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Jeff Nuttall
Jeff Nuttall
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Jeffrey Addison Nuttall (8 July 1933 – 4 January 2004[1]) was an English poet, performer, author, actor, teacher, painter, sculptor, jazz musician, anarchist[2] and social commentator who was a key part of the British 1960s counter-culture. He was the brother of literary critic A. D. Nuttall.

Key Information

Life and work

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Nuttall was born in Clitheroe, Lancashire, and grew up in Orcop, a village in Herefordshire. He studied at Hereford College of Art, (1949–1951) and Bath Academy of Art, Corsham Court (1951–1953) He married Jane Louch, his former art teacher in 1954 and in the same year gained a teaching MA at The Institute of Education in London followed by national service completed in 1956. With his family he moved to London in 1959 where he worked as a secondary school teacher in Finchley.[3] He was active with the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) until 1962, then inspired by Alexander Trocchi and Peter Currell Brown, he committed to making art to change society. He made connections with other avant-garde writers and artists in Group H including Bob Cobbing[4] and John Latham.[1]

In 1963 Nuttall produced the first of 17 issues of My Own Mag with contributions from William Burroughs. MOM was one of the first underground magazines which were a defining feature of the 1960s counterculture.[5]

During 1965 Nuttall staged early Happenings at Better Books in London.[6]

An overload of creative work and marital difficulties caused Nuttall to retreat to the Abbey Art Centre where he formed The People Show in 1966, one of the first and longest lasting Performance Art groups.[7] During 1967 he contributed regularly to International Times, and wrote Bomb Culture,[8] his personal account and critical analysis of the birth of the alternative society. The book was published in 1968 and then in 1970 as a best selling Paladin paperback. During this time Nuttall was teaching and writing in Norwich and would move first to Bradford College of Art in 1969 and then to Leeds Polytechnic Fine Art Department where he was a senior lecturer for ten years from 1970 to 1981. Nuttall was active in Performance Art collaborating with Rose McGuire (Priscilla Beecham),[9] and influencing other performers and students including Marc Almond. His presence in the Fine Art department did much to define the radical creative ethos at Leeds.[10]

He was elected Chairman of the National Society of Poetry in 1975 and with Eric Mottram tried to introduce radical modernist poetry occasioning the Poetry Wars.[11] From 1979 to 1981 Nuttall was poetry critic for The Guardian.[1]

Appointed Head of Fine Art at Liverpool Polytechnic in 1981, his tenure was marked by controversial teaching initiatives, residencies at Deakin University, Australia, and increasing alcoholic consumption, all of which contributed to his early departure in 1984.[12]

With his last partner, Jill Richards, he moved to Abergavenny, Wales, in 1991, and later to Crickhowell. His creative output continued with soft sculptures, landscape paintings, poetry, and writing. His last two books were Art and the Degradation of Awareness (1999) and Selected Poems (2003).[13] He died aged 70 on 4 January 2004 at the Hen and Chickens pub (known as the Hen and Chicks) in Abergavenny, where his jazz band had performed regularly for ten years.[1]

Literary works

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Nuttall was the author of over 40 books. These included novels (Snipe's Spinster (1975)); poetry (Objects (1976)); cultural commentary (Common Factors/Vulgar Factions, with Rodick Carmichael (1977)); and biography (King Twist: A Portrait of Frank Randle (1978)).[11]

