null Skip to main content
Every purchase supports the
Art Gallery of NSW
Added to cart
Item name
Every purchase supports the Art Gallery of NSW
  • Art Gallery exclusives
  • Prints
  • Books
  • Homewares
  • Fashion
  • Kids
  • Gifts

The Artist in the Counterculture

ISBN: 9780691236162 ISBN: 9780691236162

$90.00
Member’s price $81.00Not a member? Join Now

Ships within 2-11 business days

Artist in the Counterculture: Bruce Conner to Mike Kelley and Other Tales from the Edge explores how California’s counterculture of the 1960s to 1980s profoundly shaped - and was shaped by - West Coast artists. The 1960s exert a special fascination in modern art. But most accounts miss the defining impact of the period’s youth culture, largely incubated in California, on artists who came of age in that decade. As their prime exemplar, Bruce Conner, reminisced, “I did everything that everybody did in 1967 in the Haight-Ashbury…I would take peyote and walk out in the streets.” And he vividly channelled those experiences into his art, while making his mark on every facet of the psychedelic movement - from the mountains of Mexico with Timothy Leary to the rock ballrooms of San Francisco to the gilded excesses of New Hollywood.

In The Artist in the Counterculture, Thomas Crow tells the story of California art from the 1960s to the 1980s - some of the strongest being made anywhere at the time - and why it cannot be understood apart from the new possibilities of thinking and feeling unleashed by the rebels of the counterculture. Crow revaluates Conner and other key figures - from Catholic activist Corita Kent to Black Panther Emory Douglas to ecological witness Bonnie Ora Sherk - as part of a generational cohort galvanised by resistance to war, racial oppression, and environmental degradation. Younger practitioners of performance and installation carried the mindset of rebellion into the 1970s and 1980s, as previously excluded artists of colour moved to the forefront in Los Angeles. Mike Kelley, their contemporary, remained unwaveringly true to the late countercultural flowering he had witnessed at the dawn of his career.

The result is a major new account of the counterculture’s enduring influence on modern art.


Author: Thomas Crow
Hardback
256 pages
19 x 25.4cm

Format: Hardcover

Dimensions: 20cm x 15cm x 1 cm

More

Members save 10% at the Gallery Shop*

* excludes DVDs and Gallery publications

Members save 10% at the Gallery Shop*

Join or renew now

* excludes DVDs and Gallery publications

Get our newsletter

Be sure you never miss out on new products, our sales and special offers!

We acknowledge the traditional custodians of the Country on which the Gallery stands, the Gadigal of the Eora Nation, and recognise their continuing connection to land, waters and culture.