as stated
3 stars
This book is a short presentation of a large bank of research tracing counter-cultural movements mostly in the West from the past 200 years. It is well written and researched, and informational.
Hardcover, 62 pages
English language
Published 2019 by Askeaton Contemporary Arts.
From one of Ireland’s leading curators and writers on visual art, John Hutchinson’s Countercultures, Communities, and Indra’s Net unravels an understanding of embodied life, of commonality and sharing. Beginning with his lived experience of 1960s counterculture, Hutchinson’s thoughts later move to frontier America and to rural living in nineteenth century Britain. In these times and places, moments of his own family’s history intertwine with multifarious examples of utopian thinking and establishment of new communities and forms of living. Constantly divergent in his approach, Hutchinson’s words oscillate from descriptions of Shaker art to The Beatles, to William Blake and much more, in a process to define a form of deep ecological thought urgently needed today.
This book is a short presentation of a large bank of research tracing counter-cultural movements mostly in the West from the past 200 years. It is well written and researched, and informational.