Published today: "Artivism: The Battle for Museums in the Era of Postmodernism"
This new book exposes how artivism (activism through art) is anti-majority action by the managerial elite.
I am delighted to announce the publication of Artivism: The Battle for Museums in the Era of Postmodernism. Here are the details:
"From Banksy to Extinction Rebellion, artivism (activism through art) is the art of our era. From international biennale to newspaper pages, artivism is everywhere. Both inside museums and on the streets, global artivism spreads political messages and raises social issues, capturing attention with shocking protests and weird stunts. Yet, is this fusion of art and activism all it seems? Are artivist messages as subversive and anti-authoritarian we assume they are? How has the art trade commodified protest and how have activists parasitised art venues? Is artivism actually an arm of the establishment?
"Using artist statements, theoretical writings, statistical data, historical analysis and insider testimony, British art critic Alexander Adams examines the origins, aims and spread of artivism. He uncovers troubling ethical infractions within public organisations and a culture of complacent self-congratulation in the arts. His findings suggest the perception of artivism – the most influential art practice of the twenty-first century – as a grassroots humanitarian movement could not be more misleading. Adams concludes that artivism erodes the principles underpinning museums, putting their existence at risk."
Alexander Adams, Artivism: The Battle for Museums in the Era of Postmodernism, Imprint Academic, 2 August 2022, 210pp, paperback, mono illus., £14.95, Kindle version available
Available worldwide from bookshops, bookselling websites and the publisher here: http://books.imprint.co.uk/book/?gcoi=71157100177520
I do have a few copies available for sale and signature.
I've been waiting for this one! Just ordered my copy.
I'll check out your book. Modernists are only interested in things that affect them personally: their property values, children (most of the time) and personal health/safety. Images, gestures and sounds in time are all tools they use to gain and maintain power. Reason and gods mean nothing to them. Their desire for diversitopia is a kind of sublimation of the impulse for heaven or Elysian fields. They're not really serious, of course, because they're trapped in this world and cannot experience parousia, or an opening up to the divine.