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Ornament and Order - Graffiti, Street Art and the Parergon (Hardcover, New Ed)
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Ornament and Order - Graffiti, Street Art and the Parergon (Hardcover, New Ed)
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Over the last forty years, graffiti and street-art have become a
global phenomenon within the visual arts. Whilst they have
increasingly been taken seriously by the art establishment (or
perhaps the art market), their academic and popular examination
still remains within old debates which argue over whether these
acts are vandalism or art, and which examine the role of graffiti
in gang culture and in terms of visual pollution. Based on an
in-depth ethnographic study working with some of the world's most
influential Independent Public Artists, this book takes a
completely new approach. Placing these illicit aesthetic practices
within a broader historical, political, and aesthetic context, it
argues that they are in fact both intrinsically ornamental (working
within a classic architectonic framework), as well as innately
ordered (within a highly ritualized, performative structure).
Rather than disharmonic, destructive forms, rather than ones solely
working within the dynamics of the market, these insurgent images
are seen to reface rather than deface the city, operating within a
modality of contemporary civic ritual. The book is divided into two
main sections, Ornament and Order. Ornament focuses upon the
physical artifacts themselves, the various meanings these public
artists ascribe to their images as well as the tensions and
communicative schemata emerging out of their material form. Using
two very different understandings of political action, it places
these illicit icons within the wider theoretical debate over the
public sphere that they materially re-present. Order is focused
more closely on the ephemeral trace of these spatial acts, the
explicitly performative, practice-based elements of their aesthetic
production. Exploring thematics such as carnival and play, risk and
creativity, it tracks how the very residue of this cultural
production structures and shapes the socio-ethico guidelines of
these artists' lifeworlds.
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