The definitive monograph of Glen E. Friedman, a pioneer of skate, punk, and hip-hop photography, including much never-before-published work. Glen E. Friedman is best known for his work capturing and promoting rebellion in his portraits of artists such as Fugazi, Black Flag, Ice-T, Dead Kennedys, Minor Threat, The Misfits, Bad Brains, Beastie Boys, Run-D.M.C., and Public Enemy, as well as classic skateboarding originators such as Tony Alva, Jay Adams, Alan "Ollie" Gelfand, Duane Peters, and Stacy Peralta, and a very young Tony Hawk. Designed in association with celebrated street and graphic artist Shepard Fairey, this monograph captures the most important and influential underground heroes of skateboarding, punk, and hip-hop cultures. My Rules is an unprecedented window into the three most significant countercultures of the last quarter of the twentieth century, and Friedman's photographs define those important movements that he helped shape. A remarkable chronicle and a primer about the origins of radical street cultures, My Rules is also a statement of artistic inspiration for those influenced by these countercultures.
The definitive monograph of Glen E. Friedman, a pioneer of skate, punk, and hip-hop photography, including much never-before-published work. Glen E. Friedman is best known for his work capturing and promoting rebellion in his portraits of artists such as Fugazi, Black Flag, Ice-T, Dead Kennedys, Minor Threat, The Misfits, Bad Brains, Beastie Boys, Run-D.M.C., and Public Enemy, as well as classic skateboarding originators such as Tony Alva, Jay Adams, Alan "Ollie" Gelfand, Duane Peters, and Stacy Peralta, and a very young Tony Hawk. Designed in association with celebrated street and graphic artist Shepard Fairey, this monograph captures the most important and influential underground heroes of skateboarding, punk, and hip-hop cultures. My Rules is an unprecedented window into the three most significant countercultures of the last quarter of the twentieth century, and Friedman's photographs define those important movements that he helped shape. A remarkable chronicle and a primer about the origins of radical street cultures, My Rules is also a statement of artistic inspiration for those influenced by these countercultures.
Glen E. Friedman is considered one of the most important
photographers of his generation. Since first being published
at the age of fourteen, Friedman's work has appeared in countless
publications and exhibitions all over the world. His work is
part of the permanent collections at the Metropolitan Museum of
Art, New York, The Smithsonian Institute, Washington, DC, the
Experience Music Project Museum, Seattle, as well as other public
collections and institutions of higher learning, as well as
innumerable private collections around the world.
Contributors include: C. R. Stecyk III is a California
cultural historian, museum collected artist, photojournalist and
founder of Juxtapoz art magazine. Shepard Fairey is a
contemporary graphic designer and illustrator who emerged from
these same cultural phenomena. Henry Rollins is a musician,
writer, journalist, publisher, actor, radio host, comedian,
activist, and former front man for the hardcore punk band Black
Flag. Chuck D is a rap artist and activist. Tony Alva is
a world-renowned skateboarder. Ian Mackaye is a musician and
record label owner. Rick Rubin is an award-winning record
producer. Adam Horovitz is a musician.
"Glen E. Friedman has shot some of the most iconic
skateboarding, punk rock and hip-hop images you've ever seen. .
. . [his] in-your-face imagery spotlights the
unmistakable vitality inherent across all three subcultures, making
him a veritable Weegee of the early skate, punk and hip
hop scenes. The NYC-based photographer’s best-known book is the
indispensable Fuck You Heroes, but his latest, My
Rules, is just as compelling." -Maxim Magazine
"Friedman’s latest book My Rules...was nothing short of amazing.
This is literally a book that every skateboarder, musician and
cultural enthusiast must get their hands on. It ismore than worth
it." -Juice Magazine
"I don’t normally write posts and say “you must own this!” but…
you’ve gotta get this! Glen E. Friedman’s new My Rules (Rizzoli) is
simply stunning. A real masterpiece! It was a very pleasant—and
unexpected—surprise indeed. The book is a glorious MONSTER, with
huge color photographs and amazing BW images. Glen’s work
splendidly captures historic moments in time."
-DangerousMinds.net
“My Rules is the new book from Glen E. Friedman with the best of
his early skate, punk, and hip-hop photography along with essays by
the key players in each movement.” –The Skateboard Mag
“My Rules, the 324-page tome has over 350 photographs and
illustrations, and comes with contributing essays by such culture
heavyweights as the visual artist Shepard Fairey, Chuck D. of the
Public Enemy…The book is a pretty comprehensive source of
Friedman’s here-and-now style of photography. Many photos of
skaters mid-stride and bands mid-riff could not have been taken
otherwise. Whether skate, punk, or hip-hop, Friedman photographed
those who rebelled against the society that did not accept them in
the first place. That some of them went on to influence popular
culture and made it to the top of that very same society still
seems somewhat strange. Whether Friedman is right or wrong is up
for debate. But his photos, as a testament to the cultural energy
in American streets in the late 20th Century, are
not.” –StyleZeitgeist Magazine
“Weighing in at seven pounds and featuring 100
never-before-published photos as well as essays from Rick Rubin,
Shepard Fairey, Ad-Rock, Henry Rollins, and many more, My Rules is
a stunning, 324-page time capsule of counterculture's most
revealing moments, serving as a bible for youth in revolt looking
for honest inspiration.” –Fader Magazine
"Glen Friedman has taken so many photos of so many things I that I
love that his work sort of makes me annoyed and angry. The original
My Rules photo zine came out in 1982, and this new books collects
all the photos I love (skateboarding, hip-hop, punk rock, Public
Enemy wearing Minor Threat shirts). It is a monster that should
dominate all coffee tables this year, man" –Artforum
“The Man Behind the Most Iconic Portraits of Skaters, Punks, and
Rappers. The best of these portraits has been compiled in a new
photo anthology called My Rules. At the time, Friedman says he was
just making pictures of what inspired him. He had no idea he was
creating an important historical record of some of the era’s most
influential musicians.” –Wired
"...represents some 30 years and 7 pounds of gorgeous hardcore,
hiphop, and skateboarding history. " –Boingboing.net
“It’s seems an insult that the work of photographer Glen E.
Friedman isn’t more well known. The style of image he pioneered — a
wide-eyed and wide-angled directness, at once natural and posed —
is taken for granted in our popular culture, which has boldly
ripped him off with very little credit. My Rules is a trip down
memory lane, collecting many of Friedman’s most memorable images
throughout his life, bridging the countercultures of punk/hip-hop
and skateboarding, fused by their confrontational styles.
Interspersed between the clusters of images are recollections from
some of Friedman’s collaborators and subjects, including rapper
Chuck D of Public Enemy, former Black Flag singer Henry Rollins,
and the artist Shepard Fairey, who collaborated on the design of
the book with Friedman.” –Artinfo
"Glen E. Friedman has spent the last 40 years creating the iconic
images often associated with skateboarding, punk rock and hip hop
and his new book, My Rules, brings an incredible collection of
photographs from his archive together in one massive seven-pound
tome. Friedman spoke to American Photo about combing through his
archives, capturing counterculture movements and the
never-before-seen gems that initially slipped through the cracks."
–American Photo
"My Rules isn't Friedman's debut, but rather an expansion on his
early documentation on the subcultures that have punched the
mainstream in the jaw so many times that they've tapped out and
tried to cash in on them instead.” –ESPN
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