Roz Chast is best known for her pen-and-ink portrayals of nervy New Yorkers and the perpetually ill at ease. A cartoonist for The New Yorker for nearly half a century, she is also the writer and illustrator of more than 20 books, including Going Into Town: A Love Letter to New York (Bloomsbury USA, 2017) and the award-winning Can’t We Talk About Something More Pleasant? (Bloomsbury USA, 2014), a memoir about her parents’ final years.
Chast, however, isn’t just an artist in pen and ink, but in needle and thread, specializing in embroidered tapestries. She has dabbled in rug hooking as well, and is an accomplished creater of ornate Ukrainian-style Easter eggs called pysanky. In each medium, her works document anxiety, insomnia, New York, the surreal, and the uncomfortably real:…
