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We have completed design and illustration projects for a diverse range of clients including Nike Sportswear, Target, Arcade Fire, Rhymesayers, KidRobot, Walker Art Center, Conde Nast, Stones Throw Records, Numero Group, and many others. From logos to album packaging to posters to stage design, we would love to create the visual elemtents to help you develop your brand, promote your event, and add excitement to your business.

Design Services

Whether you're interested in a small batch of one-color tee-shirts or a large edition of multi-color art prints, we are ready and equipped to help bring your screenprinting project to life. Quality and service are the names of our game. Looking to have some print work done but have some questions? Read our FAQ and drop us a line. We'll be happy to help you out.

Print Services

Aside from designing and screenprinting, we have also published a number of print projects, taking them from the artist's drafting board all the way to the art lover's living room wall. We have published art prints for David Choe, Deuce Seven, Jennifer Davis, Aye Jay Morano, Broken Crow, Drew Peterson, Eric Inkala, and more.

Publishing

Purchase screenprinted posters, t-shirts, sticker packs, CDs & LPs, magazines, moustache bandanas, and everything else we have available. Looking for a gift for a friend? We have hundreds of hand-crafted goodies of all sizes for art-lovers, music-lovers, new parents, and everyone else in-between.

Online Store

We love organizing, promoting, and hosting art shows, dance parties, and concerts, bringing together music and art enthusiasts from all walks of life. Keep up with our upcoming happenings and browse our archive of past events from the gallery openings at our own CO Exhibitions to the annual Do It To It DJ showcases and the worldwide Dre Day celebrations.

Info Page Events
 
Wes Winship
principal, print director
Wes Winship
principal, print director
Hometown: Minneapolis, MN via Montpelier, VT

When did you start working with BRLSQ: Since the very beginning, when we decided to call it BRLSQ instead of Rambo. 2000/2001?

Brief BRLSQ job description: Owner/operator. Time is spent between design, prepress (specializing in high end separations), R & D for the printshop and trouble shooting. Also part of CO exhibitions, the art space jointly run by BRLSQ and Permanent ADG

Favorite BRLSQ project you've worked on: There isn't one that I can pinpoint. Some of the ones with the best outcomes are usually the most physically and mentally demanding. My favorite project is BRLSQ itself, that we've gotten this far and learned so much along the way.

Favorite music: Melvins have stayed high on my list for a long time. Agoraphobic Nosebleed. Astrud Gilberto. Ennio Morricone. I also just like bass in general. 100hz and below

Favorite food: Indian food, all varieties of mac & cheese and burgers, texas BBQ and a good steak

Your dream project: To design, create, and exhibit a show that is just as much an overwhelming visual installation as it is a ribcage-crushing wall of sound. Everything functions as both a visual and audible aesthetic.

Who would play you in a TV dramatization of the BRLSQ story: John Cusack with Bruce Lee as stunt double.

Wes Winship links:
Wes on Twitter

Mike Davis
principal, creative director
Mike Davis
principal, creative director
Hometown: Nashville, TN

When did you start working with BRLSQ: Started collaborating with Life Sucks Die around 2000, then moved to Minneapolis to start Burlesque with the gang in 2003.

Brief BRLSQ job description: Graphic designer, illustrator, event organizer, copywriter, public relations, lunch motivator

Favorite BRLSQ project you've worked on: Chrome Children poster or Alphabet poster

Favorite music: James Brown, Black Sabbath, Public Enemy

Favorite food: Lamb Makhani, moqueca de camarao, jerk chicken, BBQ pork ribs, banh mi bo kho, seafood gumbo, cheeseburgers, chocolate & peanut butter ice cream, laab gai, tandoori chicken, crawfish po'boys, NY style pepperoni pizza, pumpkin muffins, mangos, watermelon, Honeycrisp apples

Your dream project: Hand-drawn psychedelic animated cartoon or designing a stage set for a TV show

Who would play you in a TV dramatization of the BRLSQ story: Half scenes by Seth Rogen, half by Screech

Mike Davis links:
Mike on Twitter
So Much Pileup
Mike 2600 on Soundcloud

Ben LaFond
printer
Ben LaFond
printer
Hometown: Twin Cities

When did you start working with BRLSQ: 2005

Brief BRLSQ job description: Screen Print Alchemy

Favorite BRLSQ project you've worked on: Whale Bone Grove, David Choe Obama #2

Favorite music: funk, soul, most things with Clavinet.

