Punk Art History: Artworks from the European No Future Generation

Available
Product Details
Price
$35.00  $32.55
Publisher
Intellect (UK)
Publish Date
Pages
350
Dimensions
6.6 X 9.5 X 1.0 inches | 1.05 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781789387001
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Marie Arleth Skov is a Danish art historian, author, and curator based in Berlin.
Reviews
"What Skov has achieved with this book is to shine the light on a much-ignored part of punk, pulling on exemplary research and an insightful vision to illuminate an important art movement. It will be a sourcebook on the subject for many years to come. It is an essential addition to any serious punk library.

Skov is a Danish art historian, author and curator based in Berlin. She works on the subjects of music, art and sexuality, with a historical focus on Surrealism and the punk movement of the 1970-80s. She is also an international affiliate of the Punk Scholars Network, and it's clear from this book that she knows, and loves, her subject well."
-- "Mark Ray Louder Than War"
"Capturing the sharp, subversive energy that fueled punk art and music, Punk Art History is a blistering, scintillating chronicle of rebellious brilliance."-- "Foreword"
"I wish this book had been available to me when I was a 16-year-old punk in 2006 who had only ever read or heard of Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain's Please Kill Me. [...] Indeed, we're living in an exciting time for a burgeoning wealth of punk studies. The generations that follow will be offered a rich array of research, in part due to researchers like Marie Arleth Skov and Punk Art History for, what is offered in Skov's monograph is a different view from those typically offered in mainstream punk histories.

Skov's writing is fresh and accessible - the density of her research could be easily overwhelming were it not for her engaging tone. The book exceeded my expectations, in that I assumed I was sitting down for a primer in punk - but was completely wrong. This is a highly academic monograph, written in a way that one might feel as if they're seated with a close friend explaining a dense international network of ideas, and the artistic movements of which that network pays homage or may have in part, been bred from. Skov offers the research to her reader in delightful bite-sized, but well-written chapter sections.

This book is a service to the movement and belongs among the shelves of any self-purported full-time (or, even, to quote Television Personalities, 'part-time') punks."
-- "Emily Owens, Punk & Post-Punk"