The 1970s Counterculture in the West Country at PRSC
See event details

A event held at PRSC on Wednesday 20th April. The event starts at 19:00.


From the late 1960s through the 1970s the counterculture helped to make the West Country fizz with creative ideas and events. One of the most successful ventures, locally and nationally, was the Bath Arts Workshop. As a spin-off from London’s influential Arts Lab, BAT was a loose collective of artists and community activists. To describe it as a community arts group, however, would be to under-explain its work. It was that and much more as it proliferated into festival organisation, media production, hosted national alternative technology events known as Comtek, and challenged homelessness, ecological destruction, racism, and the destruction of historic buildings.

Tangent Books have recently published Bath Arts Workshop: Counterculture in the 1970s, on the history of the initiative launched in 1969. This event will be a rare opportunity to hear co-founder Phil Shepherd and other authors in conversation, remembering, celebrating, and reflecting upon the Bath Arts Workshop’s relevance for the present day.

Tickets are free! Any donations will help PRSC keep the School of Activism as accessible & low-cost as possible.

- - - https://prsc.org.uk/soa - - -

The School of Activism 3.0 is a month long programme of workshops, talks and activities brought to you by Peoples Republic of Stokes Croft. Running at PRSC during April 2022, the events are intended to be empowering experiences equipping people with the tools to challenge the status quo, contest power structures and ultimately to change the world.

We learn by doing. We make our own future.

Entry requirements:

Tickets for similar Bristol events.

A Decade of The Bristol Cable: Birthday Party at The Trinity Centre
— The Trinity Centre
electro afrobeats talks food & drink