Difference between revisions of "Rebel Fux!"

From ZineWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
 
Line 3: Line 3:
  
 
''Rebel Fux'' is a tiny pocket size zine measuring 2 1/2 inches wide by 4 inches tall.  It was filled with a variety of [[Cut and Paste|cut and pasted]] images to which text is added, resulting in new and different meanings. In the tradition of the Dadaists, and bricolage, sometimes the text will comment on the image and sometimes not. Some of the images were familiar, such as a photo of actor James Dean, and some are obscure, some are drawings and some are collages. Issue two featured a young man and an older woman on the cover, with the caption "Charles Baudelaire and Madame Alexandra David-Neel met on the street..." Issue four was the pairing of "Mary Shelley and J. Robert Oppenheimer". On the cover of issue five "Antonin Artaud and Maya Deren" were "reclaiming the soul from the abyss". The cover of issue twenty-three announced "The Queers Are Revolting by Allen Ginsberg Sappho James Baldwin Monique Wittig", and issue twenty-five announced "Violence and Disruption in Society". Rebel Fux was free.
 
''Rebel Fux'' is a tiny pocket size zine measuring 2 1/2 inches wide by 4 inches tall.  It was filled with a variety of [[Cut and Paste|cut and pasted]] images to which text is added, resulting in new and different meanings. In the tradition of the Dadaists, and bricolage, sometimes the text will comment on the image and sometimes not. Some of the images were familiar, such as a photo of actor James Dean, and some are obscure, some are drawings and some are collages. Issue two featured a young man and an older woman on the cover, with the caption "Charles Baudelaire and Madame Alexandra David-Neel met on the street..." Issue four was the pairing of "Mary Shelley and J. Robert Oppenheimer". On the cover of issue five "Antonin Artaud and Maya Deren" were "reclaiming the soul from the abyss". The cover of issue twenty-three announced "The Queers Are Revolting by Allen Ginsberg Sappho James Baldwin Monique Wittig", and issue twenty-five announced "Violence and Disruption in Society". Rebel Fux was free.
 +
 +
''Rebel Fux!'' was one of the featured titles in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition devoted to artist-made zines, [[Copy Machine Manifesto]].
  
 
==External Link==
 
==External Link==

Latest revision as of 02:51, 16 March 2024

Rebel Fux Issue Twenty-Three

Rebel Fux was a zine by Kate Huh, published in New York City, NY, U.S.A. from 1996 till 2001.

Rebel Fux is a tiny pocket size zine measuring 2 1/2 inches wide by 4 inches tall. It was filled with a variety of cut and pasted images to which text is added, resulting in new and different meanings. In the tradition of the Dadaists, and bricolage, sometimes the text will comment on the image and sometimes not. Some of the images were familiar, such as a photo of actor James Dean, and some are obscure, some are drawings and some are collages. Issue two featured a young man and an older woman on the cover, with the caption "Charles Baudelaire and Madame Alexandra David-Neel met on the street..." Issue four was the pairing of "Mary Shelley and J. Robert Oppenheimer". On the cover of issue five "Antonin Artaud and Maya Deren" were "reclaiming the soul from the abyss". The cover of issue twenty-three announced "The Queers Are Revolting by Allen Ginsberg Sappho James Baldwin Monique Wittig", and issue twenty-five announced "Violence and Disruption in Society". Rebel Fux was free.

Rebel Fux! was one of the featured titles in the 2023-2024 Brooklyn Museum exhibition devoted to artist-made zines, Copy Machine Manifesto.

External Link