Aesthetics of the Margins / The Margins of Aesthetics: Wild Art Explained
English
By (author): David Carrier Joachim Pissarro
Wild Art refers to work that exists outside the established, rarified world of art galleries and cultural channels. It encompasses uncatalogued, uncommodified art not often recognized as such, from graffiti to performance, self-adornment, and beyond. Picking up from their breakthrough book on the subject, Wild Art, David Carrier and Joachim Pissarro here delve into the ideas driving these forms of art, inquire how it came to be marginalized, and advocate for a definition of taste, one in which each expression is acknowledged as being different while deserving equal merit.
Arguing that both the art world and wild art have the same capacity to produce aesthetic joy, Carrier and Pissarro contend that watching skateboarders perform Christ Air, for example, produces the same sublime experience in one audience that another enjoys while taking in a ballet; therefore, both mediums deserve careful reconsideration. In making their case, the two provide a history of the institutionalization of taste in Western thought, point to missed opportunities for its democratization in the past, and demonstrate how the recognition and acceptance of wild art in the present will radically transform our understanding of contemporary visual art in the future.
Provocative and optimistic, Aesthetics of the Margins / The Margins of Aesthetics rejects the concept of kitsch and the high/low art binary, ultimately challenging the art world to become a larger and more inclusive place.
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