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Death of the Artist
Art World Dissidents and Their Alternative Identities
Death of the Artist
Art World Dissidents and Their Alternative Identities
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Description
There exists a series of contemporary artists who continually defy the traditional role of the artist/author, including Art & Language, Guerrilla Girls, Bob and Roberta Smith, Marvin Gaye Chetwynd and Lucky PDF. In Death of the Artist, Nicola McCartney explores their work and uses previously unpublished interviews to provoke a vital and nuanced discussion about contemporary artistic authorship. How do emerging artists navigate intellectual property or work collectively and share the recognition? How might a pseudonym aid 'artivism'? Most strikingly, she demonstrates how an alternative identity can challenge the art market and is symptomatic of greater cultural and political rebellion. As such, this book exposes the art world's financially incentivised infrastructures, but also examines how they might be reshaped from within. In an age of cuts to arts funding and forced self-promotion, this offers an important analysis of the pressing need for the artistic community to construct new ways to reinvent itself and incite fresh responses to its work.
Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
1. Parodies of the Self: Surrealism and Ambivalent Authorship in 'Rrose Selavy' and 'Claude Cahun'
2. Collective Practice: Art & Language and LuckyPDF
Interview: Socio-Art & The Art of Interaction: James Early of LuckyPDF
Interviewed by Nicola McCartney on 9 May 2013
3. Anonymity and Feminism: Guerrilla Girls
Interview: Feminist Avengers: Guerrilla Girls
Interviewed by Nicola McCartney on 14 August 2013
4. Pseudonyms: Bob and Roberta Smith
Interview: Art Mythologies: Bob and Roberta Smith
Interviewed by Nicola McCartney on 18 February 2013
5. Performance and Collaboration: 'No, I'm Spartacus'. . . Chetwynd!
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Product details
Published | 30 Jul 2018 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 312 |
ISBN | 9781786724724 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Visual Arts |
Illustrations | 19 bw illus |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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This book is a fine contribution to the study of modern art and artists and will help us to understand the practice and significance of alternative identities, pseudonyms and collective identity.
Art Daily
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'Nicola McCartney is part of a new generation of thinkers about art. Art now is more playful and indiscreet than it has ever been but it also aspires to talk to a political world that is both frightening but also where there is a possibility to reach new audiences. The idea of the artist in this new space is changing. In this book McCartney charts the careers of artists who question the role of the artist and who seek to subvert the notion that art is produced only by artists. McCartney asks: who do these artists think they are?'
Bob and Roberta Smith
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'Nicola McCartney gets it: anonymous groups subvert the Western convention of the artist as a lone genius (usually a white male).'
Guerrilla Girls
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'Nicola McCartney offers us a fresh and incisive analysis of moments in modern and contemporary art in which pseudonyms, anonymity, and collective identities are put to use. In doing so, McCartney interrogates the foundations of traditional art history and the art market. Death of the Artist is an important and exciting new contribution to our understanding of art's political efficacy.'
Joanne Morra, Reader in Art History and Theory, Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London

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