PREORDER
Ships When IN STOCK.
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ARTIST
TITLE
Punk: Salvador Costa's April 77 Photographs
FORMAT
Book
LABEL
CATALOG #
MRBK 001BK
MRBK 001BK
GENRE
RELEASE DATE
10/24/2025
Punk was one of the first photobooks that came out about the punk movement not just in Spain but in Europe. Originally published in late 1977, the book achieved a significant international projection, acquiring a pseudo-mythical status as it disappeared from the catalogue. Almost half a century later the book is now available again. This updated edition includes unpublished photos from Salvador Costa's own archives, preserved by his wife and children after his passing on 30 October 2008, and also short texts and comments by members of Gen X, Eater, The Models, and more. Salvador Costa's black and white photos show his awareness that monochrome is the best way to portray individual punk spirit as well as the atmosphere of beer, music, and sex at the clubs in London, April '77. This book contains an insider vision depicting the city of London and the inclusive ambience at these venues; shot close-up and with a naturalness that shows there were no barriers between players and crowds. Scattered among the public, kids, smoke, and shadows, you will be able to find faces of the Sex Pistols, Chelsea, the Nips, the Slits, Eater, and many more, encapsulated in the space-time of a golden age of youth empowerment where everything was possible and nothing was impossible. The book was originally published in Spain in late 1977 by Star Magazine. It was one of the first books that came out about the punk movement in Europe. His images resembled those of a war correspondent, he was like a photojournalist in the improvised trenches of the early days of the London punk assault. Faces, attitudes and looks that tell as much about the time they lived in as any song or book. Punk achieved a significant international projection, selling out continuously at central London stockists as prestigious as the Photographers Gallery and the avant-garde bookstore Compendium Books. In Spain, it would also sell out, acquiring a pseudo-mythical status as it disappeared from the catalogue.
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