Description

Book Synopsis
Shows that the elite of the art world are sustained by new forms and styles created by artists outside the mainstream.

Trade Review
'With great verve and urgency, Gregory Sholette explores the economics of contemporary art production in an era of neoliberalism, and outlines the promises and pitfalls of various tactics of resistance. Dark Matter is a salient call-to-arms to all cultural labourers.' -- Julia Bryan-Wilson, author of Art Workers: Radical Practice in the Vietnam War Era
'The ultimate companion to contemporary activist art. In his exquisite and theoretically informed style Gregory Sholette investigates the problematic functions of art practices in the processes of neoliberal appropriation, but above all the wild, explosive and deterritorialising lines that are drawn in the dark matter between art and politics' -- Gerald Raunig is a philosopher and art theorist who lives in Vienna, Austria. He is the author of Art and Revolution
'Masterfully illuminates the configurations, ideas, and behaviours of collectives dedicated to cultural resistance. Dark Matter is essential reading for anyone concerned with the fate of the avant-garde and the emergence of new possibilities in cultural production that suggest and create alternatives to global capitalism' -- Critical Art Ensemble
'As both active participant and witness Greg Sholette sheds a welcome and overdue light on the dark matter of the so-called art world' -- Hans Haacke, artist
'Focusing primarily on the anti-institutional, collective and politically critical artists that often willingly reject the light of the mainstream galleries and academies, Sholette both highlights a vast array of important contributors to art of the last decade and also challenges the ahistorical assumptions that ground the capitalist art market.' -- Paul B. Jaskot, Professor of Art History at DePaul University
'An important and necessary intervention. Dark Matter is well placed to shift the debate on art's utility back within the domain of labour and value, where it has long been missing' -- Professor John Roberts, University of Wolverhampton

Table of Contents
Exordium: An Accidental Remainder
Introduction: The Missing Mass
1. Art, Politics, Dark Matter: Nine Prologues
2. The Grin of the Archive
3. History That Disturbs the Present
4. Temporary Services
6. The Unnamable
7. Mockstitutions
8. Conclusions: Nights of Amateurs
Notes
Bibliography
Appendix: Artists’ Groups Survey 2008
Index

Dark Matter Art And Politics In The Age Of

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A Hardback by Gregory Sholette

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Dark Matter Art And Politics In The Age Of by Gregory Sholette

    Publisher: Pluto Press
    Publication Date: 05/11/2010
    ISBN13: 9780745327532, 978-0745327532
    ISBN10: 0745327532

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Shows that the elite of the art world are sustained by new forms and styles created by artists outside the mainstream.

    Trade Review
    'With great verve and urgency, Gregory Sholette explores the economics of contemporary art production in an era of neoliberalism, and outlines the promises and pitfalls of various tactics of resistance. Dark Matter is a salient call-to-arms to all cultural labourers.' -- Julia Bryan-Wilson, author of Art Workers: Radical Practice in the Vietnam War Era
    'The ultimate companion to contemporary activist art. In his exquisite and theoretically informed style Gregory Sholette investigates the problematic functions of art practices in the processes of neoliberal appropriation, but above all the wild, explosive and deterritorialising lines that are drawn in the dark matter between art and politics' -- Gerald Raunig is a philosopher and art theorist who lives in Vienna, Austria. He is the author of Art and Revolution
    'Masterfully illuminates the configurations, ideas, and behaviours of collectives dedicated to cultural resistance. Dark Matter is essential reading for anyone concerned with the fate of the avant-garde and the emergence of new possibilities in cultural production that suggest and create alternatives to global capitalism' -- Critical Art Ensemble
    'As both active participant and witness Greg Sholette sheds a welcome and overdue light on the dark matter of the so-called art world' -- Hans Haacke, artist
    'Focusing primarily on the anti-institutional, collective and politically critical artists that often willingly reject the light of the mainstream galleries and academies, Sholette both highlights a vast array of important contributors to art of the last decade and also challenges the ahistorical assumptions that ground the capitalist art market.' -- Paul B. Jaskot, Professor of Art History at DePaul University
    'An important and necessary intervention. Dark Matter is well placed to shift the debate on art's utility back within the domain of labour and value, where it has long been missing' -- Professor John Roberts, University of Wolverhampton

    Table of Contents
    Exordium: An Accidental Remainder
    Introduction: The Missing Mass
    1. Art, Politics, Dark Matter: Nine Prologues
    2. The Grin of the Archive
    3. History That Disturbs the Present
    4. Temporary Services
    6. The Unnamable
    7. Mockstitutions
    8. Conclusions: Nights of Amateurs
    Notes
    Bibliography
    Appendix: Artists’ Groups Survey 2008
    Index

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