  • Poems (1963), with Keith Musgrove
  • The Limbless Virtuoso (1963), with Keith Musgrove
  • The Change (1963), Allen Ginsberg (cover design)
  • My Own Mag (1963–66)
  • Poems I Want to Forget (1965)
  • Come Back Sweet Prince: A Novelette (1966)
  • Pieces of Poetry (1966)
  • The Case of Isabel and the Bleeding Foetus (1967)
  • Songs Sacred and Secular (1967)
  • Bomb Culture (1968), Cultural criticism and memoir.
  • Penguin Modern Poets 12 (1968), with Alan Jackson and William Wantling
  • Journals (1968)
  • Love Poems (1969)
  • Mr. Watkins Got Drunk and Had to Be Carried Home: A Cut-up Piece (1969)
  • Pig (1969)
  • Jeff Nuttall: Poems 1962–1969 (1970)
  • Oscar Christ and the Immaculate Conception (1970)
  • George, Son of My Own Mag (1971)
  • The Foxes' Lair (1972)
  • Fatty Feedemall's Secret Self: A Dream (1975)
  • The Anatomy of My Father's Corpse (1975)
  • Man Not Man (1975)
  • The House Party (1975)
  • Snipe's Spinster (novel, 1975)
  • Objects (1976)
  • Common Factors, Vulgar Factions (1977), with Rodick Carmichael
  • King Twist: a Portrait of Frank Randle (1978), biography of music hall comedian
  • The Gold Hole (1978)
  • What Happened to Jackson (1978)
  • Grape Notes, Apple Music (1979)
  • Performance Art (1979/80), memoirs and scripts, two volumes
  • 5X5 (1981), with Glen Baxter, Ian Breakwell, Ivor Cutler and Anthony Earnshaw (edited by Asa Benveniste)
  • Muscle (1982)
  • Visual Alchemy (1987), with Bohuslav Barlow
  • The Bald Soprano. A Portrait of Lol Coxhill (1989)
  • Art and the Degradation of Awareness (1999)
  • Selected Poems (2003)

Selected filmography

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References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jeff Nuttall (8 July 1933 – 4 January 2004) was a British poet, writer, visual artist, jazz musician, and performance artist known for his influential book Bomb Culture (1968), a seminal analysis of the psychological impact of the nuclear threat on postwar youth and a defining document of 1960s counterculture, as well as for his pioneering role in underground publishing, performance art, and the British alternative scene. Born in Clitheroe, Lancashire, Nuttall studied at art schools in Hereford and Bath before supporting himself through teaching while pursuing an eclectic career across multiple disciplines. Deeply shaped by the atomic age and post-war anxieties, he became a central figure in the emerging British underground during the 1960s, editing the experimental mimeograph magazine My Own Mag (1964–1967), which connected international avant-garde writers including William Burroughs and Alexander Trocchi, and participating in landmark events such as the 1965 International Poetry Incarnation at the Royal Albert Hall. He co-founded the influential performance group The People Show, introduced Happenings to Britain through collaborations with artists like John Latham, and produced confrontational work that challenged conformity, consumerism, and sexual repression, often drawing on visceral and provocative themes to advocate for cultural revolution. Although he grew disillusioned with aspects of the counterculture's later developments, Nuttall continued teaching at art colleges, including Leeds Polytechnic, and authored more than 40 books, ranging from poetry and novels to cultural criticism and biographies, while remaining active as a painter, sculptor, jazz cornetist, and occasional film actor until his death on 4 January 2004. His legacy endures through Bomb Culture's enduring status as a key text on the era's rebellious consciousness and his broader influence as a polymath who bridged art, performance, and social critique.

Early life and education

Birth and family

Jeffrey Addison Nuttall was born on 8 July 1933 in Clitheroe, Lancashire, England. He grew up in Herefordshire, where his father served as a school headmaster in Hereford. Nuttall was the elder brother of Anthony David Nuttall, later known as the literary critic A. D. Nuttall, who was born in 1937 as the younger of the two sons in the family.

Education and early interests

Jeff Nuttall attended Hereford School of Art, leaving in 1951. He studied painting there, entering the art world first as a painter. Some sources describe the years from 1949 to 1953 as the most formative of his education, encompassing time at both Hereford and Bath art schools. Details on specific early interests beyond painting during this period remain limited in available sources, with his broader artistic passions in areas such as poetry, performance, and jazz emerging more prominently in later decades. No formal degree completion is mentioned in connection with his art school attendance.

