Peter Kennard

Peter Kennard
Author: Peter Kennard
Publisher: Pluto Press (UK)
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2019
Genre: Photomontage
ISBN: 9780745339870

50 years of hard-hitting protest art from Britain's foremost political artist

@earth

@earth
Author: Peter Kennard
Publisher: Tate
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2011-09-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781854379849

This book contains no words: instead it tells its story in the universal language of photomontage, long the favoured medium of radical artists. The author is one such, whose work has consistently questioned power structures and injustice, from his anti-nuclear works of the 1980s to his powerful works in response to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. This photo-essay in seven chapters, combining new works, made together with Tarek Salhany, with iconic images from throughout the author's 40-year career. It makes a powerful statement about the impending eco-crisis, the arms race and the injustices of the power structures dominating today's world.

Dispatches from an Unofficial War Artist

Dispatches from an Unofficial War Artist
Author: Peter Kennard
Publisher: Ben Uri Gallery & Museum
Total Pages: 120
Release: 2000
Genre: Art
ISBN:

For more than twenty-five years, Peter Kennard has used his skills as a polemical artist to produce an astonishing collection of political photomontage images and installation work.Trained in Fine Art, Kennard abandoned painting in the 1970s in search of a new form of expression that could bring art and politics together for a wider audience. Written from a highly personal perspective, Dispatches from an Unofficial War Artist traces Kennard's artistic, political and personal development, from his early paintings in a coalshed, to art school and to a number of left-wing and radical campaigns, including those for CND. It brings together Kennard's own musings on his childhood, art, international politics and British society to make for a fascinating portrait of the times and of Kennard himself.In her introduction, Amanda Hopkinson discusses the historical roots of Kennard's work, examining Constructivism, the development of photography and photomontage, and the close relationship between art, politics and propaganda. Kennard himself writes about the possibilities of undertaking an aesthetic practice in relation to social change, and considers how his art has interacted with the politics of actual events. The narrative is thematic rather than chronological, showing how a visual motif can be re-used in different contexts. Kennard's original artwork is often reproduced alongside the newspaper or poster in which it appeared.

Irregular Army

Irregular Army
Author: Matt Kennard
Publisher: Verso Books
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2012-09-17
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1844679055

Since the launch of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars—now the longest wars in American history—the US military has struggled to recruit troops. It has responded, as Matt Kennard’s explosive investigative report makes clear, by opening its doors to neo-Nazis, white supremacists, gang members, criminals of all stripes, the overweight, and the mentally ill. Based on several years of reporting, Irregular Army includes extensive interviews with extremist veterans and leaders of far-right hate groups—who spoke openly of their eagerness to have their followers acquire military training for a coming domestic race war. As a report commissioned by the Department of Defense itself put it, “Effectively, the military has a ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ policy pertaining to extremism.” Irregular Army connects some of the War on Terror’s worst crimes to this opening-up of the US military. With millions of veterans now back in the US and domestic extremism on the rise, Kennard’s book is a stark warning about potential dangers facing Americans—from their own soldiers.

Founders of the Middle Ages

Founders of the Middle Ages
Author: Edward Kennard Rand
Publisher:
Total Pages: 392
Release: 1928
Genre: Civilization, Medieval
ISBN:

"The chapters of this book were delivered as lectures before the Lowell Institute of Boston in January and February, 1928"--Pref. "List of books": pages [285]-286. The church and pagan culture: the problem; the solution.--St. Ambrose, the mystic.--St. Jerome the humanist.--Boethius, the first of the scholastics.--The new poetry.--The new education.--St. Augustine and Dante.

Notes on the Sonnets

Notes on the Sonnets
Author: Luke Kennard
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2021
Genre: Prose poems, English
ISBN: 9781913850029

A Poetry Book Society Recommendation Luke Kennard recasts Shakespeare's 154 sonnets as a series of anarchic prose poems set in the same joyless house party. Wry, insolent and self-eviscerating, Notes on the Sonnets riddles the Bard with the anxieties of the modern age, bringing Kennard's affectionate critique to subjects as various as love, marriage, God, metaphysics and a sad horse.

