JAMIER REID
Reid's work has always involved a fusion of the political, the spiritual, and a culture in distress. Very often blurring the boundaries between art, design and critical response. It is now over 30 years since he took the Beaton portrait of the Queen, tore out her eyes and mouth, put a safety pin through her lips and stuck swastikas in her eyes. These were not just a pieces of design, they were part of an assault on culture, and possibly the last time that art was truly shocking to the establishment whilst having a genuine radical effect on a whole generation.
Before this Reid had been at art college with Malcolm McLaren where he developed his interest in radical politics and situationist tactics, which in turn informed the visual language developed with the Suburban Press (a community free press based in the then 'developing' Croydon). In this early period it is very clear to see the links between Reid's concerns with the esoteric as well as the political, with colour and drawing as well as collage and direct graphics. These are all recurring throughout his career and to this day whether it be through social protest or intensely beautiful abstract paintings, Reid's alternative vision is still as challenging and uncontainable as ever.
Jamie is represented by two London institutions: The L-13 Light Industrial Workshop an Private Ladies and Gentlemen's Club for Art, Leisure and the Disruptive Betterment of Culture, and ISIS GALLERY. They can both be contacted through their websites that can be reached through the links on the LINKS PAGE.
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