Wot! No Bike?

Wot no Bike with its continued references to self-portraiture, is inspired by 20th century realism and its documentation of the living conditions of the working classes, in particular the work of the American Ashcan School in turn of the century New York, and the ‘Kitchen Sink’ school of painters of 1950s post-War Britain. Each focused on the banal and ordinary while depicting the resultant misery, angst and, at times, violence. In Britain the fractious domestic and economic situation of post-war austerity gave rise to the emergence of the subcultures.
While Simonon is cautious about drawing parallels between his music and his painting, it is clear that British subculture of the 1950s, 1960s and 1980s has been, and remains, essential to both these aspects of his life and work.
Autobiographical in the modernist and realist painting tradition, Wot No Bike is Simonon’s personal exploration of British subculture and counterculture in the post-war decades.
To accompany the exhibition at the ICA is a limited edition hardback publication also titled Wot no Bike.





























