‘Cultural monstrosities!’ The thrilling visual legacy of punk and post-punk – in pictures

5 hours ago 10
Section 25 + A Certain Ratio, poster Plan K concert, Brussels, by Jean-François Octave, 1980

From bold anti-Nazi posters to an acid-drenched take on Jean Cocteau, a new exhibition, curated by writer Philip Hoare, shows how influential the DIY designs of the 70s and 80s became

‘Epitome of eeriness’ … Section 25 + A Certain Ratio, poster Plan K concert, Brussels, by Jean-François Octave, 1980. Photograph: Reece Straw
Tue 3 Mar 2026 08.00 CETLast modified on Tue 3 Mar 2026 08.31 CET
Buzzcocks, poster for Orgasm Addict, 1977Manchester’s beloved Buzzcocks produced urgent punk pop. The cover of their Orgasm Addict, designed by Malcolm Garrett using a photomontage by the artist Linder, was one of the most memorable images of the era, born of the meeting of a soft-porn magazine and an Argos catalogue. ‘I took the female form from both’, Linder said, ‘and made these peculiar jigsaws highlighting these various cultural monstrosities.’

Buzzcocks, poster for Orgasm Addict, 1977

A new exhibition looks at the cultural impact of punk and post-punk. The cover of Orgasm Addict by Buzzcocks was designed by Malcolm Garrett using a photomontage by the artist Linder. It became one of the most memorable images of the era, born of the meeting of a soft-porn magazine and an Argos catalogue. ‘I took the female form from both,’ Linder said, ‘and made these peculiar jigsaws highlighting these various cultural monstrosities.’ So This Is Real Life is at the John Hansard Gallery, Southampton until 9 May. All captions by curator Philip Hoare
Anti-Nazi League Carnival poster, 1978 Designer David King’s achieved his ambition to create ‘a visual style for the left’. In his work for the Anti-Nazi League. On 30 April 1978, a march from Trafalgar Square to Victoria Park, Hackney drew a crowd of 80,000, protesting at the rise of the far right National Front.1970s . The event culminated in a concert, ‘secretly’ headlined by The Clash, whose lead singer, Joe Strummer, wore a t-shirt bearding the machine-gun logo of the Red Army Faction, aka the extreme leftist Baader-Meinhoff Gang.

Anti-Nazi League Carnival poster, 1978

Designer David King achieved his ambition to create ‘a visual style for the left’ in his work for the Anti-Nazi League. On 30 April 1978, a march from Trafalgar Square to Victoria Park in Hackney drew a crowd of 80,000, protesting the rise of the far-right National Front. The event culminated in a concert, ‘secretly’ headlined by the Clash, whose lead singer, Joe Strummer, wore a T-shirt bearing the machine-gun logo of the Red Army Faction, aka the extreme leftist Baader-Meinhof gang
Magazine, poster for Secondhand Daylight tour, Virgin 1979Magazine’s hyper-charged music and literary-aware lyrics, snarlingly delivered by the it lead singer, Howard Devoto, marked the peak of post-punk. For their Secondhand Daylight album, Ian Pollock proved an eerie image of a head on a post, using a photograph he took of a masked protestor at a Save the Whale rally in Trafalgar Square.

Magazine, poster for Secondhand Daylight tour, Virgin 1979

Magazine’s hyper-charged music and literary-aware lyrics, snarlingly delivered by lead singer Howard Devoto, marked the peak of post-punk. For their Secondhand Daylight album, Ian Pollock used an eerie image of a head on a post, utilising a photograph he took of a masked protestor at a Save the Whale rally in Trafalgar Square
Public Image Limited, poster for Death Disco single, Virgin 1979The grimacing puppet-like heads, overprinted with the pill-shaped PiL logo, were drawn by John Lydon, ex-Pistol and singer in Public Image Limited, a key post-punk band formed with Jah Wobble and Keith Levene. The song, a tribute to Lydon’s dying mother, was performed in semi-darkness on Top of the Pops with a banshee-like wail, a throbbing bass line and a guitar part stolen from Swan Lake.

Public Image Limited, poster for Death Disco single, Virgin 1979

These grimacing, puppet-like heads, overprinted with the pill-shaped PiL logo, were drawn by John Lydon, ex-Pistol and singer in Public Image Limited, a key post-punk band formed with Jah Wobble and Keith Levene. The song, a tribute to Lydon’s dying mother, was performed in semi-darkness on Top of the Pops with a banshee-like wail, a throbbing bassline and a guitar part stolen from Swan Lake
Grande Nuit de Clôture, concert poster, Plan K, Brussels, 1980 British post-punk’s close artistic connections to Europe owed much to the example of Crépuscule. Benoît Hennebert’s poster for the label’s first multi-media event at Plank K, Brussels, June, 1980, is a graphic update of Jean Cocteau’s graphic art, reimagined in acid colours, advertised performances by Bill Nelson, The Monochrome Set, a display of Factory Records designs, an Erik Satie recital, and an exhibition of smells.

