Spelling Mistakes Cost Lives Dot Com
Sticker
2013 (printed and published)
2013 (printed and published)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Darren Cullen is an artist living and working in East London. His first, self-published comic is “an absurd and potentially offensive satire on military recruitment and the false promises that come with life (and death) in the army.” The comic is printed on a single sheet of paper featuring a 1.48 metre Bayeux tapestry style recreation of the Iraq war. His 'deluxe edition' contains several additional pull out pieces of work, including army related flyer adverts, A3 "Action Man Battlefield Casualties" poster, a 16 page 'Make Stuff Dead' mini-comic, postcards and stickers.
Cullen uses black humour to great effect and has created a biting satire of the modern army. His lively illustrations and witty use of language are unapologetically controversial, yet Cullen’s comic provides a counter voice to the British Government and Armed Forces concerted efforts to boost their reputation and numbers in the wake of the unpopular wars in Afghanistan and Iraq in the early part of the Twentieth Century.
Cullen uses black humour to great effect and has created a biting satire of the modern army. His lively illustrations and witty use of language are unapologetically controversial, yet Cullen’s comic provides a counter voice to the British Government and Armed Forces concerted efforts to boost their reputation and numbers in the wake of the unpopular wars in Afghanistan and Iraq in the early part of the Twentieth Century.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Spelling Mistakes Cost Lives Dot Com (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | card and ink jet printing |
Brief description | 'Spelling Mistakes Cost Lives Dot Com' (black version) by Darren Cullen; London, 2013 |
Physical description | Sticker entitled 'Spelling Mistakes Cost Lives Dot Com' with black inks. |
Dimensions |
|
Production type | Limited edition |
Associations | |
Summary | Darren Cullen is an artist living and working in East London. His first, self-published comic is “an absurd and potentially offensive satire on military recruitment and the false promises that come with life (and death) in the army.” The comic is printed on a single sheet of paper featuring a 1.48 metre Bayeux tapestry style recreation of the Iraq war. His 'deluxe edition' contains several additional pull out pieces of work, including army related flyer adverts, A3 "Action Man Battlefield Casualties" poster, a 16 page 'Make Stuff Dead' mini-comic, postcards and stickers. Cullen uses black humour to great effect and has created a biting satire of the modern army. His lively illustrations and witty use of language are unapologetically controversial, yet Cullen’s comic provides a counter voice to the British Government and Armed Forces concerted efforts to boost their reputation and numbers in the wake of the unpopular wars in Afghanistan and Iraq in the early part of the Twentieth Century. |
Associated object | E.640:12-2014 (Version) |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.640:11-2014 |
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Record created | September 16, 2014 |
Record URL |
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