Seminar with Gregory Sholette

The boundaries of the artistic sphere

PAD/D: Political Art Documentation & Distribution, 1980-1988
PAD/D: Political Art Documentation & Distribution, 1980-1988
Date and time

Held on 14 jun 2011

In this two-day seminar Gregory Sholette takes a look at some of the most salient issues in the theory and practice of recent artistic activity against general assumptions. First of all, what is the true orientation of the return, so visible in recent years, to collectivism in the public sphere? Present both in corporations and in art pedagogy, does it respond to a notion of political class or, on the other hand, is it imitating a new enterprise culture? Secondly, the collective intelligence of Internet has brought about an imbalance in the hierarchies existing between the world of art and “dark matter”, those artists who are invisible to critics and institutions, according to Sholette, and who now occupy alternative spaces in which to express their opinion and engage in representation. What is the relationship between the art institution and “dark matter”, which is becoming increasingly public?

Program

First Session

  • From Radical Solidarity to “Whatever” Collectivism: Some Thoughts on Political Art and the Rise of Post-Fordist Enterprise Culture

    Date: June 14, 2011
    Place: Nouvel Building, Study Centre
    Time: 6:00 p.m.

    The desire to speak in a collective voice has long fueled social imagination and artistic production. Before World War II, artists understood collectivization as an expression of the promise or failure of industrial and political modernity conceived as a mass phenomenon. There is a return to another collectivism. Brash, youthful, and disarmingly lighthearted, this “whatever” collectivism blends visual art, politics, fashion, music, and mimetic forms of casual organization. It produces a group working environment closer to the large communities generated by social networking platforms than to older notions of class or political solidarity arising from labor or the Left.

Second Session

  • “Dark Matter”: Art and Politics in the Age of Enterprise Culture

    Date: June 15, 2011
    Place: Nouvel Building, Study Centre
    Time: 6:00 p.m.

    Art is big business, writes G. Sholette, with some artists commanding enormous sums for their works based on demand for scarcity, while the vast majority are ignored by critics. Yet these marginalized artists, this dark matter , is paradoxically essential for the survival of the mainstream art world. The dark matter is beginning to shine. Like a crypt or a ruptured archive, this once-blocked social production is now impossible to ignore, celebrating its own excesses and redundancies, generating powerful and unpredictable consequences for all, the art world and its margins alike.

    Introduced and moderated by Jesús Carrillo, head of Cultural Programs at Museo Reina Sofía.

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