Favorite food: changes daily

Your dream project: changes daily

Who would play you in a TV dramatization of the BRLSQ story: Todd Bratrud or Emmanuel Lewis

Ben LaFond links:
Ben on Flickr
Ben on Twitter

Jodi Milbert
project manager
Jodi Milbert
project manager
Hometown: Hopkins, MN

When did you start working with BRLSQ: 2008

Brief BRLSQ job description: making sure everything is running smooth, all the time. Studio scheduling, webstore, shipping, you name it.

Favorite BRLSQ project you've worked on: Jodi Creature Babe

Favorite music: Anything guitar heavy. And I'm a sucker for the banjo.

Favorite food: cuban breakfast

Who would play you in a TV dramatization of the BRLSQ story: a mountain lion

Sarah Schatz
printer
Sarah Schatz
printer
Hometown: Minneapolis, MN

When did you start working with BRLSQ: December 2011

Brief BRLSQ job description: Printer, cutter, folder, etc.

Favorite BRLSQ project you've worked on: Anything I can throw a variant on.

Favorite music: All of it.

Favorite food: All of it.

Your dream project: Textiles. Books.

Who would play you in a TV dramatization of the BRLSQ story: Gary Oldman.

Sarah Schatz links:
Sarah on Twitter

Peter Bekke
printer, designer
Peter Bekke
printer, designer
Hometown: Minneapolis

When did you start working with BRLSQ: I started interning at BRLSQ while in college in the fall of 2006. I became an employee in the summer of 2007.

Brief BRLSQ job description: I do a little bit of everything. I do some poster printing, all of the shirt printing, and I help with everything else from pre to post print work, shipping, and some design work here and there.

Favorite BRLSQ project you've worked on: Getting to work on all the Obama prints was definitely a highlight for me. It was nice being able to work with designs from a constantly changing group of (extremely talented) artists for those couple of months.

Favorite music: 90's Dilla, Premier or Pete Rock.

Favorite food: I love to eat

Your dream project: Printing money

Who would play you in a TV dramatization of the BRLSQ story: Mathew Broderick

Peter Bekke links:
Peter on Flickr
Wants VS Needs

Todd Bratrud
designer
Todd Bratrud
designer
Hometown: Crookrock, MN. 56716

When did you start working with BRLSQ: Day oneish i believe, i could be wrong.

Brief BRLSQ job description: Just kinda... ya know, doin' my thing.

Favorite BRLSQ project you've worked on: Past: Posse Cut (crew-wide collaborative paintings from Burlesque's gallery "First Blood Part III" gallery show at OX-OP, 2005).  Future: Greeting Cards

Favorite music: according to iTunes™ my favorite music is "Folk Rock". Grizzly Bear, Girls & Garden Music, John Maus.

Favorite food: Tom's Place. 17th & Placentia

Your dream project: um... drawing... girls? skulls? gross stuff? cute things? i dunno, each project is as dreamy as the last.

Who would play you in a TV dramatization of the BRLSQ story: the ghost of Beatrice "Bea" Arthur and/or Denzel Washington.

Todd Bratrud links:
Todd on Twitter
Dank Nuggzz
The High 5
Dead To The World

George R. Thompson IV
designer
George R. Thompson IV
designer

Current city: Costa Mesa, CA (home of the bodybag)

When did you start working with BRLSQ: From the beginning, but I've pretty much been riding the coattails since I moved to California

Brief BRLSQ job description: artist / graphic designer / blogger

Favorite BRLSQ project you've worked on: Dre Day related stuff

Favorite music: Prince "Erotic City," good rap, horrible rap, old R&B, everything else that's good from all genres

Favorite food: vegetarian / vegan

Your dream project: doing pin-up style paintings / illustrations of hot Asian, Latin, and Brazilian live models

Who would play you in a TV dramatization of the BRLSQ story: Denzel Washington or Soulja Boy

George R. Thompson IV links:
Lords of Apathy (NSFW!)

 

In the mid-1990s, a group of young Twin Cities-based graffiti writers decided to publish their own magazine. Using their writing and illustration skills and taking full advantage of their access to unlimited color copies, the crew released the first issue of Life Sucks Die Magazine. Named after a mixup of punk rock icon G.G. Allin's "Life Sucks Scum Fuck" and "Live Fast Die" tattoos, LSD defied the rules of the already defiant genre of graffiti magazine with their eye-popping collages of roadkill photos, tabloid clippings, pornography, junk culture, the best graffiti flicks from all across the globe, and articles ranging in subject matter from shoplifting to hair weaves to littering to toilet clogging tips.