Audio Arts

Audio Arts
Author: William Furlong
Publisher:
Total Pages: 148
Release: 1994
Genre: Art
ISBN:

How to Trick People Into Doing the Right Thing

How to Trick People Into Doing the Right Thing
Author: Byron Kennard
Publisher: Independently Published
Total Pages: 162
Release: 2020-10-02
Genre:
ISBN:

Byron Kennard is a retired community organizer who spent over half a century trying to get people to do the right thing. To his sorrow, Kennard learned that, by and large, most people are not inclined to do the right thing. They are too preoccupied with getting fed, getting laid, getting rich, and getting even with their enemies. So there's got to be another way to secure social progress and - hallelujah! - Kennard has found it. But it's a tricky business. The trick is not to bang on democracy's front door, demanding to be let in. At present, that entry is effectively barred. And so long as our democracy is severed by political polarization and crippled by corruption, that entry will remain barred.The trick is to sneak in through the back door.How to Trick People into Doing the Right Thing is a playful, entertaining book full of historical anecdotes about how astute political leaders in the past have employed deviousness to accomplish social progress.The premise of this book is not that people are no damn good. The premise is that enough people are no damn good enough of the time to screw everything up for us decent folk. Climate deniers, for example, constitute a distinct minority of the population, but they've fomented enough political polarization to make strong climate action by the government an impossibility. And we all suffer as a result. Similarly, Covid-19 deniers, also a minority of the population, are undermining efforts to control the virus, flying in the face of truth, science, and common sense. And here again we all suffer - mightily. What's to be done about these people? They can't be educated; they can't be persuaded to change their minds. Indeed, their minds are closed.They steadfastly refuse to hear what truth, science, and common sense has to say. So they are easy prey for demagogic politicians and faux populist zealots who will tell them whatever it is they want to hear.Meanwhile, the formal political system - established to protect and serve the common good - has been rendered largely inoperable by corruption, greed, and populist fury. Alas, when it comes to issues of overriding importance - most notably, climate and public health - the political system breaks down completely. Here a political consensus - necessary to support vigorous action - isn't even a dim possibility. Gee, wouldn't it be nice if there were some alternative universe where public-spirited political leaders sought genuine social progress and where upright, but savvy civic activists pursued ideals of social justice? Ah, just imagine it! Now - while we're fantasizing - let's assume that these noble souls are also wise in the wayward ways of the world, clear-eyed, tough-minded, and free of any illusions about the extent of humanity's wisdom and virtue. Moreover, let's assume they have experienced first-hand the anti-democratic machinations that make social progress well-nigh impossible.What if - despite all the monkey wrenches placed in the works - these noble souls were determined to get people to do the right thing, no matter what? Wouldn't that be something?! And what if - under the circumstances - they determined that the best way to do this was to trick people?Now for these tricks to succeed, much depends on the capacity of these leaders and activists to act deviously, to engage in prevarication, and to pretend that something is so when it is not. Of course, some nit-pickers might call this behavior dishonest, but I must stress here that the object is to get people to do the right thing, not the wrong. A benevolent outcome is the aim. That makes all the difference in the world, doesn't it? Finally, what if people, fell for these tricks - thereby unwittingly contributing to the cause of social progress? Wouldn't that be super-duper?! Sounds too good to be true, doesn't it? Well, rub your eyeballs and read on! Such a universe exists. This book proves it. - The Author

Redlands

Redlands
Author: Philip Brookman
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2015
Genre: Agricultural laborers
ISBN: 9783869306865

Redlands weaves together an intimate sequence of photographs and a short story by Philip Brookman, set in California, Mexico and New York City during the unsettled decades of the 1960s and 1970s. Brookman uses fiction and images from his own photographic diaries to create a first-person account of Kip, an artist who wanders back and forth between farmworkers and poets--between California and New York--seeking to question the meaning of his mother's death. When Kip learns that he can't trust the eyewitness accounts of his sister, he picks up a camera to find meaning in his own experience. By juxtaposing the oppositional strategies of fiction and documentary practice to find an invented narrative, Redlands questions the veracity of logical observation and embraces the poetry of the real world.