Exhibition

Process: The working practices of Barney Bubbles curated by Paul Gorman

14 Sep 2010 – 23 Oct 2010

Regular hours

Wednesday
11:00 – 17:00
Thursday
11:00 – 17:00
Friday
11:00 – 17:00

Cost of entry

Free

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Chelsea Space

London
England, United Kingdom

Address

Travel Information

  • 77a, 88
  • Pimlico, Westminster, Victoria
  • Victoria or Vauxhall railway stations
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Barney Bubbles is the missing link between Pop and Culture" Peter Saville"

About

This autumn Chelsea Space hosts PROCESS, an exciting exhibition focusing on the working practices of one of the giants of graphic design, Barney Bubbles. The show will contain many never-before-seen items drawn from private collections, including student notebooks, working sketches, original artwork, paintings, books and photography for videos, record sleeves, t-shirts and posters created by Bubbles for such performers as Ian Dury, Hawkwind, Elvis Costello, The Damned and Billy Bragg (who is contributing a one-off rug with a rendition of the designer's Masereel-quoting cover of album Brewing Up). Bubbles (born Colin Fulcher, 1941-1983) is cited as a major influence by such contemporary practitioners as Neville Brody, Malcolm Garrett, Peter Saville and Kate Moross. Until recently a marginalised figure, his oeuvre has been reappraised in the wake of the publication of Paul Gorman's monograph Reasons To Be Cheerful: The Life & Work Of Barney Bubbles. Gorman is curating PROCESS, which will demonstrate how Bubbles problem-solved on behalf of his clients by employing powerful symbols and an intense colour sense with bright primaries, stark contrasts, interventions and strategies,from the deliberate revelation of the printing colour code on the sleeve of Elvis Costello's album This Year's Model and the 27 variations of wallpaper stock for the cover of Ian Dury's album Do It Yourself. After five years at Twickenham art school, Bubbles cut his teeth in the mid-60s as senior graphic designer at Conran Design. His idiosyncratic, non-stylised approach was honed via art direction of such publications as Oz, Friends and the NME. In parallel Bubbles emerged as the most audacious record sleeve designer of his generation with such packaging as the giant tri-fold sleeve for The Glastonbury Fayre (1972), the Constructivist cover to Your Generation by Generation X (1977) and the kaleidoscopic Armed Forces by Elvis Costello & The Attractions (1979). Bubbles also delivered advertising campaigns and integrated branding, designed books, post-modern furniture, painted privately and contributed the catalogue and exhibition poster for the important late 70s group show Lives at The Hayward (curated by Derek Boshier). Coinciding with the London Design Festival, PROCESS will include a programme of events celebrating aspects of Bubbles' work with contributions from collaborators including musicians and photographers, as well as talks, Q&As and commentary on his legacy by contemporary designers and graphics authorities. PROCESS will launch the publication of the second edition of Reasons To Be Cheerful, which was announced as MOJO magazine's Book Of The Year in January 2010. The new edition includes fresh interviews, images and information investigating hitherto unexplored territory relating to the life and work of this intriguing figure.

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