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XEROXES, CUT-UPS & OUTTAKES FROM THE GODFATHER OF PUNK
Aided and abetted by the immediacy of xerox-machines, Jamie Reid has been hooked on the freedom of designing by cut, paste, copy & scrawl since his first encounter with these machines in 1972.
Along with a burgeoning DIY scene Reid recognised the errors, experimentation & play inherent in the medium of photocopying made it ideal not just for drafting artwork but for communicating with visceral speed the radical ideas of the time: using it to disseminate agit-prop for the Black Panthers to anti-war rallying cries.
Here, the scraps of the medium are the message: cutting room floor detritus encompassing 50 years of protest, music, art, radical thinking & speaking out. From Reid’s beginnings at community activist publication Suburban Press, to punk, the Sex Pistols and beyond, shot through with political & spiritual proclamations this book is a collage testament to Reid’s maxim: Keep Warm, Make Trouble.
Introduction by John Marchant
Edited and designed by Steve Lowe and John Marchant. Published by the L-13 Light Industrial Workshop in association with John Marchant Gallery
- Hardback Edition
- 176 pages
- 30 x 22 cm
- Printed on 120 gsm Munken Lynx Rough paper and bound in paper covered pictorial 3mm book board cut flush to the edges
- ISBN: 978-1-908067-30-2
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About Jamie Reid
Jamie Reid was a British artist best known for shaping the visual language of punk music through his décollage covers of the Sex Pistols’ albums Never Mind the Bollocks and Here’s the Sex Pistols, as well as their singles “Anarchy in the U.K.” and “God Save the Queen" which was lauded as "the single most iconic image of the punk era."
Through employing faux-ransom-note letters and iconoclastic defacements of pop culture and nationalistic images he defined a generation of angst and anarchism, his influence being felt throughout music and art to this day. His works can be found in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, and the Tate Gallery in London, among others. Reid lives and works in London, United Kingdom.