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Contemporary art has never been so popular - but the art world is
changing. In a landscape of increasing globalization there is
growing interest in questions over the nature of contemporary art
today, and the identity of who is controlling its future. In the
midst of this, contemporary art continues to be a realm of freedom
where artists shock, break taboos, flout generally received ideas,
and switch between confronting viewers with works of great
emotional profundity and jaw-dropping triviality. In this Very
Short Introduction Julian Stallabrass gives a clear view on the
diverse and rapidly moving scene of contemporary art. Exploring
art's striking globalisation from the 1990s onwards, he analyses
how new regions and nations, such as China, have leapt into
astonishing prominence, over-turning the old Euro-American
dominance on aesthetics. Showing how contemporary art has drawn
closer to fashion and the luxury goods market as artists have
become accomplished marketers of their work, Stallabrass discusses
the reinvention of artists as brands. This new edition also
considers how once powerful art criticism has mutated into a
critical and performative writing at which many artists excel.
Above all, behind the insistent rhetoric of freedom and ambiguity
in art, Stallabrass explores how big business and the super-rich
have replaced the state as the primary movers of the contemporary
art scene, especially since the financial crisis, and become a
powerful new influence over the art world. ABOUT THE SERIES: The
Very Short Introductions series from Oxford University Press
contains hundreds of titles in almost every subject area. These
pocket-sized books are the perfect way to get ahead in a new
subject quickly. Our expert authors combine facts, analysis,
perspective, new ideas, and enthusiasm to make interesting and
challenging topics highly readable.
Rabelais's tale the giant prince Gargantua is a vast and
inescapable cluster of qualities and activities; his violence,
greed and incontinence are incomparable. In the old giant's size,
ubiquity, gluttony, vast knowledge and warlike nature, we can
recognize qualities of our contemporary culture. In this brilliant
polemic on our visual mass culture, Stallabrass argues that
culture's status as a commodity is the most important thing about
it, affecting its form, its relation to the viewer and its
ideology. The great diversity of choice masks the extent to which
this choice is managed by an ever-shrinking number of powerful
owners. Stallabrass shows how the consistent and unifying
capitalist ideology of mass culture leads to an increasingly
homogeneous identity among its consumers. Even in marginal and
radical cultural activities, like graffiti writing, can be found
the tyranny of the brand name and the reduction of the individual
to a cipher. Starting with an analysis of subjects which concern
specific groups-amateur photography, computer games and
cyberspace-Stallabrass works out to wider aspects of the culture
which affect everybody, including cars, shopping and television.
Gargantua raises profound questions about the nature and direction
of mass culture. It also raises a challenge to the postmodern
theorists' adherence to subjectivity, indeterminacy and political
indifference. If manufactured subjectivities are always shot
through with the objective, then their plurality may not be merely
a colourful but meaningless postmodern smorgasbord, but rather the
accurate reflection of our current cultural situation, and a map
showing paths beyond it.
Contemporary art has never been so popular - but what is
'contemporary' about contemporary art? What is its role today, and
who is controlling its future? Bloody toy soldiers, gilded shopping
carts, and embroidered tents. Contemporary art is supposed to be a
realm of freedom where artists shock, break taboos, flout generally
received ideas, and switch between confronting viewers with works
of great emotional profundity and jaw-dropping triviality. But away
from shock tactics in the gallery, there are many unanswered
questions. Who is really running the art world? What effect has
America's growing political and cultural dominance had on art?
Julian Stallabrass takes us inside the international art world to
answer these and other controversial questions, and to argue that
behind contemporary art's variety and apparent unpredictability
lies a grim uniformity. Its mysteries are all too easily explained,
its depths much shallower than they seem. Contemporary art seeks to
bamboozle its viewers while being the willing slave of business and
government. This book is your antidote and will change the way you
see contemporary art. ABOUT THE SERIES: The Very Short
Introductions series from Oxford University Press contains hundreds
of titles in almost every subject area. These pocket-sized books
are the perfect way to get ahead in a new subject quickly. Our
expert authors combine facts, analysis, perspective, new ideas, and
enthusiasm to make interesting and challenging topics highly
readable.
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