Literary career

Poetry and early publications

Jeff Nuttall began publishing his poetry in the early 1960s, contributing to the British small-press and underground literary scene that emerged during that decade. He edited and published My Own Mag, a pioneering mimeographed underground magazine that ran for 17 issues from 1964 to 1967, featuring his own experimental poetry alongside contributions from avant-garde writers including William S. Burroughs. This magazine marked one of his primary early roles as both a poet and publisher in the developing countercultural literature. His early poetry appeared in small-press formats, including co-authored pamphlets such as Poems and The Limbless Virtuoso (both 1963, with Keith Musgrove), and solo collections like Poems I Want to Forget (1965). Other works from this period include Pieces of Poetry (1966) and Songs Sacred and Secular (1967), which reflected his involvement in the experimental poetry circles associated with figures like Bob Cobbing and Writers Forum. These publications established Nuttall's reputation as a contributor to the underground press before his wider recognition in the late 1960s.

Bomb Culture and counterculture writings

Jeff Nuttall's most prominent contribution to counterculture literature is Bomb Culture, first published in 1968. This confessional work provides a personal and critical examination of the emergence of Britain's 1960s alternative society and underground counterculture, tracing the period's radical energies from roughly 1958 onward. Nuttall argues that the pervasive psychic dread of nuclear holocaust, stemming from the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, profoundly shaped both high and low culture, influencing attitudes, aesthetics, and creative output in a manner analogous to the impact of World War I horrors on Dadaism. The book investigates the sources of the era's radical art, music, and protest movements while exploring the beliefs, anxieties, and contradictions of key agitators, including Nuttall himself. It documents the instinctive rebellion of youth culture—encompassing modern jazz, rock 'n' roll, early psychedelia, Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament activism, and Beat influences—against a backdrop of nuclear anxiety that fueled creative and destructive tensions alike. Described as an extreme yet brilliant analysis, Bomb Culture has been characterized as "an abscess that lances itself," abrasive and spirited in its portrayal of the underground's contradictions and vitality. Nuttall authored some forty books across his career, encompassing poetry, fiction, memoirs, essays, and cultural commentary, yet Bomb Culture remains his most celebrated and influential text in this domain. The work achieved legendary status as a primary source and manifesto for the post-Hiroshima generation, chronicling the rise of Britain's internationalist counterculture. After being out of print for fifty years, it was reissued in a 50th anniversary edition in 2019 by Strange Attractor Press, featuring the original text alongside a new foreword, afterword, contextual introduction, and archival materials.

Performance and experimental arts

Happenings and 1960s underground scene

Jeff Nuttall emerged as a pioneer of happenings in 1960s Britain, acting as a central figure in the experimental performance and underground arts scene in London. He was instrumental in the burgeoning movements of oral verse, jazz poetry, happenings, and performance art, serving as a catalyst for rebellion and experiment in the arts during the counterculture period. In June 1965, Nuttall collaborated with artist John Latham on a planned happening for the International Poetry Incarnation at the Royal Albert Hall, intending to encase themselves top-to-toe in blue paint as a provocative action; the event was abandoned after the paint blocked their pores, causing Latham to pass out, and the pair recovered in Sir Malcolm Sargent’s dressing-room bath before being discovered by a caretaker. By 1966, Nuttall founded the People Show, one of the earliest and most enduring British performance art groups, by inviting fellow residents of the Abbey Arts Centre—including Mark Long, John Darling, Laura Gilbert, and Sid Palmer—to collaborate on staging happenings, initially for a London Free School benefit concert in Notting Hill that aligned with the emerging underground scene. These early efforts were influenced by the confrontational radicalism of the Destruction in Art Symposium held in September 1966, which featured international figures like John Latham and Yoko Ono. The People Show developed a distinctive style of improvised, non-narrative performance using structures with actions, costumes, props, and large sections marked for cast improvisation, likened by Nuttall to a jazz band with solos and duets, and often designed to shock audiences. Regular performances began in the basement of Better Books from January 1967, with early shows including confrontational pieces that sold out and gained notoriety, such as one at the Drury Lane Arts Lab where audience members were placed in cages made from bedsteads. Nuttall remained actively involved in writing, performing, and traveling with the troupe through the late 1960s, contributing to its role as a flagship of the alternative Arts Lab circuit and the broader experimental rebellion in British arts during the decade.