Grande Nuit de Clôture, concert poster, Plan K, Brussels, 1980

British post-punk’s close artistic connections to Europe owed much to the example of the Belgian record label Les Disques du Crépuscule. Benoît Hennebert’s poster for the label’s first multimedia event at Plan K in Brussels in June 1980, reimagines Jean Cocteau’s graphic art in acid colours. It advertised performances by Bill Nelson and the Monochrome Set, a display of Factory Records designs, an Erik Satie recital and an exhibition of smells
Joy Division + Digital Dance, poster, Plan K, Brussels, 1980, screen print by Jocelyn CosterIn January 1980, Joy Division played at Plan K, a five-storey former sugar refinery where, invited by Annik Honoré and Michel Duval of Les Disques du Crèpuscule, the band had first perfomed their anthemic song, Love Will Tear Us Apart, the year before. After the tragic death of their lead singer, Ian Curtis, on 18 May 1980, the band reformed as New Order, taking their name from an article in The Guardian on ‘The People’s New Order of Kampuchean Rebels’.

Joy Division + Digital Dance, poster, Plan K, Brussels, 1980, screenprint by Jocelyn Coster

In January 1980, Joy Division played at Plan K, a five-storey former sugar refinery where, invited a year before by Annik Honoré and Michel Duval of Les Disques du Crèpuscule, the band had first performed Love Will Tear Us Apart. After the tragic death of their lead singer, Ian Curtis, on 18 May 1980, the band reformed as New Order, taking their name from an article in the Guardian titled The New Order of Kampuchean Rebels
The Flowers, screenprint poster by Bob Last, 1980 Bob Last, founder in Edinburgh’s ground-breaking Fast Product, designed covers for their bands the Human League, Gang Of Four, Fire Engines, and this vibrant poster for The Flowers with its ‘dynamic unbalance between the fields of colour’, as Last notes. He was a fan of the Russian constructivist, El Lissitzky and the German designer, Jan Tschichold, both important influences on post-punk graphics.

The Flowers, screenprint poster by Bob Last, 1980

Bob Last, founder of Edinburgh’s groundbreaking Fast Product label, designed covers for its bands the Human League, Gang of Four and Fire Engines. This vibrant poster for the Flowers utilises what Last calls ‘dynamic unbalance between the fields of colour’. He was a fan of the Russian constructivist El Lissitzky and German designer Jan Tschichold, both important influences on post-punk graphics
 their debut single of 1980, Girls Don’t Count, was produced by Ian Curtis and Rob Gretton, manager of Joy Division.

Section 25 + A Certain Ratio, poster Plan K concert, Brussels, by Jean-François Octave, 1980

A Certain Ratio were described by Factory’s Tony Wilson as a better-dressed version of Joy Division. Their mysterious jazz-inflected 12” single, Flight, with its cover image of a messed-up Icarus by Anne Quigley, may be the epitome of post-punk’s eeriness. Section 25 took it into even darker places: their 1980 debut single Girls Don’t Count was produced by Ian Curtis and Joy Division manager Rob Gretton
The Raincoats, screen-printed poster for Odyshape album by Simon Bramley, 1981As a radical all-woman band, The Raincoats’ provocative feminist stance could draw violent opposition. Their manger Shirley O’Loughlin recalls that after a concert in Portsmouth with the Gang of Four in 1980, they emerged to find that their car borrowed from Rough Trade for the night - had been deeply scratched with a massive swastika across the entire front bonnet by ‘some NF skins’.

The Raincoats, screenprinted poster for Odyshape album by Simon Bramley, 1981

As a radical all-woman band, The Raincoats’ provocative feminist stance could draw violent opposition. Their manager Shirley O’Loughlin recalls that after a concert in Portsmouth with Gang of Four in 1980, they emerged to find that their car, borrowed from Rough Trade for the night, had been deeply scratched with a massive swastika across the bonnet by ‘some NF skins’
Scritti Politti, poster for The Sweetest Girl single, Rough Trade 1981Scritti Politti’s situationist-Marxist aesthics were subsumed in their song, “The Sweetest Girl”, This poster, with its retro-European feel, was designed by the band’s drummer, Tom Morley, using an intricate combination of three colour separation printing sheets. ‘The first run was a disaster and held back the song’s release for two weeks’, Morley said.

