Pawn Shop Records

A TREASURE TROVE OF UNDERGROUND ELECTRONIC MUSIC

Paul Gilligan


Known aliases: Gilligan
Last known whereabouts: Toronto, Canada
Web presence: poochcafe.com, and at wikipedia.org.

The basics:
Paul Gilligan is an accomplished illustrator, master partyer, and amateur dog-sledder. But, he’s best known for his comic strip, Pooch Cafe, which features a little dog named Poncho who’s insights into dog life actually illuminate the quirks of humanity more than anything else. Paul contributes all of the illustrations used in the design of Pawn Shop Records’ release artwork, and for that we are eternally grateful.

Bio taken from the Pooch Cafe website:
Paul Gilligan’s affair with art began in 1970, in kindergarten, when he figured out that he stunk at sports and that art was his only other option for impressing chicks. Weaned on Mad magazine, super-hero comics and “Bloom County,” Paul attended Toronto’s Sheridan College for animation and illustration and took comedy writing at the Film Institute in Ottawa.

He tested out other jobs over the years such as gas jockey, carnie, night watchman and florist, before joining the Ottawa Citizen newspaper as its on-staff illustrator, where he won awards in both illustration and design. He also found work in advertising, editorial cartooning, storyboarding, comic books and animation, and finally set up shop in downtown Toronto as a free-lancer, where his roster of illustration clients grew to include the likes of Entertainment Weekly, Time, The Wall Street Journal, Disney, and Wired. During this time he created a number of strips, the culmination of which was Pooch Cafe.

Pooch was the first comic of the new millennium, debuting on Jan 1, 2000 with Copley News Syndicate. In 2003 it was picked up by Universal Press Syndicate, and since then it’s found its way into over 270 newspapers around the globe, including recent additions like London and Moscow.

Paul does not currently own a dog, but he skulks around dog parks doing research, and is an avid viewer of “Dogs With Jobs” and “Scooby-Doo” reruns.

Strip samples:

[Valid RSS]