Thursday, 24 October 2019

Study Task 2


Explore the symbiotic relationship between sound and art


Additional research:




the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994

The Chapman Brothers
When they grew tired of making tiny models of hell full of nazis impaled on spikes, the infamous Chapman Brothers took inspiration from the Dead Kennedy’s 1979 album California Uber Alles, and began creating enormous, red Nazi-style banner flags adorned with the smiley face synonymous with rave culture where the swastika should have been. Then in 2013, Dinos Chapman released his debut album Luftbobler, the result of a decade spent experimenting with sound

Ally Fogg - The Guardian
raggle-taggle kind of army, brought together by loose, anarchic disorganisations 
Tom Hunter (born in London) 
In the wake of the introduction of the Criminal Justice & Public Order Act in 1994, artist Tom Hunter set off from Hackney with a group of friends on a bus journey that was to take them to festivals and gatherings in Continental Europe. Hunter documented this odyssey in what became known as Le Crowbar, sharing with Sweet Harmony audiences the experiences of the free party traveller community. 

Dominic (born in Luton) 
Rave would not have happened were it not for the boredom of suburbia and rural Britain.



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