Big doins in NYC
Posted: 20 Mar 2007 22:59
Better not miss it baby!
P R E S S R E L E A S E
John McWhinnie @ Glenn Horowitz Bookseller
50? East 64th street, New York, NY 10021
Exhibition: April 12 to May 12--Reception: April 12, 6-8 p.m.
John McWhinnie @ Glenn Horowitz Bookseller is pleased to announce an
exhibition, co-curated by Johan Kugelberg and John McWhinnie,
commemorating the 40th anniversary of the release of The Velvet
Underground and Nico. The album, perhaps the most famous debut by any band in the history of rock and roll, continues to resonate today with
collectors, indie-rockers, aficionados, critics and the culture at
large. Its enormous presence, however, has yet to be fully examined in
an exhibition. This show attempts to correct that oversight, offering
the most comprehensive collection of Velvet Underground memorabilia and artifacts to be seen in New York City. The exhibition tells the story
of the album and the Velvet Underground through the historical artifacts
of the period. Drawn from public and private collections, it includes rare
printed work - posters, books, silk-screens, ads, reviews, and ephemera
- as well as albums and photographs.
The exhibit reveals the many styles of cultural promotion and
engagement that served the Velvets, from their first gigs in New Jersey as a fledgling band to their celebrated collaboration with Andy Warhol. It
charts the evolution from garage band to proto-punk, a movement that
began with the release of their seminal first album. Rare posters in
the show, including a signed poster from the 1966 performance in
Provincetown, show how much Warhol influenced their early look. Later
graphics show the band grappling with their identity, fusing a detached
east coast cool with a slight nod to the psychedelia of the period. The
show also reveals how their identities wandered over the latter part of
the decade. Broadsides and announcements by other graphic designers,
trippy to the point of high hippie, reveal how little control over
their image they ultimately had. The look, a fascinating hybrid of art,
design and musical cool, will be on display at the gallery.
Never before published or publicly shown photographs of the band by
Adam Ritchie, Paul Morrisey and Doug Yule will be exhibited. The
accompanying catalogue, C/O The Velvet Underground New York N.Y., features texts by Richard Prince, William Gibson, Jack Womack, Jonathan Richman, Jon Savage, John McWhinnie and Johan Kugelberg. There will be both a limited and deluxe version of the catalogue, each containing original photographs and silkscreen posters.
Highlights of the exhibition:
Warhol's designs for Up-Tight, The Exploding Plastic Inevitable
The original artwork for the 1966 Boston Tea Party show
The famous 1966 acetate demo of The Velvet Underground and Nico - an
album The London Observer has cited as number one in a list of "50
Albums that Changed Music"
Original Lyrics by Lou Reed from 1965
Original Warhol screen test film stills and photobooth pictures of band
members
P R E S S R E L E A S E
John McWhinnie @ Glenn Horowitz Bookseller
50? East 64th street, New York, NY 10021
Exhibition: April 12 to May 12--Reception: April 12, 6-8 p.m.
John McWhinnie @ Glenn Horowitz Bookseller is pleased to announce an
exhibition, co-curated by Johan Kugelberg and John McWhinnie,
commemorating the 40th anniversary of the release of The Velvet
Underground and Nico. The album, perhaps the most famous debut by any band in the history of rock and roll, continues to resonate today with
collectors, indie-rockers, aficionados, critics and the culture at
large. Its enormous presence, however, has yet to be fully examined in
an exhibition. This show attempts to correct that oversight, offering
the most comprehensive collection of Velvet Underground memorabilia and artifacts to be seen in New York City. The exhibition tells the story
of the album and the Velvet Underground through the historical artifacts
of the period. Drawn from public and private collections, it includes rare
printed work - posters, books, silk-screens, ads, reviews, and ephemera
- as well as albums and photographs.
The exhibit reveals the many styles of cultural promotion and
engagement that served the Velvets, from their first gigs in New Jersey as a fledgling band to their celebrated collaboration with Andy Warhol. It
charts the evolution from garage band to proto-punk, a movement that
began with the release of their seminal first album. Rare posters in
the show, including a signed poster from the 1966 performance in
Provincetown, show how much Warhol influenced their early look. Later
graphics show the band grappling with their identity, fusing a detached
east coast cool with a slight nod to the psychedelia of the period. The
show also reveals how their identities wandered over the latter part of
the decade. Broadsides and announcements by other graphic designers,
trippy to the point of high hippie, reveal how little control over
their image they ultimately had. The look, a fascinating hybrid of art,
design and musical cool, will be on display at the gallery.
Never before published or publicly shown photographs of the band by
Adam Ritchie, Paul Morrisey and Doug Yule will be exhibited. The
accompanying catalogue, C/O The Velvet Underground New York N.Y., features texts by Richard Prince, William Gibson, Jack Womack, Jonathan Richman, Jon Savage, John McWhinnie and Johan Kugelberg. There will be both a limited and deluxe version of the catalogue, each containing original photographs and silkscreen posters.
Highlights of the exhibition:
Warhol's designs for Up-Tight, The Exploding Plastic Inevitable
The original artwork for the 1966 Boston Tea Party show
The famous 1966 acetate demo of The Velvet Underground and Nico - an
album The London Observer has cited as number one in a list of "50
Albums that Changed Music"
Original Lyrics by Lou Reed from 1965
Original Warhol screen test film stills and photobooth pictures of band
members