Description

Book Synopsis
The conceptual artist Liam Gillick writes a genealogy of contemporary art, arguing that we need to appreciate its engagement with history. He takes a broad view of artistic creation from 1820 to today, underscoring the industry and intelligence of artists as they have responded to incremental developments in science, politics, and technology.

Trade Review
In prose at once forthright and oblique, Liam Gillick attempts to extricate himself-and us, his readers-from the enveloping protoplasm known as 'contemporary art.' At the core of this book is a compelling alternative genealogy for our current condition, traced across four soft revolutions from 1820 to 1974. What that genealogy cumulatively reveals is a provocative diagnosis of the present as interminable: an entropic horizon against which artists and curators deploy their 'evasive markers.' With Industry and Intelligence, Gillick proves himself the most lucid inheritor of conceptualism's artist-writers, truly a latter-day Robert Smithson or Dan Graham. -- Tom McDonough, Binghamton University, author of The Situationists and the City: A Reader Read Gillick's book to find the packed sediment of conceptual art discourse undergoing metamorphic transformation-with the marketized artworld's slow heat, dull pressure, and surface torque leaving inevitable traces on an intelligent maker's mind. -- Caroline A. Jones Critical Inquiry Forceful, persuasive and provocative, while Industry and Intelligence will no doubt find purchase as a set text in universities for those studying art history or curatorial studies, it would seem its most urgent readership should be artists themselves, whose struggle has been, and continues to be, one of finding a way to avoid being subsumed completely by the logic of the market: to escape the trap, as Gillick has it, of the 'capitalisation of the mind'. -- Adam Pugh Art Monthly

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Introduction: Creative Disruption in the Age of Soft Revolutions 1. Contemporary Art Does Not Account for That Which Is Taking Place 2. Projection and Parallelism 3. Art as a Pile: Split and Fragmented Simultaneously 4. 1820: Erasmus and Upheaval 5. ASAP Futures, Not Infinite Future 6. 1948: B. F. Skinner and Counter-Revolution 7. Abstract 8. 1963: Herman Kahn and Projection 9. The Complete Curator 10. Maybe It Would Be Better If We Worked in Groups of Three? 11. The Return of the Border 12. 1974: Volvo and the Mise-en-Scene 13. The Experimental Factory 14. Nostalgia for the Group 15. Why Work? Notes Index

Industry and Intelligence

    Product form

    £18.70

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £22.00 – you save £3.30 (15%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Mon 6 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Liam Gillick

    2 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Industry and Intelligence by Liam Gillick

      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 16/01/2018
      ISBN13: 9780231170215, 978-0231170215
      ISBN10: 0231170211

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The conceptual artist Liam Gillick writes a genealogy of contemporary art, arguing that we need to appreciate its engagement with history. He takes a broad view of artistic creation from 1820 to today, underscoring the industry and intelligence of artists as they have responded to incremental developments in science, politics, and technology.

      Trade Review
      In prose at once forthright and oblique, Liam Gillick attempts to extricate himself-and us, his readers-from the enveloping protoplasm known as 'contemporary art.' At the core of this book is a compelling alternative genealogy for our current condition, traced across four soft revolutions from 1820 to 1974. What that genealogy cumulatively reveals is a provocative diagnosis of the present as interminable: an entropic horizon against which artists and curators deploy their 'evasive markers.' With Industry and Intelligence, Gillick proves himself the most lucid inheritor of conceptualism's artist-writers, truly a latter-day Robert Smithson or Dan Graham. -- Tom McDonough, Binghamton University, author of The Situationists and the City: A Reader Read Gillick's book to find the packed sediment of conceptual art discourse undergoing metamorphic transformation-with the marketized artworld's slow heat, dull pressure, and surface torque leaving inevitable traces on an intelligent maker's mind. -- Caroline A. Jones Critical Inquiry Forceful, persuasive and provocative, while Industry and Intelligence will no doubt find purchase as a set text in universities for those studying art history or curatorial studies, it would seem its most urgent readership should be artists themselves, whose struggle has been, and continues to be, one of finding a way to avoid being subsumed completely by the logic of the market: to escape the trap, as Gillick has it, of the 'capitalisation of the mind'. -- Adam Pugh Art Monthly

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Introduction: Creative Disruption in the Age of Soft Revolutions 1. Contemporary Art Does Not Account for That Which Is Taking Place 2. Projection and Parallelism 3. Art as a Pile: Split and Fragmented Simultaneously 4. 1820: Erasmus and Upheaval 5. ASAP Futures, Not Infinite Future 6. 1948: B. F. Skinner and Counter-Revolution 7. Abstract 8. 1963: Herman Kahn and Projection 9. The Complete Curator 10. Maybe It Would Be Better If We Worked in Groups of Three? 11. The Return of the Border 12. 1974: Volvo and the Mise-en-Scene 13. The Experimental Factory 14. Nostalgia for the Group 15. Why Work? Notes Index

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account