Weekend Punk - Sunday 26 June
The Design Museum is closing its doors in Shad Thames and what better way to go out than a punk closing weekend. Find out how you can use limited resources and a rebellious attitude to create flyers, posters, fanzines, fashion and make an indelible impact on the world.
All of the events are free, however some workshops need to be booked in advance. Tickets can still be bought for the Cycle Revolution exhibition over the weekend.
Location: Design Museum, Shad Thames, London, SE1 2YD
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Location: The Stage
Dr Russell Bestley of London College of Communication and the Punk Scholars Network, author of The Art of Punk, delivers a Subverting the Weekend talk and Q+A at the Design Museum. His talk focuses on Punk Beyond London, charting the punk diaspora across the UK and internationally from 1976 to the present day and as far afield as Eastern Europe, South America, South East Asia and the Himalayas, while providing insights into punk graphic design and visual communication, from do-it-yourself tools and techniques to the ways that professional designers helped to create a punk aesthetic.
Location: The Stage
Calling all aspiring image makers, writers, photographers, poets, designers, activists. Come to the museum and collaborate to create the ultimate zine. Led by Brody Associates, visitors to this workshop can create a two-page spread about a topic or issue that they are passionate about. What statement would you like to make?
Location: DIY Floor
Use image, text, photomontage, drawing and text collage to create pin badges and punk chokers. A drop in activity with designer Katie New.
Location: DIY Floor
Be inspired by PUNK.London and the museum’s displays to create unique, custom badges at this family-friendly workshop. Suitable for ages 5+.
Location: DIY Floor
The museum teams up with Time Out to smash the Weekend Punk piñata. Suitable for ages 5 – 11.
Location: The Stage
The Design Activism Research Hub (DARH) at London College of Communication runs a hands-on workshop on the theme of DIY graphics – create collages, posters and typographic layouts with simple tools and techniques on the working theme of Love and Hate. Get an insight into the fundamental principles of punk art and design and the longstanding heritage of home-made, do-it-yourself visual communication.
Plotting the release of classic punk music artwork across place and time, the Punk Timeline in the glass tank in front of the museum has been created with Russell Bestley, Principal Lecturer in Graphic Design at London College of Communication, to showcase the development of punk’s graphic identity and demonstrate the clear links between music, ideology and attitude.
Over twenty pieces from the collection and archive of British designer and artist Jamie Reid, including some previously unseen works are exhibited on the DIY Floor. The display includes photographs, original art works for gig posters and record covers, and a Vivienne Westwood screen printed flag. Growing up in a politically active family, Jamie Reid was born and raised in London where, in 1968, he attended Croydon College to study Art. It was during his time here that he met fellow classmate Malcolm McLaren, the future manager of the Sex Pistols. Reid worked alongside McLaren, and British fashion designer Vivienne Westwood in a bid to change the 1970s cultural landscape using art, music, fashion and design. He used collage to create a distinctive punk visual aesthetic, considered by turns subversive and amateurish, but now regarded as the work of a pivotal designer who established a visual frontispiece for anarchy and resistance. Jamie Reid’s archive is shown courtesy of John Marchant Gallery.
Weekend Punk is part of a year of events, gigs, films, talks, exhibits and more celebrating 40 years of punk heritage and influence in London. For more information visit the Punk London website.
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