By Alec “Icky” Dunn
The first issue of Signal is out now! Signal is a full
color, 140 page book about international political art, graphics, and
culture. This issue contains interviews with the Taller Tupac Amaru (aka Justseeds’ members Jesus, Favianna, and Melanie), Johannes van de Weert (of the Rondos and squatter comic Red Rat), Rufus Segar (the brilliant designer behind most of the early issues of Anarchy
magazine in the 60s and 70s), and Felipe Hernandez Moreno (a member of
one the art brigades of the 1968 uprising in Mexico City). It also
contains photos of seditious train graf by IMPEACH and a photo essay on
adventure playgrounds.
Signal
was conceived a number of years ago by Josh MacPhee and I. We wanted to
highlight current artists who we thought were doing compelling work,
and also to draw connections to the rich history of art and culture
associated with resistance and social movements. We especially wanted to
share some of the incredible graphics and cultural documents we’ve seen
from other struggles around the world, as most North Americans suffer
from a myopia about events taking place beyond our borders.
Josh and I made a few trips to do research for this project. The best of
these was a few days we got to spend in the Kate Sharpley Library (and
archive) in Northern California. The few days we had there were idyllic
for two nerdy researchers. We spent hours digging through boxes,
photographing old newspapers and fliers, scanning zines and pamphlets,
and inhaling the musky aromatic air of mildew and books. From this trip
we scanned a complete collection of the covers of Anarchy
magazine designed by Rufus Segar, and we also started collecting the
small modernist graphics associated with anarchist/socialist/communist
printing houses of the early 20th century (I mention these because they
are both in this issue of Signal, there’s tons more stuff that we got
there that we hope to have in future issues!). On that same trip we also
had dinner with the Taller Tupac Amaru folks in Oakland, after which
Josh and I conducted a three hour interview. Oh my goodness, that took
forever to transcribe, but we boiled and condensed it down to a solid
history of their collective, a discussion of their process and methods,
and hopefully we offer a peek into what drives this inspiring group.
Josh and I also traveled to Europe in 2007 to try and do some research in Amsterdam, London, Copenhagen, and Berlin (which we documented on the Justseeds blog here). It was an odd trip, I was sick most of the time, and Josh’s asthma was under constant attack from the liberal amount of cigarette smoke surrounding him. We designed much of the trip around getting to spend some time at the Institute for Social History in Amsterdam, which houses a great archive of items associated with the international left. Josh and I’s dreams of a lefty/art/shangri-la were quickly dashed against the reality of fussy librarians and archivists who treated us, at best, with derision. Though we had little luck with official archives, we were treated well in the various squatter and anarchist archives we visited (sometimes with open arms and sometimes with a confused, but friendly, shrug). Thanks to my friend Grrrt, who we stayed with in Holland, we saw old issues of the comic Red Rat and a copy of the book Rood Rotterdam. The interview with Johannes van de Weert (creator of Red Rat) in Signal was seeded there, thanks Grrrrt! In Copenhagen we were hosted by the excellent folks from YNKB, who supplied us with the backbone of our images for the adventure playgrounds photo essay. In Berlin we stumbled into the amazing Prometheus Bookshop and found a kindred soul in its owner Heiko, and had tea with the brilliant Sandy K of Image-Shift. Both of whom we hope to bring their wealth of information and ideas to future issues of Signal.
Earlier this year I asked Santiago Armengod (of Collective Cordyceps and Justseeds) if he knew of anyone involved in the propaganda brigades in Mexico in 1968. Information in English about the struggle in Mexico in 1968 is out there, if a little hard to find; but information about the propaganda brigades is almost nonexistent. We were thrilled when Santi told us he could get us an interview with one of the veterans of these brigades. Felipe Hernandez Moreno is a great interviewee… funny, opinionated, and inciteful.
This is a brief overview of what’s in Signal:01, there’s more as well. It’s an ongoing series, so we hope to have to have Signal:02 (and maybe even 03) out within this coming year!