Our Featured Artists
Sir Peter Blake
Sandra Blow
Maurice Cockrill
Sir Terry Frost
Donald Hamilton Fraser
John Hoyland
Patrick Hughes
Bruce McLean
Brendan Neiland
John Piper
Barbara Rae
Storm Thorgerson
View All Our Artists
 
Subject and Style
Abstract Art
Album Cover Art
Architectural Art
Fantasy Art
Figurative Art
Floral Art
Landscape Art
Naïve
Seascapes
Still Life
Stylised Art
Wildlife Art
Media and Method
Etchings
Lithographs
Monotype
Originals
Sculpture
Silkscreen prints
Art Movements
Contemporary Art
Modern Art
Pop Art
 

Home » Archive - August 2010

CCA Art Bus is transformed into the Mick Jones Rock and Roll Public Library at Vintage Goodwood

CCA Galleries are delighted to be taking part in the inaugural Vintage Goodwood. A festival celebrating 5 decades of Britiish music, design, film, fashion and art. To find out more or purchase tickets for the event please visit www.vintageatgoodwood.com

Not only are we exhibiting artwork by Sir Peter Blake in the Art Cafe and the VIP Lounge on the high street (Sir Peter will be attending the festival), the CCA Art Bus is being transformed into Mick Jones's 'The Rock and Roll Public Library' for the weekend.The below text courtesy of Chris Salewicz.

The Library is drawn from Mick Jones's (ex-The Clash) legendarily vast archive. In this vision of lfe the, the creator of the iconic sleeve of The Beatles' Sgt. Pepper meets the creator of The Clash, on a bus, the event transmorgifying into Mick Jones's magical mystery tour: We're all going on a summer holiday! Yet the deeper more pertinent truth of The Rock and Roll Public Library is that it is concerned with the invisible force that manifests visible effects in life, and the inner truth of an individual which also has an invisible influence, good or bad. In this case, the manifestation is entirely positive: and the weather's good...

This boutique version of the Library on display at Vintage Goodwood pays tribute to the legendary Faces, performing in their reformed line-up at the event. The Faces were an immense influence on Mick Jones, who saw them on mumerous occasions: a series of classic images of the group is a feature of the vintage Goodwood version of the Library. Otherwise, comics are a central theme of The Rock and Roll Public Library at Vintage Goodwood: among others, an entire section is devoted to a display of Commando Comics, whilst Valiant Comics of the early 1970s are also featured, a selection of the paperback books will also be exhibited. Meanwhile, such staples as the poster for the final Hank Williams concert remain; and there is a continued strong Zulu presence.

artbusvintage3.jpg

This 3 day exhibition serves as a trailer for Clash founder Mick Jones's long-cherished Rock and Roll Public Library which now has had four extended exhibitions, twice at the Chelsea Space Gallery, at the Norwich Gallery and, most memorably, under the westway on London's Portobello Road. The Rock and Roll Public Library, a testament to popular culture, springs directly from the enormous personal archive of Mick Jones, a collection that began well before he formed The Clash in 1976, to eventual colossal international success. As such, it forms an invaluable guide to the edifying influences that informed The Clash and Jones.

Located in a lock-up in North Acton, where it has resided for the past eighteen years, this collection represents a collision of cultural influences, of which Jones's formal art school training is but one. The Acton property is a veritable Aladdin's Cave of oour age. But it also stands as testament to the manner in which pop music came to its first full fruition at the same time as Pop Art. And as to how Mick Jones, who has an encyclopaedic knowledge of popular culture, is a pop artist, in both senses of the word, living-as the rest of The Clash did- 'in the gap between art and life', to employ Robert Rauschenberg's celebrated phrase.

Envisaged as a permanent reference library for use by both the local and international community, it comprises, believes Jones, 'a personal cultural and social history of our times, and through that it extends beyonf the local to the global.' Popular culture is now established as part of the curriculum of many universities: it is intended that the Library will be an invaluable and essential aid to academic research and personal inquisitiveness.

Among many other strands, Mick Jones's collection  contains almost 10,000 books, on a multiplicity of culturally-related subjects- music, film, art, drugs, crime, sport, and war. It also includes most significant editions of music and film-related publications of the last forty years. These range from 1960s teen magazines like Fab 208 to obscure punk era fanzines, taking in all the noteworthy music publications of our time.

artbusvintage4.jpg

Much of the early parts of the collection was created from material sent to him by his Mother, who lives in Michigan in the USA, 'She'd send me all the early copies of Creem Magazine, which was published in Detroit, ' he recalls 'And she'd send me Rock Scene, that New York magazine edited by Lisa Robinson, in which the photographer Bob Gruen's pictures first appeared en masse.'

In the Acton lock-up there is a similarly enormous array of films, around 5000 of them, mostly on VHS video. Related artefacts embrace a complete collection of Clash stage-wear and posters. Comparable material from other significant musical acts is also included.

Constrictions of space at Vintage Goodwood inevitably have led to a condensed version of The Rock and Roll Public Library, yet one that captures the very essence of the experience.

Blog InfoPosted By Clare on Thu 12 Aug 2010 04:20 Blog Comments0 comments
Blog Tags

 
1
 

Archives





CCA Galleries - Home of the largest collection of original silkscreens and etchings in the world