Speaker: The Mirror of Our Selves
18 Responses
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This looks equally as desirable as the first. I'd particularly like Bernard Roundhill’s Auckland 2000 framed and on my wall. Amazing image.
Great work again Peter and Gary. Look forward to getting my hands on one.
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Russell Brown, in reply to
This looks equally as desirable as the first.
I've seen more of the images. They're amazing.
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Just wanna say how great it is to be back on Public Address thx to the goodwill and support of Russell. The book has been a delight to prepare, and Gary and I are excited to launch it into the world. Looking fwd to insightful comments and learnings from the Public Address community. If you've had a read or looksie, thx for your interest. Peter
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Jos,
Looks great!
love our place, can we post pics?
And voted of course. :)
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Selling The Dream is a cool book, looking forward to getting this one too. Thanks for getting it made.
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Wonderful images!
What ever happened to spark-plug advertising? I remember as a young lad how spark-plug ads were everywhere; newspapers, magazines, bill-boards, sometimes murals covering the whole sides of buildings (the one of the rear of the L. T. Watkins building on the corner of Cuba and Ghuznee Streets in Wellington has only recently disappeared. It must have been at least 50 years old). Most were for Champion but I'm sure other brands were involved too. Cars still use spark-plugs and they are just as important as they have ever been but the main-stream advertising of them seems to have completely gone. -
Because few people do their own car maintenance - I'm sure there still is spark plug advertising somewhere but directed tightly at mechanics
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Ian Dalziel, in reply to
flash-bung?
What ever happened to spark-plug advertising?
They've gone all Zen
now they sell the Gap...</got coat, scarf, etc>
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Joe Wylie, in reply to
Cars still use spark-plugs and they are just as important as they have ever been
Like exhaust systems, spark plugs last far longer now that lead tetraethyl is gone from petrol. I believe that's why "muffler shops" have all but vanished. Also the proportion of diesel vehicles continues to rise.
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That looks like a marvellous book. Do you remember post-war "The Children's Health Is The Nation's Wealth"? Time for a reminder.
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Danielle, in reply to
I'd particularly like Bernard Roundhill’s Auckland 2000 framed and on my wall. Amazing image.
Retro-futurism is the BEST.
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Chris Waugh, in reply to
Retro-futurism is the BEST.
There was a blog out there called Paleofuture, seemed to move a bit, but last I looked it seemed to be going into retirement. Might be worth googling for, though, as it was pretty cool, if a bit US-centric.
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Hebe,
Excellent: This year's Christmas present sorted.
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Interestingly, Roundhill painted a much darker and (post-)modernist follow-up to Auckland 2000 during the late 1980s. I saw it in an issue of the Listener some years back, but since then it's largely dropped off the radar.
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That's interesting, would love to come across that. Thx for sharing. Te Papa held great Roundhill exhibit, curated by Richard Wolfe, but produced no exhibit catalogue or book ... Crying shame.
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Kumara Republic, in reply to
That's interesting, would love to come across that. Thx for sharing. Te Papa held great Roundhill exhibit, curated by Richard Wolfe, but produced no exhibit catalogue or book ... Crying shame.
Apologies for the thread necro, but I finally found it...
https://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/object/561038Amazingly, he started it in 1960, but not completed until years later:
https://longwhitekid.wordpress.com/2013/12/02/unblemished-record-the-flawless-reign-of-bernard-roundhill/ -
That's a great picture - amazing that it took over 30 years from conception to completion.
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Great stuff, thanks Peter. "What’s certain is the powerful influence advertising can have in shaping our aspirations as a society." Not just the aspirations! Throw in the economy and democracy as well. Advertising was far and away the most influential usage of propaganda during the 20th century. Beat the usage by communist regimes and nazis into second and third.
Credit Edward Bernays for this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Bernays
I remember back in the seventies often wondering how come I was having a professional career crafting propaganda for the capitalists - kinda weird for someone who lived on a commune awhile - rationalised it as inadvertent bad karma. But a decade making television commercials with folks like Bob Harvey & Roger Donaldson got me seeing things from their perspective somewhat. The lure of the imaginal. Extremely potent!
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