Description:
New York: John Wilcock, 1968. First Edition. Tabloid (43cm); photo-illustrated newsprint wrappers; [24]pp; illus. Light wear and toning to extremities, faint horizontal fold at center, with a faint stain to upper right margin of front wrapper, and some diagonal creases to terminal leaves; Very Good, without postal markings. Though never as popular or widely-circulated as its brethren like The East Village Other and The Berkeley Barb, nor as political as such radical-left undergrounds as The Black Panther and New Left Notes, John Wilcock's Other Scenes probably deserves pride of place as the most daring, creative, and experimental of the alternative press papers of the late Sixties. It was also - probably a function of Wilcock's comparative maturity (he was already in his late thirties in 1967) - far less reliant on the sort of psychedelic mish-mosh that defined the aesthetic of most other underground papers of the period. Described in the masthead as "a revolutionary newsletter concerned with art,…
Read More John Wilcock's Other Scenes: The International Newspaper - Vol.2, No.3 (June, 1968) by [NEW LEFT / COUNTERCULTURE] WILCOCK, John (editor) - 1968
by [NEW LEFT / COUNTERCULTURE] WILCOCK, John (editor)
John Wilcock's Other Scenes: The International Newspaper - Vol.2, No.3 (June, 1968)
by [NEW LEFT / COUNTERCULTURE] WILCOCK, John (editor)
- Used
- Paperback
- first
New York: John Wilcock, 1968. First Edition. Paperback. Though never as popular or widely-circulated as its brethren like The East Village Other and The Berkeley Barb, nor as political as such radical-left undergrounds as The Black Panther and New Left Notes, John Wilcock's Other Scenes probably deserves pride of place as the most daring, creative, and experimental of the alternative press papers of the late Sixties. It was also - probably a function of Wilcock's comparative maturity (he was already in his late thirties in 1967) - far less reliant on the sort of psychedelic mish-mosh that defined the aesthetic of most other underground papers of the period. Described in the masthead as "a revolutionary newsletter concerned with art, politics, sociology, sex and the creation of a more equitable society," Other Scenes was heavily influenced by both the Fluxus and mail-art movements as well as Andy Warhol's avant-pop aesthetic (Wilcock was a regular Factory denizen). The paper operated as much as a virtual underground club for its subscribers as it did a vehicle for news distribution; according to the masthead of an early issue, Wilcock distributed the paper "twenty times a year from wherever its editor happens to be," and his mailings often included "surprises" including "newsletters, newspapers, letters, brochures and discoveries that I make in all parts of the world." Contents include an interview with Bill Graham of the Fillmore, and contributions by Marlene Charyn, C. Clayton Clark, Sheila Krynski and Bruce Hoffman, Bob Garcia, Kerry Thornley, and others. Tabloid (43cm); photo-illustrated newsprint wrappers; [24]pp; illus. Some dustiness and mild toning to wrappers, else a Near Fine, unfolded example, without postal markings.
- Bookseller Lorne Bair Rare Books (US)
- Format/Binding Paperback
- Book Condition Used
- Quantity Available 1
- Edition First Edition
- Binding Paperback
- Publisher John Wilcock
- Place of Publication New York
- Date Published 1968