Making a Scene (v2).pdf (166.99 kB)
'Making a scene' [Review] Thomas Crow (2020) The Hidden Mod in Modern Art: London: 1957–1969 – Searching for the Young Soul Rebels. Lisa Tickner (2020) London’s New Scene: Art and Culture in the 1960s
What makes ‘a scene’? Is it a collective attitude, a distinctive argot (‘you dig it?’), a shared look, a common drug-of-choice? Or is it a physical space? A place to congregate and just to ‘be’? It is hard to imagine the New York punk and New Wave scene of the late 1970s without CBGBs in the Bowery, or to imagine the New York disco scene without Studio 54. But while a specific venue might feel like the centre of a scene, it soon becomes apparent that one site quickly connects to other places and practices: to rehearsal rooms and recording studios, to record shops and cafés, to apartments and boutiques, to lofts and bars. It would be difficult to say where the hard infrastructure of sticky floors and speaker systems ends, and the seemingly immaterial world of feelings and attitudes begin. To see them as interlaced and mutually constituting would seem like an obvious theoretical starting point: the practice of interlacing them, though, is a bit more of a challenge.
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- Published
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- Accepted version
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Oxford Art JournalISSN
0142-6540Publisher
Oxford University PressExternal DOI
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1Volume
44Page range
164-169Department affiliated with
- Media and Film Publications
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- Sussex Centre for Cultural Studies Publications
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University of SussexFull text available
- No
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Legacy Posted Date
2022-02-04First Compliant Deposit (FCD) Date
2022-02-03Usage metrics
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