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The artist, [[Ralph Rumney]] (1934-2002), who had known many of the original Parisian leaders, participated in one of the groups derived in London in 1995. He is credited with bringing the activities of the workshop to a wider audience. The workshop appears to have disbanded shortly after the release of the fourth and final issue of its journal ''Viscosity''. The journal is now infamous for having been selected by the [[K Foundation]] to announce their 23-year ban on all artistic practices.
British cultural commentator and activist, Stewart Home became a champion of their unrestrained adventurism, including excerpts from the journal and an alluring taste of the type of works undertaken. These were present in a series of edited collections published by Serpent's Tail.
"The Joker, the
==History==
{{More citations needed section|date=March 2021}}
During its 2-year 'Psychogeographical Survey of Glasgow' (1992–1994), the group concentrated on refining the interplay between the [[Lettrism|Letterist]] (and later [[Situationist International|Situationist]]) techniques of derived and constructed situations. The outcome, described in the essay "Programmed and
Artist [[Ralph Rumney]] (1934–2002) is credited with bringing the workshop's activities to a wider audience. He was acquainted with many of the original Parisian Letterists and participated in one of the group's ''dérives'' in London in 1995. It was assumed that WNLA had disbanded shortly after releasing the fourth and final issue of its journal ''Viscosity'' (now infamous for being selected by the K Foundation to announce its 23-year moratorium on all artistic practice). However, the journal suggests that the moratorium applied to the K Foundation and WNLA itself, with the group committing to stop mediating their activities entirely until 2018.
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