In the years to follow, aspiring graffiti magazine entrepreneurs attempted issue after issue to out-LSD LSD. While nobody managed to successfully rip off the style of Life Sucks Die in creating a new magazine, the influence this magazine had on the graffiti world, hip hop world, skateboarding world, and other various subcultures was more apparent than ever.


During the summer of 1997, the cast of Life Sucks Die made their way down to St. Louis MO for the annual Paint Louis graffiti festival. There, they met and befriended Mike Davis, a graffiti writer / graphic design student / DJ. Shortly thereafter, Mike was invited to write and contribute design assistance to the next few issues of LSD. Over the next several years, the lead designers from the magazine, Wes Winship and George Thompson, would help raise funds for the magazine by organizing parties featuring performances from local hip hop and punk rock acts including Dillinger Four, DJ Andrew (Broder, now of the rock group Cloak Ox), and a fledgling Rhymesayers crew. On the side, Wes and George created album artwork, t-shirts, posters, and other promotional designs for Rhymesayers, Fobia Skate Shop, anticon Records, and other small companies run by friends and extended family, often bringing in the assistance of Mike Davis and LSD art contributors Todd Bratrud and Aaron Horkey.

By about 2003, the staff of Life Sucks Die decided to put the magazine on the back burner and shift their focus towards the various design projects which had begun to stack up. Bored of the music and art scene in St. Louis and ready for a change of pace (and weather), Mike decided to move up to Minneapolis to continue working with Wes and George, who were working as full-time freelance graphic artists in the LSD office, an 800 square foot cave on the 6th floor of what was referred to as The Spice Factory - a decrepid warehouse near the University of Minnesota. There really was a spice factory in the building, filling the air with a gut-wrenching stench comprised of lemon, cinnamon, and urinal cakes. The crew was joined in the office by web designer / photographer / bicycle enthusiast / bread and olive oil consumer Skye Rossi, who would help with web projects and event organizing.


The summer before, Wes, who had been designing calendars, flyers, and magazine layouts for downtown Minneapolis' First Avenue nightclub (which you might remember from a little film called Purple Rain), designed and screenprinted a run of posters to sell at the club's two consecutive nights of Ween concerts. The posters were printed in Wes' apartment basement in South Minneapolis with a homemade press, homemade screen exposure unit, homemade print drying station, homemade screen washout area, and homemade just about everything else. Even if LSD was no longer in production, the magazine's D.I.Y. aesthetic and creative approach was still very much alive. When every copy of the poster brought down to First Avenue was snatched up by the concert-goers, Wes realized he might be on to something with this whole poster-making game plan. Following the success of the highly popular Ween poster, Wes kept his engines revved up and turned out a slew of screenprinted posters for local concerts from Atmosphere, Why?, Peaches, The Soviettes, Acid Mothers Temple, The Blinding Light, and more.

By Autumn of 2003, Wes had convinced friend and longtime collaborator, rural Minnesotan visual artist extraordinaire Aaron Horkey, to create some art for a few upcoming concert posters. Shortly thereafter, Aaron handed over the drawings for his first ever screenprinted concert poster for Andrew Bird's 2003 performance at Uptown Minneapolis' Bryant Lake Bowl. The artwork was prepared for print and screenprinted by Wes Winship and the poster was an instant smash hit. Several Aaron Horkey designs and Aaron & Wes collaborative designs followed.

In 2005, print work had piled up considerably. Burlesque was quickly gaining the attention of poster and design enthusiasts with the help of the online rock poster community at GigPosters.com. Several local and national music acts and other companies were approaching them with design and print projects large and small. With artwork coming in from Horkey, Todd Bratrud, George Thompson, Mike Davis, and of course Wes, and poster projects lined up for Rhymesayers, Bonnaroo, and a new band who called themselves The Arcade Fire on the horizon, it was clear that Burlesque was going to need some help in the print room. Wes enlisted the help of screenprinting enthusiast Ben LaFond to come assist with printing and print-related duties. Genetically dispositioned to print, eager to learn, and ready to put in some work, Bennie quickly learned his way around the new semi-automatic presses and helped crank out some great posters.