Performance art and collaborations

Jeff Nuttall was instrumental in the formation and early direction of the People Show, an enduring experimental theatre company that emerged from the underground scene as a collaborative venture in performance art. He invited fellow Abbey Arts Centre residents Mark Long, John Darling, Laura Gilbert, and Sid Palmer to join him in devising happenings and structured performances, drawing on influences such as the Destruction in Art Symposium and emphasizing improvisational structures akin to a jazz ensemble. Nuttall devised the initial scripts and frameworks for the group's earliest works, including No.2 Monster Sale / Everybody Reduced and No.3 Examination in 1967, which incorporated confrontational elements, sculpture, and open sections for cast improvisation. After shaping the People Show's confrontational style through its first few productions, Nuttall stepped back from regular devising around the early 1970s following the show Changes, though his foundational impact on its multi-disciplinary approach persisted. He later returned to the company in an acting capacity for the 1987 production Whistle Stop, presented at the Bush Theatre and on tour. In 1999, Nuttall participated in a one-day Fluxus Extravaganza at Phoenix Arts in Leicester, performing alongside artists Ian Breakwell and Stuart Brisley in an event revisiting the radical impulses of the 1960s Fluxus movement. Nuttall's performance collaborations often reflected his broader engagement with experimental and underground movements, though detailed accounts of extensive later activities remain limited.

Acting career

Film roles

Jeff Nuttall began appearing in feature films in the early 1990s, taking on supporting and character roles primarily in British productions during the subsequent two decades. His screen acting represented a later phase in his multifaceted career, following decades focused on poetry, performance art, and countercultural activities. Most of his film parts were small but distinctive, often capitalizing on his striking physical presence and theatrical background. One of his earliest credited roles was Friar Tuck in Robin Hood (1991), directed by John Irvin and starring Patrick Bergin in the title role. In 1999, he featured in Plunkett & Macleane as Lord Morris and in the James Bond film The World Is Not Enough (1999) as Dr. Mikhail Arkov, a nuclear physicist involved in the story's opening sequence. His other film credits from this period and into the early 2000s include Henry Campbell in Octopus (2000) and Priest in Black Plague (2002, also known as Anazapta). These roles remained secondary to his primary work in literature and the arts, but they demonstrated his transition into occasional screen work as a character actor.

Television and later screen work

Jeff Nuttall made a number of supporting and guest appearances on British television, primarily in the 1990s and early 2000s, often portraying authority figures such as judges, lords, or officials. He gained a recurring role as Gustav in six episodes of the BBC sitcom Chef! during its third series in 1996. His later television credits included guest spots in several well-known series and miniseries. These encompassed the Auctioneer in Vanity Fair (1998), Mr. Justice Benham in Inspector Morse (1998), Frenay in The Adventures of Young Indiana Jones (1999), the Royal Cook in The 10th Kingdom (2000), Geoff Wheelan in four episodes of In Defence (2000), and Bellows in six episodes of The Infinite Worlds of H.G. Wells (2001). In 2002, he appeared as Lord Wharfdale in two episodes of Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, Ken McMahon in an episode of Holby City, and Mr. Justice Forbes in the TV movie Harold Shipman: Doctor Death. Nuttall's final screen work came in 2004 with the role of Patterson in two episodes of the television miniseries Fungus the Bogeyman. His television output consisted mainly of character parts in period dramas, crime series, and fantasy productions, contributing to a steady but secondary aspect of his acting career in later years.

