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10 years of British Punk 10 years of British Punk 10 years of British Punk 10 years of British Punk 10 years of British Punk 10 years of British Punk 10 years of British Punk 10 years of British Punk 10 years of British Punk

10 years of British Punk

100 Fanzines, 10 years of British Punk, 1976-1985, Toby Mott Collection, published to coincide with an exhibition at The NY Art Book Fair, PPP Editions, New York, 2011. First edition limited to 500 copies. Unpaginated (126 pages), 30 x 23 cm. Condition : Very Good.

250€

This publication reproduces covers of 100 British punk fanzines from the Mott Collection and features two essays: “Glue Was All Over My Fingers” by Toby Mott and “We Are the Writing on the Wall” by Victor Brand. The zine is mass-produced graffiti, a love letter to an anonymous public, a black-and-white shout into the wilderness. As a product, it goes hand in hand so perfectly with the autochthonous priorities of the punk movement that it seems in retrospect almost inevitable. The youth of the United Kingdom — under- and unemployed, adrift and disillusioned in the aftermath of ‘60s utopianism — were the writing on the wall in the mid-1970s. The kids of punk weren’t all right: Punk was the return of the repressed. Even if they were only talking to themselves, they could express themselves without censorship through music and grainy, handwritten pamphlets.