Your Everyday Art World
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- ¥2,600
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- ¥2,600
発行者による作品情報
A critic takes issue with the art world's romanticizing of networks and participatory projects, linking them to the values of a globalized, neoliberal economy.
Over the past twenty years, the network has come to dominate the art world, affecting not just interaction among art professionals but the very makeup of the art object itself. The hierarchical and restrictive structure of the museum has been replaced by temporary projects scattered across the globe, staffed by free agents hired on short-term contracts, viewed by spectators defined by their predisposition to participate and make connections. In this book, Lane Relyea tries to make sense of these changes, describing a general organizational shift in the art world that affects not only material infrastructures but also conceptual categories and the construction of meaning.
Examining art practice, exhibition strategies, art criticism, and graduate education, Relyea aligns the transformation of the art world with the advent of globalization and the neoliberal economy. He analyzes the new networked, participatory art world—hailed by some as inherently democratic—in terms of the pressures of part-time temp work in a service economy, the calculated stockpiling of business contacts, and the anxious duty of being a “team player” at work. Relyea calls attention to certain networked forms of art—including relational aesthetics, multiple or fictive artist identities, and bricolaged objects—that can be seen to oppose the values of neoliberalism rather than romanticizing and idealizing them. Relyea offers a powerful answer to the claim that the interlocking functions of the network—each act of communicating, of connecting, or practice—are without political content.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Looking broadly at network structures within the contemporary art world, Relyea offers a discerning assessment of how art practices have evolved alongside changing global markets, economies, and infrastructures. Relyea charts the shift from museums to platforms, from a select few art cities to a transnational and peripatetic art world, keeping an eye as closely on market structures and business theory as on the practices and material objects of the artists. This charting, while dense with theory, still manages to move with ease between all of Relyea's sources. Rather than striking out against neoliberalism or praising the inclusivity of a global art world, the text builds a nuanced appraisal in which the creative connections of the university system and bricolage sculptures (among many other contemporary turns) all gesture toward opportunities to "persevere in the face of our present-day onslaught of catastrophes as usual." That Relyea manages to build this examination from a wide lens, taking such a sweeping range of information and artists into account, pushes what could be a topic of limited interest into the realm of compelling theory, provocative while resisting any easy conclusions and ultimately finding insights that extend beyond the world of contemporary art. B&w illus.