Visual arts and music

Painting and sculpture

Jeff Nuttall trained as a painter and sculptor, studying at Hereford School of Art from 1949 to 1951 before continuing his education at Bath Academy in Corsham from 1951 to 1953 under influential tutors including William Scott, Peter Lanyon, Terry Frost, and Kenneth Armitage. His early work demonstrated a preoccupation with the human figure, which continued to inform his practice across mediums. In the 1960s Nuttall created assemblages from found objects and soft materials such as stockings and kapok, crafting forms that resembled dishevelled or distorted human body parts, sometimes enclosed in suitcases or integrated into happenings, environments, and performances. He contributed to the sTigma environment in 1966, constructed in the basement of Better Books on Charing Cross Road in London alongside collaborators including John Latham and Bruce Lacey. While he produced paintings and sculptures prior to 1962, he destroyed his existing paintings that year and shifted toward art addressing nuclear threats and corporeal themes. During the 1970s Nuttall made erotic etchings and collages, followed in the late 1970s and early 1980s by a range of grotesque and cartoon-like ceramic works. His visual output included ceramics held in archives, such as two ceramic pieces alongside an oil painting titled Lumbutts from 1985. Nuttall returned emphatically to painting in the mid-1980s, producing two series of large Pennine landscape paintings exhibited at the Angela Flowers Gallery in London in 1984–85, followed by a series inspired by Portuguese landscapes and Mediterranean light after relocating to the Algarve in 1986–87. In the 1990s he developed Black Mountains reliefs, soft sculptural works that extended from wall to floor, and numerous landscape studies in watercolour and gouache. These later expressionistic landscapes and reliefs, which he described as “Dionysian Landscapes,” synthesized eroticism from his earlier drawings with a baroque romanticism and awareness of nature’s fecundity, decay, and rebirth, evoking influences from Samuel Palmer and William Blake while embracing the grotesque and burlesque. Nuttall reflected on this phase: “all my creative work, whether literary or visual, has been concerned with the same discord, the ecstatic violence which is detonated when nature meets ethics… I found that the Black Mountains…provided me with the opportunity to synthesise a vocabulary of gross eroticism with a full-blooded baroque romanticism …they do emphasise that geological and vegetable forms share shapes and parallel processes with animal (and human) digestion, gestation and reproduction, in a turbulence of decay, erosion and rebirth. My work is intended as a celebratory prayer of these things…” His visual art consistently explored the body in its corporeal states—soft skin, wounded flesh, raw matter, and intimate processes—across paintings, sculptures, and related forms.

Jazz music and performance

Jeff Nuttall was a committed jazz musician, recognized for his work as a trumpeter and cornet player specializing in traditional (trad) jazz. His involvement in the genre spanned from the 1950s onward, reflecting a lifelong passion that complemented his other creative pursuits. Nuttall's playing style showed a particular affinity for the American trumpeter Henry "Red" Allen. Following his National Service in the 1950s, Nuttall performed trumpet in venues such as Soho's Cottage Club and participated in groups like the Aldermaston Jazz Band, where he played cornet during the late 1950s. He led various bands around north London and maintained a deep attachment to the jazz of the 1930s and beyond, performing in settings ranging from quartets to larger ensembles. In his later years, Nuttall led his own trad jazz band with a longstanding weekly lunchtime residency at the Hen and Chicks pub in Abergavenny, Wales, where the performances stood as a cherished high point of his routine for a decade. He also shared reflections on his musical journey in the late 1980s through a BBC Radio 4 series titled Conservative Blues, a four-part broadcast discussing his experiences as a jazz trumpeter and pianist. Nuttall's dedication to performing jazz endured until his final moments; on January 4, 2004, he collapsed and died shortly after departing the Hen and Chicks pub following a lunchtime gig with his trad band.

Teaching career

Educational roles and mentorship

Jeff Nuttall pursued a long career in art education, beginning with secondary school teaching and advancing to senior positions in higher education institutions. After completing National Service in the Royal Army Education Corps, he took up his first role as art master at Leominster, followed by teaching positions at schools in London. From 1956 to 1968, he worked as a secondary school art master. In the late 1960s, Nuttall transitioned to art colleges, teaching at Bradford College of Art before becoming a lecturer at Leeds Polytechnic, where he held the position through much of the 1970s. He later served as head of fine art at Liverpool Polytechnic, bringing a transformative energy to his academic leadership. Nuttall was regarded as an inspiring teacher with a distinctive ability to encourage creative expression and self-discovery in his students. His educational roles extended beyond formal instruction, as he possessed a gift for helping others appreciate their own potential and fostering originality in younger artists.

