Power to the People: The Graphic Design of the Radical Press and the Rise of the Counter-Culture, 1964-1974

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Product Details
Price
$57.60
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Publish Date
Pages
264
Dimensions
10.2 X 12.2 X 1.2 inches | 4.1 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780226424354

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About the Author
Geoff Kaplan has produced projects for a range of academic and cultural institutions, and his work is included in the permanent collections of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and MoMA. He lives in San Francisco and teaches in the Graduate Program of Design at the California College of Art.
Reviews
"Power to the People reproduces stunning covers of radical late '60s and early '70s papers . . . including The Black Panther, Paul Krassner's The Realist and the long-running Off Our Backs. This is a remarkable collection curating artifacts from the diverse worlds of feminists, leftists, technology visionaries, gays and other factions all liberated by cheap printing. . . . The powerful images Geoff Kaplan has expertly assembled are each worth an eloquent thousand words."
--David Joselit, Yale University "Chicago Tribune"
"A handsome, comprehensive look at the drawings, collages and mash-ups that winked, blasted and shrieked from the pages of the underground press of the 1960s and 1970s. The result is a visual chronicle of the successes and excesses of the time. Smart essays--serious but not solemn --place the papers and the surges that launched them in political / cultural / artistic context. It's especially good on the technological innovations that allowed creators with little money and even less experience to provide counter-news and blow the doors off cultural stodginess."--Abe Peck, author, Uncovering the Sixties: Life & Times of the Underground Press "Chicago Tribune"
"When we started the International Times in London in 1966 there were only half a dozen underground papers in the US and none in Europe; a year later there were several hundred. Looking at this superb collection of pages from the underground press I am struck by how innovative and imaginative they were, particularly considering that the majority of them were designed by amateurs. This overview includes many papers that are new to me and is surely destined to become the standard work on the subject."
--Barry Miles, co-founder International Times, London "Chicago Tribune"
"Power to the People serves as a significant slice of countercultural history. It graphically captures the experimentation, anger, compassion, humor, and soul of that idealistic era. This anthology will provide you with images that may well bring back memories you never had."--Paul Krassner, author of Confessions of a Raving, Unconfined Nut "Chicago Tribune"
"The production methods of the Vietnam era underground press seem crude compared to today's digital technology, but they freed non-corporate journalists, artists, designers, and political activists to publish stunning layout and radical writing cheaply, easily, and in huge quantities, enough to create a worldwide revolution whose effects are still being felt today. In Power to the People, Geoff Kaplan has created a select kaleidoscopic gallery of cover and inside page designs from the vast portfolio of papers that the Vietnam era antiwar countercultural community gifted to the world through their personal struggles, celebrations, and discoveries. Valuable accompanying essays describe how it was done, and also draw the connection to today's social media radicals, whose roots--whether they know it or not (and too often they don't)--are with the underground press--and who owe it to themselves to read everything they can about these papers."
--Ken Wachsberger, editor of Voices from the Underground series "Chicago Tribune"
"Railing against a senseless war, pollution, and police violence while celebrating the many social and cultural advances of the time, this passionate artwork, like Renaissance painting, crystallizes a spirit that is obviously dated, but also timeless."
--Ken Wachsberger, editor of Voices from the Underground series "Village Voice"
"Documenting the power and significance of the counterculture publications of the sixties (understood, culturally, as the years between the assassination of John F. Kennedy and the end of the Vietnam War), this volume is a superb contribution to several disciplines. Historians and students of cultural history, graphic design, political history, and American Studies will discover a beautifully designed book that thoroughly explores the graphics of the period and their impact. . . . Highly recommended."--Ken Wachsberger, editor of Voices from the Underground series "Choice"
"Before there was the Internet and desktop publishing, there was the underground press--a rich, irreverent source of information, opinion, and outrageousness that is all too difficult to access today. With Power to the People Geoff Kaplan has brought together a rowdy and stimulating collection of design from the 1960s and '70s that will be an inspiration and an indispensable resource to anyone who wants to speak out in the 21st century."
--David Joselit, Yale University