In miscellaneous folder 6.
Part of the Study Room Guide on Live Art and Kids (P3091).
Rodenbeck offers a rigorous art historical reading of Kaprow’s project and related artworks. She finds that these experiential and experimental works offered not a happy communalism but a strong and canny critique of contemporary sociality. Happenings, she argues, were far more ambivalent, negative, and even creepy than they have been portrayed, either in contemporaneous accounts or in more recent efforts to connect them to contemporary art’s participatory strategies.
Surveys the evolving and diverse nature of nightlife in New York profiling over 30 artists
Charts the rise of London’s club scene from Punk in the late 1970s to the New Romantics in the 1980s.
*currently unavailable*
Texts, documents, illustrations, photographs and commentaries regarding TOPY, the most influential magikal commune of the 80s and 90s. Contributors: Carl Abrahamsson, Jason Louv, Malik, Coyote 37, Jean-Pierre Turmel, Chloe, Hilmar orn Himarsson, The Abominable TV Snowman, Eden 211, Eden, Andi Brechen, sexuality, sex, Coyote Two, Simon Woodgate, Jay Kinney, Brother Words, Lady Jaye Breyer P-Orridge, Desmond Hill
Features responses by members of the general public to 12 illustrated projects carried out by Industry of the Ordinary. Accompanying publication, REF. P1199
Responses by members of the general public to 12 illustrated projects carried out by Industry of the Ordinary. Accompanyed by DVD, REF. D1127
Documentation of the Victoria Festival, Belgium.