Oz Magazine, along with International Times was the underground magazine during the late Sixties in England. Originating from Australia where it was founded by Richard Neville and Martin Sharp it came to England in February 1967 where the first issue hit the streets of an unsuspecting London. Oz ran for 48 issues and was printed in a variety of shapes and sizes during its time.

Oz actually had more in common with Private Eye being anti-establishment but with its target audience firmly focused on the emerging underground scene it scored a massive hit. Until then there was only really the Indica Bookshop run by Miles for this kind of literature so it's success was virtually guaranteed. From the outset it was full of anger, radical ideas and left wing political ideals but by the time Issue No.3 arrived it was obviously becoming visually very psychedelic. Australian artist Martin Sharp had started experimenting with LSD and the stunning cover of Issue No.3 is testament to his new found influences featuring a joint smoking Mona Lisa and some very suggestive looking bananas!!

Issue No.4 featured superb artwork from one of London's finest, Hapsash and the Coloured Coat but perhaps the most famous cover of all was Martin Sharp's Bob Dylan cover for Issue No.7.
(Pooterland)

OZ magazine: A Cover Gallery of all the English issues

The first British issue of Oz had more in common with Private Eye than the psychedelic showcase it would later become

Indeed, by issue two, Private Eye were considering it a threat and were saying so

Martin Sharp's first psychedelic cover for the third issue changed that a little

Nigel Waymouth and Michael English (Hapsash & The Coloured Coat) provided a wonderful gold ink wraparound for issue four and a new visual direction was firmly established

Not that the fifth issue would have advertised it with its rather boring "special issue" cover

Issue six was a co-production with John Wlicox' "Other Scenes" - a title published from wherever the editor was at the time

Martin Sharps cover for issue seven was reprinted as a poster and could be seen everywhere for some years

Issue 8

Issue 9

Issue 10

Issue 11 came in two versions - one red and the other yellow. The cover was actually sticky likkable paper with perforations so the stickers could be individually put up wherever the reader wanted. It was not a pleasant experience for the toungue, especially when readers discovered rumours of extra content in the glue were unfounded

Issue 12 again featured a Marton Sharp cover and the format was a folded newspaper in the style pioneered by Rolling Stone in America - later copied by both Frendz and It in the UK

Issue 13 had another astonishing gold ink wraparound gatefold as seen on the previous page in full

Issue forteen's cover wasn't actually an advert but it might as well have been. The image is from the Door's seminal "Strange Days" album cover

Issue 15 was another cover by Martin Sharp and featured Mick Jagger against a background that merely hinted what was to follow in the next issue

Issue 16 was quite possible the most unique issue of Oz ever. Not only was this cover by Martin Sharp, but the whole magazine was given over the his visual experiment, "The Magic Theatre". Partly like a comic, partly graphic design forays and partly photo-montage there has never been anything quite like it since

Issue 17

Issue 18

Issue 19 may look a bit boring but the photo is actually of Germaine Greer and Viv Stanshall - prominent feminist and frontman for the Bonzo Dog DooDa Band respectively

Issue 20

Issue 21 was the only cover of Oz to feature a paid advertisment - this one for the then newly emerging Electra Records label

Issue 22 again featured a Marton Sharp cover but "Magic Theatre" it was not

Issue 23

Issue 24

Issue 25

Issue 26

Issue 27

Issue 28 - This was the famous Schoolkids Issue which landed the publishers in court. It wasn't the cover that did it, it was an inside comic strip featuring Rupert Bear and a penis he had hitherto be assumed not to possess!

Issue 29 was the Cunt Power issue - rather more assertive that the contributors would later exhibit when founding Spare Rib

Issue 30 looked at the so-called "hippe trail" to the east

Issue 31 was also available in three different colour variations

Issue 32

Issue 33 was also available to two different colour variations

Issue 34 was also available in two different colour variations

Issue 35

Issue 36 featured a fine, almost classical. depiction of the magazine's march to court

Issue 37 had only itself as a variant but had a completely different cover on the back so many people bough it twice. The other was "Angry Oz"

Issue 38

Issue 39

Issue 40

Issue 41

Issue 42

Issue 43

Issue 44

Issue 46 was arguably the final issue of the real Oz series - certainly the last with any real anarchic flavour

Issue 47. This was to have been the first of a new series of Oz largely under the helm of publisher Felix Dennis. Richard Neville had no returned to Australia from where he wrote a "letter from..." column. The relaunch didn't last

Issue 48 - the really really really very last final issue. This was more of a farewell party with no purpose save that

This is not a cover, but the rather famous "Plant A Flowerchild" poster from issue

For art detail, click a cover to load a larger version from Pooterland's server.
For more content details and cover printing variations: PRESS HERE for Weed Archives Server.
For Australian issues and selected inside contents: PRESS HERE for editor Richard Neville's own server.
To continue for background information and related links PRESS HERE for own own archive folder.
To read the full contents of each issue, PRESS HERE for Oz Reading Room.