'It may be time to forget the art world--or at least to recognize that a certain historical notion of the art world is in eclipse. Today, the art world spins on its axis so quickly that its maps can no longer be read; its borders blur. In Forgetting the Art World, Pamela Lee connects the current state of this world to globalization and its attendant controversies. Contemporary art has responded to globalization with images of movement and migration, borders and multitudes, but Lee looks beyond iconography to view globalization as a world process. Rather than think about the “global art world” as a socioeconomic phenomenon, or in terms of the imagery it stages and sponsors, Lee considers “the work of art’s world” as a medium through which globalization takes place. She argues that the work of art is itself both object and agent of globalization.
'Lee explores the ways that art actualizes, iterates, or enables the processes of globalization, offering close readings of works by artists who have come to prominence in the last two decades. She examines the “just in time” managerial ethos of Takahashi Murakami; the production of ethereal spaces in Andreas Gursky’s images of contemporary markets and manufacture; the logic of immanent cause dramatized in Thomas Hirschhorn’s mixed-media displays; and the “pseudo-collectivism” in the contemporary practice of the Atlas Group, the Raqs Media Collective, and others.
'To speak of “the work of art’s world,” Lee says, is to point to both the work of art’s mattering and its materialization, to understand the activity performed by the object as utterly continuous with the world it at once inhabits and creates.' (From publisher's website)
'Lee explores the ways that art actualizes, iterates, or enables the processes of globalization, offering close readings of works by artists who have come to prominence in the last two decades. She examines the “just in time” managerial ethos of Takahashi Murakami; the production of ethereal spaces in Andreas Gursky’s images of contemporary markets and manufacture; the logic of immanent cause dramatized in Thomas Hirschhorn’s mixed-media displays; and the “pseudo-collectivism” in the contemporary practice of the Atlas Group, the Raqs Media Collective, and others.
'To speak of “the work of art’s world,” Lee says, is to point to both the work of art’s mattering and its materialization, to understand the activity performed by the object as utterly continuous with the world it at once inhabits and creates.' (From publisher's website)
Access level
Onsite
artist
Bani ABIDI, 
CHU Yun, 儲雲, 
LIU Wei, 劉偉, 
Takashi MURAKAMI, 村上隆, 
Raqs Media Collective, 
author
publisher
Location code
REF.LEP2
Language
English
Keywords
globalisation,  Pakistan,  India,  China,  Japan
Publication/Creation date
2012
No of pages
248
ISBN / ISSN
9780262017732
No of copies
1
Content type
monograph
Chapter headings
Introduction: Forgetting the Art World
The World Is Flat/The End of the World: Takashi Murakami and the Aesthetics of Post-Fordism
Gursky's Ether
Perpetual Revolution: Thomas Hirschhorn's Sense of the World
On Pseudo-Collectivism: or, How to Be a Collective in the Age of the Consumer Sovereign
Conclusion: Numbers
Forgetting the Art World

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