les presses du réel

Black Ark

Lee Scratch Perry - Black Ark
Lee "Scratch" Perry's photographic works and writings, inventoried in the Black Ark studio in Kingston, one of the cradles of reggae and dub.
The point of departure for the book Black Ark with Lee "Scratch" Perry (1936–2021), a Jamaican musical and visual artist who was based in Switzerland, is a detailed inventory of photographs and writings (Spring 2021) from the Black Ark Studios in Kingston, Jamaica, where Lee produced his music from 1973 on. He was a seminal pioneer of dub, an electronic subgenre of reggae that uses sampling, looping, remixing, reverb and echoes to create new songs as well as rework  and appropriate pre-recorded songs and tracks.
Black Ark Studios was one of the cradles of dub. It's also where Lee "Scratch" Perry's musical approach found an enduring visual counterpart in the form of continuously evolving mural paintings and drawings  as well as shape-shifting assemblages of records, instruments, found objects, posters, newspaper and magazine clippings, and appropriated books. The artworks form actual layers upon layers that are rhizomatically intertwined with the studio building itself  as well as with the furniture inside—and with Perry's biography and persona.
Perry created his very own, dense and eclectic world—a world that is documented in Black Ark, before it disappears for good: the premises have recently been sold. The photographic documentation of the studio was supplemented by efforts to secure and preserve Perry's cultural objects as part of a joint project with the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
Black Ark which reflects the rhythm and layering effects of collage both in its content and the materials used to craft the book. Perry was involved in the conception of the book in its early stages. It also interweaves various media and chronologies. The new photographs of the Black Ark Studios are juxtaposed with stills from old documentaries and archival photos.
The idea of a "house" serves as both a working hypothesis and a metaphor. It's the starting point and endpoint of various thematic strands, both visual and textual: for example, the book explores the Black Ark as a "spiritual yard" in the context of African diaspora, as well as looking into archeomusicological aspects. Furthermore, extended captions by Perry's biographer provide the backdrop for a kaleidoscopic panorama of Perry's eclectic and ingenious work.
Lee "Scratch" Perry (1936-2021) was a Jamaican producer and musician, precursor of dub in the 1970s, an highly influential figure of the Jamaican music, on the reggae scene, of which he largely contributed to shape the sound and directed its evolutions, but also on many other musical styles.
Edited by Andreas Koller and Lorenzo Bernet.

Graphic design: Maximage.
 
2024 (publication expected by 2nd quarter)
English edition
21 x 28 cm (softcover)
600 pages (500 ill.)
 
68.00
 
ISBN : 978-3-907236-66-6
EAN : 9783907236666
 
forthcoming
topicsLee Scratch Perry: also present in






 top of page