every way. After a series of failed relationships and jobs he and his skull eventually find themselves through professional wrestling.

This comic has led to a series of projects. Including a seasonal roadside attraction called Haunted Francis Storybook village. This project was created during a residency at Cooler Ranch at Treiber Farms on Long Island in New York (in collaboration with Cooler Gallery, Brooklyn). Additionally, a real-life professional wrestler has been working independent dates as Haunted Francis on the East Coast.

ree

We first came across your work via the 21 Helmets show. How did you get chosen for that?

The agency Lincoln Design Company curated that show and asked me to take part.


ree

The 'real life' Haunted Francis in action. A wrestler inspired by John's comic book character Photo: Earl Gardner


Do you have any crossover with motorcycles?

Only through my favourite neighbourhood coffee shop in Kansas City is a combination motorcycle repair shop and coffee roaster called Blip.

ree

We've seen photos of you in Dead Kennedys T-shirts - where does punk fit in your art, and how is a band whose original line-up split before you were born (I'm guessing) still have a relevance to you?

When I was younger I played in punk bands - punk aesthetics and DIY ethos are woven into the fabric of who I am as a person. I’ve spent so much of my life skateboarding, drawing, and listening to/playing punk music. Those three things have informed a lot about my identity as a person and artist.

For Dead Kennedys specifically: some of the first punk songs that I covered with my friends were their songs, so they’ve been a long-time favourite. You are correct that they broke up the year before I was born but their music, and lyrical content, is, unfortunately, as relevant today as when they recorded it. Outside of that - they are just so good: Fresh Fruit For Rotting Vegetables and Plastic Surgery Disasters are two of my all-time favourite albums.

ree

What was the inspiration for the Sideburn cover artwork?

The graveyard dirt bike scenes in Phantasm are something that has always stuck with me and something that I had on my mind when I first started working on this. While working through the sketches I came to the conclusion that I wanted to give the art more narrative content. So rather than the hero on the cover outracing another dirt tracker, I had him blasting by a wolf.

A motorcycle is a freedom machine but...

there's nothing quite like bombing down a hill on a skateboard.




ree

ree

ree


ree

Dice magazine was the inspiration for Sideburn, but we've waited until issue 99 to stock it. And we've chosen now because the editor's Harris Magnum II is featured, with photos by Sam Christmas. A lot of people ask about that bike, and wonder when Sideburn is going to feature it. Well, we're not, because it's not a Sideburn kind of bike. So this is the next best.


Dice originally launched when the two founders Dean Micetich, and the late Matt Davis, were both living in London, before the pair relocated to the US, where they settle. The mag is imported from the USA, 132 pages and the most influential motorcycle magazine for the last 30 years of more.

ree

The content of Dice 99 is an eclectic mix of old kinds of bikes from choppers (what they're most linked with) to a Dick Mann replica CB750, desert sled & barn find Triumph twins, plus a lot of lifestyle and some pin-up photography.



If foreign readers don't know about Harris, but think they recognise the name it might be because Harris have made all the chassis for Royal Enfield Twin FT that Johnny Lewis races in AFT. They are a famous and well-respected British chassis specialist, who also ran race teams in World Superbike and GP, where they created aluminium beam frames for privateer Yamaha YZR500 two-stroke V4s in the 1990s. The company worked as consultants for Royal Enfield, before being acquired by the Indian company in 2015.


The Magnum range of frame kits were based on the company's extensive world endurance experience, and were a race chassis for the road, based around popular Japanese superbike engines, at a time when Japanese frames were not on a par with their engines. It's a Reynolds 531 chromoly frame, holding a Kawasaki Z1000 MkII. And I love it.


Updated: Apr 7, 2023


ree

Royal Enfield's commitment to all levels of dirt track has been strengthened with the announcement they are the title sponsor of the 2023 Dirt Track Riders Association Flat Track Nationals.


Royal Enfield have also said they are expanding their Slide School programme across the UK and Europe, and have a three-round mini-series at selected DTRA dates, using the Dirt Craft School's Scram 411-based FT411. Which immediately makes wonder, when is the special edition road bike coming? But for now, the announcement.

ree

Gary Birtwistle on the Royal Enfield Twin FT. Read our test of it in Sideburn 47


Royal Enfield's press release, says...


'The 2023 partnership announcement follows two years of successful championship winning campaigns for Royal Enfield in the DTRA’s Twins Class, with Pro rider Gary Birtwistle and factory development rider Paul Young piloting the Royal Enfield ‘Twins FT’ race machines to victory in 2021 and ’22 consecutively. Hopes are high for Birtwistle to retain the DTRA Twins title in ’23, having finished the ’22 season with an astonishing clean sweep of seven consecutive wins.'

ree

Students and instructors at the recently launched' Italian Slide School


Royal Enfield continues, 'Alongside his racing achievements, Gary Birtwistle is committed to developing the next generation of DTRA competitors through the Royal Enfield Slide School programme. Utilising modified versions of the highly acclaimed Scram 411, Gary coaches riders and develops their Flat Track skills at Slide School training sessions across the UK. With more Slide Schools operating in the Netherlands, Italy and the USA.'

ree

Royal Enfield team rider, and 2021 DTRA Twins Champ, Paul Young


The press release also hinted at a three-race series using the Slide School bikes, at Peterborough Arena, Mallory Park and Greenfield Dirt Track, with more details to follow. The competitors will be a mix of new riders and industry faces (I don't want to say influencers) to show the low-entry bar to getting involved with the sport.


Commenting on the DTRA partnership Adrian Sellers, head of Royal Enfield’s Custom & Motorsport program says, 'Royal Enfield’s investment in grassroots racing has been developing rapidly over the past few years, especially in the world of Flat Track racing. Fielding teams in the premier Twins class with the UK DTRA and USA AFT series, alongside the establishment of Flat Track 'Slide Schools' is making the growing sport accessible to more newcomers. We hope that our support of the DTRA series will help develop the local flat track community and grow the sport in Europe - Lets go racing!'



bottom of page