Passion without Objects. Young Graduates and the Politics of Temporary Art Spaces

This paper addresses the position of young arts graduates seeking to respond to the unequal access and precarity of jobs in the cultural sector by establishing artist-led temporary spaces. With the increasing dissemination of the discourse of pop-up urban uses in the United Kingdom since 2008, forme...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mara Ferreri, Valeria Graziano
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Université Catholique de Louvain 2014-12-01
Series:Recherches Sociologiques et Anthropologiques
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/rsa/1271
Description
Summary:This paper addresses the position of young arts graduates seeking to respond to the unequal access and precarity of jobs in the cultural sector by establishing artist-led temporary spaces. With the increasing dissemination of the discourse of pop-up urban uses in the United Kingdom since 2008, former genealogies of autonomous self-organised spaces intersect with the urban agendas of public commissioners and private actors. Following a long-established critique of the “creative industries” and recent studies of working conditions in the sector, this paper brings together critical textual analysis of specialized press and policy documents and a series of in-depth interviews with a young arts graduate collective involved in setting up a pop-up space in London. Our research shows how in the context of low-budget public commissions in affluent areas of central London artists are encouraged to translate their passion for autonomous, self-organised practice into dominant discourses of artistic “community provision” and place marketing.
ISSN:1782-1592
2033-7485