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Tom Hunter

Where Have All the Flowers Gone


  • Hartmann Books
  • Hardcover with foil-stamped title on gray cardboard, Glastonbury Festival 2019 from 26/6/2019 to 30/6/2019
  • by Sheelagh Hunter, Ian Hunter. Design: Ben Weaver
Tom Hunter is known for his social documen-tary projects investigating alternative communities, contemporary music, and experimental cultures in London and across Europe. Inspired by this, Hunter takes us to the Glastonbury Festival. From its beginnings in the 1970s, this festival was driven by the ethos of the hippie movements. At the 2017 festival Hunter set up his 'naked truth photo booth' and asked festivalgoers to stand naked for portraits inside the wooden booth.

ISBN 9783960700326 | E/ F/ G | HB
€18,00
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Publisher Hartmann Books
ISBN 9783960700326
Author(s) Sheelagh Hunter, Ian Hunter. Design: Ben Weaver
Publication date July 2019
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 260 x 200 mm
Pages 64
Language(s) Eng./Fr./Germ. ed.
Exhibition Glastonbury Festival 2019 from 26/6/2019 to 30/6/2019
Description

Tom Hunter is known for his social documen-tary projects investigating alternative communities, contemporary music, and experimental cultures in London and across Europe. Inspired by this, Hunter takes us to the Glastonbury Festival in his book Where Have All the Flowers Gone. From its beginnings in the 1970s, this festival was driven by the ethos of the hippie movements. At the 2017 festival Hunter set up his 'naked truth photo booth' and asked festivalgoers to stand naked for portraits inside the wooden booth. In the spirit of the first Summer of Love they were asked to reimagine the liberation of that era and embrace the freedom of nudity. Hunter took their portraits with a medium-format camera in the classical tradition of nineteenth-century por-trait photographers. Accompanied by texts and images by Hunter's parents, who attended the legendary Isle of Wight Festival in 1970 and share their experiences of freedom, liberty, and counterculture in the early 1970s, Hunter's images create a contemporary vision of today's festival culture while at the same time evoking a nostalgic, historical view of that first Summer of Love.