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Reviews
The history of contemporary art is also a history of its newsletters, manifestos, magazines, pamphlets, and journals. Those periodical publications do not simply communicate or record ideas but have worked in exciting ways to shape art's practices, histories and communities. As a new generation of artists, activists and scholars seek to uncover the histories of alternative publishing and artistic networks, this book gathers original archival discoveries while offering methodologies for studying and thinking with those artefacts. Through case studies it tells the story of an independent media culture of artists, critics and historians operating on the edges of mainstream institutions. It examines the queer, feminist, black and transnational communities that reshaped Britain's cultural landscape through ground-breaking publications including Black Phoenix, Bazaar, Artscribe, Spare Rib, Mukti, Feminist Arts News, and Urban Fox Press, and tracks changes to an expanding field of post-digital publishing through Inventory, e-flux, and The White Pube. As the first essay collection to focus on the periodical art press and the ways we study it, Counter print offers readers an alternative route into the past fifty years of contemporary art, one that is defiantly collaborative, border crossing and disruptive.
Author Biography
Victoria Horne is Senior Lecturer in Art History at the University of Northumbria in Newcastle
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press is a leading UK publisher known for excellent research in the humanities and social sciences.
View all titlesBibliographic Information
- Publisher Manchester University Press
- Publication Date September 2025
- Orginal LanguageEnglish
- ISBN/Identifier 9781526183057 / 1526183056
- Publication Country or regionUnited Kingdom
- FormatPrint PDF
- Pages376
- ReadershipGeneral/trade; College/higher education; Professional and scholarly
- Publish StatusPublished
- Dimensions234 X 156 mm
- Biblio NotesDerived from Proprietary 6347
- SeriesRethinking Art's Histories
- Reference Code16934