Dogarama 1969 Hot! ★ Fast
By 1970, Dogarama had dissolved, its participants moving into land art, punk, or animal shelters. But its ghost lingers whenever an artist films a sleeping dog for an hour, or a poet scribbles “we are all someone’s pet / until we bite the hand.”
Here’s a draft write-up for — written as if for an art catalog, music retrospective, or cultural history piece. Dogarama 1969 Howl, Lens, and the Year the Counterculture Went Canine dogarama 1969
In the feverish hinge year of 1969 — Woodstock, the Moon landing, Altamont — an underground current surfaced in lofts, underground press pages, and 8mm film reels: . Neither a single work nor a movement with a manifesto, Dogarama was a scattered, sensory explosion of images and texts that reframed the dog as a shaggy philosopher, a loyal radical, and a mirror for human unease. By 1970, Dogarama had dissolved, its participants moving
The aesthetic was low-fi: grainy Super 8 footage of dogs running in circles, Polaroids of dogs resting their heads on draft-dodgers’ knees, poems typed on deli paper titled “Ode to a Three-Legged Watcher.” Neither a single work nor a movement with