Personal life and views

Relationships and family

Jeff Nuttall was the elder brother of the literary critic A. D. Nuttall. In 1954 he married Jane Louch, a painter who had been his art teacher at Hereford School of Art. With Louch he raised one daughter and three sons. The couple stayed more or less together for the next two decades. From the late 1970s until 1984, Nuttall was in a relationship with Amanda Porter, with whom he had two sons while traveling across Britain, Australia, and Portugal. The remainder of his life was shared with the Welsh actor Jill Richards.

Anarchist sympathies and social commentary

Jeff Nuttall was an anarchist sympathiser who championed anti-authoritarian rebellion and social experimentation throughout his life. He articulated a vision of radical liberation in which human creativity and generosity could flourish in a non-commercial, non-hierarchical communal existence, free from dictation by authorities or profiteers. He imagined a society akin to "some kind of stone age village" where people built imaginatively, lived with hands and minds, and pursued true selves that were "generous and creative and permissive." Nuttall expressed his social commentary through independent publications and subversive actions that targeted societal repression, consumerism, and militarism. As editor of My Own Mag, he circulated anarchic texts and images intended to infiltrate and subvert established norms by confronting readers with the "nausea" of underlying social sickness and the "death wish" embodied in atomic-age conformity. He urged the underground to reject dependence on institutions and "build our own damn future" rather than wait for authorities to grant autonomy or resources. Nuttall grew disillusioned with aspects of the counterculture when he perceived its revolutionary potential being neutralised by media and capitalist co-option after 1967. He maintained a consistent opposition to "the philistines, profiteers, and warmongers who go on ruling the west," and welcomed the resurgence of anti-war and anti-globalisation protests in his later years as a rekindling of the anti-authoritarian spirit he had long promoted.

Death and legacy

Death

Jeff Nuttall died on 4 January 2004 in Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, at the age of 70. He passed away shortly after leaving the Hen and Chicks pub in Abergavenny, where his traditional jazz band had performed a lunchtime gig that day, an event that had been a weekly highlight for him over the previous decade.

Influence and posthumous recognition

Jeff Nuttall is remembered as a central catalyst in the British underground and international counterculture of the 1960s, where he bridged poetry, jazz, performance art, visual arts, and anti-nuclear activism to challenge mainstream conventions. Described as a polymath who embodied rebellion and experiment across disciplines, his work influenced networks of radical artists and writers, extending legacies from Dada, Surrealism, the Beats, and bebop while promoting an embodied, present-focused response to existential threats like nuclear dread. His role as a multidisciplinary provocateur—through mimeographed publications, Happenings, and performance groups—helped bring alternative scenes to broader attention and inspired others to recognize their creative potential. Nuttall's most enduring contribution is Bomb Culture (1968), a confessional manifesto that analyzed the psychic impact of the nuclear age on art, protest, and society, identifying strands such as Pop, Protest, Art, and "sick" aesthetics in the emerging underground. Out of print for fifty years and long commanding high prices in second-hand markets, the book achieved legendary status as a powerful firsthand account of 1960s counterculture. It was reissued in a 50th Anniversary Edition in 2018 by Strange Attractor Press, with a new foreword by Iain Sinclair, an introduction by editors Douglas Field and Jay Jeff Jones incorporating archival images, and an afterword by Maria Fusco, affirming its continued relevance as a spirited exploration of alternative society. Posthumous recognition has included exhibitions and events highlighting his archive and impact, such as a 2005 retrospective at Burnley Gallery, the 2017 Off Beat: Jeff Nuttall and the International Underground show at the John Rylands Library, and a 2019 illustrated lecture at Burnley Literary Festival. A full-length biography, Anything But Dull: the Life & Art of Jeff Nuttall by James Charnley, appeared in 2022, drawing on extensive interviews to reassess his provocative legacy. Some accounts suggest that full appreciation for his extraordinary range as a renaissance figure emerged only after his death. While these developments indicate renewed interest in specialist circles, modern scholarship on Nuttall remains limited, with his influence often preserved through archival holdings and countercultural histories rather than extensive academic analysis.

References

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