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[ecrea] Crafting Values: Art and its Economies/ Symposium, January 23, 2015, University of Edinburgh
Thu Jan 08 21:08:55 GMT 2015
Symposium
Crafting Values: Art and its Economies
January 23, 2015/ School of Art, Edinburgh College of Art, University of
Edinburgh (Hunter Lecture Theatre)
with Hans Abbing, Evangelos Chrysagis, The Confraternity of
Neoflaggelants (Norman James Hogg and Neil Mulholland), Angela
McClanahan, Georgios Papadopoulos, Stevphen Shukaitis, Marina Vishmidt,
Panos Kompatsiaris (organizer)
Taking its cue from debates surrounding the contested character of value
in artistic production, this one-day symposium presents an
interdisciplinary take on the issue by bringing together scholarship
from the fields of anthropology, art and critical theory, Marxism and
economics. Some of the areas that the participants will address include
the following:
Aesthetic value and processes of urban regeneration
Speculation and art production
Ethical values and economies of affect
Emotional labour, entrepreneurialism and self-precarization
Technologies of value and digital media
Neo-medievalism and hyper-economies
For more information please visit https://craftingvalues.wordpress.com/
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Summary
Crafting Values: Art and its Economies
In one of its recent news reports, the Canadian radio show ‘This Is
That’, a program dedicated to fabricating issues on current affairs,
released a pseudo-documentary titled ‘New York artist creates art that
is invisible and collectors are paying millions’, according to which a
27-year old artist creates ‘invisible art’, an art that is meant to
solely exist in the creator’s imagination rather than assume some
tangible form. On the night of the opening, as the pseudo-report
describes, the ‘who-is-who’ of the art world ended up looking at ‘blank
walls’ as the works were physically present solely through the brain
processes of the artist and audience.
The on-going disassociation of art from handcraft technique and its
reliance on public relations invokes a wider problematic related to the
art object, its proclaimed immateriality and adjacent value regimes
within capitalism. In recent critical art theory, the concept of value
is often framed through the perspective of (neo) Marxist political
economy, where the valorization of artistic labour is regarded as a
typical example of the turn to immaterial production, and/ or through
anthropological approaches that are more attentive to the everyday
practices through which objects, symbols and forms are invested with
desire and social usefulness. On the one hand, value, in the
anthropological sense, rather than being universal, is fragile, shifting
and potentially contested, having to do with the ways that specific
social arrangements conceptualise the world and its phenomena. Here,
value is understood as an outcome of emotional investments, shared
beliefs and relations of trust between members of societies, networks or
communities. However, the idea of value as a social construct risks
overlooking the processes through which value assumes a specific
‘value-form’ under capitalist relations of production, manifested for
instance in the capitalist-specific need of workers to valorize their
products and services or entrepreneurially develop themselves as brands
within a competitive and ever-expanding marketplace. In addition to
this, the recent turn to the ontology of the object in continental
theory poses new challenges to the idea of value as social construction
by bringing to the fore questions of substance, materiality and efficacy
in relation to processes of value-formation.
This one-day symposium seeks to bring together such perspectives and
voices from social and cultural theory, as well as assess wider
questions of value formation in respect to art and its economies.
Panos Kompatsiaris
Ph.D. candidate in Visual and Cultural Studies
Edinburgh College of Art
University of Edinburgh
71 South Clerk St., 3F3
EH8 9PP, Edinburgh
Tel: 01314680628
Mob: (0044) 7733236836
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