Design and print work was flowing steadily through the studio, posters were flying off of the presses and flying out the door, album covers and t-shirts were being designed and sent off, and the gang even managed to design and construct a full-sized mini-golf hole inside the space before transferring it to the Walker Art Center. Inconveniently, the screenprinting studio was located three floors up from the design studio. Neither room offered the space to host guests or clients, nor did they provide a substantial escape from the vile, aforementioned Lemon-Cinnamon-Urine™ stench which permeated every cubic inch of the building. Adding in the ever-growing clutter of books, records, vintage toys, artwork, and office supplies, not to mention the milling rumors of the forthcoming demolition of the Spice Factory building, a larger and more cohesive office space was absolutely needed. After perusing nearly a dozen warehouse spaces throughout the metro Minneapolis area, a 3000 square foot studio at the corner of Stinson & Broadway in Northeast Minneapolis was chosen as the new home of Burlesque's screenprinting studio, design office, print archive and mailorder center, and art gallery. A former pro wrestling gym and, more recently, an art framing studio, the space provided ample room to fit all of Burlesque's printing equipment, design paraphernalia, prints, toys, vintage weird stuff, furniture, and there was even enough room to host a few hundred friends! In the Spring of 2006, Burlesque enlisted the help of some very generous friends (and their trucks) to move aaaaaaaaaaaaall of their crap out of the Spice Factory and into their new home at 1101 Stinson Boulevard Northeast.


On the evening of September 29, 2006, the public was invited to the grand opening of the new Burlesque studio and the gallery known as First Amendment Arts. The walls were covered with prints, paintings, photographs, and illustrations from Broken Crow, Miss Amy Jo, King Mini, Eric Inkala, Aesthetic Apparatus, Adam Turman, and of course Burlesque. T-shirts were printed live on the spot, and there were DJ sets from Mike 2600, Paper Tiger, and Espada, plus live performances from HeatdeatH, P.O.S, and other members of Doomtree.

While there was no official headcount, it is estimated that between 300 and 500 people came through to celebrate and see the new space. Over the next few years, First Amendment would host art shows featuring work from Shepard Fairey, Chris Ware, Mark Ryden, Jay Ryan, Little Friends of Printmaking, Aye Jay and his son Cohen Morano, Isle of Printing, Hardland/Heartland, plus musical performances from Calvin Johnson, Mount Erie, Chooglin, Martin Devaney, Red Pens, The Book of Right On, The Millionth Word, and Brother & Sister, racking up numerous Best Art Gallery awards from City Pages and Vita.Mn.

Since moving into the current location, Burlesque has stayed hard at work, grinding on design and print projects for Arcade Fire, The Walker Art Center, Minnesota Public Radio, Nike Sportswear, Ron English, Deathwish Records, David Choe, Target, Kidrobot, Stones Throw Records, and Rhymesayers, organizing the annual Dre Day celebration, monthly Bomp! dance party, and the weekly Triple Double DJ night, selling prints and merchandise several times each year at local craft shows as well as the national Flatstock poster shows (occurring in conjunction with SXSW, Pitchfork Music Festival, and Bumbershoot Music & Arts Festival), showcasing their artwork in galleries from St. Paul to Los Angeles to Chicago to San Francisco to Calgary to Kansas City. Joining the team has been screenprinter / designer Peter Bekke and mailorder sorceress / office manager Jodi Milbert, both rounding out the studio crew and helping push Burlesque forward.

In the Spring of 2010, Burlesque received word from the owners of the Stinson Blvd building that a new space was opening up, exactly one floor above the print studio. The wide open 2500 square foot room seemed like the perfect home for a new art gallery, one that dwarfed First Amendment and presented a whole new realm of possibilities for art projects, so Mike and Wes teamed up with friend Joseph Belk and his crew named Permanent to run the gallery. On June 26, 2010, the doors to CO Exhibitions were opened to art lovers for the very first time and have remained open to feature exhibits from Aaron Draplin, Michael Gaughan, Doomtree, and Burlesque and Permanent themselves.

1101 Stinson Blvd #12
Minneapolis MN 55413
(612) 379-4151 office
(612) 354-3851 fax
Burlesque on Twitter
Burlesque on Facebook
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Mike Davis: mike@burlesquedesign.com
Wes Winship: wezz@burlesquedesign.com
Jodi Milbert: jodi@burlesquedesign.com
Ben LaFond: ben@burlesquedesign.com
Sarah Schatz: sarah@burlesquedesign.com

We are located at the Northeast corner of Broadway & Stinson Blvd in Northeast Minneapolis. We are conveniently located just off the I-35W New Brighton / Stinson exit, one block South of the Quarry shopping center.

Open studio / gallery hours:
Weekdays 12-5pm

Security Code:
CLICK HERE to inquire about our graphic design and creative services.

CLICK HERE to inquire about our screenprinting services.