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The Quiet Album: Difference between revisions

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=== Other uses of the photo ===
=== Other uses of the photo ===
<gallery mode="packed" heights="100px">
<gallery mode="packed" heights="175px">
File:Disco-Doubt-front.jpg|A potential design for Disco Doubt, which evolved into [[Malefactor, Ade]]
File:Disco-Doubt-front.jpg|A potential design for Disco Doubt, which evolved into [[Malefactor, Ade]]
File:Porsche-Oehlen.jpg|An Albert Oehlen print dated 1989
File:Porsche-Oehlen.jpg|An Albert Oehlen print dated 1989

Revision as of 12:13, 26 March 2023

File:Porsche-banner.webp
1990 banner
Dimensions: 148 x 400 cm. (58.3 x 157.5 in.)
File:Porsche-signatures.webp
Edition 14 of 40. Signatures on the lid of the original white box

The Quiet Album is a 1990 work by Albert Oehlen, Mayo Thompson, and Werner Büttner. Only ostensibly an album, information about the project is scarce. The album is listed in the 2012 Red Krayola Index.

In 1995, the German radio program Popalphabet listed The Quiet Album with the rest of The Red Crayola's discography[1]. Later that year, the American fanzine Puncture wrote that it was "described by Thompson as a picture of the band [...] printed onto parachute silk. There was no album per se."[2]

The Story So Far, the band's 2004 biography, explains that the album "comprised a banner showing a black and white reproduction of a photograph of [the group] life-size, singing with their faces pressed against the closed windows of Oehlen’s Porsche Targa parked in the snow in Hamburg. It was a limited edition, came in a white box modeled on The Beatles 'White Album,' and sold out immediately."[3]

On October 30, 2021, a banner matching the description above sold at auction for €2,400.[4] The banner was in a white box numbered 14 of 40 with signatures from all three. The seller was apparently only able to decipher Oehlen's signature and was likely unaware of it being an 'album'.

Interpretations

  • "The Quiet Album" is a pun on The Beatles' "White Album". Its white box also invokes the packaging design for The White Album.
  • According to his biography on AskArt.com, "Oehlen's Porsche [...] was permanently parked outside his studio because he never learned how to drive."[5]

Other uses of the photo

References