Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die: The Museum of Arts and Design

Published: June 21, 2019, 9 p.m.

b'Join us as we talk to \\xa0Chris Scoates\\xa0, Director\\xa0of \\xa0The Museum of Arts and Design\\xa0and\\xa0Andrew Krivine curator,Too Fast to\\xa0Live, Too Young to Die: Punk Graphics, 1976-1986, based almost entirely on Andrew\\u2019s\\xa0collection. The exhibition will tour through the end of 2021 and is currently being\\xa0presented by the Museum of Arts and Design in New York City through Aug. 18, 2019\\n\\nThe Museum of Arts and Design (MAD) will present Too Fast to Live, Too Young to Die: Punk Graphics, 1976\\u20131986, an exhibition that explores the punk and\\xa0post-punk movements through the lens of graphic design. The exhibition, on view from April 9\\xa0through August 18, 2019, will feature more than four hundred of punk\\u2019s most memorable graphics,\\xa0including flyers, posters, album covers, promotions, zines, and other ephemera.\\n\\n\\u201cToo Fast to Live, Too Young to Die charts punk\\u2019s explosive impact on design and examines its\\xa0complex relationship with art, history, and culture,\\u201d said Chris Scoates, MAD\\u2019s Nanette L.\\xa0Laitman Director. \\u201cPunk questioned everything, and it\\u2019s that spirit of inquiry that is driving MAD forward today, presenting and debating innovative works and ideas with lots of energy, color, and noise.\\xa0During Museum hours, a multimedia presentation, Please Kill Me: Voices from the Archive, will\\xa0play continuously in the gallery. Narrated by\\xa0McNeil and McCain and compiled by filmmaker/artist Brendan Toller, the presentation includes vintage interviews from IggyPop, Joey and Dee Dee Ramone, Debbie Harry, Jim Carroll, Billy Name, and others,\\xa0combined with never-before-seen photographs\\xa0and ephemera from Fred W. McDarrah, Adam\\xa0Ritchie, Danny Fields, Bob Gruen, James Marshall and Gillian McCain, David Godlis, Leni\\n\\nSinclair, Mike Barich, Natalie Schlossman, Paul Zone, and Tom\\xa0Hearn.'