Caroline Coon

Caroline Coon
Coon in her London studio, 2022
Born
Caroline Mary Thompson Coon

23 March 1945
London, England
EducationLegat Ballet School, Royal Ballet School, Northampton School of Art, Central School of Art, Brunel University
MovementFeminism, Figurative Art, Pop Art
Websitewww.carolinecoon.com

Caroline Mary Thompson Coon (born 23 March, 1945) is an English artist known for her paintings, her feminist political activism, her writing and photography.[1] After coming to prominence first as a leader of the British Underground counterculture of the 1960s,[2] and then in the vanguard of the punk rock movement of the 1970s,[3] she is recognised today as a foremost figurative painter in contemporary British art, with her work included in landmark survey exhibitions at London’s Hayward Gallery and Tate Britain.[4]

While at Central School of Art in 1967, Coon co-founded the charity Release, which provided legal services for those arrested on drug possession charges.[5] In the 1970s, earning money as a freelance journalist, including writing for Melody Maker, she became conscious of the zeitgeist change in youth culture which she christened the punk rock movement.[6] Her photographs of the early punk days are now published and exhibited throughout the world.[7] Coon managed The Clash from 1978 to 1980, through two significant tours in the UK and North America.[8]

Since the early 1980s, Coon’s primary focus has been her oil paintings which regularly feature women and men, both clothed and nude, in scenes that often contest the misogyny of patriarchy. With reference points as varied as Pauline Boty, Lorenzo Lotto, Artemisia Gentileschi and Henri Rousseau, her work has been compared to that of Paul Cadmus, Tamara de Lempicka, Gluck and Christian Schad. Since 2022, she has been represented by Stephen Friedman Gallery.[9]

  1. ^ ‘Caroline Coon, Artist’ Stephen Friedman Gallery, Retrieved 19 July 2024; ‘Caroline Coon, Overview’ Centre for British Photography, Retrieved 19 July 2024
  2. ^ Green, Maureen (3 December 1967) ‘Who’s Who In The Underground’ Observer Magazine, p. 9
  3. ^ Jonze, Tim (2 May 2018) ‘Caroline Coon: Even at 13, I knew I couldn’t be respectable’ The Guardian, Retrieved 19 July 2024  
  4. ^ ‘Caroline Coon, Biography’ Stephen Friedman Gallery, Retrieved 19 July 2024
  5. ^ Coon, Caroline, “We were the welfare branch of the alternative society” pp. 183 - 197 in The Unsung Sixties: Memoirs of social innovation, eds. Curtis, Helene & Sanderson, Mimi, Whiting & Birch Ltd, 2004
  6. ^ Jonze, Tim (2 May 2018) ‘Caroline Coon: Even at 13, I knew I couldn’t be respectable’ The Guardian, Retrieved 19 July 2024; Cavaluzzo, Alexander (18 April 2019) ‘Punk Legend Johnny Rotten on Design, Abortion and Trump’ Newsweek, Retrieved 19 July 2024
  7. ^ 'Caroline Coon, Overview’ Centre for British Photography, Retrieved 19 July 2024
  8. ^ Cortene, Lene ‘Caroline Coon - Punk Girl Polymath’ Punk Girl Diaries, Retrieved 19 July 2024
  9. ^ ‘Caroline Coon, Artist’ Stephen Friedman Gallery, Retrieved 19 July 2024

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