Hi, if you're looking for Shawn Cross, that's another guy who definitely doesn't do the art I do. At least I don't think. But anyways, I'm a dark art artist from Ohio. I've been working at my craft professionally for 9 years as an independent artist as well as an artist for the widely popular webcomic series, Cyanide & Happiness. I'm also a co-owner and artist for Ohio based lifestyle brand, Any Means Necessary clothing.
Though I've been known for my association with Cyanide & Happiness, in 2016 I created the mental health series, Inktober Illness, as part of the annual Inktober series which completely altered my art direction to focus more on artwork that helps create a conversation on mental health. My art has been all over the internet and bodies of many fans and it's still spreading. It's been life changing to say the least that an artist from Ohio is able to connect with so many who feel like they don't have a voice.
Beautiful illustrations, though don’t use the descriptions to try to understand any of the disorders. It was a bit annoying to me that the author would personally relate to so many of the disorders even though he didn’t have them. He’d say things like “maybe I have this.” Also he talks about harassing someone with trypophobia with a surprise picture, which I did not find funny as someone with trypophobia. It is a real fear, not a joke.
I love the concept, but the artwork which is 75 percent of the book simply does not appeal to me. The style is very Tim Burton like, and I really can’t stand that. I wish someone with a different art style would do this exact same thing. I will keep it as a reference book, because the subject is something that I am very passionate about.
I pre ordered the 2nd edition and waited months for it. While it’s not exactly [crap], unless you’re a fan of ghoulish stick figures it’s just not worth getting.
Love Shawn Coss’s artwork! I’ve purchased several of his prints, and without fail will just stop and stare at them… often noticing something new each time.
So no surprise I loved his book. My only (very minor) wish was that there had been better proofreading of the text portion. My brain balked at some very small type-o’s etc. Because that’s part of how MY brain works.
Stunning artwork. I really appreciate how each image had a correlating caption discussing the NIMH definitions/attributes, personal stories of his fans/followers, or simply the inspiration behind the image. Deeply haunting book, in the best of ways.
This beautifully illustrated, haunting book is one man's interpretation of mental health issues. I highly recommend it to anyone struggling with their mental health, or even if you are just naturally an anxious person (like me). As soon as it arrived in the mail I started thumbing through the pages and ended up reading it from cover to cover in one sitting. SUCH a unique perspective and a beautiful way to view the world in a different way. Pick your copy up asap! You won't regret it.
Man. Coss is such a good artist. I'm someone who's fairly open with my struggles with ADHD, OCD, anxiety and depression but sometimes it's genuinely hard to describe what you're feeling when you're dealing with the stuff you're dealing with. Coss just nails it on the head. Highly recommend this book.
Such amazing art in this book, really touching remarks about each piece that shows exactly what each piece means to him. This book was right up my alley.
This is much more a series of pieces of artwork than a written-word book, though some do include explanations from the artist about their own experience or perception of the mental health experiences depicted. Many of them are both harrowing & beautiful, but I would caution that this contains a lot of deeply sensitive and potentially traumatic imagery, particularly relating to a wide range of phobias and mental health conditions.
I personally really love these depictions, and found those I have personal experience of to be an effective & emotive portrayal of some of my own experiences - however, I appreciate it may not reflect everyone's experiences, and the artist does acknowledge that at the start of the book. I also want to highlight the author's own reminder that they are approaching this from an artistic perspective, not that of a mental health professional, so this is more about appreciating dark & evocative art that may only reflect some people's lived experiences.
(If it is of use to know, I have read the "2nd Dose Edition" of this book)
I find this book to be insensitive to those with the mental illnesses included, and the author is not a mental health professional so it is not a book one should use to learn about these conditions. Furthermore, someone who does not experience a specific mental disorder personally, doesn’t have any business drawing visual representations of it for profit. I have several of the disorders in the book and I don’t like how the visuals imply that there are monsters inside of those of us with these conditions. Yes, it is hard and painful to have a mental illness but we don’t have scary demons inside of us, we are traumatized and/or abused children that have grown up, our brains created coping mechanisms to survive the environments we grew up in.
The artwork in this book is breathtaking. Shawn Coss has a rare ability to capture the rawness of mental and emotional struggle through haunting, unforgettable illustrations. As an art book, it’s brilliant and worth having on your shelf for the visuals alone.
Where it falls short is in its delivery around mental health diagnoses. Despite the way it’s framed, this is not a resource for clinical insight or understanding, and nothing here should be used for diagnosis. The heavy self-disclosure from the author often felt overwhelming, even to the point of distraction.
If you’re seeking powerful art, this book delivers. If you’re looking for meaningful or accurate commentary on mental health conditions, it does not.
This book is amazing. I got it for my birthday and have been going through it and decided to finish it today. The pictures are so beautifully dark. The art really is stunning. But you have to be mentally ok to go into it because it does go into the subjects of depression, anxiety, self-harm, substance abuses, SA ect. But alot of it is very relatable for anyone who has dark thoughts, or who has dealt with a dark past or struggles with trauma. I recommend this book very highly for anyone who loves this kind of content.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
This book is an emotional rollercoaster for those of us who have ever been diagnosed with any mental health illnesses. What Shawn has done with this book no other person in history ever has. Through his art, he humanizes the demons many of us face daily. He uses his real world experience with his talent to depict and describe these afflictions. I was very moved by the specific ones that I have been diagnosed with. So grateful for my autographed copy.
I have the second edition and I love it. The book is gorgeous, hardcover with excellent quality. I'd seen images of his art over the last couple of years and when I saw he had a book I had to get it. As someone who lives with more than one diagnosis I can tell you at least three of them are spot-on.
Amazing illustrations. The artist is multitalented and there’s no way he relates to all those mental illnesses also you can tell he’s ignorant to a lot of them (i.e. agoraphobia, some descriptions just plain off base) but I like how he pulled in NIH and truly tried to use Inktober as an empathy experiment to see himself in a lot of it and that’s part of what makes it so incredible.
I really liked the artwork depicted for each disorder. very different. I also like how he gave both the dsm definition and his relation to the disorder
After reading so many positive things about this book I was expecting more. I thought there would be a bit more writing along with the artwork. It’s mostly art with 1-3 paragraphs, with the first paragraph being directly from National Institute of Mental Health. Seems he only focused on the drawings and not any of the writing. Someone else should have done the writing for this book. The art is unique and fantastic but that’s it more than half of the illnesses don’t have any write up so you have to google them yourself.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
(I have the “2nd Dose” second edition HC.) This book is incredible and builds wonderfully Sawn’s depictions of mental illness. More of this sort of thing needs to exist. By any means necessary.