Unseen pleasures
| Jon Savage on Joy Division’s visual documents.
The art of Scott Treleaven
Nick + Matt (2004).
Collage and painting by Canadian artist Scott Treleaven who says of his work “occult language and symbology often remains the most accurate way of describing and dignifying the human condition.”
Black Shuck (i) (2007).
• Scott Treleaven at Gay Utopia: I | II
Elsewhere on { feuilleton }
• The gay artists archive
Previously on { feuilleton }
• The art of Andrey Avinoff, 1884–1949
• The art of Robert Flynt
• Austin Osman Spare
Brave new worlds
Brave new worlds
| Moorcock remembers Arthur C Clarke. A great piece.
Paradise Now available now
Arthur Magazine‘s second essential DVD release is now available.
“Life, revolution and theater are three words for the same thing: an unconditional NO to the present society.” Julian Beck (Living Theatre)
“Paradise Now … more relevant now because we’re closer to now than we ever have been.” Hanon Reznikov (Living Theatre)
Arthur Magazine proudly presents PARADISE NOW: The Living Theatre in Amerika DVD — a fulminating art-meets-life installation brought to you in collaboration with The Living Theatre, The Ira Cohen Akashic Project and Saturnalia Media Rites of the Dreamweapon featuring rare, never-before-distributed films and a bacchanal of revolutionary multimedia documents from The Living Theatre’s historic and influential ’68–’69 American tour.
LIMITED EDITION OF 1,000 – AVAILABLE NOW NOW NOW NOW
Previously on { feuilleton }
• Paradise Now: The Living Theatre in Amerika DVD
• William Burroughs by Ira Cohen, 1967
• The Invasion of Thunderbolt Pagoda
Meggendorfer’s Blatter
Meggendorfer’s Blatter, Meggendorfer’s Journal, a satirical magazine founded in 1886 by Lothar Meggendorfer. As with Punch and other humorous magazines of the era, much of the humour is lost today (even more so in a foreign tongue) but there’s some fine and stylish illustration on display.
Elsewhere on { feuilleton }
• The illustrators archive
Previously on { feuilleton }
• George Du Maurier’s Christmas Dream
• “Weirdsley Daubery”: Beardsley and Punch
• Simplicissimus




