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・ Exo videography
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・ Exo-Man
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・ Exit fare
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EXIT magazine 1984-1992
・ Exit Marrakech
・ Exit Music
・ Exit number
・ Exit numbers in the United States
・ Exit Paradise
・ Exit permit
・ Exit Planet Dust
・ Exit planning
・ Exit poll
・ EXIT procedure
・ Exit Project
・ Exit pupil
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EXIT magazine 1984-1992 : ウィキペディア英語版
EXIT magazine 1984-1992

EXIT Magazine was a New York-based large-format alternative comic art and graphics magazine published from 1984 through 1992. It was founded in 1983 by George Petros and Adam Parfrey, with Kim Seltzer joining shortly afterward. Five issues were released; a sixth was partially completed. The magazine’s history is divided into two eras: the first, from inception through 1987, was characterized by the collaboration of Petros and Parfrey; and the second, spanning from Parfrey’s 1987 departure until the project’s end, was characterized by Petros’s work with J.G. Thirlwell, Robert N. Taylor, Michael Andros and Salvatore Canzonieri. The magazine’s ISSN: 0883-9558.
== Contents ==

Science, science fiction, fringe politics and alternative history influenced EXIT’s graphic style. Some of the magazine’s contributors worked in a form they christened Serial Art, which adopts the techniques of timelines, graphs and diagrams to show changes, processes, and the flow of situations. Serial Art also appropriates techniques of comic art and film storyboards. Other contributors worked in a form they christened Propagandart, which adopts principals of advertising and propaganda in order to manipulate emotions and opinions. EXIT also presented alternative comics, photomontage, photography, poetry and incendiary literature.
EXIT reflected the confrontational punk rock and hardcore punk attitudes of the 1980s. It drew upon the prevailing nihilism of New York’s Lower East Side. It presented art and writing considered controversial from contemporaneous political and sociological perspectives. For example, some of the magazine’s content endorsed the eradication of boundaries between Left and Right. Notorious historical figures appeared in iconic form. Some of the magazine’s content dealt with psychopathic social phenomena such as serial killers and mass murderers. Disparate genres such as scientific illustration and pornography came together in graphic form.
In his introduction to the compilation ''The EXIT Collection'' (Tacit Press, 1998), George Petros describes EXIT as “… an outlaw Pop Art magazine in opposition to both the underground and the establishment. It was a forum for extreme ideologies and inclinations manifested as political pornography, psychosexual terrorism, scientific threats and infernal texts. It was graced by contributions from the best artists and writers in America — famous, infamous, and unknown …”

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