Plus d’un million de livres, à portée de main !
Bookbot

LaNitra M Berger

    Irma Stern and the Racial Paradox of South African Modern Art
    Story of Crass
    • Story of Crass

      • 295pages
      • 11 heures de lecture
      3,7(66)Évaluer

      In-depth interviews with the main movers in the punk rock movement—Crass members Penny Rimbaud, Gee Vaucher, and Steve Ignorant—detail the face of the revolution founded by these radical thinkers and artists. When punk ruled the waves, Crass waived the rules by putting out their own records, films, and magazines and setting up a series of situationist pranks that were dutifully covered by the world’s press. Not just another iconoclastic band, Crass was a musical, social, and political phenomenon: commune dwellers that were rarely photographed and remained contemptuous of conventional pop stardom. As detailed in this history, their members explored and finally exhausted the possibilities of punk-led anarchy. This definitive biography of the band not only gives backstage access to their lives, philosophies, and the movement that followed, but also to never-before-seen photographs and rare dialogues.

      Story of Crass
    • Introduction -- Irma Stern in a Global Context: Expressionist Influence -- Cape Town Blues: Painting South Africa -- Congo and Zanzibar -- Modernism Under Apartheid: Art and Social Context -- If Rhodes Must Fall, Must Stern Fall? Audacities of Color in Post-apartheid South Africa.

      Irma Stern and the Racial Paradox of South African Modern Art