Preface/Introduction/ 1. Reimaging, Reimagining, or Reimagineering: Rebranding Ulster, Sarah Feinstein and Sheelagh Colclough/ 2. Art, Activism, and Addressing Sexual Assault in the UK: A Case Study, Winnie M Li/ 3. Macao before and beyond social media: the creation of the unexpected as a mobilisation logic, Alberto Cossu and Maria Francesca Murru/ 4. The Political Value of Techno-future, Emanuele Braga/ 5. Changing the Narrative: Highlighting Workers’ Rights in Environmental Art Activism, Paula Serafini/ 6. Working Dancers; contemporary dance activism in Argentina, Konstantina Bousmpoura and Julia Martinez Heimann/ 7. Making Art Relevant in the Aftermath of the Egyptian Uprising, Rounwah Bseiso/ 8. Collective art-making to agitate for social change: Liberate Tate in parallel with The Wooster Group, Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp, Forced Entertainment, La Pocha Nostra, Climate Camp and Occupy Wall Street, Mel Evans/ 9. Embracing failure, educating hope: some arts activist educators' concerns in their work for social justice, Jane Trowell/ 10. In Case of Emergency Make Art: Exploring the (non)function of art in response to humanitarian disasters, Jessica Holtaway/ 11. Post- Autonomous Art and Common People in Barcelona, Roger Sansi/ Conclusion: Art, Labour and Activism, Notes for Future Research, Alberto Cossu, Jessica Holtaway and Paula Serafini/ Acknowledgements/ Index
Alberto Cossu is a Lecturer in New Media and Digital Culture in the
Department of Media Studies at the University of
Amsterdam.
Jessica Holtaway is a PhD candidate in the Department of Visual
Cultures at Goldsmiths College, University of London.
Paula Serafini is a Research Associate at CAMEo Research Institute
for Cultural and Media Economies, University of Leicester.
artWORK: Art, Labour and Activism represents an important
contribution to emerging debates about contemporary socially
engaged art produced in the wake of new forms of global protest and
resistance over the past decade. It will do much to further advance
this debate, especially through it’s close attention to the complex
imbrication of art practice and social movements across a range of
geo-political contexts, from Argentina to Spain to Egypt to the UK
and beyond.
*Grant Kester, Professor of Art History at the University of
California, San Diego*
Assembling an encyclopedia-sized volume of writings by over a dozen
sharp-minded thinkers and practitioners, Serafini, Cossu and
Holtaway provide us with a timely book about 21st century socially
engaged culture: a rapidly evolving field combining art, activism,
education and alternative community organizing that refuses to be
contained within museums, academies and other institutional spaces
as it confronts our tumultuous political era with a abundance of
imagination, ideas and hope.
*Gregory Sholette, Assistant Professor of Sculpture and Social
Practice at Queens College Art Department, The City University of
New York*
In artWORK, “WORK” is a verb: it encompasses the making of art
as labor, political organizing around labor issues, and the
efficacy and appeal of activist art. Art works. Offering
readers a thick description of the art of contemporary, multi-sited
social movements, and incorporating the insights of practitioners
and scholars (and scholar-practitioners), the editors have crafted
a conversation about art and activism that is thoughtful, critical,
practical, and deeply urgent all at once.
*Rebecca Zorach, Mary Jane Crowe Professor of Art and Art History
at Northwestern University*
Brecht and Weill famously asked 'What keeps mankind alive' in song
form. This important and timely collection asks what keeps artists
and cultural workers alive today, when confronted with conditions
of increasing precarity. Essential reading for building a new art
workers' coalition.
*Stevphen Shukaitis, Senior Lecturer in Culture and Organization at
the University of Essex and author of The Composition of Movements
to Come*
artWORK: Art, Labour, and Activism is an ambitious and successful
project and an enriching read for the way it highlights the
generative capability of art/artists as cultural producers that are
part and parcel with, rather than separate from, broader
socio-spatial activist struggles. The enthusiasm and spark of the
contributors, many of whom are freshly inspired/informed by
empirical research, comes off the pages and imbues the reader with
a sense of possibility and optimism in otherwise fairly dark and
perilous times.
*Antipode: A Radical Journal of Geography*
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