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Community art : an anthropological perspective / Kate Crehan.

Fine Arts Library N72.A76 C74 2011
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Crehan, Kate A. F.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Artists and community--Great Britain.
Artists and community.
Free Form Arts Trust (Great Britain).
Great Britain.
Physical Description:
xviii, 210 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Edition:
English edition.
Place of Publication:
Oxford ; New York : Berg, 2011.
Summary:
Exploring key issues for the anthropology of art and art theory, this fascinating text provides the first in-depth study of community art from an anthropological perspective.
The book focuses on the forty year history of Free Form Arts Trust, an arts group that played a major part in the 1970s struggle to carve out a space for community arts in Britain. Turning their back on the world of gallery art, the fine-artist founders of Free Form were determined to use their visual expertise to connect, through collaborative art projects, with the working-class people excluded by the established art world. In seeking to give the residents of poor communities a greater role in shaping their built environment, the artists' aesthetic practice would be transformed.
Community Art examines this process of aesthetic transformation and its rejection of the individualized practice of the gallery artist. The Free Form story calls into question common understandings of the categories of "art," "expertise," and "community," and makes this story relevant beyond late twentieth-century and early twenty-first-century Britain. Book jacket.
Contents:
I The Rejection
1 Art Inside and Outside the Gallery 3
The Art World 5
Art with a Capital A 11
The Art World and Common Sense 18
Charges and Briefs 22
II The Shaping
2 Moving beyond the Gallery 29
Beginnings 29
An Art World Brief 35
Into the 'Community; 38
A Warmly Persuasive Word 40
Back to the Art World 41
'What's It For, Mister?' 44
Freedom and Structure 47
Fun Events v. Artism Lifeism 51
3 From Performance to the Environment 57
'I'm Afraid This Whole Horrible Box Takes Priority' 58
From Visual Systems to Free Form Arts Trust 59
Performance 61
Dead Fish and Totem Poles 72
The Environmental Turn 76
4 Community Arts and the Democratization of Expertise 79
The Rise and Fall of community Arts and Community Architecture 80
Early Environmental Work in Hackney 87
Providing Access to Expertise 91
5 Responding to Local Needs: Goldsmiths 95
Football and Mosiacs 98
Of Distraction and Expression 103
6 Making Art Collaboratively: Provost 111
Paths and Plantings 111
The Mural 115
'Everybody Was Involved in the Mural' 124
The View from the Arts Council 125
7 Theoretical and Political Locations 129
Artists and Ethnography 129
Locating the Free Form Artists 131
The Coming of the Audit Culture 137
III Into The Twenty-First Century
8 Free Form in 2004 141
A Professional Organization 141
The Norwich Commission 148
The Catton Grove Brief 152
9 A Carnival and a Standing Stone 157
The Catton Clear Day Carnival 158
'It's Personalized the Rubbish Collection a Bit More' 162
The Fiddlewood Project 165
Selecting an Artist 165
The Standing Stone 171
'It's Much Better Than That Angel of the North' 177
The End of the Journey 180.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
9781847888334
184788833X
9781847888341
1847888348
OCLC:
727610653

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