Antagonism and Relational Aesthetics
TL;DR: The Palais de Tokyo as mentioned in this paper is a museum dedicated to the World's Fair of 1937, where the former Japanese pavilion was converted into a site for contemporary creation, and most of the money was used to reinforce (rather than renovate) the existing structure.
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Abstract: On the occasion of its opening in 2002, the Palais de Tokyo immediately struck the visitor as different from other contemporary art venues that had recently opened in Europe. Although a budget of 4.75 million euros was spent on converting the former Japanese pavilion for the 1937 World’s Fair into a “site for contemporary creation,” most of this money had been used to reinforce (rather than renovate) the existing structure.1 Instead of clean white walls, discreetly installed lighting, and wooden floors, the interior was left bare and unfinished. This decision was important, as it reflected a key aspect of the venue’s curatorial ethos under its codirectorship by Jerome Sans, an art critic and curator, and Nicolas Bourriaud, former curator at CAPC Bordeaux and editor of the journal Documents sur l’art. The Palais de Tokyo’s improvised relationship to its surroundings has subsequently become paradigmatic of a visible tendency among European art venues to reconceptualize the “white cube” model of displaying contemporary art as a studio or experimental “laboratory.”2 It is therefore in the tradition of what
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Citations
‘I am Tower of Hamlets’: enchanted encounters and the limit to art’s connectivity
TL;DR: In this paper, a geographical investigation into the type of encounters and relations created by the Tower of Hamlets artwork is presented, which suggests that while enchanted, meaningful encounters did occur between participants and the sculpture, these occurred within a pre-existing art community, something which compounded problematic class boundaries.
Social Labor and Communicative Action
01 Dec 2023
TL;DR: Social labor and communicative action provide a framework for understanding the aesthetic qualities of engaged art and its transformative potential. The act of resistance has the capacity to transform the consciousness of the agents of resistance and lead to the development of alternative social forms.
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