Leah Hayes Sasha De Sade File

If you enjoy the brooding, intimate, and slightly subversive atmosphere of Sasha de Sade's music, you will likely connect with the visual storytelling in Leah Hayes' Not Funny Ha-Ha . Both represent a specific brand of modern femininity that is unafraid to show the messy, unglamorous parts of life.

Since "Leah Hayes" and "Sasha de Sade" function in slightly different spheres—one as a graphic novelist/illustrator and the other as a musical artist/performer—it appears you may be looking at a crossover collaboration, or perhaps grouping them together as contemporary female artists exploring similar themes of intimacy, vulnerability, and subversion. leah hayes sasha de sade

However, the most prominent work associated with that fits the tone often attributed to a "Sasha de Sade" aesthetic is the graphic mini-comic "Not Funny Ha-Ha" . Below is a review of that work, along with a note on the musical styling of Sasha de Sade. If you enjoy the brooding, intimate, and slightly