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Caroline Coon

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Nationality
  
English

Period
  
UK underground

Role
  
Artist


Name
  
Caroline Coon

Website
  
Carolinecoon.com

Movies
  
Dante's Inferno

Caroline Coon CAROLINE COON On PUNK PleaseKillMe

Born
  
1945 (age 69–70)
London, England, UK

Books
  
1988: The New Wave punk Rock Explosion, The Release report on drug offenders and the law

Similar People
  
Richard Neville, Barney Bubbles, Felix Dennis, Germaine Greer, Ken Russell

Caroline coon interview c 1967 mpg


Caroline Coon (born 1945) is an English artist, journalist and political activist. Her artwork, which often explores sexual themes from a feminist standpoint, has been exhibited at many major London galleries, including the Saatchi Gallery and the Tate.

Contents

Caroline Coon Camera Press Photographers Caroline Coon

1960s Rebels: Caroline Coon - Artist and Activist


Life

Caroline Coon THE UNDERESTIMATOR Paul Simonon of The Clash and

Coon was born to a family of Kent landowners and had five brothers. She left home at 16 and came to London to find a job. She lived in Notting Hill and began by doing some modelling work, including making a softcore porn film. Trained as a figurative painter, she became involved in the 1960s underground movement in London while still attending art school. In 1967, with Rufus Harris, she co-founded Release, an agency set up to provide legal advice and arrange legal representation for young people charged with the possession of drugs. She remains politically active, campaigning primarily for feminist causes, including the legalisation of prostitution.

Caroline Coon Caroline Coon on Pinterest The Clash Patti Smith and Punk

In the 1970s, she became involved in the London punk scene, writing about the bands for Melody Maker and providing artwork for groups such as The Clash, whom she briefly managed, and The Police. In the "Punky Business" episode of the BBC comedy series The Goodies, Jane Asher plays a parody of Coon ("Caroline Kook"), the dream lover of Tim Brooke-Taylor's aspiring punk rock star. She also inspired Robert Wyatt's lyrics for the Matching Mole song "O Caroline", The Stranglers' "London Lady" and, according to herself, Bob Dylan's "She Belongs to Me", though this claim is highly questionable since most Dylan experts would argue that the song is actually about either Joan Baez, or Dylan's future wife Sara.

Caroline Coon wwwsouthendpunkcomimagesbookspunkbo11ljpg

Coon's artwork is provocative and is particularly concerned with the human nude. In 1995 her painting, Mr Olympia, was not shown at Tate Liverpool because the male subject had a semi-erect penis. In June 2000 she won damages of £40,000 and legal costs of £33,000 from publisher Random House after author Jonathon Green made false claims in his 1998 book All Dressed Up: the Sixties and the Counterculture. Nina Antonia reviewed Caroline Coon's 2016 intimate memoir Laid Bare in the August 2017 issue of The Reprobate: The Second Coming.

Publications

Caroline Coon Caroline Coon Interview c1967mpg YouTube

  • The Release Report on Drug Offenders and the Law, Sphere Books, 1969, ISBN 0-7221-2445-7
  • 1988: The New Wave Punk Rock Explosion, Hawthorn Books, 1977, ISBN 0-8015-6129-9
  • Laid Bare - Diary - 1983-1984, Cunst Art, 2016, ISBN-10: 1526206080 & ISBN-13: 978-1526206084
  • References

    Caroline Coon Wikipedia