Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Art

Portraits Of… 80’s London New Romantic Culture

Clare Thom, Boy George, Michele Clapton. Coach trip to Margate.. 1980

I can appreciate the New Romantic scene now more than I did when I was younger. Looking at Graham Smith’s book We Can Be Heroes: London Clubland 1979-81 I can see that this scene was full of young adults who wanted to get dressed up and have fun. They were a tribe of club kids that were willing to go all out when it came to fashion. I’m stoked that Graham was there to capture night life history….Check out his portraits of New Romantics 1979-81….Go HERE to pick up a copy of We Can Be Heroes: London Clubland!

 

Clare Thom, Boy George, Michele Clapton. Coach trip to Margate.. 1980

Clare Thom, Boy George, Michele Clapton. Coach trip to Margate.. 1980

Boy George. Jeremy Healy. 1980

Boy George. Jeremy Healy. 1980

Club for Heroes. Boy George. 1981

Club for Heroes. Boy George. 1981

Chris Sullivan. The Blitz. Jan 1980

Chris Sullivan. The Blitz. Jan 1980

Clare Thom. Stephen Linard on their way to see Spandau Ballet 1981

Clare Thom. Stephen Linard on their way to see Spandau Ballet 1981

Kim Bowen. Warren Street squat. In Stephen Jones hat. 1980

Kim Bowen. Warren Street squat. In Stephen Jones hat. 1980

 

 

Smith:

The story begins more than thirty years ago. I was 18, having grown up in Edgware at the dull end of the Northern Line. With my cocky ginger school mate Robert Elms, I entered a grotty Soho dive bar named Billy’s. A camp Welsh cossack posed by the entrance as the electronic beats of Kraftwerk pounded from the speakers. Several androgynous couples danced a robotic jive and someone else was wearing an iron as a hat. The look was retro but it definitely felt like tomorrow. So the following week I went back…

The press dubbed us the New Romantics, but we paid no attention. We were too busy enjoying ourselves.

We became a gang that made clubs our lifestyle: Billy’s, the Blitz, Le Beat Route, the Mud Club, theWag and the Dirt Box. Nightclubbing was our fuel, family and an after-dark gateway to fulfil ambitions. We were narcissistic and hedonistic, but more importantly we inspired each other to push boundaries. It was about rebellion, creativity, originality and being yourself outside normal and straight society.

Michele Clapton. 1980

Michele Clapton. 1980

St.Moritz club. Stevie Stewart. 1980

St.Moritz club. Stevie Stewart. 1980

 

Stephen Linard 1979

Stephen Linard 1979

new-romantics-9-692x1024

Camden Palace. Opening night. Martim Kemp, Biddie and Eve, Steve Norman (Spandau Ballet). 1981

Camden Palace. Opening night. Martim Kemp, Biddie and Eve, Steve Norman (Spandau Ballet). 1981

Stephen Linard and Michele Clapton on their way to see Spandau Ballet. 1980

Stephen Linard and Michele Clapton on their way to see Spandau Ballet. 1980

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Bizarre

via Lazer Horse There’s nothing funny about death really. But there is a lot of certainty to it. There’s not a person who’s ever...

Black Metal

During the first year of CVLT Nation, I was turned on to this unreal band from Wales called GHAST. Their release Terrible Cemetery was...

Black Metal

More Chaos! More Fury! More Rancid Riffs! only begins to tell you how CVLT Nation’s Blackened Everything Vol. IX is going to get you...

Featured

By Sascha via Behold The Blessed Wax Trial – Moments Of Collapse LP, 1986 This is not a write up about the Straight Edge...

Copyright © 2020 ZoxPress Theme. Theme by MVP Themes, powered by WordPress.