Punk Art-Jamie Reid Punk Artwork

by Shril on September 1, 2009

anarchy flagShril’s ‘not normal’ gene

Do you ever feel your not quite normal?  I do.  In fact I’m sure I have a school report somewhere that says I’m not.  The ‘not normal’ point was something my parents reinforced in me for as long as I can remember.  Their crys of ‘why can’t you just be normal’ was used as some kind of fore warning that life will not turn out well if I continued to ‘dress like that’ or ‘dye my hair that color’.

That had me wondering if there is a ‘not normal’ gene.  A gene that a number of the population are born with.  Once the gene becomes active then the not normal gene does its magic and stands you out from the herd. I bet there is you know and all artists have this gene.  They are just different.

Activate the not normal gene
Thinking about this a little deeper I can remember the exact time my not normal gene activated.  It was August 1978 whilst I was holidaying with my parents on the Lincolnshire coast in the UK.  I was 13 and the world was just becoming interesting.  I remember walking into one of those old independent type record shops that used to be everywhere before limited company’s like HMV and Virgin swallowed them all up.

never mind the bollocksThe shop was in a small covered in market and had lines of 12” vinyl albums you had to thumb through.  As I thumbed my way through the merchandise I was suddenly stopped dead   in my tracks.  I’m still not sure if it was the garish pink and acid yellow colors that first caught my eye or whether it was the wording splashed across the front.  I had found the album Never Mind the Bollocks by the Sex Pistols.  My life would never be the same again.  My ‘not normal’ gene had been activated.

Thinking back to that time I can remember a feeling of curiosity and excitement rolling around with my teenage hormones.  The world suddenly seemed more adult and little more dangerous.  It seems foolish now but I remember a number of elaborate schemes to keep my parents from seeing the album cover.  In a small four birth caravan that’s not an easy task.

Punk influence
Although I didn’t realise it at the time that a particular artwork on the album cover and the musical contents it held inside became the biggest influence on me as an artist that I could ever have imagined.  When punk rock came on the music scene with bands like the Sex Pistols – music suddenly became accessible.  The punk movement rocked the music establishment with its Do-It-Yourself ethos.  Suddenly anyone who wanted to could do it.

pretty vacantPunk Art
The artwork that went on to symbolise the punk ethos was created on this album cover by the artist Jamie Reid.  It was a few years later at art school that I found out this type of artwork that resembled the style of a ransom note was referred to as décollage.

In artwork décollage is somewhat the opposite of collage.  A collage is an image built up from other parts of existing images.   Décollage is created by cutting, tearing away or otherwise removing, pieces of an original image.  A similar technique to this is the lacerated poster. Here one poster is placed over another or a series of others, and the top posters are ripped to reveal the posters underneath to varying degrees.

The artwork that surrounded the punk movement made use of all three of these styles.  They often look the same but examine them closer and you can see they are different techniques.  Jamie Reid is credited as the defining the image of punk rock.  He is the original punk artist.

god save the queenGod Save the Sex Pistols
The ransom-note lettering was synonymous with the Sex Pistols.  Subverted images of cut and paste artwork went on to influence punk imagery for a generation.  His best known works include the Sex Pistols album Never Mind the Bollocks, Here’s the Sex Pistols and the singles “Anarchy in the UK”, “God Save The Queen”, and “Pretty Vacant” .  The 1977 silver jubilee portrait of the Queen by was to become the basis for one of punks most iconic and instantly recognisable punk images ever.  This gave Reid the notoriety of becoming the man who put a safety pin through HRH’s lower lip.  Back in 1977 this was not good form.  Now, over 30 years on I feel Jamie Reid’s edgy cut-up DIY graphics remain as striking and influential as the day they were created.

Shril thoughts
Jamie Reid’s punk artwork is fine art, but doesn’t require years of learning fine brush strokes, studying form and aesthetic principles. It does not go with the flow; it kicks at the art establishment.  It is real, it is accessible, we can all do it.  His work says something.  It speaks a language we can all understand.  This is how art should be.  It switched on my ‘not normal’ gene.

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

1 Jean punk-Cotterill September 10, 2009 at 3:15 am

Dear Shril It is with great admiration that on seeing your website I found it AMAZING.

Big bear seems to spring to mind.

Jeanpunkcotxx

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