Sewn in the Sweatshops of Marx

Regular price €28.50
20th century
A01=Thierry de Duve
aesthetic theory
aesthetics
andy warhol
archeology
art historian
artistic analysis
Author_Thierry de Duve
avant-garde
capital
Category=AGA
Category=QDTN
commodity
communist
creativity
criticism
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
exchange value
history
interpretation
joseph beuys
karl marx
labor
marcel duchamp
marxism
mass production
modernism
modernity
philosophy
political economy
politics
power dynamics
proletarians
socialism
socialist
sociology
working classes
yves klein

Product details

  • ISBN 9780226922386
  • Weight: 170g
  • Dimensions: 14 x 22mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Oct 2012
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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"Joseph Beuys", "Andy Warhol", "Yves Klein", and "Marcel Duchamp" form an unlikely quartet, but they each played a singular role in shaping a new avant-garde for the 1960s and beyond. Each of them staged brash, even shocking, events and produced works that challenged the way the mainstream art world operated and thought about itself. Distinguished philosopher Thierry de Duve binds these artists through another connection: the mapping of the aesthetic field onto political economy. Karl Marx provides the red thread tying together these four beautifully written essays in which de Duve treats each artist as a distinct, characteristic figure in that mapping. He sees in Beuys, who imagined a new economic system where creativity, not money, was the true capital, the incarnation of the last of the proletarians; he carries forward Warhol's desire to be a machine of mass production and draws the consequences for aesthetic theory; he calls Klein, who staked a claim on pictorial space as if it were a commodity, "the dead dealer"; and he reads "Duchamp" as the witty financier who holds the secret of artistic exchange value. Throughout, de Duve expresses his view that the mapping of the aesthetic field onto political economy is a phenomenon that should be seen as central to modernity in art. Even more, de Duve shows that Marx - though perhaps no longer the "Marxist" Marx of yore - can still help us resist the current disenchantment with modernity's many unmet promises. An intriguing look at these four influential artists, "Sewn in the Sweatshops of Marx" is an absorbing investigation into the many intertwined relationships between the economic and artistic realms.
Thierry de Duve is an art historian, critic, and curator. His publications in English include Kant after Duchamp and Clement Greenberg Between the Lines. Rosalind E. Krauss is University Professor in the Department of Art History and Archaeology at Columbia University.