David King Publications 1977 - 2019


Opening reception: Friday, October 25th, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm :: RSVP HERE

David King (1948–2019) was an English artist, graphic designer, and musician best known for designing the Crass symbol. His many varied projects encompassed drawing, photography, sculpture, film, video, radio plays, and more. King was a core member of the New York no wave band Arsenal, and later the San Francisco post-punk bands Sleeping Dogs and Brain Rust. He generated hundreds of flyers for these bands and others during the period of 1977–1988, as well as creating logos, brand identities, and posters for nightclubs like Danceteria, Pravda, and the Peppermint Lounge in New York and the I-Beam in San Francisco.


                    

Left to right: Sleeping Dogs zine (1983) ||  Non-Stop by Brian Aldiss, cover art by David King (1977) || Flyer for I-Beam (1980s) || Untitled collage (n/d)


In the 1980s King made dozens of photocopied and offset zines that often accompanied his music projects. In the early 2000s he began self-publishing highly idiosyncratic short-run books with subjects ranging from his photographs of J.G. Ballard’s home to rock formations seen in early Western films. In the later 2000s several books on his graphic design and photography were released through Colpa Press, &Pens, and Gingko Press.

VIEW THE PRESS RELEASE

This exhibition and the accompanying book, David King Publications 1977–2019 (co-published by Colpa Press and San Francisco Center for the Book), are supported in part by a generous grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.