Scritti Politti, poster for The Sweetest Girl single, Rough Trade 1981

Scritti Politti’s situationist-Marxist aesthetics were subsumed in their song The Sweetest Girl. This poster, with its retro-European feel, was designed by the band’s drummer, Tom Morley, using an intricate combination of three colour separation printing sheets. ‘The first run was a disaster and held back the song’s release for two weeks,’ Morley said
Nick Cave/The Birthday Party, collage for Elemental fanzine, 1981 Nick Cave’s text, Dirtiness is Next to Anti-Godliness, was a perverted advertising line scrached into The Birthday Party’s gothic-inflected single, Release the Bats. The line later appeared in Cave’s novel, And the Ass Saw the Angel. By the 1980s, fanzines had moved on from Sniffin’ Glue, the first house magazine of punk, to more elaborate ways of exploiting photocopying and other methods to disruptive and riotous ends.

Nick Cave/The Birthday Party, collage for Elemental fanzine, 1981

Nick Cave’s text, Dirtiness Is Next to Anti-Godliness, was a perverted advertising line scratched into the Birthday Party’s gothic-inflected single, Release the Bats. The line later appeared in Cave’s novel, And the Ass Saw the Angel. By the 1980s, fanzines had moved on from Sniffin’ Glue, the first house magazine of punk, to more elaborate ways of exploiting photocopying and other methods to disruptive and riotous ends
New Order, poster for Movement album, Factory Records, 1981 design by Peter SavillePeter Saville is the most influential designer to have emerged from the post-punk period. For this poster and album design for New Order, Saville drew on a 1932 poster by the Italian Futurist artist, Fortunato Depero. When the band’s manager, Rob Gretton, saw Saville’s design and its credit for Depero, he insisted the artist’s name was removed because of Futurism’s associations with fascism. ‘I had enough problems with “Joy Division”,’ Gretton told the designer, mindful of criticism that the band had taken their original name from concentration camp brothel.

New Order, poster for Movement album, Factory Records, 1981 design by Peter Saville

For this poster and album design for New Order, Peter Saville drew on a 1932 poster by Italian Futurist artist Fortunato Depero. When the band’s manager, Rob Gretton, saw Saville’s design and its credit for Depero, he insisted the artist’s name was removed because of Futurism’s associations with fascism. ‘I’d had enough problems with “Joy Division”,’ Gretton told the designer, mindful of criticism that the band had taken their original name from a concentration camp brothel
Aztec Camera and Orange Juice, poster design by Edwyn Collins, 1981 Alan Horne’s Postcard Records and its bands, Orange Juice, Aztec Camera and Josef K where The Sound of Young Scotland, combining brilliant song-writing, Warholian wit, and ironical use of tartan. This 1981 poster is illustrated by Edwyn Collins, lead singer of Orange Juice, also known for his delicate drawings of birds.

Aztec Camera and Orange Juice, poster design by Edwyn Collins, 1981

Alan Horne’s Postcard Records and its bands, Orange Juice, Aztec Camera and Josef K, were The Sound of Young Scotland, combining brilliant songwriting, Warholian wit and ironical use of tartan. This 1981 poster is illustrated by Edwyn Collins, lead singer of Orange Juice, also known for his delicate drawings of birds
New Order, concert poster, Brussels, 1981, illustration and design by Benoît Hennebert In the summer of 1980, Factory Records made a European alliance with Belgium’s artful and sophisticated Les Disques du Crèpuscule, whose romantic image was predicated on the elegant, quirky work of Benoît Hennebert, their designer. The lush colours and mid-century style of this poster for a New Order concert in Brussels tease out a sense of restrained luxury from the austere aesthetic of the band.

New Order, concert poster, Brussels, 1981, illustration and design by Benoît Hennebert

Les Disques du Crèpuscule’s romantic image was predicated on the elegant, quirky work of its designer Benoît Hennebert. The lush colours and mid-century style of this poster for a New Order concert in Brussels tease out a sense of restrained luxury from the austere aesthetic of the band
Ludus and Eric Random, New Hormones tour poster, 1981, designed by Benoît HennebertLudus, formed by Linder Sterling and Arthur Kadmon in 1978, famously performed at the Hacienda in November 1982 with Linder wearing a dress clad in raw meat, pulling aside her skirt to reveal a dildo underneath, a feminist protest at the club’s casual and interminable showing of porn films. Eric Random is a radical hero of the Manchester music scene, collaborating with artists such Nico, A Certain Ratio and Sheffield’s electronic pioneers, Cabaret Voltaire.

Ludus and Eric Random, New Hormones tour poster, 1981, designed by Benoît Hennebert

Ludus, formed by Linder Sterling and Arthur Kadmon in 1978, famously performed at the Hacienda in November 1982. Linder wore a dress clad in raw meat, pulling aside her skirt to reveal a dildo underneath – a feminist protest at the club’s casual and interminable showing of porn films. Eric Random is a radical hero of the Manchester music scene, collaborating with artists such Nico, A Certain Ratio and Sheffield’s electronic pioneers Cabaret Voltaire

Explore more on these topics

Read Entire Article
Bhayangkara | Wisata | | |